Interesting. Here Joni is using a capo, but playing first position triads, instead of her now traditional open tunings. I always thought that she had never played traditional guitar chords, but this video tells me that isn't so. UA-cam has become an ethnomusicological resource! Great!
Wow, she was gorgeous! Yes, her playing, her voice, her interpretation of this song I only knew from the Dead's version, all are spectacular. But the combination of her incredible beauty and performance/stage presence/facial expressions, I am in love with her all over again.
Look at their faces when she delivers the line "it being summer, I took off my shirt" And with the flash of her eyes, she sent a high-voltage charge through the room! So young, so good with the guitar, and the besides the camera, the microphone loves her.
After release, composer John Phillips started receiving royalties for same. Mystified, he contacted Joni to ask her what this wuz about. She informed him it wuz for this song, which Phillips didn't know he wrote. It had been a multi-substance night after a concert in a hotel room in Colorado. Mitchell wuz there, liked the tune and recorded it. Phillips noted his memory of composing it grew more keen w/ each check. And another thing! Me and My Uncle wuz the Grateful Dead's most performed tune. I hope you all took notes. There will be a spot quiz later.
because of the genius of her songwriting and the effect of her angelic voice, her guitar skill have been underrated. she's amazing. I've never seen film of her this young; I knew she was beautiful, but this is ridiculous! She looks almost- almost- like Catherine Deneuve in Umbrellas of Cherbourg, and I doubt Catherine has Joni's chops. the point: an angel lives among us. She is THE Renaissance woman of our generation.
So achingly young and beautiful. 1965 wasn't such a bad year, judging by this video. I was 12, and everything looked ok to me. Mom and Dad were still alive, so was my favorite aunt (died at age 52, Thanksgiving of '79). All the bad shit was so far off, or off of my radar. I don't think I'd care to go back and do it again, but glimpses of that age, such as through vids like this, are priceless.
I imagine a lot of the old school performers in ties and sweaters (@:56 e.g.) were watching and thinking ... 'there's the future of folk, and it ain't us'. I think her amazing performance of 'Urge for Going' nailed that home more than anything because of the poetry and delivery. Joni went so far beyond folk, she was the style of herself.
It is truly so precious to see her at this time. She was a WAY better singer and guitarist then they had ever seen before ! And way ahead of her time. And they were all in love with her, of course. Do you blame them ?
I was surprised to learn that the song was written by John Phillips of the Mamas and the Papas.. I have know it for years but thought the Dead wrote it. I do like the young Joni so this video was a real treat.
Funny thing I was raised on GD version too, but learned controversial John Phillip's actually wrote and recorded 8t but was so drunk he forgot about it
john Philips did write it in Texas after a night with Mr. Tequila and fellow musicians: John Phillips from The Mamas & The Papas wrote this song. In the liner notes to his solo album Phillips 66 (where his version of the song appears), it states: "John often used to tell the story behind 'Me And My Uncle.' Years ago he began receiving publishing royalties from a song on a Judy Collins record with which he was unfamiliar. It was titled 'Me And My Uncle.' He called Judy to let her know of the mistake because he hadn't written any such song. She laughed and told him that about a year before, in Arizona after one of her concerts, they had a 'Tequila' night back at the hotel with Stephen Stills, Neil Young and a few others. They were running a blank cassette and John proceeded to write 'Me And My Uncle' on the spot. The next day, John woke up to the tequila sunrise with no recollection of the songwriting incident. Judy kept the cassette from that evening and then, without informing John, recorded the song for her own record. Over the years the song was recorded by several people, and eventually became a standard of the Grateful Dead. John used to joke that, little by little, with each royalty check, the memory of writing the song would come back to him."
- And that is how ya do it! Amazing, Joni had Polio at age 9. It affected her fingers and she devised dozens of "alternative tunings" of her own. BTW, The young gentlemen in the band, lookin' on in awe are Harry Chapin and his brothers Tom & Steve. Oscar Brandt (recently of WNYC) was the host, he passed in 2016.
What a great rendition ! Joni does it great. Not what one would expect, but I adore her great taste in folk music. (Not to say anything about her own musical genius). Great selection. I love the song !
David Christian Oscar Brand was quite an interesting character. Also a folk musician, he did children's songs, produced this show and on the side had a band that did children's tunes with substituted filthy X-rated lyrics. I've got the album somewhere buried in my record collection. Oscar Brand and the Fabulous Road Apples or something like that. Quite a kick. About time to break it out again, blow the dust off it and give it a spin. Oh yeah... LOVE Joni!! I'm so used to the Dead version, this was GREAT!
thanks! As a guitarist and songwriter myself, Joni is among a handful that I wouldn't dare aspire toward. She's unattainable. Joni's a little older than I am (not by a whole lot), but, had I met her when I was single, my heart would have fallen directly at her feet.
Thank you henhenstoll !!! I love Joni !! There's nothing she can't do - i remember Stephen Stills once saying " it ain't easy keeping up with Joni on guitar " and here she is so young playing like a master picker and still singing like a rockin angel.
Oscar Brand was a collector of all kinds of folk and traditional music. I have a paperback from 1967 called "Folksongs for Fun" which has over 200 folk songs. I still play them. Nice to see him and Joni too.
How many times did I see Bob Weir sing this tune, 30+? Now this...totally mind-blowing....... OK...I'm back from wikipedia; apparently written by John Phillips of the Mamas & The Pappas in a tequila haze in a hotel room party with Neil Young in 1963. A cassette was rolling and Judy Collins left with it. The next morning John has no recollection of it and Judy's gone and she records it and the Dead hear it and Joni Mitchell (obviously) and a few others. Dead played it ~ 616 times.
It's not your fault, it's in the Wikipedia entry - but Neil Young hadn't even left Winnipeg in 1963, didn't meet Stephen Stills until 1965, in Thunder Bay Ontario. He certainly wasn't in California. The story becomes plausible if we set it in 1966 or '67, although it wouldn't have been a cassette the song was recorded to - it would have been a reel-to-reel. After some research, here is the most plausible scenario: Joni Mitchell sang "Me and My Uncle" on the Let's Sing Out TV show, which aired on October 4, 1965. So the only place the apocryphal story could have transpired would have been in New York, where Neil went on two occasions in the summer of 1965. Stephen was there, and John Phillips very likely was as well. What's more, "Shakey" mentions that Judy Collins was recording in the same studio where Neil made his demo for Elektra in early September, 1965, although he would have probably met her during his first New York visit, through Stills. Judy Collins was already well-known, so she could have had a reel-to-reel recorder in the hotel room, and she may have been working on that very song at the same time Neil was doing his demo in the tape vault at Elektra! ("Went all the way there and they gave me a tape machine. Told me to press start" - Shakey, p. 133). Tantalizing possibility. However, further investigation shows that Judy Collins first recorded the song in October of 1964 on her Judy Collins Concert album, and that John Phillips himself remembers it as having happened after a concert in Phoenix Arizona. In one interview he says that Roger McGuinn of the Byrds was there, and in another he mentions Stills and Young. Of course, John Phillips' memory is totally unreliable, so my final theory is that Phillips is mixing up a bout of drinking with Stills, Young, Collins et al in New York in 1965 with a "tequila night" in Arizona in 1963 (or more likely 1964). Neil Young was having trouble getting from Winnipeg to Thunderbay in his hearse in 1964, had not met Stills yet, and had never been to the States at that time, save for a trip to Florida with his family. It's a mix-up of two nights of drinking among the hundreds in Phillips' career.
who else was half expecting that incredibly beautiful cherubic face and voice to sing... " and I left left his dead a** there by the side of the road !! and how I was hoping there would be a shot of the face of that smiling gent to her right, while she sang it henhenstoll, you my hero for the day, thanks for posting this I think Joni was cool and beautiful from day 1
I always took it for granted that the Dead wrote this... now I know . ""Me and My Uncle", often also written as "Me & My Uncle," is a song composed by John Phillips of The Mamas and the Papas, and popularized in versions by Judy Collins and the Grateful Dead."
Look at the facial expressions of the guys watching. They realize that their day has come and gone. That they have nothing. Joni Mitchel has defined the last several decades as far as music goes.
I know this about Joni but the guys off in the background are the Chapin Brothers. The guy that is tuning his guitar as the video starts is Harry Chapin
@BarkingEggplant the original lyric (the song was written by John Phillips) said "left him lying there by the side of the road". It's in the Judy Collins version and in the Phillips version, both of which pre-date the Dead doing this song.
Her "self portrait" was a beautiful representational rather than abstract pencil drawing ! wow...wrote all the songs, played piano and guitar and...wow!!!
I did not know that (Johnny Carson voice)! I first saw the Dead in late summer '66 and they spent 45 minutes tuning up and lots of folks thought it was far out. I thought it was boring. they got a whole lot better and made some great music. Crazy days, but good ones, by and large.
I love this song. I've playing around with it a lot lately. It not the first time this song has captured my attention It sounds good in so many different keys and registers. Lately I've been trying it out in Nashville tuning. Your version is beautiful as Hell expected.
That's great! I only know the Dead version. Oscar Brand's kinda leering at her, but it's neat to see the other performers just stunned by her performance: what a helluva performer---she can do it all.
i only knew the grateful dead version before this. i honestly watched this just to see if she would say "left his dead ass there by the side of the road" haha. Absolutely beautifully haunting voice this woman had.
slownoman, I can't read the comment that led to your reply. However, I almost pissed myself laughing at your rebuttal. You are too funny and right as well. Peace out sister!
Joni Never Lies! Great clip. The shows host is Oscar Brand (no "t" on the end) he still has a weekly radio show out of New York. The four guys in the band behind Oscar are The Chapin's, Harry Chapin & his brothers Tom, Jim & Steve. Would love to see some video of the Chapin's playing.
One of the most "Beautiful" and iconic singers in the world!
Interesting. Here Joni is using a capo, but playing first position triads, instead of her now traditional open tunings. I always thought that she had never played traditional guitar chords, but this video tells me that isn't so. UA-cam has become an ethnomusicological resource! Great!
Wow, she was gorgeous! Yes, her playing, her voice, her interpretation of this song I only knew from the Dead's version, all are spectacular. But the combination of her incredible beauty and performance/stage presence/facial expressions, I am in love with her all over again.
John Phillips wrote it for Judy Collins pre Mamas & Papas days.
Look at their faces when she delivers the line "it being summer, I took off my shirt" And with the flash of her eyes, she sent a high-voltage charge through the room!
So young, so good with the guitar, and the besides the camera, the microphone loves her.
the expression from the guy to the left LOL
If you listen again you'll hear she changed the line to "I took off my shoes".
@@sunnyhobblegate9173 That is also what I heard.
i've just watched this video 675 times in a row.
я русский
Yep, I'm just getting started
So much love for joni
WOW!!!
Come on, it isn't that difficult to learn.
Listen to the fancy guitar work Joni fires off so effortlessly!! She was SUCH a talent in soooooo many ways!!!
After release, composer John Phillips started receiving royalties for same. Mystified, he contacted Joni to ask her what this wuz about. She informed him it wuz for this song, which Phillips didn't know he wrote.
It had been a multi-substance night after a concert in a hotel room in Colorado. Mitchell wuz there, liked the tune and recorded it.
Phillips noted his memory of composing it grew more keen w/ each check.
And another thing! Me and My Uncle wuz the Grateful Dead's most performed tune.
I hope you all took notes. There will be a spot quiz later.
It was Judy Collins, not Joni. Here is the story: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Me_and_My_Uncle
because of the genius of her songwriting and the effect of her angelic voice, her guitar skill have been underrated. she's amazing. I've never seen film of her this young; I knew she was beautiful, but this is ridiculous! She looks almost- almost- like Catherine Deneuve in Umbrellas of Cherbourg, and I doubt Catherine has Joni's chops. the point: an angel lives among us. She is THE Renaissance woman of our generation.
These poor guys had no idea who was singing with them. God's angel of music.
So achingly young and beautiful. 1965 wasn't such a bad year, judging by this video. I was 12, and everything looked ok to me. Mom and Dad were still alive, so was my favorite aunt (died at age 52, Thanksgiving of '79). All the bad shit was so far off, or off of my radar. I don't think I'd care to go back and do it again, but glimpses of that age, such as through vids like this, are priceless.
Her performance just tickles me! Juxtapose her innocence with the lyrics= perfect irony. Very sweet :)
Even though I just watched it, it's hard to wrap my mind around Joni singing this.
Musical prodigy, art prodigy, throw in some beauty………Joni Mitchell is queen.
I imagine a lot of the old school performers in ties and sweaters (@:56 e.g.) were watching and thinking ... 'there's the future of folk, and it ain't us'. I think her amazing performance of 'Urge for Going' nailed that home more than anything because of the poetry and delivery. Joni went so far beyond folk, she was the style of herself.
Seriously one of my favorite UA-cam videos ever, great!
It is truly so precious to see her at this time. She was a WAY better singer and guitarist then they had ever seen before ! And way ahead of her time. And they were all in love with her, of course. Do you blame them ?
+geez louise And she s - she was e real beauty than. #holymoly
+geez louise was written by Poppa John Phillips one drunk,did not even remember writing until he started getting royalties checks
Matthew Speed McDonald That's not nice. That's a disgusting thing to say. John was my friend TROLL.
Thank you for posting what must be an incredibly rare appearance of Joni Mitchell. I can't believe I'm seeing her so early in her career.
Damn. I mean damn. I gre up w/ Grateful Dead's version. i also am not a big Joni mitchell fan. But sometimes you gotta say damn...
Hell yes!
You should be she is a GREAT TALENT
Me too!!
I was surprised to learn that the song was written by John Phillips of the Mamas and the Papas..
I have know it for years but thought the Dead wrote it.
I do like the young Joni so this video was a real treat.
Funny thing I was raised on GD version too, but learned controversial John Phillip's actually wrote and recorded 8t but was so drunk he forgot about it
She is so gifted!!! Amazing
Hooray for Oscar Brandt, a real talent and discoverer of talented folks
I see why Prince loved her so much.
john Philips did write it in Texas after a night with Mr. Tequila and fellow musicians: John Phillips from The Mamas & The Papas wrote this song. In the liner notes to his solo album Phillips 66 (where his version of the song appears), it states: "John often used to tell the story behind 'Me And My Uncle.' Years ago he began receiving publishing royalties from a song on a Judy Collins record with which he was unfamiliar. It was titled 'Me And My Uncle.' He called Judy to let her know of the mistake because he hadn't written any such song. She laughed and told him that about a year before, in Arizona after one of her concerts, they had a 'Tequila' night back at the hotel with Stephen Stills, Neil Young and a few others. They were running a blank cassette and John proceeded to write 'Me And My Uncle' on the spot. The next day, John woke up to the tequila sunrise with no recollection of the songwriting incident. Judy kept the cassette from that evening and then, without informing John, recorded the song for her own record. Over the years the song was recorded by several people, and eventually became a standard of the Grateful Dead. John used to joke that, little by little, with each royalty check, the memory of writing the song would come back to him."
Just came back here. Superb
- And that is how ya do it! Amazing, Joni had Polio at age 9. It affected her fingers and she devised dozens of "alternative tunings" of her own. BTW, The young gentlemen in the band, lookin' on in awe are Harry Chapin and his brothers Tom & Steve. Oscar Brandt (recently of WNYC) was the host, he passed in 2016.
theTV.website/ Heys thanks that, would have slipped by me.
Harry was awesome!
What a great rendition ! Joni does it great. Not what one would expect, but I adore her great taste in folk music. (Not to say anything about her own musical genius). Great selection. I love the song !
Lovely, just simply amazing. They don't make em' like this anymore!
She was having a blast singing this and Brand was definitely holding back a laugh when she sang the line about taking off her shirt
David Christian Oscar Brand was quite an interesting character. Also a folk musician, he did children's songs, produced this show and on the side had a band that did children's tunes with substituted filthy X-rated lyrics. I've got the album somewhere buried in my record collection. Oscar Brand and the Fabulous Road Apples or something like that. Quite a kick. About time to break it out again, blow the dust off it and give it a spin.
Oh yeah... LOVE Joni!! I'm so used to the Dead version, this was GREAT!
Unbelievablely beautiful
thanks! As a guitarist and songwriter myself, Joni is among a handful that I wouldn't dare aspire toward. She's unattainable. Joni's a little older than I am (not by a whole lot), but, had I met her when I was single, my heart would have fallen directly at her feet.
Such fun!! Joni often takes you by surprise with her lyrics and this is part of her cleverness in song writing! Enchantingly brilliant! 💖
It is written by John Phillips Mamas and Papas
Thank you henhenstoll !!! I love Joni !!
There's nothing she can't do - i remember Stephen Stills once saying " it ain't easy keeping up with Joni on guitar " and here she is so young playing like a master picker and still singing like a rockin angel.
Oscar Brand was a collector of all kinds of folk and traditional music. I have a paperback from 1967 called "Folksongs for Fun" which has over 200 folk songs. I still play them. Nice to see him and Joni too.
Who still listens 2020
Taylor Sachs ...Joni is a total babe. I’m here cause of the greatest band in the land (~);}
Canada's gift to the world
Joni is a phenomenal singer who speaks of innocents and hard times
How many times did I see Bob Weir sing this tune, 30+? Now this...totally mind-blowing....... OK...I'm back from wikipedia; apparently written by John Phillips of the Mamas & The Pappas in a tequila haze in a hotel room party with Neil Young in 1963. A cassette was rolling and Judy Collins left with it. The next morning John has no recollection of it and Judy's gone and she records it and the Dead hear it and Joni Mitchell (obviously) and a few others. Dead played it ~ 616 times.
It's not your fault, it's in the Wikipedia entry - but Neil Young hadn't even left Winnipeg in 1963, didn't meet Stephen Stills until 1965, in Thunder Bay Ontario. He certainly wasn't in California. The story becomes plausible if we set it in 1966 or '67, although it wouldn't have been a cassette the song was recorded to - it would have been a reel-to-reel. After some research, here is the most plausible scenario: Joni Mitchell sang "Me and My Uncle" on the Let's Sing Out TV show, which aired on October 4, 1965. So the only place the apocryphal story could have transpired would have been in New York, where Neil went on two occasions in the summer of 1965. Stephen was there, and John Phillips very likely was as well. What's more, "Shakey" mentions that Judy Collins was recording in the same studio where Neil made his demo for Elektra in early September, 1965, although he would have probably met her during his first New York visit, through Stills. Judy Collins was already well-known, so she could have had a reel-to-reel recorder in the hotel room, and she may have been working on that very song at the same time Neil was doing his demo in the tape vault at Elektra! ("Went all the way there and they gave me a tape machine. Told me to press start" - Shakey, p. 133). Tantalizing possibility. However, further investigation shows that Judy Collins first recorded the song in October of 1964 on her Judy Collins Concert album, and that John Phillips himself remembers it as having happened after a concert in Phoenix Arizona. In one interview he says that Roger McGuinn of the Byrds was there, and in another he mentions Stills and Young. Of course, John Phillips' memory is totally unreliable, so my final theory is that Phillips is mixing up a bout of drinking with Stills, Young, Collins et al in New York in 1965 with a "tequila night" in Arizona in 1963 (or more likely 1964). Neil Young was having trouble getting from Winnipeg to Thunderbay in his hearse in 1964, had not met Stills yet, and had never been to the States at that time, save for a trip to Florida with his family. It's a mix-up of two nights of drinking among the hundreds in Phillips' career.
Sublime talent percolating up from the vastness of the Canadian prairie. Joni is a gift from the Gods. Thank you!
who else was half expecting that incredibly beautiful cherubic face and voice to sing... " and I left left his dead a** there by the side of the road !!
and how I was hoping there would be a shot of the face of that smiling gent to her right, while she sang it
henhenstoll, you my hero for the day,
thanks for posting this
I think Joni was cool and beautiful from day 1
So haunting and beautiful.. I find my self back here listening to this one from time to time!..
I like the slightly different lyrics and approach. I don't know if this is strictly speaking a "murder ballad" but it's a fun song!
great looks great voice great playing
So beautiful!!!
WHAT A STORY TELLER!
HER EYES!
HER SMILE!
WHAT A KICK! 💕
I am a huge Dead head, and Joni fan.......but ya learn something new every day...had No idea Joni covered this John Phillips' brilliant cowbiy tune!
I always took it for granted that the Dead wrote this... now I know . ""Me and My Uncle", often also written as "Me & My Uncle," is a song composed by John Phillips of The Mamas and the Papas, and popularized in versions by Judy Collins and the Grateful Dead."
Look at the facial expressions of the guys watching. They realize that their day has come and gone. That they have nothing. Joni Mitchel has defined the last several decades as far as music goes.
What beautiful eyes!
Beautiful renditiion. Stunning! I love, love, love Joni. An artist who has made it strictly on her own terms. The model of artistic integriy.
It's not often that you see such an intimate connection between the song, the instrument, music and singer. Bravo Ms. Mitchell, Bravo!
outrageous...I've never seen these clips. UA-cam as a time machine. H.G. Wells, eat your heart out.
Way, way classic. What a find. Thanks for that
she's gorgeous. her lyrics are so deep and beautiful
So beautiful and so talented.
Joni is a beautiful singer that's gifted and a survivor from not getting lung cancer due to smoking 😊
i love this.
joni mitchell has one of the most unique voices i have ever heard.
thanx much for posting.
xx
Damn, she was beautiful. And so good on the guitar.
Wow, I never saw her that young!
Soooo charming! She just lit up the sky.
Just picked-up Reckless Daughter by David Yaffe. Can’t wait to dive-into JM.
I know this about Joni but the guys off in the background are the Chapin Brothers. The guy that is tuning his guitar as the video starts is Harry Chapin
Only other version I've heard other than the Dead's - her's is tremendous!
Oh boy, I like this song so damn much thath i've been listening it for hours without gettin tired!
She's a great performer. Her facial expresions tell it all!
I can't believe I have never heard this...thanks so much!
an angel right before us pouring out her angel heart. sigh..
@BarkingEggplant the original lyric (the song was written by John Phillips) said "left him lying there by the side of the road". It's in the Judy Collins version and in the Phillips version, both of which pre-date the Dead doing this song.
I love this song... I surely love the way Joni Sings it!! thanks for sharing this!!
once in a while you make amazing discoveries here. this is one of them. what a great song!
Her "self portrait" was a beautiful representational rather than abstract pencil drawing ! wow...wrote all the songs, played piano and guitar and...wow!!!
This is so fucking awesome! Love this song and had never seen or heard her do it. Brilliant!
...and God Bless Joni...
I did not know that (Johnny Carson voice)! I first saw the Dead in late summer '66 and they spent 45 minutes tuning up and lots of folks thought it was far out. I thought it was boring. they got a whole lot better and made some great music. Crazy days, but good ones, by and large.
Going to play this song and a cover by The Grateful Dead today on "Bluesland" KCSB 91.9 FM at 3 PM. Love it.
+Leo Schumaker Did the Grateful Dead ever do a cover version of Big Yellow Taxi?
Not that I know of.
Big Country did!
Another song sung by Judy Collins too. Both versions are again very different. I like both. Great thanks !
Wow...this might well be the earliest performance footage of Joni Mitchell that exists.
Wow...I thought I'd seen it all...been a Deadhead for years and a Joni fan for even more...never seen this. THANK YOU!
Thank you.
absolutely gorgeous
the mostest awesome talent in the bud-stage! precious recording! thanks for posting!
What's not to love, agree so much on interpretation, making it hers ,yet true to the essence if not more. Goose bumps stuff.
thank you youtube and OP! great clip. great picking and teeth, joni! Fine song writing by j philips.
You're seeing some seriously old film footage. Yes, Woodstock brought her a lot of attention. But a lot of us were already hanging on her every word.
She never even went. A manager advised she honor her Dick Cavett show appearance instead. She still wrote an impeccable song about it tho.
Looking at this video, I now understand why every guy who met her fell in love sith her in the 60's. So beautiful and talented.
Wow...no denying the absolute talent...
Goddess of music
I love this song. I've playing around with it a lot lately. It not the first time this song has captured my attention It sounds good in so many different keys and registers. Lately I've been trying it out in Nashville tuning. Your version is beautiful as Hell expected.
This performance is legend
Incredible footage from way back
great song, thanks for posting
I love this woman!
That's great! I only know the Dead version. Oscar Brand's kinda leering at her, but it's neat to see the other performers just stunned by her performance: what a helluva performer---she can do it all.
wow, just wow!
This early material is great! too bad it never made it on any of her albums.
Wow.
i only knew the grateful dead version before this. i honestly watched this just to see if she would say "left his dead ass there by the side of the road" haha. Absolutely beautifully haunting voice this woman had.
slownoman, I can't read the comment that led to your reply. However, I almost pissed myself laughing at your rebuttal. You are too funny and right as well. Peace out sister!
Gosh, what a voice!
Joni Never Lies! Great clip. The shows host is Oscar Brand (no "t" on the end) he still has a weekly radio show out of New York. The four guys in the band behind Oscar are The Chapin's, Harry Chapin & his brothers Tom, Jim & Steve. Would love to see some video of the Chapin's playing.
had noooo clue this is a joni rip!!!!
It is Oscar Brand.
He preserved many filthy old songs.
Look him up.
Great version with Joni.
She looks and sounds so lovely here.