If you guys want to know more about Popper’s fight with the black crowes on stern I’ve done a whole video on it th-cam.com/video/_shbjDHKPUQ/w-d-xo.htmlsi=pbnUYXdq-ziOvOSA
Black kid coming from the hood and luvin music. I recognized there talent and still play them. How did i discover them.... working at a computet retail store. They had a different sound that stood out. Fav is The Mountains Win Again. One of my fav to play when going hiking. We only live once..... enjoy the world while you can, and limit your hate.
I met Popper at a party in Princeton (I lived in nearby PA) right before the first record came out. I had a drum set there from a previous jam session, and my buddy had a couple of guitars. Our host encouraged us to play, and we cobbled together a little power trio to back up Popper. At this point, I'd never heard him play or sing. He called out some blues tune, and proceeded to just blow the roof off the place. Later that week, we went to some joint in New York to see the band, and they had like 300 people packed into this tiny little room. It was one of those dancing-on-the-tables type nights. I was an instant fan.
@@ilacallya324 does he still live in Quakertown? I grew up there, went to Qtown high school in the 80s. I caught a bunch of Dead shows in college, and headed down to Florida for the '89 Miami shows. I fell in love with the weather and still live here to this day. I was home visiting my folks one Christmas, and a bartender at Wagon Wheel told me Popper was living nearby (I think off of Richlandtown Pike, but this was quite a long time ago, so I could be misremembering that)
They were college nerd dorks not caring what music they thought was cool, but I went to stagecoach In irvine SoCal and for SoCal a country concert was the most polite non-pretentious Orange County thing you could do, chicks were cool and dudes friendly no attitude for the area it was in. That was shocking how friendly people were.
From 1989 through 1993, there was no better blues / jam rock band. I saw them around 50 times in this era and they were dripping with true power jam rock, exploding every 100 to 1000 seat standing room bar or small theatre into an insane ecstatic frenzies. They mastered their instruments, wrote beautiful songs and could take songs into the ether or in any direction just to land gracefully back to Earth. Unfortunately to most OG fans, the album "Four" and the included hits made them fall into the pop MTV area. They deserved every cent but it got a tad fluffy. Chan, the guitarist, has said this much in a few interviews. It killed their hunger where the money brought a certain laziness. To me, "Travellers & Thieves" is the best rock / jam album of the 1990's. All songs are legendary in both lyrics and instrumental sections. A true classic. Great video. Thanks.
The first time I saw them was in some relatively tiny New York bar called, if memory serves, Caroline's. I don't think it was the same Caroline's as the comedy club with the same name, but I could be wrong. Saw them not long after at The Wetlands in NYC, where they alternated sets with Baba Olatunji's Drums of Passion. The best part was that they swapped players one by one between the two bands (like Sheehan would switch with Baba's bassist, then Chan switched with the guitarist) while the jam kept going. So, in the immortal words of the Grateful Dead, the music never stopped...
Four was my first introduction and I had to buy the cassette 3 times because I kept wearing it out. That caused me to go back and buy the first 3 albums. I couldn't even tell you which is my favorite because all 4 are so freaking good. Compared to those, I was less impressed with Straight on til Morning, and then the band wholly changed with the loss of Bobby. No specific album since has lived up to the first 4, but I still get them all.
Even though Blues Traveler aren't a band I listen to regularly, I respect them, and their two big hits capture their style really well. I saw them live twice and was fortunate to have Chan Kinchla as my very first interview for a local newspaper I wrote for. Glad their music still resonates!
I have been to hundreds of concerts. Nothing has ever been as good as the vibe and groove that I experienced at one of their shows in the late 90s that stretched to about 4 hours long. They were an electric jam band.
I'm jealous. My fifth and last show was in April of 1995 in Ames, Iowa. Also saw them in Iowa City, Minneapolis, Omaha and Kansas City in venues of 400-18,000 people and they never disappointed. Met Bobby and Brendan at separate shows. It's hard to see them anymore. Real life and fewer shows.
I have something in common with the lead singer. At one point I was 500.91 pounds (in freedom units), and today I am at 178 and have been there for almost two decades now. We had the exact same surgery.
big congratulations getting the surgury and getting the weight off is one thing keeping it off after is biggest challenge of all it seems at least for many.
@@rnrtruestoriesmost people with this surgery still have the same cravings for their favorite food it's just that they can't eat as much as before due to feeling full faster.
I had the same. After so many years of being very active in sports and military service I wrecked my back. I went from 195lbs to 403lbs at my worse. Now 16 years later I’m at 195 and maintaining. You do divorce yourself from eating and that is depressing but you eventually get past that phase. You no longer crave the sugar, fat, etc. I maintain my protein and supplements. My life is so much more enriched. It’s not for everyone and for a while I felt shame that I took the easy way out in some opinions. The easy way out would actually be for me to continue putting on weight and eventually die. Peace.
Blues Traveler arguably helped kick off the old school hard rock revival that began when grunge fizzled in the mid-90s, and though I don’t really listen to them much nowadays, they were a needed breath of fresh air in their prime. I caught them at The HORDE festival in ‘97 along with Primus and Neil Young. One of the better concerting events of my teens.
@@daytonasayswhat9333No, listen to the lyrics. It's literally says that it doesn't matter what the lyrics are as long as the melody is good and you have a catchy hook, the stupid masses will eat up a pop song.
@@northofnashira2575 the hilarious part is that it's the chord progression of Pachabel's "Canon" - it's been used so many times it's not funny. Total failsafe that drives the point home.
@@northofnashira2575 I see. Yeah they’re like really giving the middle finger and stuff. They were signed to a major label and had a major producer. They’re like so rebellious and stuff.
I grew up hearing that song, it was all over the place in the mid 90s. I never really listened too carefully to the lyrics, maybe because I was a kid at the time. But I liked it and thought it was a neat, catchy song. Then I really listened to it as an adult, and found it incredible. It was really right out there in front of us the whole time, and it went right over so many peoples heads, including mine. It's an incredible song, though. Very clever.
Saw them a few years ago in Philly and we were blown away. As good as their albums are they are an absolute treat to see live. It was one of my favorite shows!!!
It's sad that Sheehan died and that other members of the band had so many problems over the years. I am happy to report that other than missing Bobby, the band is otherwise alive and well and as good as ever. I heard them in concert in Primm, NV last weekend. It was an excellent concert. Their new album Traveler's Soul is excellent. Everyone should hear it.
I saw them at a casino a couple years ago. Popper had twisted his knee and did the show in a recliner. It was still pretty rad though. The guitar player sounds GREAT in person. I think he was using HiWatt amps.
I showed up in college as a freshman. The very first rock concert I ever attended was Blues Traveler. I had literally been away at college for days and a couple of dorm mates went to the Anaconda theaters. And damn. Just blown away. My own incredible introduction to live music was Blues Traveler in 1991.
Right I thought it was dumb that he didn't know anything about harmonicas. Also super weird that he said "popper would admit to carrying..." like what did he have to admit? 😅
John Popper is the Jimi Hendrix of harmonica. I play a bit of blues harp, but I have absolutely no idea how he plays like that. It’s truly mind blowing.
I love Blues Traveler, they came into the scene with a new sound and style that was much needed and made them stand out from anyone else. I watched as Popper ballooned and seriously expected to hear he had passed from heart disease. One of my favorites is “Canadian Rose”, I love Poppers playing and voice on that song.
You should have been at the Ranch Bowl show in 1994. They played until venue management cut the power to the amps after 1 am. I stumbled out of there drenched in sweat and smiling from ear to ear. It was life-affirming.
I saw these guys by accident some time ago in Chicago in the early 90s - my Roomate couldn’t get a ticket for his girlfriend so he gave me his. I was completely blown away. I had no idea what to expect. Popper’s voice wow. We of course dropped acid . I remember stumbling out of the Metro at 4 am . It seemed like they payed all night
Talk about a spooky coincidence!!! At the same time i was watching this video, runaround began playing on the radio, here at my job, lol. I'm glad that John Popper was finally able to get his weight issues under control. I remember jam bands like Blues Traveler, Big Head Todd & Monsters, Hootie & the Blowfish, Spin Doctors, were huge in the early to mid '90s!
I was fortunate enough to discover BT on their solo album. I got to see them live at Red Rocks when "Hook" hadn't been released yet. I had tickets to another show that had to be canceled due to Popper's heart attack. Their first 3 albums get overlooked, unfortunately along with their 5th. As good as "Four" is, it mask how unbelievable their other albums are. Their music is so much better than casual listeners will know.
Everyone remembers “Hook” and “Runaround” and so few listen to Travelers and Thieves which is by far their best Album. Blows everything else out of the water. Every song on the album is sonic perfection. And unfortunately it’s so good that their other albums feel lacking of any real musical substance. The faint trumpeting of elephants as “Onslaught” fades away and “Ivory Tusk” kicks in. Just beautiful. Perhaps one of the most underrated albums.
Fledgling from Save His Soul is one of the best songs I’ve ever known. Epic Blues Traveler, and a John Popper tour de force for vocals and harp. Amazing tune.
I've seen Blues Traveler well over 100 times live. I've got 4 Popper harmonicas, 4-5 drumsticks and guitar picks. They were my favorite 90's band. It hasn't been the same since Bobby died. Popper is the greatest harmonica player that ever lived.
I saw them a lot between '92-'95. Still love them. Met Bobby waiting near their bus in 1992 in Iowa City. He asked for directions to a bar nearby. He never showed, though.
i freaking love John that dude was born with a harmonica in his mouth. i brought their album when it came out and love and play their songs to this day. i remember catching their cameo appearance on Roseanne and also the movie with Tim Allen and Kirsty Alley For richer or poorer.
I met Popper in 2000. Dude was a bit cuckoo. Before the show he was crazy concerned about the security and freaking out we only had one "armed personnel" supporting the event. I mean, we were at a no-name SUNY school in the middle of nowhere, NY. The biggest security threat we ever faced was some drunk kid going out the alarmed door (clearly marked, with flickering light... he was that trashed)
Ah, now I get why when he was pulled over once they found that his vehicle had a stash of hidden compartments, which contained four rifles, nine handguns, a switchblade knife, a Taser, a set of brass knuckles, and night vision goggles. Paranoia can be a bitch.
@SuperStrik9 I just googled that because I wasn't sure if it was a joke that went over my head. Nope, he totally did. I guess I'm not altogether surprised, though.
@@SuperStrik9 Happened in rural Washington state along I-90. Made a big splash in the local news, but it turned out every single thing in the car was legally owned with no nefarious intent. I believe he was traveling with his road manager or some such, and they were planning to go do some practice shooting in the area.
I don't think that anyone will believe this but my band called 'Subject To Change' opened up for this band back in August 2005 at the NorVa (Norfolk, VA). I remember listening to them when i was in high school and college but didn't know as much about them as I do now. We met them after they finished in the backstage green room area. Was a good time. Those were the good times! :)
While hanging out with ARU's Oteil, Jimmy, Matt and Bruce, I met john Popper on HORDE 93 and he was such a nice real guy, in a wheelchair that summer. One of my old roommates was Chan's roadie for a while.
I’m not big on 90’s music by any stretch but Blues Travelers have been phenomenal. There a kind of musical acts that are down to earth in many ways. 👍👍✌️✌️✌️
They played red rocks every 4th of July for yearrrrrrrrs! I was able to catch 5 or 6 shows. Went by myself, just moving to CO. Long story short; made tons of friends and met amazing "travelers"
Popper has done some nice duets over the years with warren haynes on Haynes christmas jam recordings. good stuff. glad to see that Popper is still around after having big health issues. Failable & mountains win are my top faves.
2nd best show of my life was Horde in 1996... Jeff Healey, Lenny Kravitz, Rusted Root, Natalie Merchant, and of Course Blues Traveler, amazing show. My favorite John Popper moments were at All Good Festival where on a few different years he has shown up and done unscheduled guest musician appearances with Trey Anastasio Band, Dave Mathews, Karl Denson, Warren Haynes, and the various Grateful Dead side project bands...oh and my favorite appearance was with Karl Denson's Tiny Universe. I also saw him do a song with Galactic at Bonnaroo one year, can't remember which one though...lol
They will be playing, for the second time, a small outdoor venue in a small town in North Idaho this summer. I plan to be there, again. First saw them in Minneapolis in 94 on my birthday. Fun show, the but the sound was terrible. Seen them a couple times since with much better sound, great fun. Been a fan since the first album dropped. Still my favorite one.
John Popper showed up at a bar my band was playing at in Fairfield CT on Halloween before Blues Traveler got famous. He wanted to play with us but we had a bad situation the night before at Shenanigans in Norwalk CT. A harmonica playing guy dressed as Elvis got up and played one song with us then he didn't want to get off the stage after playing the one song. It turned into a giant fight with Elvis and his two other buddies dressed as Elvis fighting with the bouncers and eventually the police. After I packed out my gear a cop on his police car speaker said "the Elvis's have left the building" as I was getting into my car. I'm still bummed we didn't let Popper play. It would have been fun.
Please do a detailed one on These guys. They are one of my favorite bands and they have a cool story. You should cover their relationship with the Spin doctors.
@@bsloannyc I just couldn't imagine how they would be able to give something like that away...and yeah i know this channel is about rock bands, and i've been to plenty of rock concerts, not once did i ever get free drugs lol
I got to meet and hang out with them back in 2005 when they came out to Kosova for a uso show. They're really nice guys. They gave me a couple pick after we played together.
If you guys want to know more about Popper’s fight with the black crowes on stern I’ve done a whole video on it th-cam.com/video/_shbjDHKPUQ/w-d-xo.htmlsi=pbnUYXdq-ziOvOSA
I'm surprised at the "John Popper Arrested" video you made.
6:53 you called Bobby Sheehan "Billy Sheehan." It caused a bit of confusion for me.
Thanks
Black kid coming from the hood and luvin music. I recognized there talent and still play them. How did i discover them.... working at a computet retail store. They had a different sound that stood out. Fav is The Mountains Win Again. One of my fav to play when going hiking. We only live once..... enjoy the world while you can, and limit your hate.
Dude...that's my favorite song from them too. Underrated tune!
oh man thats a great pick for a favorite.
"I picked up my smile..."
That is one of my all time favorite songs, really excited to see them in July!
I recommend " Gina ". That is like a harmonica tornado . It's on a record way before " Run Around " .
I met Popper at a party in Princeton (I lived in nearby PA) right before the first record came out. I had a drum set there from a previous jam session, and my buddy had a couple of guitars. Our host encouraged us to play, and we cobbled together a little power trio to back up Popper. At this point, I'd never heard him play or sing. He called out some blues tune, and proceeded to just blow the roof off the place.
Later that week, we went to some joint in New York to see the band, and they had like 300 people packed into this tiny little room. It was one of those dancing-on-the-tables type nights. I was an instant fan.
Haha that’s a great story
he is often seen at the movie theater on rt 309 kinda by 5pts.
@@ilacallya324 does he still live in Quakertown? I grew up there, went to Qtown high school in the 80s. I caught a bunch of Dead shows in college, and headed down to Florida for the '89 Miami shows. I fell in love with the weather and still live here to this day. I was home visiting my folks one Christmas, and a bartender at Wagon Wheel told me Popper was living nearby (I think off of Richlandtown Pike, but this was quite a long time ago, so I could be misremembering that)
The most polite, considerate audience was at a Blues Traveller show.
Fantastic show it was.
You've never been to a Grateful Dead show I take it.
@@daBEAGLE1017
I always expected they were probably the same way, but I never liked GD.
@@tobiasfrehley4568 the crowds at both concerts were well behaved and we all danced and shook our bones.
I miss touring. Good times.
They were college nerd dorks not caring what music they thought was cool, but I went to stagecoach In irvine SoCal and for SoCal a country concert was the most polite non-pretentious Orange County thing you could do, chicks were cool and dudes friendly no attitude for the area it was in. That was shocking how friendly people were.
From 1989 through 1993, there was no better blues / jam rock band. I saw them around 50 times in this era and they were dripping with true power jam rock, exploding every 100 to 1000 seat standing room bar or small theatre into an insane ecstatic frenzies.
They mastered their instruments, wrote beautiful songs and could take songs into the ether or in any direction just to land gracefully back to Earth.
Unfortunately to most OG fans, the album "Four" and the included hits made them fall into the pop MTV area. They deserved every cent but it got a tad fluffy. Chan, the guitarist, has said this much in a few interviews. It killed their hunger where the money brought a certain laziness.
To me, "Travellers & Thieves" is the best rock / jam album of the 1990's. All songs are legendary in both lyrics and instrumental sections. A true classic. Great video. Thanks.
Travelers and Thieves was the first CD I ever bought. Absolutely amazing album. 93 Horde tour was my first concert. I loved these guys so much.
The first time I saw them was in some relatively tiny New York bar called, if memory serves, Caroline's. I don't think it was the same Caroline's as the comedy club with the same name, but I could be wrong.
Saw them not long after at The Wetlands in NYC, where they alternated sets with Baba Olatunji's Drums of Passion. The best part was that they swapped players one by one between the two bands (like Sheehan would switch with Baba's bassist, then Chan switched with the guitarist) while the jam kept going. So, in the immortal words of the Grateful Dead, the music never stopped...
Save his soul
They’re not really blues are they? I’ve never heard a single
Blues song from the travelers.
Four was my first introduction and I had to buy the cassette 3 times because I kept wearing it out. That caused me to go back and buy the first 3 albums. I couldn't even tell you which is my favorite because all 4 are so freaking good.
Compared to those, I was less impressed with Straight on til Morning, and then the band wholly changed with the loss of Bobby. No specific album since has lived up to the first 4, but I still get them all.
Even though Blues Traveler aren't a band I listen to regularly, I respect them, and their two big hits capture their style really well. I saw them live twice and was fortunate to have Chan Kinchla as my very first interview for a local newspaper I wrote for. Glad their music still resonates!
four is a lifetime album. It's part of the soundtrack of my life.
The Mountains Win Again is a masterpiece.
My cousin and I saw them in Chicago at soldier Field when they opened for the stones. That was a fantastic concert. 🤘🏻✌🏼😊
I have been to hundreds of concerts. Nothing has ever been as good as the vibe and groove that I experienced at one of their shows in the late 90s that stretched to about 4 hours long. They were an electric jam band.
I've seen the boys over 75 times... They never disappoint. Going to see them tonight as well!
I'm jealous. My fifth and last show was in April of 1995 in Ames, Iowa. Also saw them in Iowa City, Minneapolis, Omaha and Kansas City in venues of 400-18,000 people and they never disappointed. Met Bobby and Brendan at separate shows. It's hard to see them anymore. Real life and fewer shows.
I've seen him 41 times lol one of my favorites of all time
I truly enjoy the full musicianship of this band. I play bass and have mad respect for these guys! The songwriting brilliance of "Hook"!
Such a great and often overlooked band from the 90s
I have something in common with the lead singer. At one point I was 500.91 pounds (in freedom units), and today I am at 178 and have been there for almost two decades now. We had the exact same surgery.
Congrats brother. It took me almost a year to lose 50 pounds trying to make weight for the Air Force.
big congratulations getting the surgury and getting the weight off is one thing keeping it off after is biggest challenge of all it seems at least for many.
Do you still crave eating same foods?
@@rnrtruestoriesmost people with this surgery still have the same cravings for their favorite food it's just that they can't eat as much as before due to feeling full faster.
I had the same. After so many years of being very active in sports and military service I wrecked my back. I went from 195lbs to 403lbs at my worse. Now 16 years later I’m at 195 and maintaining. You do divorce yourself from eating and that is depressing but you eventually get past that phase. You no longer crave the sugar, fat, etc. I maintain my protein and supplements. My life is so much more enriched. It’s not for everyone and for a while I felt shame that I took the easy way out in some opinions. The easy way out would actually be for me to continue putting on weight and eventually die. Peace.
Blues Traveler arguably helped kick off the old school hard rock revival that began when grunge fizzled in the mid-90s, and though I don’t really listen to them much nowadays, they were a needed breath of fresh air in their prime. I caught them at The HORDE festival in ‘97 along with Primus and Neil Young. One of the better concerting events of my teens.
The song "Hook" was such a big middle finger to the music industry, and I love it
Isn’t it about drugs / addiction?
@@daytonasayswhat9333No, listen to the lyrics. It's literally says that it doesn't matter what the lyrics are as long as the melody is good and you have a catchy hook, the stupid masses will eat up a pop song.
@@northofnashira2575 the hilarious part is that it's the chord progression of Pachabel's "Canon" - it's been used so many times it's not funny. Total failsafe that drives the point home.
@@northofnashira2575 I see. Yeah they’re like really giving the middle finger and stuff. They were signed to a major label and had a major producer. They’re like so rebellious and stuff.
I grew up hearing that song, it was all over the place in the mid 90s. I never really listened too carefully to the lyrics, maybe because I was a kid at the time. But I liked it and thought it was a neat, catchy song. Then I really listened to it as an adult, and found it incredible. It was really right out there in front of us the whole time, and it went right over so many peoples heads, including mine. It's an incredible song, though. Very clever.
When i need a break from.the raw aggression of my usual musical taste these guys are always nice to hear
When I need a break from black metal, I'll listen to shit like Katy Perry and Kelly Clarkson
Saw them a few years ago in Philly and we were blown away. As good as their albums are they are an absolute treat to see live. It was one of my favorite shows!!!
It's sad that Sheehan died and that other members of the band had so many problems over the years. I am happy to report that other than missing Bobby, the band is otherwise alive and well and as good as ever. I heard them in concert in Primm, NV last weekend. It was an excellent concert. Their new album Traveler's Soul is excellent. Everyone should hear it.
Thanks for putting this together. Always loved Blues Traveler. Learned quite a bit about them. 👍🏻👍🏻
I've seen hundreds of famous bands live, and Blues Traveler is the tightest rock band I've ever heard.
The Mountains Win Again is the best song ever. It makes we want to go back to the 90s and never leave.
Me, too.
I saw them at a casino a couple years ago. Popper had twisted his knee and did the show in a recliner. It was still pretty rad though. The guitar player sounds GREAT in person. I think he was using HiWatt amps.
Hook was so epic ! The first time I heard it I was like that’s just awesome .
I showed up in college as a freshman. The very first rock concert I ever attended was Blues Traveler. I had literally been away at college for days and a couple of dorm mates went to the Anaconda theaters.
And damn. Just blown away. My own incredible introduction to live music was Blues Traveler in 1991.
I was 5 yrs old
This was wonderful! Yes please, more detailed videos about Blue Traveler! 😊
You got it!
@@rnrtruestories *Blues Traveler (my bad, what an embarrassing typo lol)
Man, Blues Traveler absolutely RIPS. It’s actually freaking insane how good they were
Are...I saw them this summer and they were killer.
Popper obviously carried ten harmonicas in different keys not "tuned differently" because that's the way it works
14
Right I thought it was dumb that he didn't know anything about harmonicas. Also super weird that he said "popper would admit to carrying..." like what did he have to admit? 😅
John Popper is the Jimi Hendrix of harmonica. I play a bit of blues harp, but I have absolutely no idea how he plays like that. It’s truly mind blowing.
Right
I love Blues Traveler, they came into the scene with a new sound and style that was much needed and made them stand out from anyone else. I watched as Popper ballooned and seriously expected to hear he had passed from heart disease. One of my favorites is “Canadian Rose”, I love Poppers playing and voice on that song.
The album, travelers and thieves is incredible
Their best album. Imo
I came of age in the 90s and just saw these boys for the first time tonight at the Steelhouse in Omaha. Amazing jam band. John's still got it!
You should have been at the Ranch Bowl show in 1994. They played until venue management cut the power to the amps after 1 am. I stumbled out of there drenched in sweat and smiling from ear to ear. It was life-affirming.
Straight On Til Morning is an absolutely fantastic album, still listen to it to this day.
I saw these guys by accident some time ago in Chicago in the early 90s - my Roomate couldn’t get a ticket for his girlfriend so he gave me his.
I was completely blown away. I had no idea what to expect. Popper’s voice wow. We of course dropped acid . I remember stumbling out of the Metro at 4 am . It seemed like they payed all night
Talk about a spooky coincidence!!! At the same time i was watching this video, runaround began playing on the radio, here at my job, lol. I'm glad that John Popper was finally able to get his weight issues under control. I remember jam bands like Blues Traveler, Big Head Todd & Monsters, Hootie & the Blowfish, Spin Doctors, were huge in the early to mid '90s!
I was fortunate enough to discover BT on their solo album. I got to see them live at Red Rocks when "Hook" hadn't been released yet. I had tickets to another show that had to be canceled due to Popper's heart attack. Their first 3 albums get overlooked, unfortunately along with their 5th. As good as "Four" is, it mask how unbelievable their other albums are. Their music is so much better than casual listeners will know.
Watching Rosanne today and blues traveler was on. And here I am!!! Didn't realize how much music was coming out in 89.
Bobby Sheehan was an amazing bassist!
Got to meet him after they played 328 Performance Hall in Nashville on his birthday. Caught the harmonica John threw out to the crowd too!
Any relation to Billy Sheehan?
@@travisazzopardi8024 I don't think so
@@rikjones5924 saw him with Blues Traveler in 93 with Soundgarden, Pearl Jam and Neil Young here in Toronto. Wild show.
They had an awesome cameo in the movie Kingpin
One of my all-time favorite movies.
You did a real good job on covering blues traveler story there dude.
As your time permits definitely do an extended version on the group. 👍
They are my all-time favorite band. I've seen them many times, and they never disappoint
Blues Traveler headlined FallFest in 2001 at my alma mater, a free concert to commemorate the first day of class. They were phenomenal!
The '90s really had the best music
Yep, high water mark.
It definitely set the standard.
Run Around and Hook are still absolute BANGERS! I love those tracks. Great band!
Everyone remembers “Hook” and “Runaround” and so few listen to Travelers and Thieves which is by far their best Album. Blows everything else out of the water. Every song on the album is sonic perfection. And unfortunately it’s so good that their other albums feel lacking of any real musical substance. The faint trumpeting of elephants as “Onslaught” fades away and “Ivory Tusk” kicks in. Just beautiful. Perhaps one of the most underrated albums.
It's their best album by far.
Love this band, he's an outstanding harp player. Would love a more in-detail video about their history. Cheers
Great vid. Been a fan of the band since watching the clip for the song Conquer Me.
Fledgling from Save His Soul is one of the best songs I’ve ever known. Epic Blues Traveler, and a John Popper tour de force for vocals and harp. Amazing tune.
John Popper is an insanely talented harmonica player
6:58 "Bassist 'Billy' Sheehan" I was was like, wait was Billy Sheehan in Blues Traveller?! 🤣
My bad I had Billy on my mind, mistake
@@rnrtruestories 🙌🏼 I know, just thought it was funny! Love the videos!!! 🤘🏼🤘🏼🤘🏼
@rnrtruestories
I thought there were 2 bassists named Billy Sheehan 😂
Bobby
@@DMTaberI know. He says Billy at 6:58 in the video tho!
Good video! Yes a longer one on Blues Traveler would be great. Also please give the drummer some.
I love their music
I've seen hundreds of bands play live and Blues Travel puts on one of the greatest live shows there is.
That was great dude! Really enjoyed it..subscribed
Blues traveler is still one of my favorite bands
Just came from their concert. They still rock!
I've seen Blues Traveler well over 100 times live. I've got 4 Popper harmonicas, 4-5 drumsticks and guitar picks. They were my favorite 90's band. It hasn't been the same since Bobby died. Popper is the greatest harmonica player that ever lived.
I saw them a lot between '92-'95. Still love them. Met Bobby waiting near their bus in 1992 in Iowa City. He asked for directions to a bar nearby. He never showed, though.
Another entertaining episode, thank you. Love your channel! How about shows on PM Dawn, Primitive Radio Gods and/or the Violent Femmes. Thank you.
I saw them in 2017, and they rocked. Would go again for sure
i freaking love John that dude was born with a harmonica in his mouth. i brought their album when it came out and love and play their songs to this day. i remember catching their cameo appearance on Roseanne and also the movie with Tim Allen and Kirsty Alley For richer or poorer.
Thanks, more I gotta listen to BT again. It's been years👍
You should!
One of the things that i loved about the hand is how real they looked.
Still love them and they are still making music and seen them everywhere and from 1991 till 2005
I met Popper in 2000. Dude was a bit cuckoo. Before the show he was crazy concerned about the security and freaking out we only had one "armed personnel" supporting the event. I mean, we were at a no-name SUNY school in the middle of nowhere, NY. The biggest security threat we ever faced was some drunk kid going out the alarmed door (clearly marked, with flickering light... he was that trashed)
Ah, now I get why when he was pulled over once they found that his vehicle had a stash of hidden compartments, which contained four rifles, nine handguns, a switchblade knife, a Taser, a set of brass knuckles, and night vision goggles. Paranoia can be a bitch.
@SuperStrik9 I just googled that because I wasn't sure if it was a joke that went over my head. Nope, he totally did. I guess I'm not altogether surprised, though.
@@SuperStrik9 Happened in rural Washington state along I-90. Made a big splash in the local news, but it turned out every single thing in the car was legally owned with no nefarious intent. I believe he was traveling with his road manager or some such, and they were planning to go do some practice shooting in the area.
@@corey6393 Do people often practice tasers or brass knuckles?
@@SuperStrik9yeah I did a video on that
Saw them open for Soundgarden, Pearl Jam and Neil Young here in Toronto in 93.
Just saw them last month and it was fantastic.
Thank you, great video on a superb band.
I don't think that anyone will believe this but my band called 'Subject To Change' opened up for this band back in August 2005 at the NorVa (Norfolk, VA). I remember listening to them when i was in high school and college but didn't know as much about them as I do now. We met them after they finished in the backstage green room area. Was a good time. Those were the good times! :)
I saw them close with Devil Went Down To Georgia, Popper played the fiddle part on the harmonica. Jaw dropped.
While hanging out with ARU's Oteil, Jimmy, Matt and Bruce, I met john Popper on HORDE 93 and he was such a nice real guy, in a wheelchair that summer. One of my old roommates was Chan's roadie for a while.
Yes,please! I’m a huge BT fan. Do more videos on them
Love your videos🤘
Thanks
I’m not big on 90’s music by any stretch but Blues Travelers have been phenomenal. There a kind of musical acts that are down to earth in many ways. 👍👍✌️✌️✌️
Post grunge was amazing. So much variety hit the air waves.
They played red rocks every 4th of July for yearrrrrrrrs! I was able to catch 5 or 6 shows. Went by myself, just moving to CO. Long story short; made tons of friends and met amazing "travelers"
Popper has done some nice duets over the years with warren haynes on Haynes christmas jam recordings. good stuff.
glad to see that Popper is still around after having big health issues. Failable & mountains win are my top faves.
2nd best show of my life was Horde in 1996... Jeff Healey, Lenny Kravitz, Rusted Root, Natalie Merchant, and of Course Blues Traveler, amazing show. My favorite John Popper moments were at All Good Festival where on a few different years he has shown up and done unscheduled guest musician appearances with Trey Anastasio Band, Dave Mathews, Karl Denson, Warren Haynes, and the various Grateful Dead side project bands...oh and my favorite appearance was with Karl Denson's Tiny Universe. I also saw him do a song with Galactic at Bonnaroo one year, can't remember which one though...lol
They will be playing, for the second time, a small outdoor venue in a small town in North Idaho this summer. I plan to be there, again. First saw them in Minneapolis in 94 on my birthday. Fun show, the but the sound was terrible. Seen them a couple times since with much better sound, great fun. Been a fan since the first album dropped. Still my favorite one.
Got to see them a couple of years ago. Popper is a beast! A more in depth video would be great.
While watching this, I dug out my copy of there Live album. Be listening to it tonight.
Still love Blues Traveler so much.
Saw them five times. Met Bobby and Brendan, too. Great band!
John Popper showed up at a bar my band was playing at in Fairfield CT on Halloween before Blues Traveler got famous. He wanted to play with us but we had a bad situation the night before at Shenanigans in Norwalk CT. A harmonica playing guy dressed as Elvis got up and played one song with us then he didn't want to get off the stage after playing the one song. It turned into a giant fight with Elvis and his two other buddies dressed as Elvis fighting with the bouncers and eventually the police. After I packed out my gear a cop on his police car speaker said "the Elvis's have left the building" as I was getting into my car. I'm still bummed we didn't let Popper play. It would have been fun.
This was really well done. Thanks !
thank you! Really proud of this one. We have another great album retrospective coming on Friday, that's been requested by a number of people.
Please do a detailed one on These guys. They are one of my favorite bands and they have a cool story. You should cover their relationship with the Spin doctors.
Such an amazing band. They even did a special on Roseanne. Amazing show as well.
I remember seeing them perform run around on mtv music awards for the first time. I hadn't heard the song before but I was very impressed
Loved the story!! Great band!!
Do you have one on Screaming Cheetah Wheelies?
Sorry I don’t
early 90s they were awesome and still good today
@4:24 they gave away free WHAT? nitrous? As in nitrous oxide? 😳😱 And like...what KIND of mushroom tea...
yes.
What kind do you think? You do realize this is a channel about rock and roll bands?
@@bsloannyc I just couldn't imagine how they would be able to give something like that away...and yeah i know this channel is about rock bands, and i've been to plenty of rock concerts, not once did i ever get free drugs lol
@@micky_knucklesI know right I think it was $5 at the concerts I attended.
@@stevewalters6853 only time I ever got free drugs was if I found it on the ground coz someone dropped it accidentally 🤣
Awe❤😊 love them ❤️
They wrote several great songs. They have my respect
Love these guys
Blues Traveler was doooope! great video!
Thanks
One of the most underrated bands of the 90s. So talented.
I got to meet and hang out with them back in 2005 when they came out to Kosova for a uso show. They're really nice guys. They gave me a couple pick after we played together.
Saw them open for the Allman Brothers. Amazing show.
There will never be a fall of Blues Traveler
Saw Blues Travele with Dave Mathews and Black Crows in the mid 90s. It was great!
That sounds like my nightmare.
I went through like 3 portable CD players back in the day listening to Four, I can still put that on album, and not have to hit the next track button.
I play the harmonica but I don't even come close to playing like John Popper It's amazing how fast he can play lead on it just as fast as a guitar