Rapper FIRST time REACTION to Buffalo Springfield - For What It's Worth 1967
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- Опубліковано 10 тра 2024
- #buffalospringfield #reaction
Rapper FIRST time REACTION to Buffalo Springfield - For What It's Worth 1967
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In 1967 I was 20 years old and wanted change. Today I am 76 years old, and I still want change. In those 56 years I have seen that the more things change, the more they stay the same.
That's the way the people that control the world want it to be. They are very manipulative - keep us fighting each other all the time. Nobody's right if everybody's wrong. We never get the things we really want or need.
Amen brother. We step forward yet leap backwards. Same as it ever was.
Meet the new boss, same as the old boss,
I was 20 years old in 1967 also, a student at Kent State University.
@@patticrichton1135 You know. The guy watching this needs to hear the story
As relevant TODAY as it was back in the day!
Yup, unfortunately it is a cyclic prophecy.
Neil Young on the electric guitar solos..... amazing baby!!!
This is relevant EVERYDAY.
Neil Young, Steven Stills, Bruce Palmer (Emerson, Lake & Palmer) Jim Messina are Rock Royalty! Buffalo Springfield is Rock Royalty!
it was Carl Palmer who was drummer in Emerson Lake & Palmer they were all from the UK. Keith Emerson and Greg Lake were the other 2 members. Love Stephen Stills and the guys that were in Buffalo Springfield
Vietnam, civil Rights movement, all of that was going on during this time.
“Nobody’s right if everybody’s wrong.”
should be the tagline for 2020
Reminds me of politics.
I still love this song 55 years later
Steven Stills is a HIGHLY under rated guitarist. His writing and singing is always top notch. Later in Crosby, Stills, & Nash he really was one of the best!
Steven Stills, Manasses, also a favorite album from him.
His solo work in the 80's is immaculate. Neil Young played lead guitar on this track.
Plus he was almost on The Monkees with Peter Tork!
In case you don't know, there are Stills/Hendrix jam sessions readily available.
& Young
Highly underrated band - really cleared the way for CSNY a few years later.
This song, "Ohio" by CSNY, "Eve of Destruction" by Barry Maguire. Lennon. You can't hear war protest songs anymore on the radio because of franchising. It was a better world when people called out evil, rather than just talk about women and $$.
Also, phil ochs but he didn't have much radio time
Don't forget about Country Joe and the fish.
yasssssssssssss BP please check out those 2 songs!!!!
Don't forget the grand daddy of them all! Masters of War by Dylan
@@gremlyn1439 What are we fighting for? Don't ask me i don't give a damn (yada yada) Well we ain't got time to wonder why, WHOOPEE were all gonna die. sORRY I WAS IN A HURRY TO SPIT OUT THE HOOK.
Yes this is the original and the writer. "For What It's Worth" by Buffalo Springfield is often considered an anti-war song, but it's actually about the group's stance on anti-loitering laws and the 1966 Sunset Strip riots. The song was written by Stephen Stills after witnessing a riot outside a club on the Sunset Strip where young people were protesting a curfew. The Sunset Strip was a popular area for rock and roll counterculture in the 1960s, and the song also addresses the closing of the West Hollywood nightclub, Pandora's Box. Another song by Buffalo Springfield, Bluebird ua-cam.com/video/yKHY8MXgiz0/v-deo.htmlsi=U9aTPAADPNnpSEwJ The band members interchanged making different groups in the 60, and the members are more famous that the bands, so for people not living back then, learning the members is more important in understanding the dynamics of the music. It was a great time to be alive and made this music the most meaningful in my lifetime, though I love all music. My only hope it that all others who sample these songs know the meaning and cost to humanity and what the young people wanted to birth in these times of great unrest. We were changing the world and only got credit for making things worse. We are the Boomers. We started the fires of change, but did not really have control of world events that became our reality. Today is another big time of change with huge cost to human rights and death of humanity... Shine on all you crazy diamonds.
Learned something new, Thanks!
I've tried to make the argument about Boomers taking the blame for current sh!t in the world. The people who created the crap we're living through now are the next generation from the Boomers. How they came to be the way they are with the example set by the Boomers generation is beyond my comprehension.
Yep.. One of the most misunderstood songs of my era. Parents letting kids run on the streets was terrible. I ran into many 12 year old girls smoking bud and drinking. and whatever. With the war going on and crazy politics, it's easy to see why it was lost in the mix.
So correct, fellow Boomer. We were the first generation to question the Status Quo and not want to continue blindly doing “just because”. We questioned The Establishment” and the military industrial complex.
@@ElsieDee001what about the Beats? You were not the first, nor last, to question bourgeois capitalism and it's war machine, but glad you did
Gotta love a young Neil Young with those legendary sideburns....
I don't think you need to apologize for the "sampling" by hip hop or other genres. It's an excellent way to get introduced to a band. I love that you go digging for the originals.
Rock music stood on the shoulders of the blues so hip hop using rock to enhance makes complete sense
Believe me most, not all, young black youth who love rap are not going to know where the sample was taken or anything about the rock band it was "borrowed" from. I'm sure they would never listen to the original!
most hip hoppers are void of talent so they sample those that had talent back in the day. It's not right.
So you don't think it's "Cultural Appropriation"?
@@noradeclark9283 Many artists stole liberally from black artists. Elvis, Led Zeppelin etc. They stole from really talented people who got no money or credit. It's not right
Buffalo Springfield existed from 1966-68. Released three albums. This was their biggest hit. Obviously, a protest song. The lead singer is Stephen Stills.
After the band broke up, Stills united with David Crosby (formerly of The Byrds) and Graham Nash (formerly of The Hollies) and formed... wait for it... "Crosby, Stills and Nash." They also had Dallas Taylor on drums and Greg Reeves on bass. Sometimes Neil Young, who had also been in Buffalo Springfield, joined with them. So, they alternately operated as CS&N or as CSN&Y. Young is the composer and lead singer of the group's 1970 protest song "Ohio," about the Kent State shootings.
Both Stills and Young have substantial bodies of work as solo and informal collaboration artists as well.
Members of Buffalo Springfield became Crosby, Stills and Nash. There was a lot of unrest at the time. The war, the draft, civil rights and the protests that sprang up got the attention of the man, who called the heat. There's always a lot going on and the 60's had it's share.✌️
It was just Stephen STILLS and Neil YOUNG that came from Buffalo Springfield. David CROSBY came from THE BYRDS, and Graham NASH came from THE HOLLIES. 🙂🙂
@@patticrichton1135 duly noted.👍
I have always loved that song. That is Neil Young with the huge sideburns.!
Yes it's really cool, and how they came together later and also did their own things, both super talented.
They were called mutton chops
I noticed him too. This led to Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young, another great band.
Another oldie but goodie revived by Black Pegasus!! Thanks again. ☺👍
We were the first generation that didn't want to be just like our parents; that wanted change, that wanted an end to war and had a voice to be heard. It was certainly an amazing time to be a teenager/young adult.
We were also the first teenagers…term was invented for our generation.
@jaccilowe3842, yes it was, I was of that age during that time too.
It was originally about the riots over the curfews imposed in LA but it is so well done each generation since has been able to apply it to hte issues of the day. I think we could all use their advice today: "Stop children, what's that sound? Everybody look whats going down."
Steven Stills. Brilliant writer. This is a protest song. No over thinking needed.
Kent State. you don't forget
That would be "Ohio"
@@lynnesears6254 And it would be several years later
Four dead in Ohio
I was still in high school about 25 miles from Kent State with friends who were students there. I remember.
This was after Stephen Stills saw Protesters in L.A., being attacked by the Cops. 🐽
Hard to believe that this song is still relevant even today.
Society has gotten worse not better.
Even more so today! 😭
Buffalo Springfield was the short-lived but awesome 60s band that brought us legends Stephen Stills and Neil Young, among others. Check out "Mr. Soul" from their second album. 😊
Yay! CSNY!! 🎉
Richie Furay went on to form Poco, some of whose members went on to be with Eagles and Loggins & Messina. 🙂
Also Firefall
@@schirpik oh, who was in Firefall?
@@lynnesears6254 My bad it was Rick Roberts but it was Still's band
Manassas not Buffalo Springfield.
A lot of artists from this time we're singing about being against Vietnam. So relevant today. Peace out ✌️ ☮️
But the war wasn't what the song was about
I'm 70 so I grew up when music was made by the people who actually played the instruments and sang without fine tuning! I don't care for rap ,hip hop, I know it's a new generation thing, where's the actual talent? I appreciate you diving into our generation of music 🥰
I'm 76 and am so grateful to have been around for decades of great music. And like you said just great songwriters and talent! No auto tune, and to me the sound was so much better! ❤️
@@sandralybrand9425 I agree with you. I turned 77 in March, so we are close in age. I am so glad I was born when I was, so that I would be growing up during that period.
Recognizing cycles is important. It’s hard to miss the similarities in what’s happening today. Always been a favorite of mine. Thanks for this one!
Yeah, about every 50 years or so.
"Singing songs and carrying signs...Mostly say 'Hooray for our side' "...such a prophetic lyric given all the 'protests' these days where the 'protesters' resemble the fans out to support their favorite football team...
A lot of people think it's a war protest song but according to the songs writer Stephen Stills (Crosby, Stills & Nash) the song was about the Los Angeles curfew riots in 1966.
Yes. Correct.
Yes I deleted my comment cuz I know there's going to be a lot of damn arguing over it.
The larger context was the war.
#truestory
It's a Protest song
I’ve always loved this song! ❤❤❤❤
This was one of the most popular protest songs of the era.
This song is still fitting of the times.
Buffalo Springfield was my favorite band in college. I actually attended their final concert as headliners. One-hit-wonders October Country opened followed by Gary Puckett and the Union Jack. Great concert!
"What a field day for the heat"
I was 14 when this was popular. I still love this song.
Me too!! Neil Young was my 1st rock’n’roll crush with the sideburns and fringed suede jackets! Love this band to this day. This was “my” band, when everyone was looking at the Beatles and Stones.
Me too, I've always loved this band. This song is the best!
love when classic songs are sampled.... sincerest form of flattery
In the mid-sixties, a lot of youngsters would congregate around Sunset Blvd., in L.A.
There were great music venues and sometimes the kids would even stop traffic.
This was when the "freaks" got loose, and the cops were called in to break it up.
The cops came in and broke some heads, too.
Thus, Stephen Stills reaction via "For What It's Worth."
Peace on earth.
Now you are in my wheelhouse!! I just loved them and this was what my generation voiced for change. We still need change.
74 year old black Vietnam veteran. That war was wrong.
When you're young sometimes you can't be told anything because you already know everything.
Buffalo Springfield was (in retrospect) rock & roll royalty, because it was made up of members who later went on to form bands like Crosby, Stills & Nash (& sometimes Young), Poco, Loggins & Messina and The Souther-Hillman-Furay Band, not to mention the solo careers of Stephen Stills, Neil Young, Richie Furay and Jim Messina. The Byrds and Buffalo Springfield were basically responsible for launching the LA rock and pop scene of the 60s and 70s, and their musical footprints are all over other genres like country and Americana.
Stephen Stills wrote the song about the Sunset Strip Riots of 1966, particularly the attempts to close down the nightclub Pandora's Box. Stills, who'd grown up partly in Latin America, saw the protests happening and then saw the riot police approaching, and it reminded him of the repressive Gestapo-like approach of Latin American riot police. He got the hell out of Sunset Strip, went home and wrote the song.
I was 12 when this album (vinyl) was newly released. I had a mad "crush" on the lead singer Stephen Stills (cowboy hat). My "crush" turned into administration for his talent.. I'm still a fan of Crosby Stills Nash (Young) all these years later. I'm a Southern California native. 😉
I graduated highschool in 1967... Vietnam was probably the biggest protest focus....so was racist issues... the whole "God is dead" thing.... hippy lifestyle issues...it wasn't a pretty time, but then when has there been a really pretty time where humans are involved 😢😢😢
It was about a riot in LA, caused when the city/mayor tried to crack down on the hippies and kids on the strip at night, by imposing a curfew. That did not go down well.
The song isn't specific to the event, but captures the spirit of all such events such that it is now timeless.
Hooray for our side!
I was 18 when this came out …I loved it then and I still do. I think we need more protest songs these days…
This was in the midst of the Vietnam war and they were observing the politics of it, this song is as strong today as it was then. Deep meaning.
I am reminded of "Masters of War" (Bob Dylan).
They protested anything they thought was wrong. I studied Rachel Carson in high school. She wrote Silent Spring about the dying species and this was 1962. I studied her in late 60s. We knew. We cared.
One of my favorite songs of all time.
Its not being irrational…its all about feeling invincable, and that it was our responsibility to make the changes the grown-ups wouldn’t. “If you are not part of the solution, you are part of the problem!” (Popular bumper sticker of the day).
Stephen Stills (of Buffalo Springfield) was on the song with Public Enemy, and he does sing the original hook. My husband said to me that he loves it when rap artists sample classics because it makes him want to go hear the original. He first heard this song on The Muppet's I heard in my parents vinyl collection.
There are absolutely cycles. I don’t always think we look back and realize we’re wrong. I’m in my 50s and still think as I did in my 20s. What I realized is that it’s not as easy to create change as we thought when we were young. Not giving up, but changing strategies to something more realistic.
one of the defining songs of the 1960s
I don't have the words to convey how it felt growing up during this time, the music keeping time with all the things happening in our world. It influences us to this day,
Congratulations on your new baby! SO precious
One of my all-time favorites. It is still relevant today.
Thank you for explaining "sampling." They respected this, at least. Buffalo Springfield led to CSN. Very important band.Both Stephan Stills and Neil Young.
I'm 64, I remember these protests on the news as a kid. Of course my parents thought these kids were rebellious and stupid. I never thought that. Even as young as I was. I grew up at the tail end of hippie Era. I also grew up rebellious, opinionated and resistance to authorities especially government and police. I never protested but got into a few situations where I was arrested. My stand was on equality and race. Ppl that treated others differently based on sex, race and personal choices. Anyhoo..now I'm older. History repeats itself. The young have the energy and wear with all to protest and make waves. I salute them all, no matter the cause.
This song is what was happening at the time, race wars and Vietnam War.
Old Bob Dylan did many tributes to these causes....I always shed a tear when I hear these songs. Stay blessed.❤
Essential song that you NEED to know, bro. Huge part of rock history.
I'd describe young people as not only being much more passionate but much less cynical. As the years go by, reality wears you down, and you have much more to lose. It just becomes easier to fall in line.
Love to all you young people fighting the good fight. ❤
This is so thought-provoking. Memories are running through me - my heart, my soul, and my brain. Too much to talk about.
When I was 15 years old, my best friend and I had a band and we did this song. I still have the recording of us.
2 Great parts of CSNY. Stephen Stills & Neil Young. Saw them 3x ❤ Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young! You must check out "Teach your Children" and "Our House" Amazing Harmonies! RIP David Crosby.🎉
I was 9 when this came out. Played over and over and over etc on my record player. Still listen regularly
Iconic!!! Vietnam, Civil Rights, Equal Rights for Woman.
Love being with you on your career change as an archaeologist.😅
This song and Riders On The Storm are my earliest music memories.
This song has been used in more movies and movie soundtracks than any other song in music history. I read somewhere once that "For What It's Worth" has been used in at least 38 movies. The song was inspired by the Vietnam War Protests going on during the mid to late 1960's.
So relevant for today
66 and still fighting the good fight.
1967 was the summer of love. The term "Summer of Love" originated with the formation of the Council for the Summer of Love during the spring of 1967 as a response to the convergence of young people on the Haight-Ashbury district.
6:57 you're describing what legendary child psychologist Jean Piaget called the "messianic stage" of late adolescence and early adulthood. From Jen's Rogmann (2020): "Here, the stage model is used to explain why, in late adolescence and early adulthood, many young people are prone to adopt idealistic and utopian social and political ideas which they reassert with an almost zealous vigor. Yet, at the same time, and probably due to a lack of experience and an egocentric tendency, they tend to underestimate the difficulties and the ramifications of attempts to implement their ideals in complex, real-world settings."
J. Roggman, Notes on Piaget & Inhelder's Formal Operational Stage as a "Messianic Stage", University of Hamburg 2020
It's an anthem - check out CSN & sometimes Y, they defined a generation - Woodstock (written by Joni Mitchell) Ohio (about shooting of unarmed student protesters at Kent State), Suite: Judy Blue Eyes, just a very wonderful rabbit hole to go down.
Saw your short early this morning with you holding your precious baby girl, congratulations, she is beautiful.
There were no music videos when this was performed. Someone put this together.
Yes, Finally For What it's worth, a song by Buffalo Springfield, written by Stephen Still of Crosby Stills & Nash sometimes Young.
One Hell of a song.
Here is my take of the first part of the song in my view.
World Freedom
For What It's Worth,...
I hope we all remember that song. Released on Dec, 5, 1966
Songwriter: Stephen Stills. Recorded by: Buffalo Springfield.
They warned us, not just for that time for all times, but did we listen
The sh!t of it is, it didn't stop then, it just changed.
It morphed.
World Freedom,
There's something happening again,
What it is, is getting clearer,
It starts when we gave into fear,
There was a man who once said,
The Only Thing We Have have
To Fear Is...Fear Itself,
It's time We stop
And find that sound!
Everybody!: wake up to
what's going down?
Google search brought this up: “For What It's Worth,” by Buffalo Springfield is often mistaken for an anti-Vietnam War song, but really the song reflects group's stance on anti-loitering laws and the Sunset Strip Riots of 1966.
Oh you mean like what's happening now these past yrs? History does indeed repeat itself doesn't it??
Yes that's true but the anti war movement quickly adopted this song that they identified with. I was in college in early 70s when the anti war protests were prevalent on most college campuses including my own . This song was extremely popular with the anti war protesters, I remember that all too well
Protest song either way
This song was about the Sunset Strip riots of 1966, but it's meaningful for every kind of protest and movement to change the world. It will always meet resistane initially.
All the above .
This and Country Joe McDonald and the Fish's I feel like I'm a fixin to die are probably the two biggest protest songs from the 60s
You are 100% correct - it is all just one. big. hustle. 100%.
One of the handful of songs, that I will call my ALL TIME favorite. Love that guitar riff at the end. '67 Protest were against Vietnam or for civil rights. This song was most likely about Vietnam.
what comes around goes around. and here we are again. it was a very volatile time. i see so much going on now that i've seen before. it's time for us to grow as a society again, and there are always growing pains. this song is as relevant today as it was back in '67.
This is a great song. I remember it well.
I loved it back and still love it and find it relevant still. I am 71.
Buffalo Springfield was the first concert I ever went to. The two most famous members were Stephen Stills and Neil Young. I still have their LP.
Great song, and i love what PE did with it too.
That is a perfect description of the protest mechanism. Thank you
this was from a tv show. i remember watching it way back then 1967 we were protesting everything --- a lot like today
A protest song that has been used in many instances over the years and is generic enough to work for any cause still. brilliant on them.
, young men are more volatile... glad you're digging into past popular music. Music spans centuries but still evokes feelings no matter when. Thank you for keeping it alive, real!
Some people are saying it was a vietnam war protest but it wasn't. It was kids protesting about a curfew which was enforced on them by the authorities and meant they couldn't meet up and go to their music club in the evening. Local shopkeepers had complained it was hurting trade. The police rounded them up every evening and arrested them and put them in vans and charged them for just being there. Then they said they were going to shut the club down. It was it's last night of opening. The kids came out with signs and stood in front of the club. It was a quiet protest, but then the police were called and intimidated them, and all of a sudden it became serious. It was a total over reaction by the police chief to send his men in force like that to deal with basically what was a bunch of teens. It turned into a riot, kids got hurt, property got damaged. Some members of Buffalo Springfield were driving in that direction and were stopped and turned back by an armed policeman. They found out what it was afterwards and wrote that song.
yep, that's it, in those days you could get trip through the justice system for lots of simple things.
Pandora’s Box.
The song actually came out 65-66 it was a protest on Sunset Strip as the authorities were wanting to impose a curfew, music venues like Whiskey a Go go were opening with bands like The Doors, the music was spilling out everywhere. Buffalo Springfield was a short lived band as they went on to become Crosby Stills and Nash and Neil Young (guy with the sideburns) went on to a successful solo career and unintentional godfather of grunge
A song that is still quite relevant, today.
One of my all time favs - thanks for reacting to this awesome song ❤
Possibly my favorite song of all time.
This one is timeless 👏👏👏
I live in Buffalo NY.
My music. Sooooooooooooooooooooooo from my growen up.😊
All rap comes from original rock.🔴
In 1967 there were no original music videos. The group was only together 1966-1968, but post-breakup success showed them to be one of the first super groups. Richie Furay and (late addition) Jim Messina in Poco, and later Messina in Loggins and Messina. Neil Young and Steven Stills in Crosby, Stills and Nash, which at times also included Young, with both Stills and Young having very popular solo careers. Buffalo Springfield released only 3 albums, but their influence in mixing psychedelic, folk and rock was huge; the group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997.
The sounds that came out of this Era are amazing!!! Not easily duplicated. Songs like this, Spirit in the Sky, House of the Rising Sun, and many more❤❤❤
Hey BP. I remember the Public Enemy video having this gentleman in it. Playing that mean riff and singing those lines.
Crosby skills Nash and young recorded a song for dead in Ohio in 1970 that was speaking about the riots that were going on at Kent State University 4 of the protesters were fatally shot. It was a very Violent time in our country until the Vietnam war finally ended.
Title of the song literally comes from when the band was playing some songs for a record exec who didn't think much of what they had and he asked them if they had anything else and Steven Stills said "Well, for what it's worth I have this other one" and played him this song.
This song is about the Vietnam War. I love the channel. I just turned 54, I love music of all genres. I have a fountain of useless knowledge in my head. Love hip-hop and think the sampling and hooks are awesome. Keep making great videos.
The first time I heard this song I was watching The Muppet Show when I was a kid.