Rookie TURNED a DISTURBING French Song about DEATH into the #1 HIT of 1974! | Professor of Rock

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  • Опубліковано 22 лют 2024
  • Coming up… it started out as a disturbing French song about death... Then it was translated into English and recorded by one of the biggest bands in rock history. The Beach Boys...but then Brian Wilson and his group abandoned the sessions and the song’s producer who was really an unknown at the time decided to record the song… Terry Jacks and his hit Seasons in the Sun…It became one of the biggest hits of the 70s and the best-selling song in Canada’s history.. on its way to sales of 15 million. It was a feel-good song unless one listened to the lyrics very closely or heard the original French version… Up next, the story of a one-hit wonder that is one part happy-go-lucky and one part sad and devastating… NEXT on Professor of Rock.
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    Hey music junkies, Professor of Rock, always here to celebrate the greatest artists and the greatest songs of all time. If you have always been curious about the stories behind the songs of your life. You’ll dig this music community the stories straight from the legends, the stories behind the songs. Subscribe below to be a member of this music community.
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    It’s time for another edition of our series Bottled Lightning where we celebrate a song that was king for a day or for many days. We honor artists and bands and that one glorious hit they had that rocketed up the charts…and for reasons unknown didn’t have another hit. We all know them for the term one-hit wonder but we try to step beyond that and celebrate them as Lightening in a bottle. Today we focus on a song that is both happy and quite dark. It’s a song that deserves a thorough breakdown… Today we take a walk through “Seasons in the Sun”- a song that was bottled lightning for Canadian singer-songwriter Terry Jacks in 1973.
    While I was preparing for this feature, I remembered a conversation that I was having with my business partner a while back, he told me a story that really hit home. He said that he attended a funeral some years back, for the father of one of his best friends. The deceased was also like a father to him. As the casket was being carried away to the burial site after a very emotional service, he said that there was an eerie silence… And then all of a sudden, the birds in the nearby trees began to sing, their chirping slowly getting louder and louder, until the flock was in harmony like a beautiful choir.
    For a moment, the birdsong was all that you could hear. In that moment... he said that he remembered feeling a peacefulness that he had never experienced before. He said that It was almost as if the birds were there to comfort him and the others that were there... the birds were conveying the message that this dear deceased man was at rest, and that precious life was ready to move forward… I was astounded when he told me about this because I had a similar experience which I’ll share later… but this feeling immediately took me back to the gripping lyric in Verse 2 of “Seasons in the Sun”: “Goodbye Papa, it’s hard to die, When all the birds are singing in the sky...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,4 тис.

  • @ProfessorofRock
    @ProfessorofRock  5 місяців тому +50

    Poll: What is your pick for the GREATEST one hit wonder of the 70s?

    • @surlechapeau
      @surlechapeau 5 місяців тому +44

      Spirit In The Sky - Norman Greenbaum. Billboard Hot 100 from 02.28.70 - 04.18.70.

    • @Atoms-Raging-cd3vo
      @Atoms-Raging-cd3vo 5 місяців тому +26

      Play that Funky Music Wild Cherry

    • @peterd.9978
      @peterd.9978 5 місяців тому +14

      Love Hurts

    • @catherine6653
      @catherine6653 5 місяців тому +12

      Rock On, David Essex.
      Another childhood "Guilty Pleasure ".

    • @christineml1476
      @christineml1476 5 місяців тому +17

      "Play That Funky Music" Wild Cherry

  • @MichaelPiz
    @MichaelPiz 4 місяці тому +6

    A dear friend of mine died of leukemia not long before Seasons in the Sun came out. We were both 12 at the time. I shed tears every single time this song plays.

  • @michaelblythe4395
    @michaelblythe4395 5 місяців тому +77

    My college roommate's girlfriend used to change the lyrics of this song to "We had joy, we had fun, we went streaking in the sun, but the cops drew their guns and they shot us in the buns." Good times.

    • @paulleckner8235
      @paulleckner8235 5 місяців тому +5

      Tell that to Weird Al Yankovic. He might give you a song credit.

    • @paultaylor7082
      @paultaylor7082 5 місяців тому +2

      Now there's a wordsmith at work, no doubt about it...

    • @Gary-tm1kx
      @Gary-tm1kx 5 місяців тому

      Did you ever hear Nirvana 's
      version of this song ?

    • @madbrowniac7871
      @madbrowniac7871 4 місяці тому +1

      @michaelblythe4395: The Seventies encapsulated in one rhyme scheme! Brilliancy and then some.😂🤔🎤🎼🎵🎶🎸🎹🥁🏃‍♀️🏃‍♂️☀️B.W.

    • @gusty60
      @gusty60 4 місяці тому +2

      I will never be able to hear the original words again. 😄

  • @dustybrand
    @dustybrand 5 місяців тому +55

    Adam, you are a blessing. Here's my story about this song. I was born in 1970. My sister was 9 years older than me. When I was 5 she had the 45 of this song, from Bell Records. I would have her play it 3 or 4 times in a row sometimes on her stereo and I would always cry because it was sad. She would kneel down on the burnt orange shag carpet in her bellbottoms with her Farrah Fawcett hair and hug me and tell me it was ok to feel music in that way. We became different people over the years, as siblings do. When I graduated from college she gave me a 45 of this song matted and framed. Our mother died in January 2019. Summer of 2020 she called to tell me she was at the e.r. and didn't feel good. Five weeks and one day later she was dead from brain cancer. Our father died in 2021. I am the only one left.
    The story of your father's funeral is beautiful. Your family is beautiful. Carry fire, brother.

    • @jeansalzman2.012
      @jeansalzman2.012 5 місяців тому +9

      God bless you. What a beautifully tragic life you have had. There is so much sorrow in great love. I am moved by your words.

    • @y_fam_goeglyd
      @y_fam_goeglyd 4 місяці тому +2

      I'm so sorry for you. You've really been through the emotional mill. I hope you're doing as well as can be expected. With much love to you ❤

    • @EdwardKrzynowek-fx5to
      @EdwardKrzynowek-fx5to 4 місяці тому +3

      Both of my parents, and my sister are also gone.
      My mother lived longer than the others did. But, she died in 2019.
      One of the things I eventually noticed was that they served as the record keepers in my family. If I wanted to know when such-and-such died, or got married, all I had to do was ask.
      That's gone now. And, I do miss it.

    • @jeansalzman2.012
      @jeansalzman2.012 4 місяці тому

      @@EdwardKrzynowek-fx5to Yes, the record keepers. Because we forget so much and without them, who will remember all of the wonderful dates we should commemorate?

    • @EdwardKrzynowek-fx5to
      @EdwardKrzynowek-fx5to 4 місяці тому

      @@jeansalzman2.012
      I do miss the company of the loved ones I left behind. But, I have a lot of good memories that followed me wherever I went.
      Especially when times were tough, they provided at least a little cushion against life's
      bumpy ride. I'm happy to say that it still works.
      There have been many bumps. So, I'll take all of the cushions I can get.
      Your comment has me remembering a poem I learned in school.
      My English teacher gave it to us as a mandatory assignment. I think she picked a good one, about not wasting your time. Make that, 'precious time'.
      These are the first and last stanzas of the short poem,
      To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time
      ---by Robert Herrick---
      "Gather ye Rose-buds while ye may,
      Old Time is still a-flying:
      And this same flower that smiles to day,
      To morrow will be dying...
      ...Then be not coy, but use your time;
      And while ye may, go marry:
      For having lost but once your prime,
      You may forever tarry".
      I was fortunate enough to talk to friends and relatives of all ages. I say, 'fortunate', because my older relatives knew things that my younger relatives didn't.
      Some of my same-age friends were surprised by the fact that I had friends who were a lot older than me.
      The time I spent together with my older friends was worth every minute. Even though I was just a kid, they told me a lot of great stories--I mean, stories about their life.

  • @workdre
    @workdre 5 місяців тому +11

    From the dad side of things... In 2013 my son was packing for his freshman trip to college. I didn't pay too much attention as my kids were all very self-reliant and level-headed. After loading up the car and right before taking off, he asked if he could take some of my CD's with him. I didn't even know he had a CD player but apparently so. I expected him to pick a few of the more recent ones but instead, he took my entire collection of 70's artists - Boston, Carpenters, Led Zepplin, etc. - over 100 discs. It dawned on me he wanted to bring a piece of the life we'd shared with him. A great memory and again, a testament to the connecting power of great music.

  • @MichaelSundberg
    @MichaelSundberg 5 місяців тому +73

    You know why I watch your videos? You’re not a critic but an explorer of songs that people created that tell of their emotions, experiences and opinions. There is beauty in older songs and new songs. They all tell a story. Music is the language of the soul.

    • @nestorcarvalho8550
      @nestorcarvalho8550 5 місяців тому +7

      I agree 100 %.

    • @upat65
      @upat65 5 місяців тому +4

      I second that!!!

    • @1439315
      @1439315 5 місяців тому +3

      Tell music critics; IF they do NOT write and perform original songs; retire now because they have NO credibility.

  • @fazole
    @fazole 5 місяців тому +34

    This song and Elton John's "Daniel" always choke me up. They are both uniquely evocative of loss.

    • @jeremyreid9582
      @jeremyreid9582 5 місяців тому +1

      Very true.
      It is this emotive force that original scores and emotive lyrics possess that drew we to music … and has accompanied me for 57 years.
      I salute the original musicians (whilst I scorn the wannabe ‘artists’ that produce [c]rap).

    • @chrisballas3356
      @chrisballas3356 Місяць тому

      Daniel is one of the best anti war songs of all time.

  • @abelincoln3287
    @abelincoln3287 5 місяців тому +156

    Terry Jacks wasn't a rookie. He was in the group "The Poppy family" with his wife Susan and they had a hit "Which way you going Billy"

    • @timskelton2325
      @timskelton2325 5 місяців тому +12

      I just commented about the B-side of WWYGB. I had the 45 growing up and never listened to the A-side but once. Endless Sleep on the B-side is almost psychedelic with Terry playing a killer riff on Fuzz guitar.

    • @tomfarr56
      @tomfarr56 5 місяців тому +9

      I sing that song while driving in traffic every day...

    • @LadyHeathersLair
      @LadyHeathersLair 5 місяців тому +25

      Don’t forget “Evil Grows”.

    • @curtislowe4577
      @curtislowe4577 5 місяців тому +5

      ​@@LadyHeathersLairUA-cam has a video of Terry and Susan lip synching Where Evil Grows on the Kenny Rogers show.

    • @Yaktahbay
      @Yaktahbay 5 місяців тому +12

      Also "That's Where I Went Wrong".

  • @tomfarr56
    @tomfarr56 5 місяців тому +48

    I remember being sick-to-death of it from over-play on the radio stations. I graduated H.S. in 1974.
    I tended to follow roads less traveled, but I have found your stories in particular to be very interesting, thanks to your parents' input!
    Thank you for giving these old songs new life!

    • @rdhudon7469
      @rdhudon7469 5 місяців тому +2

      I got sick of it to and rewrote some of the lyrics to sing to my sister Michelle . Lol , I was a brat !

    • @almason253
      @almason253 5 місяців тому

      My friends would change the words as well. "We had joy we had fun sticking fingers in her bu..." Haha! Good Times.@@rdhudon7469

  • @gram1608
    @gram1608 5 місяців тому +30

    Seasons in the Sun was played to death on Top 40 radio here in Melbourne... I still struggle to listen to it to this day because of that

    • @BlackCatMargie
      @BlackCatMargie 5 місяців тому +4

      Yes, I was 9 years old, in Melbourne, and remember how often the radio played it.

  • @mgh7625
    @mgh7625 5 місяців тому +74

    The preteen years were rough in many ways. “Seasons in the Sun” and “Shannon” by Henry Gross never failed to get the waterworks going when I needed a good cry.

    • @heidichristensen7919
      @heidichristensen7919 5 місяців тому +2

      Oh gosh yes, when I saw that this video was about Seasons in the Sun I immediately thought of Shannon also. I was a preteen when they came out. Despite being fairly young, I got the idea of death from both. Interestingly, the stalker feel of Every Breath You Take went right over my head when it came out, despite being in my 20s.

    • @julianagreenfield4168
      @julianagreenfield4168 5 місяців тому +10

      Oh goodness, yes, "Shannon," "Wild Fire," and "Seasons in the Sun." I cried so much as a youngster!

    • @maxthepupp
      @maxthepupp 5 місяців тому +6

      And 'Honey' by Bobby Goldsboro! 😭😭😭😭

    • @jenniferm6042
      @jenniferm6042 5 місяців тому +1

      ​@mgh7625 that's a creepy stalker song

    • @kellyalves756
      @kellyalves756 5 місяців тому +3

      “Alone again, naturally.”
      I popped up a link to that song while bantering on Facebook with some friends and one lady from Portsmouth, UK told me “No way am I clicking that bloody link…”😄

  • @dickmanson2081
    @dickmanson2081 5 місяців тому +72

    This song has an eerie way of always popping up exactly when needed. From the stories about your father, to finding out about my son's passing this morning and landing on this video, to it coming on the radio on my way home from saying goodbye to my dad who'd just had a massive heart attack, it's always there, just like those birds in the trees were. Your uploads are always top quality, but this one was near the bone.

    • @KattMurr
      @KattMurr 5 місяців тому +12

      So sorry for your loss!!!

    • @carolcyr8553
      @carolcyr8553 5 місяців тому +9

      Sorry to read about your losses. :-(

    • @MountainFisher
      @MountainFisher 5 місяців тому +5

      I lost my youngest son when he was 24, I know how you feel. What happened?

    • @donnahilton471
      @donnahilton471 5 місяців тому +7

      I'm so sorry! I lost my daughter a long time ago. The song that gets me is James Blunt's "I'll Carry You Home." Tears me up. It's going to be hard for a long time.😢

    • @MountainFisher
      @MountainFisher 5 місяців тому +6

      @@donnahilton471 Been 13 years and I cannot say I'm over it. Never will be in this world. So sorry about your daughter, I know how it feels.

  • @darleneschneck
    @darleneschneck 5 місяців тому +44

    I remember hearing this song on the school bus in the spring of 1974 when I was 17 and had my whole life in front of me. The deepness of this song was haunting to me then and now. It sure takes this 67 year retired woman back to simpler times.

    • @adotintheshark4848
      @adotintheshark4848 5 місяців тому +4

      the song is pretty deep all right.

    • @maryarnold1426
      @maryarnold1426 5 місяців тому +4

      First, I was a fan of Rod McKuen. I was able to see him at Massey Hall in Toronto. I drove through torrential rain to get there from Barrie, 60 miles north of the city.
      I was an RN for 43 years before retiring to Belize 6 years ago. “Seasons in the Sun” came out around the time that I was working in the ICU in Reno, NV. One of our orderlies contracted AIDS. He was the first person with that diagnosis in the area. I drove him to California for treatment a few times. I would always take as my patients, the AIDS patients wherever I worked since sometimes others were afraid to care for them. I ended up adopting a young man with HIV in my later years. He is still doing well. He contracted the virus from a dirty needle. Many hospital workers have suffered through what seemed interminable waiting to see if they were infected by needle sticks. The plaintiff lyrics to this song touched my heart because, we’ve all made foolish life choices that have left us with great regret. This was a very touching episode, bringing back many memories of dying patients and their families.
      I had an opposite experience with birds singing. I was at a camping retreat. We were having a Sunday worship outside under the trees. We sang”Holy, Holy,Holy” one phrase is “let all the earth keep silence before thee.” Suddenly the birds that had been raising a ruckus with their songs, were absolutely quiet. Memorable times. Thank you for your dedication to telling the stories behind the music that streams in our hearts.

  • @kariqualters5908
    @kariqualters5908 5 місяців тому +28

    This song came out right before my Grandma died of cancer and was still being played often on the radio at that time, thanks Adam, for the memories… ❤

  • @simonrichards6739
    @simonrichards6739 5 місяців тому +13

    We sing this at Manchester United matches about our noisy neighbours Manchester City. “We had joy we had fun, we had city on the run, but the joy didn’t last cos the b&stards rsn too fast” great record!

    • @dustybrand
      @dustybrand 5 місяців тому +3

      Blue moon, I saw you standing alone....cheers, mate.

  • @kennybaran1080
    @kennybaran1080 5 місяців тому +29

    Reminds me of the year I turned 10, the year this song ran up the charts, I had just buried a classmate who drowned at 9 and this song really resonated with me.

    • @chadborklund2171
      @chadborklund2171 5 місяців тому +2

      You're talking about in a cemetery, right?

    • @kennybaran1080
      @kennybaran1080 5 місяців тому +4

      @@chadborklund2171 of course, we were 9, he drowned, tragically, was a good friend at the time.

    • @debbieomi
      @debbieomi 5 місяців тому +6

      I'm sorry for your loss. This song came out when I was nine, and it made me think of Ronny. He was a neighbor, classmate, and friend who passed when we were six, from a bowel obstruction. Death is a horrible lesson to learn, especially when you're a child and another child passes.

    • @kennybaran1080
      @kennybaran1080 5 місяців тому +5

      @@debbieomi absolutely

  • @Spinspiel
    @Spinspiel 5 місяців тому +19

    As is sometimes typical of Canadian music artists - Terry Jacks had many other hits in Canada as a solo artist, but he also was part of a group that had a #2 & #29 Billboard hits in 1969 / 1970 with "Which Way You Going, Billy" and "That's Where I Went Wrong". He was the songwriter in a band that featured his then wife Susan Jacks on vocals: The Poppy Family. Thanks Professor.

  • @curzon176
    @curzon176 5 місяців тому +22

    My earliest recollection of this song was in 1977-78, i was riding in the car with my family, and i was about 7 years old and it came on the radio. I remember looking outside the car window as we drove through the city on a bright summer day, looking at the trees and the green grass in our neighborhood and this song, without paying too close attention to the lyrics, felt like a nice music accompaniment to what i was seeing, and an affirmation of life, which , well, was so profound that memory stayed with me til today. i don't have too many memories left of being 7 years old, i don't remember my 7th birthday or christmas, but that one remains.

    • @cnph7067
      @cnph7067 5 місяців тому +5

      So funny how we can hold onto random little events from our childhood. At least for me a lot of the earliest events I remember are tied to pop songs and often car ride memories since my parents always had the radio(thankfully they liked pop/rock/R&B) on a good station.

    • @johnspillman
      @johnspillman 13 днів тому

      As a kid I didn't follow lyrics closely either, they were just part of the music and I didn't understand many of them anyway so I just took it as a nice song. After years of not hearing it I listened to the words and got bummed out.

  • @eleni1968
    @eleni1968 5 місяців тому +42

    Thank You Adam!! The original song written by French satirist and comedian, Jacques Brel was originally a satirical ironic song about a husband who knew his wife was having an affair with his friend and requested that his wife's paramour would take care of her after he died. This song is actually very funny because that isn't the real reason why he was committing suicide. The French have different ideas about marriage than we do. The "asking for forgiveness" letters he leaves for his priest, I think his banker, his lawyer, his business partner/co-workers [?], his wife and finally Antoine, his friend who stole his wife are all hilarious. I remember watching a documentary on Jacques Brel and listening to the audience as he was singing "Le Moribund" and they are hysterically laughing and applauding. There are some cultural references in the Brel version that don't translate very well or NOT at all for English speaking audiences. The Terry Jacks version always made me cry in the mid 1970's, along with "Billy Don't Be a Hero" but for very different reasons. I'm curious, If Jacks didn't write the lyrics why should he legally have writing credit? IT seems you care more than he does. Cheers from NYC!!!

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  5 місяців тому +13

      Thanks.

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 5 місяців тому +4

      Yes, I love the original version! So humorous.

    • @rosssmith1062
      @rosssmith1062 5 місяців тому +4

      10:09 on the 45 the song writers are Brel & Kuens. So I don’t think he got credit

    • @mathieu-ye3jy
      @mathieu-ye3jy 5 місяців тому +11

      Jacques Brel was Belgian not french

    • @pcno2832
      @pcno2832 5 місяців тому +1

      I can see why Jacks might have wanted part of the credit; he changed a lot. But I assume Brel had the right to refuse any use of the song if Jacks wanted partial credit. Maybe it never came up.

  • @GoodieWhiteHat
    @GoodieWhiteHat 5 місяців тому +7

    I love your comments at the end. ‘Professor of Rock, that’s just a nickname, I’m an old song teller”. It’s the first time I’ve heard you talk about your dad’s farewell. It was very moving. You tell your song stories beautifully and I love listening to them. I’ve always liked this strange song but this is the best memory I now have of it.

  • @cjbaptiste1
    @cjbaptiste1 5 місяців тому +7

    You don't know how beautifully the stories of your dad touch me as I had similar memories of my dad. Good dads are a gift from God.

  • @jmichaelhpaul
    @jmichaelhpaul 5 місяців тому +4

    Summer at my cousins’ house. This, Cats in the Craddle, My Name is Michael, Hooked on a feelin, Billy Don’t Be a Hero. I could go on and on tons of childhood songs. The playlist of my life.

  • @michaelstamper5604
    @michaelstamper5604 5 місяців тому +18

    Listening to you talk about your relationship with your Dad was very moving, Professor. I imagine we all have certain memories of times spent with our parents that help to hold us upright after they're gone. I often say of my own dad that "he may not have taught me everything I know, but he taught me everything worth knowing" and I get that same vibe from your own words as I listen to you.
    One thing I can tell you for sure. Your dad would be very proud of you for what you do, not just for your wife and family, but for a vast crowd of strangers out here in UA-cam-land. Thank you.

  • @DosBear
    @DosBear 5 місяців тому +12

    I was 12/13 at the time this came out. This was and is my favorite feel good song of all time & my pick for greatest one hit wonder of the 70's. And yes, it brings both a sadness and a peace after loss of a loved one. Only Terry's version works for me. Thanks for all the efforts you put in to provide this. I too, am the blacksheep of the family & the only one to have a relationship with my Father. Cheers

  • @punk2pasture
    @punk2pasture 5 місяців тому +13

    Well Professor, you done gone and made me cry, again. I am autistic but I figured out that I can use other people's songs to express how I feel and when my best friend was dying of cancer I played this song for her and I swear to God the very next year while I was laying on the operating table about to undergo a double organ transplant I felt someone squeezing my hand and when I looked my friend Angi was looking back at me.

  • @user-rw5fg5wj7q
    @user-rw5fg5wj7q 5 місяців тому +36

    Looking Glass with Brandy. Awesome song! Never get tired of listening to it!

    • @leestewart72
      @leestewart72 5 місяців тому +9

      Listen to Brandy by Looking Glass, then listen to Captain of Her Heart by Double. To me, it's a direct sequel to Brandy.

    • @kellyalves756
      @kellyalves756 5 місяців тому

      That’s a belter. ❤️

    • @rkbyrd4432
      @rkbyrd4432 5 місяців тому

      Brandy... Great Tune. Looking Glass became the nacelle of STARZ!

    • @tracycolligan677
      @tracycolligan677 5 місяців тому

      Professor of Rock did an interview a while back with Elliot Lurie of Looking Glass. They speak about the origins of Brandy and he even performs a bit. See that vid here, too.

    • @hyacinth4368
      @hyacinth4368 4 місяці тому

      My #1 favorite song, since the beautiful spring of 1974. That's where it always takes me. A neighbor boy laughing at me because I loved "Brandy, You're a Fine Girl". He and my brother thought it was silly 'bubblegum music. ' Now that I'm an old lady, I don't have to try to be cool, and I embrace my bubblegum music, which I always did love!

  • @dougcesario3098
    @dougcesario3098 5 місяців тому +5

    I remember Seasons In The Sun being a "guilty pleasure" for me. Most of the people I hung with talked about it being crap. I have always been one who listened to the lyrics, and these ere very real. I have a feeling that even those who professed to hate it, took it to heart on their own.

    • @peterbaruxis2511
      @peterbaruxis2511 4 місяці тому

      Wow, I see from the comments that I'm in the minority. No, some of us truly hated it.

  • @neilperry2224
    @neilperry2224 27 днів тому +2

    I've recently returned to the area where l grew up till l was 30.
    I was sorting out some stuff and found a ring my late mother had given to my ex.
    It stopped me in my thoughts and then this came on, and the song allowed me to remember my mother alive and not fighting cancer which ultimately took her life in 03 just after May bank holiday.
    Thank you for everything, Adam. 🤙

  • @nestorcarvalho8550
    @nestorcarvalho8550 5 місяців тому +4

    This song is still one of my all time favorites. Everytime I hear It, It touches my 70 y.o. heart. Thank you Terry, and Adam. From Brazil 🇧🇷

  • @flavellinator
    @flavellinator 5 місяців тому +58

    This song and Billy Don't Be a Hero were all over the airwaves in 1974... Reminds me of doing yard work and raking the leaves while my little transistor radio played

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  5 місяців тому +3

      Thanks for sharing Flave! Blast from the past.

    • @MikeB-1965
      @MikeB-1965 5 місяців тому +2

      I had forgotten that song (Billy Don't be a Hero). I another good but melancholy song.

    • @Willie_McBride
      @Willie_McBride 5 місяців тому +3

      Which version of Billy Don’t Be a Hero? Remember, Paper Lace (The Night Chicago Died) released Billy first… but it didn’t chart well in the US.
      No Donaldson and The Haywoods re cut it, with some minor arrangement adjustments & it soared. Up the charts!
      I’ve always wondered what a hard rock version of Seasons in The Sun would sound like. Think like a Ronnie James Dio Power Ballad!
      Like the Disturbed version of The Sound Of Silence.

    • @adotintheshark4848
      @adotintheshark4848 5 місяців тому +2

      Both songs were terrible. It didn't stop people from liking them though.

    • @cylonred8902
      @cylonred8902 5 місяців тому

      Always loved Billy Don't Be a Hero and Seasons in the Sun

  • @durandaldevil
    @durandaldevil 5 місяців тому +16

    The Brel lyrics are amazing and his version is ALSO superior musically. Most non-French speakers probably have no idea. And M. Brel had another great song about death in the Funeral Tango.
    Thanks for the video!

    • @marilynryan7822
      @marilynryan7822 5 місяців тому

      I enjoy your channel always but I think this one is your best! So much feelings were expressed.Thank you for sharing so much of your personal life with your Dad.

    • @durandaldevil
      @durandaldevil 5 місяців тому

      @@marilynryan7822 i’m not the professor of rock. You replied to a viewer’s comment.

  • @joelquebec
    @joelquebec 5 місяців тому +7

    Whenever I see your videos, besides listening to your outstanding presentation, I see the records displayed behind you and the memories come flooding back.

  • @LollieVox
    @LollieVox 5 місяців тому +14

    I will never hear this song again without thinking of you & your dad. I teared ip when I saw the picture of you too. Your dad looks a lot like my dad back in the day. Thank you!
    My dad was my music mentor too!

  • @debbie4503
    @debbie4503 5 місяців тому +161

    Yes. I remember this song well. It always reminds me of my Little Sister who passed away in 1973. She was 9 yrs old, 5 months away from being 10. I had just turned 12 less than 2 weeks before she died. 💔

    • @Heene1028
      @Heene1028 5 місяців тому +20

      🙏❤😢

    • @williamsherman1089
      @williamsherman1089 5 місяців тому +10

      That's sad

    • @debdo1960
      @debdo1960 5 місяців тому +24

      My deepest condolences.
      My story is similar 😢
      My brother/only sibling died in December 1975 at the age of 16 and 5 days before my 15th birthday. I still miss him like crazy and songs like this seem to transport me to that very sad time in my life.
      My wish for you is that the memories of your sister comfort you 🫂💗

    • @sandijohnson2216
      @sandijohnson2216 5 місяців тому +4

      ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

    • @sandijohnson2216
      @sandijohnson2216 5 місяців тому +5

      @@debdo1960❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @stevendenton4965
    @stevendenton4965 5 місяців тому +8

    It wasn't just the song but also Terry Jack's voice that made it such a great song. It came out one month after my dad died at the age of 63. I'm now 62. RIP daddy.

    • @TheGlssr60
      @TheGlssr60 5 місяців тому +1

      Hey, I'm 63 and I turn 64 on March 2nd. My oldest brother passed the day before his 64th birthday, so I'm hoping to surpass his longevity. Only 5 days to go. How's THAT for dark? "Seasons In The Sun" has got nothing on me.

  • @debbralehrman5957
    @debbralehrman5957 5 місяців тому +2

    Thanks Professor💕💕💕 Don't dismiss the term professor. You are a teacher and you do a great job of it too. As I listen to the music and stories it brings back memories of my life. Keep up the great work.😃🌺

  • @theneighborhood2280
    @theneighborhood2280 4 місяці тому

    I believe this is my most favorite episode that I've seen you create. Including your personal stories about you and your dad was very engaging, and made this episode very endearing. The history of the song was also enlightening, and well appreciated. Thank you for creating this video.

  • @rebeccacorbin1590
    @rebeccacorbin1590 5 місяців тому +17

    "Seasons in the Sun" was really part of the zeitgeist of the early to mid 70s. It started in 71 with the hit movie "Love Story" about a newly married woman dying of cancer.
    The movie "Brian's Song" came out in 71. It was a story about Chicago Bears player Brian Piccolo who died from cancer and his friend who supported him.
    In addition to this song there was the 73 TV movie "Sunshine" about a woman dying of cancer. The theme song was John Denver's hit "Sunshine on my Shoulders".
    In addition to being a great song, "Seasons in the Sun" came along at the right time in music history.

    • @tammylewis2408
      @tammylewis2408 5 місяців тому +3

      Actually, that trend of sad songs involving the death of a partner started with 1968's #1 hit, "Honey" by Bobby Goldsboro, about a man grieving for his late wife; her spirit lived on in the tree she planted Jim Croce's "Time in a Bottle" was used in the 1972 TV movie "She Lives" starring Desi Arnaz Jr., in a plotline similar to Love Story. And there was the 1976 song "Rocky" by Austin Roberts about a man grieving for his late wife, who died of cancer but left a piece of her behind in their baby daughter.

    • @obgfoster
      @obgfoster 5 місяців тому +1

      Daddy don't you walk so fast and Time in a bottle were also saf.

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 5 місяців тому +1

      A great time for sad songs.

  • @j_cbat
    @j_cbat 5 місяців тому +14

    My family moved to Belgium in the summer of 73 from Canada, this song takes me right back there. I am a huge fan of Jacques Brel ( your pronunciation needs some work) this was a great story, esp. your connection with your father. All the Best jcb

    • @nestorcarvalho8550
      @nestorcarvalho8550 5 місяців тому +2

      To work on the French pronunciation I would recommend Adam to listen carefully Nina Simone's cover of "Ne me quitte pas". It means 'do not leave me'.

    • @dustybrand
      @dustybrand 5 місяців тому

      Pro-tip: leave off the snide, shitty comments about pronunciation.

    • @debbieomi
      @debbieomi 5 місяців тому +3

      ​@@dustybrand
      What was snide or shitty? There was nothing wrong with a gentle aside about pronunciation.

    • @j_cbat
      @j_cbat 5 місяців тому +2

      @@dustybrand get a sense of humour.

    • @assassindelasaucisse.4039
      @assassindelasaucisse.4039 5 місяців тому +1

      @@nestorcarvalho8550 Nina Simone's pronunciation is not great. Just listen to actual French speaker, like the aformentioned Jacques Brel for example (who sang the original "ne Me Quitte Pas"), best way to improve.
      Same advice for any languages.

  • @jonbenjisnomore7935
    @jonbenjisnomore7935 5 місяців тому +13

    Thanks POR for covering under rated & under appreciated Canadian talent like Terry Jacks. Have you covered the Stampeders yet? They had more hits than just the banjo featured " Sweet City Woman". Hit the road Jack, Ramona, Wild Eyes, Carry me, New Orleans, San Diego, Playin in the Band, Bring the house Down, Oh my Lady, Sweet Love Bandit.

    • @billybandyk0720
      @billybandyk0720 5 місяців тому +1

      Mr. Jehovah; DEFINITELY "Wild Eyes" by the Stampeders.

  • @rwmiller9062
    @rwmiller9062 5 місяців тому +2

    One of your best videos! I was a high school "musician" in a rock band, so you would think I paid attention to the lyrics, but no. So I enjoy hearing the back story and finding out what the song was really about. Grew up in Idaho Falls in the 60's, so maybe we were sort of neighbors. Congrats on a great YT channel.

  • @daveautzen9089
    @daveautzen9089 5 місяців тому +39

    I knew this was going to be “Seasons in the Sun” just from the title of the video! I’ve always loved this song…I think I wore out the 45 I had!

    • @Jims_Camera_at_dawn
      @Jims_Camera_at_dawn 5 місяців тому +2

      Terry had his own pet sounds in singing right down the line. Unique to say the least. That he shops this song around is amazing. Familiar story, isn't it? Thank goodness Terry stood up as leader of the band and made this song a hit. I have the 45 still to this day. Thanks POR! ☕️☕️ 🎶🎵🎶

    • @DanieVargas
      @DanieVargas 5 місяців тому +1

      See, and while Adam was doing his intro, I was SURE he was talking about Gilbert O’Sullivan’s song. About the singer who was about to kill himself! It’s kinda sad sounding but I never bothered to listen to the words until about 4 or 5 years ago! it had been a favorite song of mine but I had no clue WHAT the song was about! LOL

    • @bobina05
      @bobina05 5 місяців тому

      I even tried to steal the 45 when I was about 13. I LOVE that song. Sang it all the time as a little kid in the 70s.

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 5 місяців тому +1

      I guessed it instantly.

  • @Heene1028
    @Heene1028 5 місяців тому +24

    One more memory: Seasons in the sun was being played on the radio regularly in 1974, when my childhood friends were moving back to Argentina. We knew each other since we were nine or 10… And the day they left, the father of another friend came to get me and his daughter out of school to drive us to the ship they were sailing on, to say goodbye. I had a feeling I would never see them again, and I never did… I tried reconnecting on Facebook, but unfortunately, those youth time relationships had actually died and I am crying again over this song and what it has meant to me❤💕😭😭😭

  • @NeilDeal2023
    @NeilDeal2023 18 днів тому

    Learned so much about a song I loved as a 70s kid.
    Why can't I give this video more than one thumbs up? Thanks PofR! So well done!

  • @Rollin_L
    @Rollin_L 5 місяців тому +2

    Old guy here, remembering when this song hit the charts. I heard it on AM radio regularly and always listened closely. I had no particular attachment in terms of a relatable story, but the emotion of it was always something I felt I could appreciate. Thanks for sharing the story, Professor!

  • @mochs3869
    @mochs3869 5 місяців тому +6

    Professor - please take this full circle and do an episode on Terry Jacks' wife Susan and "Which Way You Goin', Billy" from their group The Poppy Family. Such a beautifully haunting song.

    • @ueno1
      @ueno1 5 місяців тому

      I second this! Susan was great!

    • @rogervondrasek5677
      @rogervondrasek5677 5 місяців тому +1

      A voice I would put right with Olivia, Karen, and Linda. Not only on Billy, but That's Where I Went Wrong, and You Took My Moonlight. She could also do psychedelic on No Blood in Bone.

    • @Era515
      @Era515 5 місяців тому +1

      Susan had a beautiful voice; she sang with emotion and pureness and from all accounts she was a terrific person too. I was sad to hear she died in April 2022.

  • @amorylovin2137
    @amorylovin2137 5 місяців тому

    This was really great! Thank you for doing the research and putting this together. Loved this song when I was young and did not know the background at all.

  • @CirclesOfGrowth
    @CirclesOfGrowth 4 місяці тому

    Thank you for sharing about you and your father. Well, about this song, I always thought it was very simple, but when I was hurting, it helped me somehow. I’m glad it was there for people when we needed to hear it.

  • @dianecopeland4491
    @dianecopeland4491 5 місяців тому

    Thanks for all the stories! Such a sweet picture of you and your family!

  • @TerryBollinger
    @TerryBollinger 5 місяців тому +2

    That was a beautiful commentary about your dad at the end. Thank you!

  • @shuroom57
    @shuroom57 5 місяців тому

    Adam, thank you for sharing your passion for not only music but how its pure, inspirational power can bring people together, sometimes when nothing else does. I lost my Dad too, ten years ago. It's hard.

  • @illiambarna9470
    @illiambarna9470 5 місяців тому +1

    Thank you for sharing that part of your journey. For me it was my mother who passed away in 1973, when I was just 16. It took decades for me to come to terms with her loss.

  • @toddhelms4037
    @toddhelms4037 Місяць тому +1

    Professor, I am blown away . Your knowledge and how well you present everything is truly on a level of it's own. You have been given the torch from the late great Kacy Kacem. Keep up the great work and thankyou.

  • @kurtmitchell6839
    @kurtmitchell6839 4 місяці тому

    This is why I love this channel! Adam can take a song I can't stand, tell its enthralling behind-the-scenes story, and make me consider it in a whole new light. I'll never like "Seasons in the Sun" but now I can at least respect it.

  • @terryhart4090
    @terryhart4090 5 місяців тому

    Wow! What a heartfelt introspective for you, you really shared your heart on this one. You've had a great life (thus far) and a wonderful family! God Bless you Adam, my you continue to prosper and be blessed!

  • @wesleygleason5868
    @wesleygleason5868 5 місяців тому

    Great video! Thanks for sharing your story! ❤️😌👍🏼

  • @toddm149
    @toddm149 5 місяців тому

    As always you provide such great content! I loved and still love this song today!

  • @christophercox8428
    @christophercox8428 5 місяців тому

    Great commentary with an added personal touch, Loved it.

  • @timduch1
    @timduch1 5 місяців тому

    such great coverage and sharing so appreciative of what you bring into the world

  • @davidblack3290
    @davidblack3290 5 місяців тому

    Thank you for telling us your story and the story of this song as well as the others. I was teen was this came out and I remember it fondly but even more so now.

  • @eliseintheattic9697
    @eliseintheattic9697 5 місяців тому +2

    I never knew this was a feel good song. It always made me cry. It came out when I was pretty young and for some reason we all loved sad, intense songs back then.

  • @martineldritch
    @martineldritch 5 місяців тому +20

    ...but the hills that we climbed were just seasons out of time

  • @jackr.1609
    @jackr.1609 5 місяців тому

    Thank you, Adam! Love your videos, but this one was outstanding!

  • @johnbauman4005
    @johnbauman4005 5 місяців тому +9

    Had forgotten Rod McKuen. Cringey poet every 14-15 y/o girl adored in the late 60's - early 70's. So self impressed. Thanks SO much for resurrecting that memory. Restarting active repression now.

  • @shawnlowrance6528
    @shawnlowrance6528 5 місяців тому

    Hey Adam, I remember having this album on a 8 track that was part of my record player. I was 9 or 10 years old at that time. I also had a 8 track of Tony Orlando and Dawn that I played the heck out of. Fond memories of my childhood. Seasons in the Sun was one of my favorite songs back then, still is. Thanks for doing a episode about this song. The whole album is a good listen. Keep bringin' em and we'll keep watchin'.

  • @jeanninebagley6354
    @jeanninebagley6354 5 місяців тому +3

    How did I miss this song ? Probably because my mom never let me dwell on sad songs … I miss my mom so much , this song is super touching to me - thank you for sharing

    • @TheGlssr60
      @TheGlssr60 5 місяців тому

      I have a whole collection of sad songs. Sad songs usually have the best melodies IMHO.

  • @jonathanirvin2201
    @jonathanirvin2201 5 місяців тому

    Once again, professor, you've gobsmacked me with a perfect exposition of the wonderful spirit behind the music we all love! That's why I and thousands of others are part of your community!

  • @jeansalzman2.012
    @jeansalzman2.012 5 місяців тому

    Wonderful review. I love this song. I had no idea what it was about. Your legacy from your Dad is priceless. You, indeed, had seasons in the sun.

  • @lawrencetalbot55
    @lawrencetalbot55 5 місяців тому

    I wouldn't have guessed Terry Jacks, Professor. You really do come up with some of the greatest songs of all time!! I will tell you, quite truthfully, that I actually have Seasons In the Sun in my mp3 player. This was one of my top favorites, of which there are many, admittedly. But I always felt there must be a sad story behind that song, thanks for digging our music and for digging out the nuggets!! Great show, I'm going to be sharing this.

  • @user-ti1vs2qf3l
    @user-ti1vs2qf3l 5 місяців тому

    I vividly remember this song. Even though it was a sappy, seemingly formulaic song, it always hit me, often made me tear up. I think because Terry Jacks came across as so genuine it didn’t matter that it seemed a calculated tear-jerker. I never knew the backstory. Learning, now, that it was about his dying friend it makes sense that he came across as sincere and genuine - it’s because he was. It was a song I loved (and hated). Loved, because it made me feel loss so intensely, and that made me feel my connection with family and friends more deeply. Hated…because it made me feel loss so intensely. Ha! Once again you make the story more meaningful by freely sharing personal details of your own life. You emulate the same sincere genuineness that make me love this song. For me, it is a huge part of why I love this channel. I appreciate your willingness to be so open, and hope you never change. I hope fame never causes you to lose your genuine, honest, down-to-earth nature.

  • @temperingtantrum
    @temperingtantrum 5 місяців тому

    Great video Prof! Finding out the reasons for songs is something I both love and hate. I love getting inside the head of the person writing, learning their reasons for what they wrote. I hate finding out that a song I love and either know the words to or can fake them well, doesn't say or mean what I thought it did. I have always loved music in other languages, and used to try to figure out what they meant just by the music. I remember falling in love with a Celtic song and holding it up with Mozart's 5th for what it made me feel. Then a friend who also loved it looked into it (this was before the net was really a thing) and found out it was about doing farm chores. Milking the cow, feeding the chickens. It was soul breaking for a while..

  • @juliepreston3088
    @juliepreston3088 5 місяців тому

    Thank you, Adam. This actually made me cry remembering the passing of a childhood friend.

  • @Eric_B
    @Eric_B 5 місяців тому

    Thank you for sharing your story about your father in this video, Adam. 🙏🏼

  • @frank_av8tor
    @frank_av8tor 5 місяців тому

    Perhaps your very best video yet. The song is haunting, I remember hearing it as a 9 year old and not fully getting it.

  • @scottroder5516
    @scottroder5516 5 місяців тому

    Another great video Professor. I heard this a lot in 1974 and 1975

  • @johnspillman
    @johnspillman 13 днів тому

    Your stories about your dad are great. I was born in 1963 & my dad was 37 so we had no musical connection like that. He lost his mother when he was a child & had to help raise his younger siblings, school was only a luxury when the weather was too bad for him to work the fields in rural Louisiana and he had his feet freeze in Germany during WW2. He had to pretend to swallow meds then spit them out later because the Army wanted to amputate them. He was a good man & died when I was 21 so I never really got to know him as an adult.

  • @Dan-dg9pi
    @Dan-dg9pi 5 місяців тому

    It was one of the first singles I owned. I think you hit the nail on the head with the tension between the lyrics and the more upbeat mood of Terry's vocal pitch and melody. Hearing that open riff takes me right back to 1974. Good times in Detroit.

  • @erinriwen
    @erinriwen 2 місяці тому

    I’m 63. I was 13 when this song came out and I remember vividly the first time I heard it, bought the single and played it at school parties. I played the 45 to death, going through 3 copies. I still love it so much. Thanks for doing this deep dive.

  • @duaneperkins8329
    @duaneperkins8329 5 місяців тому

    Always loved this song...one of my favorite songs as a kid. I was thirteen when it came out and remember so very well. Took a few listening before I really understood the song. Thanks for covering!

  • @annafrost8659
    @annafrost8659 5 місяців тому +1

    Awesome song! Indeed, the opening guitar line is great…..amazed to have just learned that it was played by Link Wray.. Thanks for the info Professor 🎸👍😎🇳🇿

  • @cindyheun6936
    @cindyheun6936 4 місяці тому

    My sister introduced me to this song when I was a little kid and it made me cry and it still does and when you listen to the words as I did when I grew up, you realize how deep it is now heartfelt. The emotions are when you know you’re losing someone very special 20:29 20:29 20:29

  • @duncansbuddy
    @duncansbuddy 5 місяців тому

    "Seasons In The Sun" hit home with me the same as you Professor of Rock. Thanks for sharing.

  • @slipperyj6155
    @slipperyj6155 5 місяців тому

    Hello Professor, my name is Jeff, I was a child of the 70’s. I remember driving with my Mom and Dad, sometimes my one older brother would come along on trips to northern Michigan as I grew up in metro Detroit. I recall Seasons in the Sun playing on the radio, it was very sad but I loved it anyways.
    Thanks for this

  • @DaGaspo
    @DaGaspo 5 місяців тому

    Wow what a story, the first 45 I ever bought was this song, thanks for the background, I had no idea!!!! 💜🙏💜

  • @bartbluemusic
    @bartbluemusic 5 місяців тому +3

    "Seasons in the Sun" was an instant classic - and as soon as you hear it, you can't help but sing along with it. SO infectious! Great vid! (as always) ... :)

  • @llewellynduplantis4019
    @llewellynduplantis4019 5 місяців тому

    ❤ very touching episode Adam thank you i grew up in Canada and heard it alot on the. Radio , reminds me of two of my childhood friends Dean and Trevor who just recently 39 passed on i live in Texas now and have for several years and could not Attend either of the funerals we were the little blue wrecking crew ❤

  • @aneyesky
    @aneyesky 5 місяців тому

    Adam- I watch all your videos. This was just great. Thanks for the work you do for these. My wife loves this song.
    Over your left shoulder is Late for the Sky-Can you do a look into the title track? I tell everyone David Lindley’s solo runs the entire length of the track- a very rare feat and a great tune. Thanks for sharing your personal angle on this especially.

  • @rattyguitars
    @rattyguitars 4 місяці тому

    What a great way to talk about your father and his memories. That really touched me.

  • @kevinl.johnson4549
    @kevinl.johnson4549 5 місяців тому +2

    My mother in law requested this be played at her funeral.
    She was in her 80’s but could sing the verses from memory.
    It was a real tear jerker. ❤

  • @ericflower9855
    @ericflower9855 5 місяців тому

    Your videos make me think of the mid late 80's as a kid and listening to the count down to #1 on Sundays...

  • @cnph7067
    @cnph7067 5 місяців тому

    Prof. Another great episode! I remember this song hitting the stations when I was about 9 yrs old. Even at 9 I remember liking the song but feeling sad at the same time. Funny there are a few pop songs with a similar vain that have been popular - Shanon, Billy Don’t Be A Hero, Wild Fire, and prob my fav. “ Alone Again” .

  • @gioknows
    @gioknows 5 місяців тому

    Ah this song….it was sooooooo popular on the radio back in the 70’s. Terry Jacks had another big hit up here “Christina” which was also a hauntingly beautiful song. “We had joy, we had fun…” l sang those words many times as a kid, this really brings me back. I wonder if my sister still has the 45 record. You tell a great story, Professor. Cheers from Ottawa, Canada 🍁

  • @tssitcom
    @tssitcom 5 місяців тому

    When my grandmother died in February of 1974, of all the songs on the radio, this was the one that will always remind me of that terrible day. Today, I hear it and I think of her. Thank you Terry.

  • @dianamgallagher
    @dianamgallagher 5 місяців тому

    I was 9 years old in 1974, this song was magic, so much of my life was shaped by the songs of that time period, Wildfire, Kung Fu Fighting, Witchy Woman... the adults were boss of the only TV in the house, so outside with the am radio to play and run and listen to the music of our generation. Your story at the end really touched my heart, the love you carry for your dad is like a bright torch and I love it. Bless him and you for carrying on his legacy.

  • @jjaviercampos
    @jjaviercampos 5 місяців тому

    Beautiful words at the end, my friend.

  • @eauhomme
    @eauhomme 5 місяців тому

    Excellent coverage of a classic song. Yes, very heartbreaking once you listen to the lyrics. I found it through Jacques Brel when I was studying French and decided to check out his vinyl at the library. I had heard the Terry Jacks song once or twice, but had never really listened to it. After listening to and translating "Le Moribund", I went back to the library and checked out the Terry Jacks version.

  • @greatsilentwatcher
    @greatsilentwatcher 5 місяців тому

    Always learn stuff about tunes I grew up with. Thanks.

  • @GenXtra65
    @GenXtra65 5 місяців тому +1

    As a young kid in the early 70’s, with the AM radio to keep me company after school, this song was omnipresent. The song came to evoke memories of young men in our neighborhood who were lost in Vietnam. I believe that shared sentiment contributed to its popularity.

  • @skooterfd
    @skooterfd 5 місяців тому +14

    I've always loved this song, Thanks for the incite to its origins! Another song I remember from back then is "The Legend of Billy Jacks - One Tin Soldier".

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  5 місяців тому +5

      Thanks for watching!

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 5 місяців тому +2

      I think I know that song.

    • @emom358
      @emom358 5 місяців тому +3

      One Tin Soldier was an awesome song, perfect for the singer Jinx

    • @johnbauman4005
      @johnbauman4005 5 місяців тому +2

      *Jack, not Jacks.

    • @skooterfd
      @skooterfd 5 місяців тому +2

      @@johnbauman4005 Yeah I know the name of the character and movie was Billy Jack, but I was referring to the fact that the song belonged to the movie, thus showing possession it would end in an 's'!

  • @ScooterOnHisWay2024
    @ScooterOnHisWay2024 Місяць тому

    This song was one of the most beautiful songs ever played on the radio. Musically beautiful and lyrically passionate.