"Fogerty, who is from the very unswamplike Berkeley, California, got his first look at a bayou courtesy of John Fred, the one-hit wonder who sang "Judy In Disguise (with Glasses)." Fred was from Louisiana, and when Creedence played a show in Baton Rouge in 1969, he met Fogerty at a rehearsal and offered to take him to a real bayou. They drove 15 minutes to Bayou Forche, where they ate some crabs and crayfish, giving Fogerty the idea for this song".
There is no bayou forche in Louisiana. You are referring to Bayou Lafourche but it's not 15 minutes from Baton Rouge. Btw, we don't spell crawfish as crayfish, ever. Not trying to rain on your parade but I don't like misinformation being put out about South Louisiana (my people) from people that aren't even from there.
He was a big fan of the culture and sounds of Louisiana. He did a cover of “Dont Mess With My Toot Toot” which is a zydeco song by Rockin Sydney. Few outside of south central Louisiana would know who that is. My girlfriends grandfather produced that song and it won a Grammy for best folk song so it did have some commercial success back then. Had no idea Fogerty covered it until we got to talking about the song and so I had to look it up. As always he kills his rendition. Always feels authentic and he really treated the culture here with love. That’s why CCR will always be a favorite of mine.
It kind of reminds me of Jim Nabors, and how his speaking voice from Gomer Pyle's was so different. And his singing voice was so different from his speaking voices.
@@richardjones9007 That’s a great point and man I love Hendrix so it pains me to say I’d probably take CCR’s best three over the the incredible Jimi trilogy.
You can't go wrong with CCR, John Fogerty wrote everything in that band, great songwriter, guitarist and vocalist and he's still killing it today, total living legend. "Up Around the Bend" is the most "aggressive" happy song I've ever heard, he just has that grit in his voice that works with everything he sings.
John wrote everything except on CCR's final studio album Mardi Gras (1972). By that point, his brother Tom had already quit the band in favor of a solo career, and his relationship with the remaining band members was strained because they wanted more say into the band's business decisions and creative input. Before recording said album, John basically gave bassist Stu Cook and drummer Doug Clifford an ultimatum that they had to write and sing their own songs or else he'd would quit. Mardi Gras had 10 tracks, only 4 of which were sung by John.
The first time I heard CCR was March 1969. I was in basic training at Fort Bragg, NC and Viet Nam bound. Proud Mary was playing on all the radio stations and we only had radio in the mess hall. Fun times dancing with a mop during KP. Say what you will, but Creedence Clearwater Revival was the gold standard during the late 60's and early 70's....
At that time I was 8 yrs old already listening to n loving CCR, an uncle constantly started playing their album in 67/68. Been playing their music for most of my life, love all of his songs, he's an incredible musician all around*
I was 19 in 1969 and Fayetteville was like New York City to me. Never seen so many tall buildings, and I was on Hay Street. By 01/29/1969 I was at Ft Bragg@@Millerman57
“I put a spell on you” is amazing with killer guitar work, and the grit in John’s vocals is the best ever from them. When he hits the lyrics “because you’re mine”. Oh man….
that first album has so many great lead guitar parts from track one to the last track. It's my favorite album by them. Not completely polished yet. Raw bluesrock with killer guitar solos.
CCR had a unique blend of music that encompassed Blues, Country, Soul, Rockabilly, Gospel and Folk music that appealed to people from many walks of life. It's the reason they were so successful and sold so many records IMO.
CCR makes me think of my parents. I remember a story they told me years ago. They were traveling from Indiana to California 1973. My mom was pregnant with my sister and they were headed to Fort Ord where my dad was stationed in the Army. The beat up Oldsmobile they had at the time (my dad was 20 my mom 18) had an 8 track player. There was an 8-track cassette stuck in the player - CCR. When they couldn't catch a radio station they rocked CCR on repeat. They'd play CCR records when I was little and there was just something unique and interesting about their music. Great band.
Side note, I’m a military wife, moved from Honolulu to Newport, RI when I was about 7 1/2 months pregnant. Flew to LA, picked up our Grand Cherokee, and drove cross country to our new home. We called it the “Potties of America” trip, because I’m pretty sure we stopped at every single one between LA and Newport, lol. My son was born about 6 weeks later, he was nearly 9 lbs., no wonder my poor bladder couldn’t take it!
They really did do their homework cause "Hoodoo" is the black magic practition that most people confuse with "Voodoo" which is actually just a religion. CCR are like a good ol pair of trusty blue jeans. Pure classic rock.
"The Working Man", "Down on the Corner", "Lookin' Out My Back Door" and the ballad "Long As I Can See the Light" are some of my favorites. But you can't go wrong with any of their songs.
John Fogerty's raspy vocals and lead guitar are fantastically basic but with a very visceral beat that creates an incredible and tight groove to their music. CCR has so many great jamming tunes in their library.
"Cotton Fields" blew my mind the first time I ever heard it because of all the years I've loved listening to Cuando Yo Era Un Jovencito by Ramon Ayala and never knew.
Heard this song on the radio in 1969...and ....I fell in love with CCR!!!! John Fogerty's voice is the most unique and soulful vocals in music history!!! "Good Golly Miss Molly" is another great song from CCR which is a cover song too but the band does it very well!!!
CCR is one of those timeless bands. It doesn't matter how old you are, you're gonna love the sound they create. Looking out my back door is one of my favourites. I think John wrote it for his kids and it's such a happy song, it lifts your mood instantly.
"I put a spell on you" is one that you will not regret listening to. You can't go wrong with any of CCR's work, but that song is one I think you both would really enjoy.
I’ve seen every huge band of the 70’s. Stones,Floyd, Zepplin in ‘77, but John Foggarty was the best and most enjoyable show I’ve ever seen. Every single song was incredible. He is a great musician.
CCR is so great man. Yall should check out Midnight Special , Run through the jungle, long as I can see the light, sweet hitch hiker , green river, lodi... I can go on
All Rock n Roll is based on the Blues fellas. Blues is the beginning of EVERYTHING when it comes to Rock n Roll. If you didnt have Blues you literally could not have Rock n Roll. Great reaction.
Hey guys, I'm a drummer from New Orleans, LA, and the bands I've played in who covered this song would always get into such a smooth, blues groove with this one. We could just rock it and stay in such a sweet pocket that it was always a crowd pleaser down here.
I love watching them playing this song at Albert Hall in England. I go to that site frequently and it looks like they were having such a great time. And they just killed it.
As a Cuban-American from Miami, you guys are on the money about Al in Scarface! Dude is so on point, he was more Cuban than some actual Cubans I know 😂 Great channel! Love your content and always enjoy your interpretations of my classic rock favorites.
Let's call it reborn on the bayou... People ask me why I watch reaction videos. Three reasons: 1. I love to see people connect with music that I like. 2. Often times a little bit of biography is brought up, or analysis of lyrics which can often be informative/thought provoking. 3. I find new music from recommended reactions and from the comments. The first time I ever heard megadeth was "Holy Wars" on your guys' channel. What a payoff! Rust in Peace has made it into my top 20 albums and probably top 3 metal albums. Never would have found that gem or many other songs if it was not for channels like yours and the crowd they attract. Glad to see you guys still on the grind. Be well and peace out!
Number 3 is big for me. I’ve found artist I never would otherwise. The best example is “Shoshana Bean- make it rain.” Live at the ace hotel. Some musical theatre chick gave possibly the best live performance I’ve ever seen.
At around 2:35 Ryan says something about the song being in a movie...pretty sure this song or Fortunate Son has been used in every Vietnam movie ever made.
My mother was a music teacher, she raised me on music like this....I'm a metal bass player now,but...this right here, this is legit...CCR is no joke! Thanks for doing this 1 guys!
I am white but the son of a Jamaican. Raised in the 60s and 70s. I was brought up on the greats of reggae Bob Marley and the Wailers, Peter Tosh, and the other greats. I have a great appreciation for all genres of music even classical. CCR is my favorite band to listen to when I am out in the back country of Canada. White water canoeing is at a other level when I have CCR playing taking on the currents. Love this band. Thank you for reviewing this and others. Their music really makes you feel like you are out with nature (bayou/everglades/back country).
CCR were consummate musicians. Practiced hours every day. There is very little live footage of the band. The drummer was otherworldly live. Up there with John Bohnam and Keith moon.
Fire! John Fogerty, Tom Fogerty, Stu Cook, and Doug Clifford all grew up in El Cerrito, California, south of Richmond, north of Berkeley, ten miles as the crow flies from Oakland. No doubt they've got Louisiana in their hearts. El Cerrito is in Contra Costa County, which to the East extends to the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta in Northern California, parts of which can be very swampy -- in a few places the people who still live there reside in houses built on stilts and the like. Every year various communities across the larger region even host shrimp and crawdad festivals as well.
Suzie Q is my fav song....grew up on a pool table my pops had a Meucci Que and he named it "Susie Q" I was always told when that was playing you don't play him but I love your fellas reactions.....love the energy and the honest opinion not matter what the subject is .....but Suzie Q and Bad Moon Rising and Heard from the grapevine is executed to perfection......Suzie Q
John Fogarty put some stank on it with that one!! Great groove…instrumentation…funky, catchy, and morally informational (….don’t let the man getcha, do what he done ta me!)
You gotta include ZZTop in that group. Billy Gibbons’ licks and Dusty’s vocals can’t be denied. I just wished I had seen John Fogerty and ZZTop together on that tour a few years back.
CCR was a college band touring around, but that was back in the seventies. They were that sort of underground sound that became mainstream. Fogerty also wrote 'Proud Mary' during a short time working on a river boat, so the lyrics are a true story funny enough.
My Brothers of different mothers, I want to say I've dug and groved to the channel for a few years, I don't think I've had much to say bcuz you say it all. On the vibe with this song, don't know if you have reacted, but you MUST, MUST try the Marshall Tucker Band, "Can't You See". Lead singer looks like young George Thoroughgood in the early video. It's blues as all hell.
To me, this song and Green River are their pinnacle. Get so lost in the sauce , but there’s there’s this driving intensity pushing and pushing at the same time.
I just found you guys and I love your chemistry. I am a disabled Army Veteran and am 61 years young, I love the fact that you guys are open to any type of music. You make me laugh, smile and I can’t wait to look at your work, now that I am a subscriber 😊🥰🤗. God speed.
70s is one of my favorite era's of music. I was a teenager in the mid/late 90s, and so much of 90s music is sampled from 70s songs. When I noticed the connection I was hooked. Got into Funk, Soul, Blues... all of it. I got mocked mercilessly when I tried to tell all my teenage friends that all the Gangsta Rap we loved came from 70s Funk and Soul. I didn't care that much. If it's good, it's good. The only music I had a prejudice against was Country, but that got cured in the Marine Corps. That 'Outlaw Country' from the 70s is fantastic too. Just a phenomenal decade for music.
I'm so happy right now. CCR is so underrated IMO. John's voice cuts right through you like knife. Instantly recognizable. You can't help but crank them up. And they broke up long before I was born. But great music is great music. Whoo-hoo! Thanks, G & R! ✌️❤️😊🎶
Heard Creedence for the first time in the summer of 68. I was in my high school locker room during two a day football practices in the middle of a hot August. Our all-county linebacker from Alabama, cranked up "Suzi Q", which was Creedence's first hit. It blew me away. A pure 20-minute jam. Not the usual 4-minute pop song on the radio. Anyone who went to Vietnam will tell you that this was the favorite band of the grunts. It broke my heart when they broke up around 69. After 30 something years of litigation over song rights, and BS, John Fogarty won in court his right to play the music he wrote, played lead guitar, mixed, and produced. Oh yeah, and he was the lead singer too! I finally got to see Fogarty at a casino in New Mexico. He did not disappoint!
My opinion....not many bands that our more badass then CCR. The content they put out in a short time... amazing. Check out John Forgery's Centerfield from the 80s.
What's freaking AMAZING is that ccr put out almost 30 songs that are now considered all time classics. Everyone knows them... in just 3 years. 6 xs more classics than most bands do in a 30 year career
i grew up on a stack of 45 singles from these guys that my uncle gave to me when i was 9 years old. Check "Long As I Can See The Light" Right in your guys wheelhouse. Keep up the great work and Happy Holidays! Peace!
I think you guys would love ray LaMontagne! He is an award-winning folk singer-songwriter from Nashua, New Hampshire. I would recommend Jolene, Trouble, Shelter, and You are the best thing!
This song will forever take me back to the summer of 69, cruising' Wesley Street with Bobby Woodard in his brown Corvette, with the killer 8 track tape player...such a great time to be alive!!!
"Fogerty, who is from the very unswamplike Berkeley, California, got his first look at a bayou courtesy of John Fred, the one-hit wonder who sang "Judy In Disguise (with Glasses)." Fred was from Louisiana, and when Creedence played a show in Baton Rouge in 1969, he met Fogerty at a rehearsal and offered to take him to a real bayou. They drove 15 minutes to Bayou Forche, where they ate some crabs and crayfish, giving Fogerty the idea for this song".
Thanks for the background info.
There is no bayou forche in Louisiana. You are referring to Bayou Lafourche but it's not 15 minutes from Baton Rouge. Btw, we don't spell crawfish as crayfish, ever. Not trying to rain on your parade but I don't like misinformation being put out about South Louisiana (my people) from people that aren't even from there.
I’m from Louisiana, bayou country. This is the song. Nuff said.
Fogerty being from California, singing Louisiana swamp music, with a Jersey accent may be the greatest thing life has ever offered to us as a species.
He was a big fan of the culture and sounds of Louisiana. He did a cover of “Dont Mess With My Toot Toot” which is a zydeco song by Rockin Sydney. Few outside of south central Louisiana would know who that is. My girlfriends grandfather produced that song and it won a Grammy for best folk song so it did have some commercial success back then. Had no idea Fogerty covered it until we got to talking about the song and so I had to look it up. As always he kills his rendition. Always feels authentic and he really treated the culture here with love. That’s why CCR will always be a favorite of mine.
i listen to this like "damn Santana and company just gotta successor SON"
It kind of reminds me of Jim Nabors, and how his speaking voice from Gomer Pyle's was so different. And his singing voice was so different from his speaking voices.
Haha agreed 😊
That’s a Cajun accent. They say “ hoid” for “ heard” like they do in Jersey.
What this band accomplished in a mere three years is absolutely mind blowing.
Rubicon, how cool would it have been to se how they grew and changed through the years?
Almost as remarkable as what Hendrix was able to do in three years
@@richardjones9007 That’s a great point and man I love Hendrix so it pains me to say I’d probably take CCR’s best three over the the incredible Jimi trilogy.
You can't go wrong with CCR, John Fogerty wrote everything in that band, great songwriter, guitarist and vocalist and he's still killing it today, total living legend. "Up Around the Bend" is the most "aggressive" happy song I've ever heard, he just has that grit in his voice that works with everything he sings.
His solo albums are pretty good too
+ arranger and producer
He also sang and played every instrument on his solo album Blue Ridge Rangers..He played the sax on Long as I can see the light
@@kajabrill2404 And lots of organ & Wurlitzer on Pendulum. Multi-talented
John wrote everything except on CCR's final studio album Mardi Gras (1972). By that point, his brother Tom had already quit the band in favor of a solo career, and his relationship with the remaining band members was strained because they wanted more say into the band's business decisions and creative input. Before recording said album, John basically gave bassist Stu Cook and drummer Doug Clifford an ultimatum that they had to write and sing their own songs or else he'd would quit. Mardi Gras had 10 tracks, only 4 of which were sung by John.
My favorite CCR song. Absolutely a masterpiece.
I agree but Bad Moon Rising and Suzy Q are pretty great.
@@fractuss Proud Mary and Run Through The Jungle are up there too for me
Psychedelics lol
@@420_momentum Fogerty and band never touched that stuff while working. That music is way too focused and worked-out to be from druggies.
Yes, my fav, as well!
Their version of “ I put a spell on you” is fantastic
Live version.❤️
@@deborahstrickland9845 yes
Good Golly Miss Molly is outstanding, too...a cover of Little Richard. Great guitar tone in that solo.
Yep, Midnight Special 👍
REACT TO " OBITUARY - BLINDSIDED " PLEASEEEEEEEEEE 🙏😭 Yall are going to enjoy it ALOT heavy & groovy.
This song could go on for 20 minutes and I wouldn't get tired of it. The groove is just such nourishment for the soul.
Amen and AMEN BROTHER !!
It's like watching a thunderstorm go by!
Tru dat!! 😉
A long form jam if I ever heard one.
A good workout song, too!
This band is criminally overlooked.
Remember it well. :-) This song was heard all over Vietnam
The first song played at Woodstock after it poured rain!
You guys should listen to their version of "Heard it through the Grapevine"
lol nah, that's basically an instrumental. Great for chilling to, not great for a reaction.
@@checkle1 it wasn't really a reaction request, they should hear it for sure.
or the long version of suzie-Q
The long version 11 minutes+👍✌️
I totally agree
What I love about this song is ... Patience. They ride the groove and they let it shine and they wait to drop the next verse.
The first time I heard CCR was March 1969. I was in basic training at Fort Bragg, NC and Viet Nam bound. Proud Mary was playing on all the radio stations and we only had radio in the mess hall. Fun times dancing with a mop during KP. Say what you will, but Creedence Clearwater Revival was the gold standard during the late 60's and early 70's....
Hell yeah they were😁👏👏👏👏👏
Rock on dude, I live in Fayetteville. Town has changed a lot since 69...lol
At that time I was 8 yrs old already listening to n loving CCR, an uncle constantly started playing their album in 67/68. Been playing their music for most of my life, love all of his songs, he's an incredible musician all around*
I know what you mean, I live in Laurinburg...@@Millerman57
I was 19 in 1969 and Fayetteville was like New York City to me. Never seen so many tall buildings, and I was on Hay Street. By 01/29/1969 I was at Ft Bragg@@Millerman57
It's unbelievable to think they put out so many bangers in essentially just 4 years!!
The brightest flames burn quickest.
It’s truly unbelievable. Just like Hendrix: 4years of pure magic.
This fact is something I only learnt about a few months ago and it still spins me out!
Yeah, but they fought in court over their songs for forty years.
Creedence was on a tiny label with zero promotion.
“I put a spell on you” is amazing with killer guitar work, and the grit in John’s vocals is the best ever from them. When he hits the lyrics “because you’re mine”. Oh man….
this song will never get old. Hits me every single time.
that first album has so many great lead guitar parts from track one to the last track. It's my favorite album by them. Not completely polished yet. Raw bluesrock with killer guitar solos.
@@stevedotwood oh man that first album is perfection start to finish.
YES! DARE TO SAY SOUNDS BETTER THAN THE ORIGINAL.
CCR had a unique blend of music that encompassed Blues, Country, Soul, Rockabilly, Gospel and Folk music that appealed to people from many walks of life. It's the reason they were so successful and sold so many records IMO.
and some psychedelic
Put a Candle in the Window is my favorite CCR song. It's dripping with emotion.
It’s actually called Long As I Can See The Light. My fave CCR tune. Love the sax solo..
@@dickcnormis1444 Yeah! Oh yeah!!!
I’ll be coming home soon…
Long as I can see the light.
REACT TO " OBITUARY - BLINDSIDED " PLEASEEEEEEEEEE 🙏😭 Yall are going to enjoy it ALOT heavy & groovy.
The bass in this song is amazing and it hits hard
CCR makes me think of my parents. I remember a story they told me years ago. They were traveling from Indiana to California 1973. My mom was pregnant with my sister and they were headed to Fort Ord where my dad was stationed in the Army. The beat up Oldsmobile they had at the time (my dad was 20 my mom 18) had an 8 track player. There was an 8-track cassette stuck in the player - CCR. When they couldn't catch a radio station they rocked CCR on repeat. They'd play CCR records when I was little and there was just something unique and interesting about their music. Great band.
Freaking amazing story!
Lol, that’s the most 70s thing ever! I hope that Olds had wood panels!😂
Side note, I’m a military wife, moved from Honolulu to Newport, RI when I was about 7 1/2 months pregnant. Flew to LA, picked up our Grand Cherokee, and drove cross country to our new home. We called it the “Potties of America” trip, because I’m pretty sure we stopped at every single one between LA and Newport, lol. My son was born about 6 weeks later, he was nearly 9 lbs., no wonder my poor bladder couldn’t take it!
@@redstateforever Love it! Those are the stories that last. Hope the family is well.
Yep. Army Hub and I have traversed the country multiple times.
They really did do their homework cause "Hoodoo" is the black magic practition that most people confuse with "Voodoo" which is actually just a religion. CCR are like a good ol pair of trusty blue jeans. Pure classic rock.
Mississippi Hoodoo Man from Omar and the Howlers. Also, Running through the Canebrake.
This man knows what Hoodoo is. Believe it.
Magnificent album, Born On The Bayou is a great album with great music
"The Working Man", "Down on the Corner", "Lookin' Out My Back Door" and the ballad "Long As I Can See the Light" are some of my favorites. But you can't go wrong with any of their songs.
John Fogerty's raspy vocals and lead guitar are fantastically basic but with a very visceral beat that creates an incredible and tight groove to their music. CCR has so many great jamming tunes in their library.
"Midnight Special", "Cotton Fields", "Wholl Stop The Rain", and definetly "I Put a Speel on You", songs that you will going crazy!
"Cotton Fields" blew my mind the first time I ever heard it because of all the years I've loved listening to Cuando Yo Era Un Jovencito by Ramon Ayala and never knew.
"It was down in Lou'siana
Just about a mile from Texarkana.."
Put a spell on you is just an all time great song
REACT TO " OBITUARY - BLINDSIDED " PLEASEEEEEEEEEE 🙏😭 Yall are going to enjoy it ALOT heavy & groovy.
fuuuckin love The Midnight Special
Their
“I Heard It Through The Grapevine” is phenomenal
Heard this song on the radio in 1969...and ....I fell in love with CCR!!!! John Fogerty's voice is the most unique and soulful vocals in music history!!! "Good Golly Miss Molly" is another great song from CCR which is a cover song too but the band does it very well!!!
Run Through the Jungle
I Put a Spell on You
Long As I Can See the Light
Are all bangers. ❤️
Im 47 and have listened to them my entire life and it never gets old. Listened to them today at work.
You guy are just too friggin awesome the stuff that you review. Rock on!
In the 1970s you couldn't go to a bar without hearing CCR on the jukebox. Loved by all. ❤
Lodi is amazing, and a really good journey through a struggling musicians experience
RUN THOUGH THE JUNGLE = next CCR song.
Their grooves are always so in the pocket
CCR is great. Pick almost any song from them and you will enjoy it. One of my favorites is Green River.
Green River is the one
Green River just has that vibe
@@typazon That whole album!
Creedence's emulation of swamp blues was as Pacino's Scarface to Cuban gangsters. Absolutely spot-on analysis. Brilliant.
CCR is one of those timeless bands. It doesn't matter how old you are, you're gonna love the sound they create. Looking out my back door is one of my favourites. I think John wrote it for his kids and it's such a happy song, it lifts your mood instantly.
"I put a spell on you" is one that you will not regret listening to. You can't go wrong with any of CCR's work, but that song is one I think you both would really enjoy.
I’ve seen every huge band of the 70’s. Stones,Floyd, Zepplin in ‘77, but John Foggarty was the best and most enjoyable show I’ve ever seen. Every single song was incredible. He is a great musician.
Haha yes! I was just listening to them a few days ago. My mom listened to them when I was growing up. Good stuff!
CCR is so great man. Yall should check out Midnight Special , Run through the jungle, long as I can see the light, sweet hitch hiker , green river, lodi... I can go on
Run through the jungle!
@@Wildman70892 the big lebowski!
Keep on Chooglin
All Rock n Roll is based on the Blues fellas. Blues is the beginning of EVERYTHING when it comes to Rock n Roll. If you didnt have Blues you literally could not have Rock n Roll. Great reaction.
They are one of the bands I grew up listening to through my parents and I love them ! Definitely some feel good music.
Hey guys, I'm a drummer from New Orleans, LA, and the bands I've played in who covered this song would always get into such a smooth, blues groove with this one. We could just rock it and stay in such a sweet pocket that it was always a crowd pleaser down here.
CCR is one of the greatest bands, for sure!
they have such a unique groove and are so soulful. so happy you did this song.
Took awhile, but eventually made my Top 20(#17) about 10 years ago. I can listen to them anytime which is rare for me.
I absolutely love CCR!!!!
Can never go wrong with CCR. Always brightens the mood
I love watching them playing this song at Albert Hall in England. I go to that site frequently and it looks like they were having such a great time. And they just killed it.
As a Cuban-American from Miami, you guys are on the money about Al in Scarface! Dude is so on point, he was more Cuban than some actual Cubans I know 😂
Great channel! Love your content and always enjoy your interpretations of my classic rock favorites.
Hey man... she's not for you!!
I love these guys!
Let's call it reborn on the bayou...
People ask me why I watch reaction videos. Three reasons:
1. I love to see people connect with music that I like.
2. Often times a little bit of biography is brought up, or analysis of lyrics which can often be informative/thought provoking.
3. I find new music from recommended reactions and from the comments.
The first time I ever heard megadeth was "Holy Wars" on your guys' channel. What a payoff! Rust in Peace has made it into my top 20 albums and probably top 3 metal albums. Never would have found that gem or many other songs if it was not for channels like yours and the crowd they attract. Glad to see you guys still on the grind. Be well and peace out!
I totally agree with you. I've also found so many new great songs from the comment sections of videos
Number 3 is big for me. I’ve found artist I never would otherwise.
The best example is “Shoshana Bean- make it rain.” Live at the ace hotel.
Some musical theatre chick gave possibly the best live performance I’ve ever seen.
Fogerty has a kick ass voice!
"I Put A Spell On You" is on another level by them (if that's possible). Highly recommend checking it out.
At around 2:35 Ryan says something about the song being in a movie...pretty sure this song or Fortunate Son has been used in every Vietnam movie ever made.
Their version of "I Put A Spell On You" is 🔥. "Ramble Tamble" is also a psychedelic/prog rock gem. Very groundbreaking tune.
My mother was a music teacher, she raised me on music like this....I'm a metal bass player now,but...this right here, this is legit...CCR is no joke!
Thanks for doing this 1 guys!
I am white but the son of a Jamaican. Raised in the 60s and 70s. I was brought up on the greats of reggae Bob Marley and the Wailers, Peter Tosh, and the other greats. I have a great appreciation for all genres of music even classical. CCR is my favorite band to listen to when I am out in the back country of Canada. White water canoeing is at a other level when I have CCR playing taking on the currents. Love this band. Thank you for reviewing this and others. Their music really makes you feel like you are out with nature (bayou/everglades/back country).
This and Run Through the Jungle are the hardest Creedence songs I know about.
I would give sinister purpose a listen
Their song "Long As I Can See The Light" drips with soul, I think you guys would like it
Yes and yes
John Fogarty called his particular sound Swamp Rock. That is his signature sound.
Song is from 1969.... My favorite band from High School, 1968 to 1972.......
You can be born anywhere and still have lots of soul. 😎
CCR were consummate musicians. Practiced hours every day. There is very little live footage of the band. The drummer was otherworldly live. Up there with John Bohnam and Keith moon.
Fire! John Fogerty, Tom Fogerty, Stu Cook, and Doug Clifford all grew up in El Cerrito, California, south of Richmond, north of Berkeley, ten miles as the crow flies from Oakland. No doubt they've got Louisiana in their hearts. El Cerrito is in Contra Costa County, which to the East extends to the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta in Northern California, parts of which can be very swampy -- in a few places the people who still live there reside in houses built on stilts and the like. Every year various communities across the larger region even host shrimp and crawdad festivals as well.
Suzie Q is my fav song....grew up on a pool table my pops had a Meucci Que and he named it "Susie Q" I was always told when that was playing you don't play him but I love your fellas reactions.....love the energy and the honest opinion not matter what the subject is .....but Suzie Q and Bad Moon Rising and Heard from the grapevine is executed to perfection......Suzie Q
You’re gonna love their cover of Heard It On the Grapevine!
This song sounds like an absolute JAM!
This song is structurally really different… it has like 3 or 4 jam sessions dividing it. Love that
John Fogarty put some stank on it with that one!! Great groove…instrumentation…funky, catchy, and morally informational (….don’t let the man getcha, do what he done ta me!)
You gotta include ZZTop in that group. Billy Gibbons’ licks and Dusty’s vocals can’t be denied. I just wished I had seen John Fogerty and ZZTop together on that tour a few years back.
They were just down the road from Berkley and Oakland. Lots of talent in the Bay Area.
Up Around The Bend by CCR is a banger!
Your NEXT CCR adventure should be: "Sweet Hitchhiker"! The first 2 seconds of that song will hook you in!
Love it. “Put a Candle in The Window” is another great one by them… bluesy, emotional, stretched out his voice at the end
Love from California. Great band. I was 5 when that song came out, grew up on them. Grew up to love them.
CCR, even though only together for 6 yrs, has a huge catalog of hit music. So many great tunes. "Up Around The Bend" is a jam.
CCR was a college band touring around, but that was back in the seventies. They were that sort of underground sound that became mainstream. Fogerty also wrote 'Proud Mary' during a short time working on a river boat, so the lyrics are a true story funny enough.
My Brothers of different mothers, I want to say I've dug and groved to the channel for a few years, I don't think I've had much to say bcuz you say it all. On the vibe with this song, don't know if you have reacted, but you MUST, MUST try the Marshall Tucker Band, "Can't You See". Lead singer looks like young George Thoroughgood in the early video. It's blues as all hell.
One of my favorites.
@@bakerinthehouse5346 the flute to open and the pain inside. Almost like Allman brothers "Whipping Post" end the end meaning
To me, this song and Green River are their pinnacle. Get so lost in the sauce , but there’s there’s this driving intensity pushing and pushing at the same time.
You can not go wrong with CCR. John Fogerty is incredible.
Z.Z. Top is a good blues band. Just Got Back from Baby's and Jesus Just Left Chicago are great examples of their blus sound.
"Pagan Baby" is one of the best songs done by CCR in my opinion! I think you guys would love that one.
I just found you guys and I love your chemistry. I am a disabled Army Veteran and am 61 years young, I love the fact that you guys are open to any type of music. You make me laugh, smile and I can’t wait to look at your work, now that I am a subscriber 😊🥰🤗. God speed.
You could do a CCR marathon and no one would complain
70s is one of my favorite era's of music. I was a teenager in the mid/late 90s, and so much of 90s music is sampled from 70s songs. When I noticed the connection I was hooked. Got into Funk, Soul, Blues... all of it. I got mocked mercilessly when I tried to tell all my teenage friends that all the Gangsta Rap we loved came from 70s Funk and Soul. I didn't care that much. If it's good, it's good. The only music I had a prejudice against was Country, but that got cured in the Marine Corps. That 'Outlaw Country' from the 70s is fantastic too. Just a phenomenal decade for music.
Credence is life. Ramble Tramble is a pure psychedelic bayou banger 🔥
That was the first song I ever learned from them, awesome tune to jam to.
REACT TO " OBITUARY - BLINDSIDED " PLEASEEEEEEEEEE 🙏😭 Yall are going to enjoy it ALOT heavy & groovy.
I could listen to “Ramble Tamble” every day.
It's a masterpiece 😁👍👍👍👍
Greet song from CCR 1970 and all over the world in the Discos! Thanks "Lost In Vegas" for the good music an reaction from Germany!
I'm so happy right now. CCR is so underrated IMO. John's voice cuts right through you like knife. Instantly recognizable. You can't help but crank them up. And they broke up long before I was born. But great music is great music. Whoo-hoo! Thanks, G & R! ✌️❤️😊🎶
Heard Creedence for the first time in the summer of 68. I was in my high school locker room during two a day football practices in the middle of a hot August. Our all-county linebacker from Alabama, cranked up "Suzi Q", which was Creedence's first hit. It blew me away. A pure 20-minute jam. Not the usual 4-minute pop song on the radio. Anyone who went to Vietnam will tell you that this was the favorite band of the grunts. It broke my heart when they broke up around 69. After 30 something years of litigation over song rights, and BS, John Fogarty won in court his right to play the music he wrote, played lead guitar, mixed, and produced. Oh yeah, and he was the lead singer too! I finally got to see Fogarty at a casino in New Mexico. He did not disappoint!
My opinion....not many bands that our more badass then CCR. The content they put out in a short time... amazing. Check out John Forgery's Centerfield from the 80s.
Right?!
6 killer albums in just over 2 years is ridiculous. Full of bangers too.
They don’t make bands like that anymore.
Old Chicago is pretty amazing as well
the central valley delta is very much like the bayou. spent time around both.
I would definitely recommend Down On The Corner and Up Around The Bend! Honestly, you really can't go wrong with CCR.
“I can still hear my ole hound dawg bawking!”
This channel just puts a smile on my face. Fun to listen to you guys and just appreciating everyone for what they contribute. You guys are awesome
You owe it to yourself to hear their version of “I Heard It Through The Grapevine” by far the best, and that’s not easy to do!!!!
This song feels like a hydro massage rolling through my joints!
So many great CCR songs. “Run Through The Jungle”, “Lookin’ Out My Backdoor”, “Green River”,etc. all fantastic imo.
What's freaking AMAZING is that ccr put out almost 30 songs that are now considered all time classics. Everyone knows them... in just 3 years. 6 xs more classics than most bands do in a 30 year career
i grew up on a stack of 45 singles from these guys that my uncle gave to me when i was 9 years old. Check "Long As I Can See The Light" Right in your guys wheelhouse. Keep up the great work and Happy Holidays! Peace!
I think you guys would love ray LaMontagne! He is an award-winning folk singer-songwriter from Nashua, New Hampshire. I would recommend Jolene, Trouble, Shelter, and You are the best thing!
This song will forever take me back to the summer of 69, cruising' Wesley Street with Bobby Woodard in his brown Corvette, with the killer 8 track tape player...such a great time to be alive!!!
Did you customize car speakers back then?