@@almiller5682 My father just gave me his vintage Pentax K-1000se and darkroom supplies. In the darkroom supplies, he left an ABBA 8-track. I found the songs online and listened to them. They made me remember my father doing development and prints in our apartment about 40 years ago, using rhe camera I have now. The camera is very heavy. I found my father bought this Pentax as soon as this model was released. Thus, this is the Japanese K-1000se.
@@DINO-SP201 My dad was in Vietnam in 67-68. Australian soldiers served near him and he sent me a cool Aussie slouch hat that snapped on the left side.
Two Tours Iraq. Still listen to Rock as we jump on the Helo...thunk thunk thunk thunk. Crew chief "It's OK, they're Self sealing Gas Tanks. Me: "Why are they shooting at us?"
@@NoLadderI recall a study spanning the 70s to the late 2010s recording the repeating of notes and tones in popular music. There was a very noticeable and rapid spike in songs sounding the same, and I can imagine it’s only gotten worse since then. Graduated from a bucket of crap to a quick-open pouch of thrice digested slop.
Amen, brother. I did Afghanistan and Iraq. Unlike after you came back from Vietnam, everyone now says, Thank you for your service. I wish they would have done that for you guys.
It was a war that could never be won sadly families on both sides suffered and not only did the states lose the war it was really bad for the veterans on both sides 🙏🙏
I was a River Rat on the Vam Co Dong and we had a Teac reel to reel with 15' Sansui speakers blasting these tunes as we patrolled. Charlie always knew where we were anyway, so the loud rock n roll didn't really matter. We Gotta Get Outta This Place was our theme song. Ben Luc, Vietnam 1969
I was there at Ben Luc, vietnam 1969, I used to go down to where you guys would tie up at. First thing I ate there in the small mess hall was Lobster that they would catch right on the river, so cool, I had a buddy that met this girl that worked in mess hall and she needed some help at her house, so would go with him and haul sand and whatever else needed to be done. Being from Lousiana of all things noodles shrimp so good. I was blessed. Nice to see someone else from that time who was at Ben Luc. God Blessings on you.
Been there, done that, lived to tell about it. 1st Bn, 7th Air Cav, 1st AirCav Div. '71-'72. GaryOwen. Now, I'm an old man enjoying the music I grew up listening to on CKLW in Detroit, Michigan, baby, and later on that FM station outside Ft. Knox, Ky! So long ago. Oh, yah...F--k Westmoreland, that lying Sob! He kept the war going with his lies!
@joemamma4758 He kind of was lol. General Patton Jr, had more progress and followed the instructions of the New U.S President to help bring the war to a better end for withdrawal plus the Invasion of Cambodia which Eliminated vast weapons caches on the border massively set the North Back.
I lost count of how many funerals I went to between '65 and '69. When this music plays I can still see the faces of the mothers and fathers of the dead fading in and out of my mind. I joined the Navy in '69 rather than be drafted and was assigned to work in communication intelligence (NSA). Peace and rest to those who didn't get to take the big bird back to the states.
as a retired army vet and someone who served on three deployments in Iraq, I know all to well the difference of someone being alive one minute and the next being killed, war really has no rhyme or reason of who lives and who dies. It was so unfair.
@@skiplazauski1497 I personally went to three Jan 68 my oldest brother KIA in Vietnam, Oct 68 my Mother's who was murdered then Feb 79 my mom's Dad of a stroke.💔🙏
Lost my uncle Kia in the NAMs Central Highands mid3/68 , tail end of bloody ass TET , up near Pleiku in the 1st AirCav ,just 2wks b-4 my 11th bday . Remember hearing this tune mid5/69 when I was 12 exiting the 6th grade .
Sorry to hear about your uncle. If it had not been for the war the Central Highlands would have been a beautiful place at the time. Camp Enari was dusty and muddy but the surrounding area had forests and terrace farming. The Montagnard villages had a timeless feeling.
Does that include the !4th Galician Division of the Waffen SS (formed of Ukrainian Volunteers). Me, I rode with the 1st Cav in Tay Ninh Province, RSVN. gawd that was so long ago, just yesterday.
Not many know just how badass your job was. You guys were like the river boats, but not up in the sky far enough, and with a lot less firepower, looking to ruin Charlie's day when you found him.
@@idahosagebrush5662 There are some truly out there stories about the river boats engaging helicopters while on patrol. Of course, the vietnamese didn't have any helicopters so....in any event thanks.
IF I ever were to own a helicopter tour company, it would be A HUEY BELL......it took a lot during the war effort and I hardly ever heard of a crash with these copters....only those smaller copters failed. Also, when our county had "medevac' landings in town at the govt capitol lawn, since it was close to the nearby trauma hospital........
Thnks for your service. My wish is that you were not left with PTSD and that you experience happiness and good health for the rest of your life. Respect.
That was Dad´s music.......simple, wonderful and amazing. Music from other time, music that lives in surviving veterans of a hard, harsh, long, crazy and terrible war.... Yet I love it.
@@JosephSmith-re3fu Remember hearing this tune early 8/68 ,whenI was 11 years old ,now 66 year young; lost a relative mid/3- 68 tailed of bloody TET 2 wreaks b-4 my 11 th bday "Andy was in USAs 1st Cav AirMOBILE / AIR ASSUALT NEAR PLEIKU CENTRAL HOGHLANDS SOUTHVIETNAM when a VIETCONG RPG HIT HIS HUEY , AND 3 Troopers !!
i was a Huey helicopter pilot in Nam ... Vietnam Search Find Recover injured personal until a cong artillery shell exploded were a had just landed, was sent home. i was the only one to survive that attack, my best buddy died in that war god less ya Conway" RIP
Had a good friend who flew Hueys in Nam. I had always look up to him. Him being older than me. His body came back alive but not his mind. He died a few years later. Salute to all who served.
This was my parents' generation. I missed out living through it, but best era of music there ever was. Never forget the classics. Rock n roll never dies.
@@naturaljustice4654 PRAY- let it go to GOD- When all is bad and sad- you have to believe in a HIGHER POWER- what ever it is- don't talk about it- let it go- no one can come forward holding onto the past.. I know- I'm one- I hope we can converse- we all need a kind, wholesome soul....Prayers DEAR ONE....
Did you see the post A guy who served in Nam said the Huey Pilots were angels in the skies! Bless you guys ,heroic warriors in the sky over Vietnam ❤God Bless you for your service ☦️
I joined the US Navy 1980 , but my dad joined In 1958... He wanted to be a C.B. So I got to hear all this kind of music... He lived though it... This is Soul Music to me!!!
I'm Thai. My grandfather was a Thai soldier who fought in Vietnam with the Queen's Cobra Battalion. He didn't tell me many stories about the battlefield because I wasn't very close to him. But after I grew up and listened to the interviews of the Queen's Cobra Battalion soldiers who fought in Vietnam, I became proud of my grandfather. And I understand why he doesn't want to talk about this. War is really a brutal thing.
There is a You Tube channel Watch Wes Work. It is an auto repair channel. One time he was working on a Duce and a half, replaced the rear axle and backed it out of the garage. At the same time a crop duster helicopter flew past the truck. The combination of the helicopter and the Duce and a half triggered a flashback 50 years. It was the first flashback I ever had about Vietnam. It was crazy and was not expecting it. 😵💫
Some lived through it and some didn't. Never ever forget it. We'll all get to the same place eventually. It's just a matter of how. Rock on my brothers.
I want to take the opportunity to say thank you to all the veterans and their families for the sacrifice and selfishness you gave to us! God bless you all! I will forever be indebted to all of you!
I born in 1971, but I grew up inspired by the Vietnam War era and the use of helicopters for the war. Eventually I became in Army Officer and Army Aviator in my country. Thanks to the lord I learned to flight helicopters in a Huey and then was Bell-412 and MI-17 captain. I always remember my time fighting against narco and guerrillas, I doesn’t compare with the guys that fought in Nam, but you were inspiration for many guys like me. Thanks for your service for the freedom.
Glad to see the Australian contingent (not forgetting the New Zealanders either) in Somebody to Love. I had two family members serve in the Republic of Vietnam, Signalman Paul Crangle in the Royal Australian Signals and Pte Bryan Ferrie, Royal Australian Regiment, both National Servicemen. Bryan returned to Vietnam as a Royal Australian Navy Nurse for a second tour. Finished as a Commander in the RAN. Lest we forget.
Thank all of you for your service.. if able in any way, we still need you but this time you all dont need to go far. A phone, camera and a voice.. the country yall, your parents, grandparents fought for has been taken hostage. We've been dancing with the devil way too long & its time to bring God home.. amen God bless
I was thinking.. who is this that wrote this, was it me? No it wasnt, BUT I wasn't surprised when I realized we had the same name.. lol..keep speaking fact brother.. God bless, amen..
All those songs reminded my youth at highschool, and whata a wonderfull time, nice girls and discovering of the first kisses, lol, un saludo desde Argentina
My friend well i am 11 but i am friends with a vietnam Veteran and he was the most likable guy and the best personality ever and he always went fishing with me and gave me reels and rods to fish with and hes the best friend i ever had next to my other friend wich is from the states both the best fishing buddies ever had in my life alongside my dad.
This music was never ever heard in Vietnam. Only had armed forces radio government propaganda never played any rock music in Vietnam. We were isolated in the military in 60s no tv newspapers no radio. We had no internet or phones you good see the news or hear music. I didnt hear these songs until years after i got out. My small high school lost four guys 68 to 70 this just before i got sent in 71. When we got back got screwed over by the people, va and government. You could do anything to us and nobody would step up. Not even McCain he didn't help us.
So sorry, thank you for serving. I graduated in 75 si I missed it. I dated one gal with 3 sisters. Her father was the last to carry on the family name as her only brother joined the Marines and was killed over there. Another gal I dated her father was shot down over Laos in Dec 68. They spoke to him on the ground and recovered his co piolet but he was listed POW/MIA and was never returned. That seems to have been the fate of all US soldiers that went across the fence into Laos. I don't believe any ever were returned. The Vietnamese called the French POWS pearls of War and kept them as slaves long after the war.
Depends on who you were with and were you were. I know for a fact we had it there. We had personal devices you know, not like today, but we did. Some AirCav units had speakers that played music like this on loud speaker's just to mess with the gooks on approach. That's where the "Apocalypse Now" movie producers got the idea for that movie. Some had old Teac brand Real to Real players installed to play the music.
My grandfather died July 30th 2023 at 69 years old from failing kidneys, he was in the navy during Vietnam he was a engineer mechanic and they would take helicopters to sweep for sea mines so the ships could pass he was my grandfather my father figure my best friend and my mentor John Mygatt
Rip to your grandaddy. Mine was a naval officer. WW2 he was enlisted, Korea he had been commissioned, Vietnam he was running signals intelligence from a Naval group and working at the Pentagon. Nobody is immune to cancer, no matter how much of a hardass or how tough they are. Pancreatic cancer would've gotten my grandfather, but his last act on Earth was firing a gun in his front yard, after he had called the police. We had fair warning. He always told us that he would rather opt out than be an invalid and survive on a machine with a nurse wiping his ass. He went out on his terms.
Imagine in the Nam era, when you return from the war......you kids innocently ask you where you were, You simply dont say anything because of what you faced headon in the jungles of Vietnam.... My dad never told us anything......he and my uncle served in WW2, in the 100th Battalion MIS group.
Not Vietnam, but a bullet in the head is harsh. Had to ID my uncle in a J'burg morgue but I prefered that version of him than the undertaker tart-up. Messy but he still looked like him, not a wax doll.
I hate going to the VA Hospital because they are rude to us. They cuss at us and give us below standard medical care. We should have the same medical care as a president of the United States.
It is not like you did not try. 12 years is not bad. I got 3 years active (1966-1969) and three reserves. Made it to Vietnam. Then tried again in 91 had the war started without me while I was in the MEPS station.
The proud son of a Hippy Vietnam Vet born with Autism, Scoleosis ,Shoermans disease and a whole host of nualigacal problems caused by Angent Orange exposure. He went before his draft came up, served 13 months and 1 day, changed in a airport bathroom and threw his unifom in the trash can. I love you dad and welcome home. Thank you for your service. I wasn't always able to say that but it gets easier in my old age. Especpicaly after my mother passed.
The music and feel of the song and the era may have been a little naive, but can you feel the difference in the messaging? The era was filled with positivity and hope, whereas the current is filled with hopelessness and anger. Which works better? It's not being filled with nostalgia, but I long for the spirit of 1967.
Oh WoW!!!! This brings me back to when I was in the Seals, just like in the Movies!.. and then as a pilot in a Cayuse and I had an 8 Track tape player-Just like in the Movies! And then I was a Captain on a patrol boat in the Mekong and had an 8 Track tape player -Just like in the Movies !! Wow I sure miss those Days way back then… Just like in the movies……
I wanted to put an 8 track player in our Duce and a half, but the 12 volt 8 track would not work on 24 volts. But had a little RCA transistor radio that fit under the handle for the flip out window. It worked great at lower speeds. At higher speeds you could not hear anything.😊 But it was just AFVN only. That was a long time ago.
We went to Nam to restore freedom and democracy. It didn`t happen, we were booted out like running dog and cursed at home.Some elite got very rich though.
Agreed. I was a kid at the time so I'm a tourist but I reflect when I hear the tracks.. and thats with admirtaion for survivors of the shit-storm it must have been.
We were just kids, we were drafted, we went, we saw the horror, we lived though the horror The indescribable horror still lives in all of us. To all of my colleagues along the DMZ in 68 who also had to face elusive Charlie: Semper-Fi
Growing up with a military family. We loved music, my Father played guitar. It's part of All of my family. Good music was the only thing I can say was comforting for a Military Brat ❤️ to young to know but I knew enough
I was a door gunner on hueys. I love listening to all this music while flying our missions especially when we were flying low level. Nothing like a 100 mile an hour wind blowing on you and watching the ground racing by under you and hearing the sound of the main rotors cutting and grabbing the air feeling that ship shuttering and vibrating in turns. Gets the heart pumping just thinking about it.
immense hommage à tous les anciens du Viet Nam, à leur sacrifice et à leur dévouement à leur patrie et bien sur nous n'oublions pas ceux qui sont tombés avec honneur et gloire, qu'ils reposent en paix
Respect aux combattants des 2 camps. Ok. Mais jamais d oubli et de pardon pour le commandement et le gvt Us qui après nous avoir bien savonne la planche en 54 a DBP, ont abandonné les khmers et les viets aux horreurs du communisme... comme ils font tjs et feront encore demain en ukraine qd leurs interets ciaux le commandera...et je ne parle meme de l agent orange qui tue encore aujourd'hui alors que ces salauds donnent des leçons de morale au monde entier..
Thank you sir for serving our country so ppl would understand that you put your life on the line so we could be safe in our country bless America & bless you too sir❤ in 🇺🇸 & living cause you were there for us amen.
the Cong said we smelled like pork so the smart ones ate rice and rotten duck eggs and fish oil so they smelled like them Sinor Trip of 65 Fortunate Son WillSon
Topkick rolls up into your pos and informs you " gentleman! I am here to impart upon you. The wisdom of old, as passed down to me from my sergeant and to he his sergeant before him. Behold, the glory of real music."
Love this music even tho I’m from Yugoslavia and me parents and grandparents were sending about 5% of their monthly income to support our brothers fighting in Vietkong. 🇻🇳🇻🇳🇻🇳 General Giap was in top 10 best generals in 20th Century.
Grew up on this music in the 70’s. Still love it. When I was 7 - 10 I had a friend named Brian who was a Green Beret. He’d go away for long stretches but always had interesting stories to tell when he came back. He befriended our little group and told us to stay out of the Army when we grew up. I ended up in the Navy in the 80’s instead.
I am addressing you as a veteran of the Homeland War from Croatia, at the same time a volunteer and war invalid, I want to say that we are Croatian freedom fighters from the great Serbian aggression that attacked us in alliance with the Yugoslav People's Army, which until then was at the same time the army of all of the people of Yugoslavia, we could no longer reconcile with it and we needed a new image, and that image was you, the American fighters against communist imperialist evil, and thank you for that image, for your selfless sacrifice and for the effort you made invested in preventing communism from spreading even further
I love how there's 2 types of themes to Vietnam era music. "Remind me of Better Times and Home" or "Get me the F&%K outta here" My family was Airforce. They were squares. They never liked this stuff, but I always loved it.
The government drafted my dad and then poisoned him with Agent Orange. He had PTSD and health problems my whole life. He passed in 2019. This was the music that played in our house my whole childhood. ✌🏻
Such a great loss for many and the difficulties they suffered w/o alot of help from the government. My Thanks and Prayers for all who Served and the survivors!!🙏🙏🙏❤❤
I am far to young to have served and I'm British so probably not but I remember the Vietnam war from my child day's must have been the news now stamped into my old brain
1960s was the greatest era of rock and roll.
Yeah and after that it was the 70s, then 50s then 90s then 80s Imo! Aha.. For which were the best!
That's Vietnam music for those who served in Vietnam know what I mean.
@@frankmendez3085 Indeed.
Top!
Sadly, it was very close to the end of Rock and roll. It has been gone for about 24 years.
a simple guitar riff can bring back faces from 50 years ago
@@almiller5682 My father just gave me his vintage Pentax K-1000se and darkroom supplies. In the darkroom supplies, he left an ABBA 8-track. I found the songs online and listened to them. They made me remember my father doing development and prints in our apartment about 40 years ago, using rhe camera I have now. The camera is very heavy. I found my father bought this Pentax as soon as this model was released. Thus, this is the Japanese K-1000se.
Pretty girl faces, old friends and good summer affairs...
the best of times and the worst of times, but it was our time,
thanks for the songs and the memories; one old vet to another on our day.
❤
No comments
Love you brother ❤️
😂😂😀😀😀😀😀😀🙂😀🫢🫢🤩🫢😋🫢😑@@faith4916
well said
I was a soldier in the Australian army reserve from 1977 to 1992 & grew up on Vietnam era rock, & still loving it
TKS FOR YOUR SERVICE SIR. God Bless you
@@DINO-SP201 My dad was in Vietnam in 67-68. Australian soldiers served near him and he sent me a cool Aussie slouch hat that snapped on the left side.
Aussie girl in the USA married Green Bennie in 1969.
It was the best of time/ It was the worst of time.
Two Tours Iraq. Still listen to Rock as we jump on the Helo...thunk thunk thunk thunk. Crew chief "It's OK, they're Self sealing Gas Tanks. Me: "Why are they shooting at us?"
Salute all the Kiwis and Aussies who served in Vietnam
Loo yes me too semper Fi broooo
And Korea and other on.sing hero's
my nieghbor did 2 tours, they said...no more...he ran wires thru the jungle, doesnt look it , but VERY smaart
Loved the Aussies much respect And quite the left hook would love to serve again in the next life
I grew up listening to this music with my dad and uncles, all served in Vietnam. Some of the best music ever produced, in my opinion.
Golden era of music for sure, today it's just fast shit but in a fast produced shit bucket.
In my opinion.
@@NoLadderI recall a study spanning the 70s to the late 2010s recording the repeating of notes and tones in popular music. There was a very noticeable and rapid spike in songs sounding the same, and I can imagine it’s only gotten worse since then. Graduated from a bucket of crap to a quick-open pouch of thrice digested slop.
and some of the stupidest people lol.
Amen, brother. I did Afghanistan and Iraq. Unlike after you came back from Vietnam, everyone now says, Thank you for your service. I wish they would have done that for you guys.
@deanwinslow1407 I did Afghanistan three times and Iraq twice. I swear it was my home away from home for many years.
Great music during a tragic time.Remember, my fellow Vets.?
En,ese,entonses,estaban,,nuestros ,jovenes,en,el,frente,de,batalla
My dad served 4 tours in Vietnam on the day. When tours were 12-18 months long. 😢Never the same...until the day he died.
2 tours in Eye Corp. None of us are the same. Peace and honors to your Dad.
Shut up
It was a war that could never be won sadly families on both sides suffered and not only did the states lose the war it was really bad for the veterans on both sides 🙏🙏
4 tours? Impresionante.
So sorry for your great loss. 🙏God bless bless you.
I was a River Rat on the Vam Co Dong and we had a Teac reel to reel with 15' Sansui speakers blasting these tunes as we patrolled. Charlie always knew where we were anyway, so the loud rock n roll didn't really matter. We Gotta Get Outta This Place was our theme song. Ben Luc, Vietnam 1969
Thank you for your service welcome home
I was there at Ben Luc, vietnam 1969, I used to go down to where you guys would tie up at. First thing I ate there in the small mess hall was Lobster that they would catch right on the river, so cool, I had a buddy that met this girl that worked in mess hall and she needed some help at her house, so would go with him and haul sand and whatever else needed to be done. Being from Lousiana of all things noodles shrimp so good. I was blessed. Nice to see someone else from that time who was at Ben Luc. God Blessings on you.
@@genechilton4939 Cool story! Just curious . . . were you Army helo or SeaBee by any chance?
@@iStreetglide yep I was army, thanks for replying back, god bless,first time i ever seen anyone from ben luc
@@genechilton4939 We could've crossed paths in that little chow hall my brother - peace be with you ✌️
My dad was in the navy. He was one of the river boat men. He never talked about his experiences other than to say that they were not fun.
I want to say RIP 2nd LT. Joseph Rodriguez K.I.A Vietnam and all the other Hero's that made the ultimate sacrifice.
'Dad'..a thankless task but he sounds cool, hope hes ok
Probably met my dad and 2 brothers they were on the boats as well. The only things they talk about is r&r in Saigon.
Been there, done that, lived to tell about it. 1st Bn, 7th Air Cav, 1st AirCav Div. '71-'72. GaryOwen. Now, I'm an old man enjoying the music I grew up listening to on CKLW in Detroit, Michigan, baby, and later on that FM station outside Ft. Knox, Ky! So long ago. Oh, yah...F--k Westmoreland, that lying Sob! He kept the war going with his lies!
Westmoreland was gone in 68 and he may have lied but he was not the last of them to lie!
@@joemamma4758 The biggest criminal was Lyndon Blow Job. I told him and the U.S. government, KMA and went to Canada!
thank you Sir❤
Exactly right. They are still living 😂. Meet people. Travel to New places. Fight for the maaan Maaaaaan. @@joemamma4758
@joemamma4758 He kind of was lol. General Patton Jr, had more progress and followed the instructions of the New U.S President to help bring the war to a better end for withdrawal plus the Invasion of Cambodia which Eliminated vast weapons caches on the border massively set the North Back.
I lost count of how many funerals I went to between '65 and '69. When this music plays I can still see the faces of the mothers and fathers of the dead fading in and out of my mind. I joined the Navy in '69 rather than be drafted and was assigned to work in communication intelligence (NSA).
Peace and rest to those who didn't get to take the big bird back to the states.
it was like a illness you don't forget my their souls be remebered
as a retired army vet and someone who served on three deployments in Iraq, I know all to well the difference of someone being alive one minute and the next being killed, war really has no rhyme or reason of who lives and who dies. It was so unfair.
My older Brother Marine was KIA in January of 68 and buried in Dallas in Febuary. United States Marine 1/9
I fear,that there is only big,vast NOTHING after We're DEAD. Brother...!!! It's the Children of THOSE BRAVE MAN, Who carry on...!!!
@@skiplazauski1497 I personally went to three Jan 68 my oldest brother KIA in Vietnam, Oct 68 my Mother's who was murdered then Feb 79 my mom's Dad of a stroke.💔🙏
Lost my uncle Kia in the NAMs Central Highands mid3/68 , tail end of bloody ass TET , up near Pleiku in the 1st AirCav ,just 2wks b-4 my 11th bday .
Remember hearing this tune mid5/69 when I was 12 exiting the 6th grade .
😢
Sorry to hear about your uncle. If it had not been for the war the Central Highlands would have been a beautiful place at the time. Camp Enari was dusty and muddy but the surrounding area had forests and terrace farming. The Montagnard villages had a timeless feeling.
that opening to Run through the jungle will forever be the most iconic
100% Respect 🙏 To ALL WHO HAVE SERVED THERE COUNTRY 🎖️IN ALL WARS..
*their
Does that include the !4th Galician Division of the Waffen SS (formed of Ukrainian Volunteers). Me, I rode with the 1st Cav in Tay Ninh Province, RSVN. gawd that was so long ago, just yesterday.
@DMor-qj1ie thank you I didn't start it but got he'll when I came home 1st of 7th Air cav.
@@DMor-qj1iethey are serving, correct?
I was a door gunner/ crewchief on a loach in 1971.
The pilot,copilot and i listen to these tunes while searching for mr. Charlie.
Not many know just how badass your job was. You guys were like the river boats, but not up in the sky far enough, and with a lot less firepower, looking to ruin Charlie's day when you found him.
@@idahosagebrush5662 There are some truly out there stories about the river boats engaging helicopters while on patrol. Of course, the vietnamese didn't have any helicopters so....in any event thanks.
IF I ever were to own a helicopter tour company, it would be A HUEY BELL......it took a lot during the war effort and I hardly ever heard of a crash with these copters....only those smaller copters failed. Also, when our county had "medevac' landings in town at the govt capitol lawn, since it was close to the nearby trauma hospital........
THANKS FOR YOUR SERVICE
To All Vietnam Veterans
Glad the most from your All is back Home
GREETINGS FROM 2 / 75 B / CO
RANGER BATTALION
👍👍👍
Thnks for your service. My wish is that you were not left with PTSD and that you experience happiness and good health for the rest of your life. Respect.
@@HaGirl10
Thank you so much !!!
I am okay thanks for asking !!!
They have Balls of fudgin Steel
That was Dad´s music.......simple, wonderful and amazing. Music from other time, music that lives in surviving veterans of a hard, harsh, long, crazy and terrible war.... Yet I love it.
Great songs from the past
@@JosephSmith-re3fu❤❤❤
@@JosephSmith-re3fu Remember hearing this tune early 8/68 ,whenI was 11 years old ,now 66 year young; lost a relative mid/3- 68 tailed of bloody TET 2 wreaks b-4 my 11 th bday "Andy was in USAs 1st Cav AirMOBILE / AIR ASSUALT NEAR PLEIKU CENTRAL HOGHLANDS SOUTHVIETNAM when a VIETCONG RPG HIT HIS HUEY , AND 3 Troopers !!
Remember these tunes on PHILADELPHIAS WFIL"FAMOUS 56 . MOST TUNES COVER 68- 70 WITH NAM WAR RAGGING FIERCELY !!
Love this music. I was a teenager in the sixties when this music was around. I think it exemplified what was going on in Viet Nam.
Caro desconhecido, 1960 foi o ano em q nasci, N sei mto sobre a guerra do vietnam , só sei q amo essas músicas desde mto pequena
Paz e rock "rool
i was a Huey helicopter pilot in Nam ... Vietnam Search
Find Recover injured personal until a cong artillery shell
exploded were a had just landed, was sent home.
i was the only one to survive that attack, my best buddy died in that war god less ya Conway" RIP
i just had a stroke reading this and i still dont get all of it, can you please write it in an understandable way?
@@luutek_sound I understood everything, and english is not my mother-language
One of my neighbors was a Huey pilot in Nam. He had some stories, about Nam and Africa. Sadly, he passed away a few years ago.
RIP Lowie
May God Bless comfort and guide you, in Jesus name. and continue to keep you here, I never deployed. A 68b10 huey oh 58 etc.
Had a good friend who flew Hueys in Nam. I had always look up to him. Him being older than me. His body came back alive but not his mind. He died a few years later. Salute to all who served.
david i too flew Huey's great machine felt safe
god bless all vets
RIP. Unforgettable.
Poor guy. Survive the tough stuff then find you cant survive whats left
I am 64 years old now & still loving the music from the Nam, a former Australian army veteran
I remember Raymond. Brings sadness and tears when in solitude.
This was my parents' generation. I missed out living through it, but best era of music there ever was. Never forget the classics. Rock n roll never dies.
I was a soldier in the south african and namibian armies from '77 to 1983.The sound of rotor bades give me goose bumps!
i was a helicopter pilot in those wars
sorry buddy glad you are a survivor sir
Buddy Hugh was there about that time. I have / have lost family in SA and the place means a lot to me .
My cousin was Huey-Pilot, served 3 year in Nam.
BLESS HIM- IS HE GOOD 👍 ❤❤
@@marianaduran6898
Think so, hard to talk about.
@@naturaljustice4654 PRAY- let it go to GOD- When all is bad and sad- you have to believe in a HIGHER POWER- what ever it is- don't talk about it- let it go- no one can come forward holding onto the past.. I know- I'm one- I hope we can converse- we all need a kind, wholesome soul....Prayers DEAR ONE....
Did you see the post
A guy who served in Nam said the Huey
Pilots were angels in the skies! Bless you guys ,heroic warriors in the sky over Vietnam ❤God Bless you for your service ☦️
I joined the US Navy 1980 , but my dad joined In 1958... He wanted to be a C.B. So I got to hear all this kind of music... He lived though it... This is Soul Music to me!!!
❤
I'm Thai. My grandfather was a Thai soldier who fought in Vietnam with the Queen's Cobra Battalion. He didn't tell me many stories about the battlefield because I wasn't very close to him. But after I grew up and listened to the interviews of the Queen's Cobra Battalion soldiers who fought in Vietnam, I became proud of my grandfather. And I understand why he doesn't want to talk about this. War is really a brutal thing.
There is a You Tube channel Watch Wes Work. It is an auto repair channel. One time he was working on a Duce and a half, replaced the rear axle and backed it out of the garage. At the same time a crop duster helicopter flew past the truck. The combination of the helicopter and the Duce and a half triggered a flashback 50 years. It was the first flashback I ever had about Vietnam. It was crazy and was not expecting it. 😵💫
Some lived through it and some didn't. Never ever forget it. We'll all get to the same place eventually. It's just a matter of how. Rock on my brothers.
Aussies photo for "Some Body to Love", outstanding
I want to take the opportunity to say thank you to all the veterans and their families for the sacrifice and selfishness you gave to us! God bless you all! I will forever be indebted to all of you!
I was a born a soldier for peace ✌️. My father was a WW2 sniper . All I want is peace .
My grandpas cousin served in Vietnam when he came home my grandpa gave him a Harley Davidson 💯🇺🇲
I have the utmost respect and gratitude for Vietnam veterans 🙏🏽 OIF Vet I-II, ‘08-‘09 🫡
I born in 1971, but I grew up inspired by the Vietnam War era and the use of helicopters for the war. Eventually I became in Army Officer and Army Aviator in my country. Thanks to the lord I learned to flight helicopters in a Huey and then was Bell-412 and MI-17 captain. I always remember my time fighting against narco and guerrillas, I doesn’t compare with the guys that fought in Nam, but you were inspiration for many guys like me. Thanks for your service for the freedom.
Glad to see the Australian contingent (not forgetting the New Zealanders either) in Somebody to Love.
I had two family members serve in the Republic of Vietnam, Signalman Paul Crangle in the Royal Australian Signals and Pte Bryan Ferrie, Royal Australian Regiment, both National Servicemen.
Bryan returned to Vietnam as a Royal Australian Navy Nurse for a second tour.
Finished as a Commander in the RAN.
Lest we forget.
No comments
@@livingonparkavenueinmanhat775
This is still a comment, somehow.
🫡🫡
Thank all of you for your service.. if able in any way, we still need you but this time you all dont need to go far. A phone, camera and a voice.. the country yall, your parents, grandparents fought for has been taken hostage. We've been dancing with the devil way too long & its time to bring God home.. amen God bless
I was thinking.. who is this that wrote this, was it me? No it wasnt, BUT I wasn't surprised when I realized we had the same name.. lol..keep speaking fact brother.. God bless, amen..
I was a Sniper the 82nd air born in 1972 this music , takes me back, I love it, I just wish I could go back and feel the Vibe.
тебя в Гаагу ,надо направить ,прямым курсом
BROTHERS WE SHALL PAY OUR RESPECTS TO THESE UNFORTUNATE SOLDIER'S THAT DIDN'T MAKE IT 😢
All those songs reminded my youth at highschool, and whata a wonderfull time, nice girls and discovering of the first kisses, lol, un saludo desde Argentina
understood
My friend well i am 11 but i am friends with a vietnam Veteran and he was the most likable guy and the best personality ever and he always went fishing with me and gave me reels and rods to fish with and hes the best friend i ever had next to my other friend wich is from the states both the best fishing buddies ever had in my life alongside my dad.
Nice story!👍
This music was never ever heard in Vietnam. Only had armed forces radio government propaganda never played any rock music in Vietnam. We were isolated in the military in 60s no tv newspapers no radio. We had no internet or phones you good see the news or hear music. I didnt hear these songs until years after i got out. My small high school lost four guys 68 to 70 this just before i got sent in 71. When we got back got screwed over by the people, va and government. You could do anything to us and nobody would step up. Not even McCain he didn't help us.
So sorry, thank you for serving.
I graduated in 75 si I missed it. I dated one gal with 3 sisters. Her father was the last to carry on the family name as her only brother joined the Marines and was killed over there. Another gal I dated her father was shot down over Laos in Dec 68. They spoke to him on the ground and recovered his co piolet but he was listed POW/MIA and was never returned. That seems to have been the fate of all US soldiers that went across the fence into Laos. I don't believe any ever were returned.
The Vietnamese called the French POWS pearls of War and kept them as slaves long after the war.
The PX didn’t sell these albums? I know they could be had out on the economy; and mamasan had no problem getting them for her club
I didn’t know that. Thank you for telling us.
Depends on who you were with and were you were. I know for a fact we had it there. We had personal devices you know, not like today, but we did. Some AirCav units had speakers that played music like this on loud speaker's just to mess with the gooks on approach.
That's where the "Apocalypse Now" movie producers got the idea for that movie. Some had old Teac brand Real to Real players installed to play the music.
So sorry you and the other vets had to go through that, we're not all haters, thank you for your service and many sacrifices
My grandfather died July 30th 2023 at 69 years old from failing kidneys, he was in the navy during Vietnam he was a engineer mechanic and they would take helicopters to sweep for sea mines so the ships could pass he was my grandfather my father figure my best friend and my mentor John Mygatt
Rip to your grandaddy. Mine was a naval officer. WW2 he was enlisted, Korea he had been commissioned, Vietnam he was running signals intelligence from a Naval group and working at the Pentagon.
Nobody is immune to cancer, no matter how much of a hardass or how tough they are. Pancreatic cancer would've gotten my grandfather, but his last act on Earth was firing a gun in his front yard, after he had called the police.
We had fair warning. He always told us that he would rather opt out than be an invalid and survive on a machine with a nurse wiping his ass.
He went out on his terms.
@@jameskirk3 my condolences
how beautiful you carry a variation of his name! hope you're on the up!
To ALL veterans, active...retired...MIA and passed on, I salute you for your service. This, November 11, 2024....Veterans Day.
Imagine in the Nam era, when you return from the war......you kids innocently ask you where you were, You simply dont say anything because of what you faced headon in the jungles of Vietnam.... My dad never told us anything......he and my uncle served in WW2, in the 100th Battalion MIS group.
I had a friend get killed over there. He was shot in the head. They had an open casket, that's something I'll never forget!😪💔
💔 Tragic you had to lose a close friend that way. May you have many happy memories to remember him by. Memories can not be taken from you.
Thank you!❤
@@VickyAtkinson Welcome, Vicky. Take care.
Not Vietnam, but a bullet in the head is harsh. Had to ID my uncle in a J'burg morgue but I prefered that version of him than the undertaker tart-up. Messy but he still looked like him, not a wax doll.
❤@@simondunning9682
One thing about the music retheme is the same as the M60 retheme crying out. A vet in nam.1967 door gunner I cav. B Co.229
Lord Have Mercy!!! These songs bring back so very many memories and I'm going to habe bad dreams tonight!
RIP TO ALL THE BRAVE WHO FALLEN FOR OUR FREEDOM 👍🇺🇸👍
for the banksters profit
And may we take this country back from the dumbasses that ruined it. So that their fall is not be in vein.
@@anglosaxon244good thing we know they’re willing to sink to the extremes of war. We can do the same when we get rid of the rich.
@@anglosaxon244Puppet mindset
Air mobile, help the Vietnam War tremendously they were tough and fearless
I did Vietnam December 8 69 to December 23 of 70. I was an engineer 46 engineers.
I hate going to the VA Hospital because they are rude to us. They cuss at us and give us below standard medical care. We should have the same medical care as a president of the United States.
I join Australia Army 1971 1 RAR was due to go but it finished before we could go. Did 12yrs, love ever minute of it.
It is not like you did not try. 12 years is not bad. I got 3 years active (1966-1969) and three reserves. Made it to Vietnam. Then tried again in 91 had the war started without me while I was in the MEPS station.
The proud son of a Hippy Vietnam Vet born with Autism, Scoleosis ,Shoermans disease and a whole host of nualigacal problems caused by Angent Orange exposure. He went before his draft came up, served 13 months and 1 day, changed in a airport bathroom and threw his unifom in the trash can. I love you dad and welcome home. Thank you for your service. I wasn't always able to say that but it gets easier in my old age. Especpicaly after my mother passed.
The music and feel of the song and the era may have been a little naive, but can you feel the difference in the messaging? The era was filled with positivity and hope, whereas the current is filled with hopelessness and anger. Which works better? It's not being filled with nostalgia, but I long for the spirit of 1967.
Nailed it. Better off naive and optomistic or realistic and pessamistic? Life.
Best rock ever brings back d good olde days some sad but others makes me stronger and firm on what we stand and fought for proud to b american
BLESS Y'ALL - THANK YOU❤️❤️💞💞💞2024❤❤
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Prayers for you and your family are doing well and you are doing well and you are doing
❤😊
Oh WoW!!!! This brings me back to when I was in the Seals, just like in the Movies!.. and then as a pilot in a Cayuse and I had an 8 Track tape player-Just like in the Movies!
And then I was a Captain on a patrol boat in the Mekong and had an 8 Track tape player -Just like in the Movies !! Wow I sure miss those Days way back then… Just like in the movies……
what a liar you are, you just want to pretend
I'm guessing introspection is not a SEAL trait..keep it up ! Love it
I wanted to put an 8 track player in our Duce and a half, but the 12 volt 8 track would not work on 24 volts. But had a little RCA transistor radio that fit under the handle for the flip out window. It worked great at lower speeds. At higher speeds you could not hear anything.😊 But it was just AFVN only. That was a long time ago.
God bless those who served in vietnam
Great music, bad war. Make love, not war.
hadn't time cong saw to that lol
While enjoying cool jams let’s not forget freedom comes at a high cost from the blood of patriots.
We went to Nam to restore freedom and democracy. It didn`t happen, we were booted out like running dog and cursed at home.Some elite got very rich though.
Agreed. I was a kid at the time so I'm a tourist but I reflect when I hear the tracks.. and thats with admirtaion for survivors of the shit-storm it must have been.
This is an absolutely memory.. God Bless America🇺🇸✊🏻
We were just kids, we were drafted, we went, we saw the horror, we lived though the horror
The indescribable horror still lives in all of us.
To all of my colleagues along the DMZ in 68 who also had to face elusive Charlie: Semper-Fi
Good luck to you and mates
As soon as we came out of the boonies, we turned Armed Forces Radio. I was Sgt. Joe, 101st ABN, 11Bravo, '69-'70. Now, just another old man.
You'll always be a warrior. God bless.
@@christopherhartline1863 Thank You.
Born in 66 still listening in 2024 ...timeless!!!
I lost alot of friend's over there. May your friends rest in peace. God Bless You Brother!
Old RSA soldiers also went to Nam. Namibia 😂😂😂 Listen to the same music. Salute guys
love the songs you all are wonderful
All best from Polish veteran with American brothers Iraq 2004 and Afganistan 2014/2015🫡
Massive respect for you Brother
I was in Iraq 2004 and 2008. I saw the Polish troops there, in Nasariyah Camp Cedar and Baghdad camp Liberty. Greetings!!!
God bless
@@adampaszkowski644 les polonais sont toujours sur les gros coups !
Growing up with a military family. We loved music, my Father played guitar. It's part of All of my family. Good music was the only thing I can say was comforting for a Military Brat ❤️ to young to know but I knew enough
I was a door gunner on hueys. I love listening to all this music while flying our missions especially when we were flying low level. Nothing like a 100 mile an hour wind blowing on you and watching the ground racing by under you and hearing the sound of the main rotors cutting and grabbing the air feeling that ship shuttering and vibrating in turns. Gets the heart pumping just thinking about it.
R.I,P, Smokey still rippin it up brother,
Yeah I was there July 69 to July 71. It was hot, humid and depressing. But the music was great.
Dang. Must've been hard to go through.
I was in Nam 1972 b com 502 101st airborne camp eagles
cher dennis je vous écris de France et je n'ai qu'une chose à vous dire : God bless you
@MarieliseLegrand thank you, but I can't read French ,I think it's French,
Yes it IS french !
I was in the Army 1972, this takes me back in time. I'm letting it rip 😂
una canzone che ti fà tornare in dietro di anni,e ti fa tornare in mente tanti ricordi
immense hommage à tous les anciens du Viet Nam, à leur sacrifice et à leur dévouement à leur patrie et bien sur nous n'oublions pas ceux qui sont tombés avec honneur et gloire, qu'ils reposent en paix
Respect aux combattants des 2 camps. Ok. Mais jamais d oubli et de pardon pour le commandement et le gvt Us qui après nous avoir bien savonne la planche en 54 a DBP, ont abandonné les khmers et les viets aux horreurs du communisme... comme ils font tjs et feront encore demain en ukraine qd leurs interets ciaux le commandera...et je ne parle meme de l agent orange qui tue encore aujourd'hui alors que ces salauds donnent des leçons de morale au monde entier..
Love the music from the Nam
Ю
Б. Х. Ґ.б. Б
Thank you sir for serving our country so ppl would understand that you put your life on the line so we could be safe in our country bless America & bless you too sir❤ in 🇺🇸 & living cause you were there for us amen.
My uncle LT Joseph frankoviak who died for his men in Vietnam
I remember being on point..
smelling the Cong smoking weed!
u always knew they were near !!
the Cong said we smelled like pork so the smart ones ate rice and rotten duck eggs and fish oil so they smelled like them Sinor Trip of 65 Fortunate Son WillSon
Thank you from Slovakia
We got to get out of this place, during basic training.
Topkick rolls up into your pos and informs you " gentleman! I am here to impart upon you. The wisdom of old, as passed down to me from my sergeant and to he his sergeant before him. Behold, the glory of real music."
Love this music even tho I’m from Yugoslavia and me parents and grandparents were sending about 5% of their monthly income to support our brothers fighting in Vietkong. 🇻🇳🇻🇳🇻🇳 General Giap was in top 10 best generals in 20th Century.
Interesting
Grew up on this music in the 70’s. Still love it. When I was 7 - 10 I had a friend named Brian who was a Green Beret. He’d go away for long stretches but always had interesting stories to tell when he came back. He befriended our little group and told us to stay out of the Army when we grew up. I ended up in the Navy in the 80’s instead.
Was his last name Cottrell?
Only true VETS CAN SPEAK ABOUT YHE HORROR S IN NAM ,, AS FAR AS THE MUSIC WAS CONCERNED 🌬️👍💨 SWEET
Amen!!!!
He was so excited to be coming home!
I am addressing you as a veteran of the Homeland War from Croatia, at the same time a volunteer and war invalid, I want to say that we are Croatian freedom fighters from the great Serbian aggression that attacked us in alliance with the Yugoslav People's Army, which until then was at the same time the army of all of the people of Yugoslavia, we could no longer reconcile with it and we needed a new image, and that image was you, the American fighters against communist imperialist evil, and thank you for that image, for your selfless sacrifice and for the effort you made invested in preventing communism from spreading even further
On our transistors listing as Hurricanes passed untill you were found & told not to run those batteries down.
Rock and roll Will never die
🇺🇲🤝🇩🇪💯% 👍no Russ in my Homeland ! Thanks
🇺🇸🤝🇩🇪 none anywhere soon
I love how there's 2 types of themes to Vietnam era music.
"Remind me of Better Times and Home" or "Get me the F&%K outta here"
My family was Airforce. They were squares. They never liked this stuff, but I always loved it.
The government drafted my dad and then poisoned him with Agent Orange. He had PTSD and health problems my whole life. He passed in 2019. This was the music that played in our house my whole childhood. ✌🏻
Such a great loss for many and the difficulties they suffered w/o alot of help from the government. My Thanks and Prayers for all who Served and the survivors!!🙏🙏🙏❤❤
I am far to young to have served and I'm British so probably not but I remember the Vietnam war from my child day's must have been the news now stamped into my old brain
No war had better music!!
Agree for sure. Vietnam had it all, the music, the pot and opium, fast choppers, mama sans - what more could a young GI ask for ?
Iraq and Afghanistan.
Thanks for your service
I volunteer right now I'll go where they tell me and I'm not lie , just let me have 2weeks leave before being shipped out 😊
My grandpa fought in ‘Nam, damn he was cool.
To.all.vets.antonio.caballero..weslaco..tex..n.all.vets.from..the.valley..n.all.the.nation.thank.u..for..ur..service..God.Bless.u.all...n.the.Usa
They don’t have “Fortunate son” or “bird is the Word”
Impossible
Vietnam 🇻🇳 = best war soundtrack 👍🏻
The PLAYLISTS FÁBIO thank kyo
..Valeu JAMES GORDON ☆☆☆☆