I wish they had gone on longer. They could have definitely been the second coming of The Beatles. I love their enthusiasm (well, except for Steve who had that John Entwistle type of stoicism).
The Lovin' Spoonful - - LIVE ONSTAGE - - 1965 - - - listen to those harmonies - - better than their studio recordings wow - - ZAL Yanovsky ringing out on his GUILD FIREBIRD guitar - - Joe Butler on those the drums is so real - - JOHN Sebastian on his zither is wonderful and his voice is spot on - - STEVE Boone on his bass is groovin' - - nothing but feeling here !
This phone is crazy. I was trying to say this is the tightest single in Rock History. 3 complete verses, chorus, instrumental interlude and a fade, all in two minutes flat! If there is a tighter single, I never heard it.
These boys are from the Village. Greenwich Village. Real N ew Yorkers. We grew up with them. And never forgot them. Love to All the Loving Spoonful . Kriti . 4:37
Yes, great quality film Directed by Larry Peerce and distributed by American International Pictures. I did edit the false start by the band, and make minor volume adjustments for this post. The Big T.N.T. Show is a 1966 concert film. It includes performances by numerous popular rock and roll and R&B musicians from the United States and the United Kingdom. The concert was shot before a live audience at the Moulin Rouge club at 6230 Sunset Boulevard Los Angeles, California on November 29, 1965. In order of appearance in the film: #4 is The Lovin' Spoonful "Do You Believe in Magic", "You Didn't Have to Be So Nice" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Big_T.N.T._Show
You KNOW you were “the sh*t” when John Lennon stole your complete look of the round glasses, sideburns and hairstyle…and kept one of your tunes on his home jukebox (Daydream.)
Farm Out, Ted, Salad! Gravy, man, ya know whut I mean, Bromeeen? I am a Powers on my Mom's side, descendants of Walter Power on the FTDNA Project. Thanks for helping me remember. I need to get outside now. What a day for a daydream.
The wire rim glasses were first worn by Roger McGuin. We used to call them Byrd glasses. Lennon first wore wire rims in 1966 for film he was in. Roger ... 1965.
Sebastian ; an Underrated Singer ,And ,Songwriter :
Great time to grow up to music like this.
John Sebastian and the Lovin' Spoonful were a truly great band. The writing and songs were special and meaningful. Good time
I wish they had gone on longer. They could have definitely been the second coming of The Beatles. I love their enthusiasm (well, except for Steve who had that John Entwistle type of stoicism).
The Lovin' Spoonful - - LIVE ONSTAGE - - 1965 - - - listen to those harmonies - - better than their studio recordings wow - - ZAL Yanovsky ringing out on his GUILD FIREBIRD guitar - - Joe Butler on those the drums is so real - - JOHN Sebastian on his zither is wonderful and his voice is spot on - - STEVE Boone on his bass is groovin' - - nothing but feeling here !
This phone is crazy. I was trying to say this is the tightest single in Rock History.
3 complete verses, chorus, instrumental interlude and a fade, all in two minutes flat!
If there is a tighter single, I never heard it.
No, they don't both fit the bill.
One two minute single.
Just one.
I've loved them since mid 1960's. And the theme Welcome Back. I took my brothers 8 track tape by them. Haha it was pay back for taking 1 of mine!
Love this! Lot more energy than their studio versions.
I miss those days of feeling like a seagull soaring through the clouds with my long hair flowing through the wind!
You betcha by golly wow, if there has ever been a single tighter than this one, I never heard it.
These boys are from the Village. Greenwich Village.
Real N ew Yorkers. We grew up with them. And never forgot them.
Love to All the Loving Spoonful .
Kriti
.
4:37
They were such a great band , and John was a brilliant writer . Happy Days
The great Spoonful playing real live, saw them many times and Zal was always a trip RIP.
How about those 3 chicks @1:13 rocking their asses off.
I would say they're in to it!
That's when chicks were chicks!
@@GaryAa56 Now we have chicks with dicks, who don't rock, ha.
That's a hard driving rock band right there.
Tightest single in the history of rock. 2 minutes flat on the 45.
Good Job!!! ❤💋
thanks. fuzzy
Gods of rock!!
Two classics right there😊
Magic by america
the fellow at 1:18 is missing the point haha
Yup! Love this band, and have seen John Sebastian. Very cool :)
Should have left in the initial false start on Magic. I think Joe was on the wrong beat in the first try.
This is a perfect recording did you record this live or in person excellent job
Yes, great quality film Directed by Larry Peerce and distributed by American International Pictures. I did edit the false start by the band, and make minor volume adjustments for this post. The Big T.N.T. Show is a 1966 concert film. It includes performances by numerous popular rock and roll and R&B musicians from the United States and the United Kingdom. The concert was shot before a live audience at the Moulin Rouge club at 6230 Sunset Boulevard Los Angeles, California on November 29, 1965.
In order of appearance in the film: #4 is The Lovin' Spoonful
"Do You Believe in Magic", "You Didn't Have to Be So Nice"
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Big_T.N.T._Show
You KNOW you were “the sh*t” when John Lennon stole your complete look of the round glasses, sideburns and hairstyle…and kept one of your tunes on his home jukebox (Daydream.)
Right on
Farm Out, Ted, Salad! Gravy, man, ya know whut I mean, Bromeeen?
I am a Powers on my Mom's side, descendants of Walter Power on the FTDNA Project.
Thanks for helping me remember.
I need to get outside now. What a day for a daydream.
The wire rim glasses were first worn by Roger McGuin. We used to call them Byrd glasses. Lennon first wore wire rims in 1966 for film he was in. Roger ... 1965.