Awesome. Saw them supporting The Stray Cats at the old Lyceum when the Cats first hit the UK. Pirates blew the lid off the place and left an impression on me forever.
Mick Green - what an awesome guitarist - the best!!! I've watched this over and over and am always mesmerized. He pulls all the tricks out of the bag here at speed. No one else plays or sounds like him. The drummer and bassist are amazing too. Tight as fuck. This is pure rock n roll!!
I saw them opening, frequently, for psychobilly acts in the early 80's. My parents enthused about them when they opened for Chuck Berry in London circa 1979. I was a big fan. Mates at school dissed them for being old (in their 40's). I'm 56 now, still laying down bass for my punk band. This lot were the originators, and finest, of British R&R at its best
Right on. There was only 20 years between Rockabilly and punk. 20 years is nothing. Guys that started playing skiffle and rockabilly in their teens were only in their 30s by the time punk happened. It's exactly the same music. It just went underground during the whole psychedelic-progressive thing, then went mainstream again when the drugs wore off.
My band opened for Johnny Kidd and the Pirates in the mid sixties with THIS Pirates lineup. They blew me away at the time. Fast forward to the seventies and I was once again playing opening act for them, minus Johnny Kidd of course. Mick Green was a HUGE influence on so many of us at the time and without him there would never have been a Wilko Johnson as we know him today. Both great players but Mick was the master in this genre.
This guitar solo is in the top 10 of the greatest 15 seconds ever of rock n roll. Ever. It starts at 1:21 and just gets better for the entire 15 secs, but the sound he makes his guitar make at 1:31 is distilled 99% pure rock n roll. Ever.
I agree! That solo is pure talent and a joy to listen to. Very few people can make a guitar sound like that. Reminds me of Stevie Ray Vaughn--both Stevie and Mick are guitar gods. Mick and the Pirates are a sad reminder that sometimes superior talents, even with hard work, do not break into the really big time. I never heard of this group until a couple of months ago.
Grew up with this music, Went to school with Micks nephew who played guitar just like him and I played drums. Mick was the greatest guitarist the UK has ever produced, The Master of The Telecaster and a really nice bloke!!
These guys were/are so underrated, especially here in the States. I found their "Out of their skulls" album in a pawn shop of all places. What's funny is years later I lived near the guy who wrote the liner notes for it. He had met the Pirates and said they were great guys.
Never underrated he has the Word Legend in front of his name,I see him with Johnny Kidds Pirates in the very early 60s at Leyton Baths,they were regulars there Mick and them were brilliant then.
Sounds like 5 or 6 geezers on stage but there's 3. Astonishing. First saw them supporting Eddie and the Hot Rods at the Roundhouse in 1976, when I was 17 and got see them about 10 times over the years, the last time being April 2005 at the Half Moon Putney. Incredible performance , 32 year old Mick Green totally in control with Johnny and Frank on board. I'm proud to have been one of the blokes down the front at their gigs. Emotional and Powerful stuff.
This is real rock trio...maybe the best ever...I saw them live in 1977...hot stuff...second time when I saw them too,was 2000 centyry,they was old men,but still kicking...Mick Green was really guitar hero...
He was a great man, friendly man, good old Rocker who just jumped on stage and start playing/singing (with band of cource) old´n´new Pirates songs...That kind of Mick i´ve learn to know...and i´m youngster.... -68 born Teddyboy since -77
The young man in the black raincoat, is what Elvis Presley always wanted to be in his other life and take the flight playing the electric guitar....Regards
@@raymondlang I saw the Pirates at Reading Festival in 1978 and at Erics club in Liverpool late 78, I would say that the Reading set was their greatest ever performance they were simply Magnificent!! Them and the original Dr Feelgood were unmatchable
@@stevebowness9435 You lucky man! Only saw tham around 1978 at our local Sports Centre, here in my little village of Harworth near Doncaster. Never forget it.
@@raymondlang Raymond if you go on TH-cam and Google The Pirates at Reading Festival, two or three of their songs will come on, then you'll see how they worked the crowd info a frenzy!Blistering stuff.
Proud to have seen this band live. Advice. You have got to be confident to think that you are going to be able to follow them. They have blown many headliners away and righteously so. 😮 😅
I did a gig with them in 1978 when Mick,s amp failed and they stood there with their piratey thunderstorm noises going off ,unable to start. Mick said have you got an amp, disregarded my vox ac30 and opted for the basspayer,s hh transistor 100watt.I remember he just plugged in ,used one hand movement to roll all available knobs to maximum and just laid into the first intro at blistering volume .This was at the rock garden and the acoustics made this small concrete space only amplify this effect.
Mick Green, one of the best but too often underrated :/ A unique style, very inventive and full of energy, which has influenced many guitarists. And a very humble musician, who passed away too soon.
the pirates are the utter proof that punk rock was nothing new, its 1977 and everyone is obsessed with the pistols, clash etc but these blew them all away, absolutely brilliant raw rock n roll, they put most so called punk bands to shame
1977 was UK punk time. Punk started quite before, between Detroit, Akron and NYC, back in the early 70's. And this cover from The Pirats of the 1956 Johnny Burnett song is not "punk" per say, but it has the energy of Rock n Roll, and that's ageless... Punk helped re-energize rock, and that's a lot...
@marcosgonzalez6610 Anyone with even a basic understanding of the history of rock n roll gets the importance of this song to defining a new unhinged sound. The Pirates version here is sensational.
I won a dozen hard rock/ punk albums in about 1980.One of them was the Pirates (Black cover)and I never got to play it because some lowlife lifted it at a party.Many years later I got a compilation Pirates CD and loved it to death until that grew legs!!!
I saw them twice in the late 70s..what a band.....Mick Green was such an exciting player....the gig in Scunthorpe was blistering..anybody remember that? A great three piece..they should have been huge....RIP Mick. Thanks to Johnny and Frank.
In history of my hometown, Lahti (the business city), Finland, a punch of Pirates' fans formed up a real badass street gang hanging out at a burger stand. Big guys with a rockabilly hairdo and black leather jackets with the skull and guitars logo.
I absolutely loved this band. Saw them at Dingwalls, the Hope & Anchor and (I think) the Cartoon in Croydon in the 70s & 80s. Mick Green was an absolute guitar hero to me, along with his protege Wilko Johnson. Last saw them at the Half Moon in Putney - on my anniversary in November 2008 (the wife wasn't so impressed!). I finally managed to buy a 1970s Telecaster Custom like Mick's - if only I could play it a fraction as well as he could...
FWIW When I gigged with them in the sixties Mick was using a Les Paul Junior and that was if anything even more blistering than the later Telecaster deluxe!
This is the first time I even heard of this band "The Pirates"-ROCK N ROLL to the MAX. These guys are F**** great!!! I love the way they take this old 50's stuff and just rock it right up man.This is 1977?? What happened to them ?? Where are they now?? Next stop-Wikepedia-lol. Fuckin wild ,man.
We sang the Pirates' praises loudly and extensively in Blitz Magazine back in the day. They got the job done far, far better than most, as is evidenced in abundance here.
I regret looking in Wikepedia-they have had so many lineup changes.They actually began in the 50's and just kept going with various musicians coming and going. They still fuckin rock. Thank god for TH-cam.
Awesome. Saw them supporting The Stray Cats at the old Lyceum when the Cats first hit the UK. Pirates blew the lid off the place and left an impression on me forever.
Now that's a pairing of bands!
Did you have *any* energy left after The Pirates?
@@VintageSG I was too blown away by how good the Pirates were for anything the Cats did to impress me too much!!
Mick Green - what an awesome guitarist - the best!!!
I've watched this over and over and am always mesmerized. He pulls all the tricks out of the bag here at speed. No one else plays or sounds like him.
The drummer and bassist are amazing too. Tight as fuck.
This is pure rock n roll!!
Dr Feelgood
@@adeblair Wilko was heavily influenced by Mick Green.
Dick Dale was better and invented that style
So Raw!
@@nathandodge665
And he would be one happy dick
The Pirates--proof it was a straight line from rockabilly to punk.
I saw them opening, frequently, for psychobilly acts in the early 80's. My parents enthused about them when they opened for Chuck Berry in London circa 1979. I was a big fan. Mates at school dissed them for being old (in their 40's). I'm 56 now, still laying down bass for my punk band. This lot were the originators, and finest, of British R&R at its best
Right on. There was only 20 years between Rockabilly and punk. 20 years is nothing. Guys that started playing skiffle and rockabilly in their teens were only in their 30s by the time punk happened. It's exactly the same music. It just went underground during the whole psychedelic-progressive thing, then went mainstream again when the drugs wore off.
Absolutely!
@@bokehintheussr5033acting like fellas like these weren’t jacked up on coke plenty 😂
Punkabilly Elvis! :D
Never heard of 'em but it's sounds great!
Mick Green is a monster. Such vicious tone, feel, and energy.
Hearing this for the first time. Man this is kick azz rock n roll. Oh yeah!!!!!!!
My band opened for Johnny Kidd and the Pirates in the mid sixties with THIS Pirates lineup. They blew me away at the time. Fast forward to the seventies and I was once again playing opening act for them, minus Johnny Kidd of course. Mick Green was a HUGE influence on so many of us at the time and without him there would never have been a Wilko Johnson as we know him today. Both great players but Mick was the master in this genre.
a rare genius with a brilliant rhythm section and front man
What band were you in?
Mick Green was indeed a huge influence on many, including me.
bonkey dollocks Apparently Ivan Carling was in a few groups back in the day. I googled it.
We supported them as well on 21st June 1965 in South Wales. www.thepiecesofmind.com/gallery
Howdy.
Mick Green is on fire. His guitar sounds wonderfully dirty.
Regards.
That second solo. Holy ****!
Saw them in the 60’s with Johnny Kid,Mick Green was phenomenal, just a Tele and Vox Ac 30 no pedals , best Tele sound ever.
No computers, real and raw. Very nice.
That bass player is doing an epic job.
absolute monster.
Definitely!!!🤘🤘🤘
Johnny Spence.
This guitar solo is in the top 10 of the greatest 15 seconds ever of rock n roll. Ever. It starts at 1:21 and just gets better for the entire 15 secs, but the sound he makes his guitar make at 1:31 is distilled 99% pure rock n roll. Ever.
I agree! That solo is pure talent and a joy to listen to. Very few people can make a guitar sound like that. Reminds me of Stevie Ray Vaughn--both Stevie and Mick are guitar gods. Mick and the Pirates are a sad reminder that sometimes superior talents, even with hard work, do not break into the really big time. I never heard of this group until a couple of months ago.
@@jacobblumin4260 Mick was acknowledged by so many famous names in the business as a divine influence, he was indeed a god
@@jacobblumin4260de
Yeah , perhaps Tarantino can still come up with a scenario that can handle this kinda guitar fire 🔥
This video keeps running thru my 'options', and I keep watching it. Great raw, rockin' & rollin' fun.
Yep, same here!
Never heard of The Pirates.I’m digging it.Thanks!!
Johnny Kidd and the Pirates.
Borrowed my amp at a gig in North London, back in the sixties. It never sounded like that when I played through it.
Grew up with this music, Went to school with Micks nephew who played guitar just like him and I played drums. Mick was the greatest guitarist the UK has ever produced, The Master of The Telecaster and a really nice bloke!!
Mick Green, a guitarists guitarist. A genuinely lovely soul and staunch family man.
My new favorite version
この演奏がいいね。アルバムに収録されているバージョンよりもアップテンポだし、ギターもはっきり聞こえる。
si es moda de los años 60s
These guys were/are so underrated, especially here in the States. I found their "Out of their skulls" album in a pawn shop of all places. What's funny is years later I lived near the guy who wrote the liner notes for it. He had met the Pirates and said they were great guys.
Never heard of this band, came here cos of all the references in comments from Dr. Feelgood videos. U can see where Wilko Johnson got his chops.
Do you have a copy of the liner notes? Or any lyrics for the songs they did on the B side such as Gibson Martin Fender? thanks, PF
We opened for The Pirates in some college in East London back in 1977. Generation X we're on the bill too. The Pirates were astonishing.
What band were you in? Were you any good?
Lost for words! Really how good is this!!!
Never underrated he has the Word Legend in front of his name,I see him with Johnny Kidds Pirates in the very early 60s at Leyton Baths,they were regulars there Mick and them were brilliant then.
These Lads are at the top of their game
How good is this? Epic rock n roll.
So tasty and up there with our brit icons, and still kicks ass decades later, LP is on my hall of fame
Wow mick green , what a guitarist.
can only describe Mick Greens playing here as ferocious! quite unlike anyone else... the guitar breathes a sigh of relief at the end..
Sounds like 5 or 6 geezers on stage but there's 3. Astonishing. First saw them supporting Eddie and the Hot Rods at the Roundhouse in 1976, when I was 17 and got see them about 10 times over the years, the last time being April 2005 at the Half Moon Putney. Incredible performance , 32 year old Mick Green totally in control with Johnny and Frank on board. I'm proud to have been one of the blokes down the front at their gigs. Emotional and Powerful stuff.
Parabéns, vc viu duas merdas.
i went to the hope and anchor in 1981 with my pals band and you could STILL smell mick greens ball sweat !!!
It's telling to see how much these fellas put into a performance! 100% drenched in sweat but undiminished in intensity
Amphetamines.
@@paulsouth4794 Not unlikely
Cocaine’s a helluva drug 😂
Lonesome train - my absolute favorite!
This is real rock trio...maybe the best ever...I saw them live in 1977...hot stuff...second time when I saw them too,was 2000 centyry,they was old men,but still kicking...Mick Green was really guitar hero...
Yes indeed, I saw too them live in 1977. In Finland
Hendrix experience would like a word with you.
Love the idea that bands like this still played 50's tunes, and done them very VERY WELL!
Здорово 👍 наикрутейшие рокеры суперская группа рок 🎸 навсегда
The Pirates by far the best three piece ! Blowing many a big name off stage !
Original Motörhead are wonderfully dynamic .
Rory Gallagher ‘s trio also excellent .
Mick Green ‘s playing is stunning here , real drive .
Mick Green legend
He was a great man, friendly man, good old Rocker who just jumped on stage and start playing/singing (with band of cource) old´n´new Pirates songs...That kind of Mick i´ve learn to know...and i´m youngster.... -68 born Teddyboy since -77
The young man in the black raincoat, is what Elvis Presley always wanted to be in his other life and take the flight playing the electric guitar....Regards
Legit. Dr Feelgood quality and feels.
La putin de rythmique de ouf 😮 , le guitariste vient d,une autre planète.
Mick Green est un Alien. RIP 😢 .
One of the first, and best gigs I ever went to The Pirates at Nottingham Boat Club in 77. Awesome live band.
these guys are smoking - saw them back in the late 70's - what a trio, each of them a master on their instrument.
The literal definition of a sweaty gig. Fantastic!
Went to see these twice back in 77/78. The best live band around at the time by a country mile. Mick Green total legend.
These dudes are the bomb 🔥
Love the sound he makes on that Tele, great tone, these boys rock that's for sure.
Love these guys…
In the late 70s, they were the best live band I had ever seen..Mick Green the complete rock guitarist.
Mick Green Wilko Johnson's hero and inspiration 🙌 👏
@@stevebowness9435 Yes! Seen Wilko many times over the past 10 years.
@@raymondlang I saw the Pirates at Reading Festival in 1978 and at Erics club in Liverpool late 78, I would say that the Reading set was their greatest ever performance they were simply Magnificent!! Them and the original Dr Feelgood were unmatchable
@@stevebowness9435 You lucky man! Only saw tham around 1978 at our local Sports Centre, here in my little village of Harworth near Doncaster. Never forget it.
@@raymondlang Raymond if you go on TH-cam and Google The Pirates at Reading Festival, two or three of their songs will come on, then you'll see how they worked the crowd info a frenzy!Blistering stuff.
Pulsating and superb drumming from Frank Farley. This driving rhythm is not easy to play at this kind of tempo!
Such great memories of seeing this band a lot in the late 70's early 80's
Great song, love the way Mick Green plays the guitar
Proud to have seen this band live. Advice. You have got to be confident to think that you are going to be able to follow them. They have blown many headliners away and righteously so. 😮
😅
Love that relentless driving beat. That's Rock & Roll!!!!!!!
Calnon Hardy I can see where Metal gets it from.
Great driving version of the old Johnny Burnette Trio classic!
This is just awesome! Pure music and raw talent!
Now that's the way I like my dirty rock and roll. That is how it's done.
The Pirates really embraced punk rock here. Sad nobody remembers this side of them, only two 60s hits
Hey I'm doing my research! Theres' two of us now!
Brilliant!
Never known before of Mr green. He's class. Proper mean guitarists, no bollocks just playing.
I did a gig with them in 1978 when Mick,s amp failed and they stood there with their piratey thunderstorm noises going off ,unable to start. Mick said have you got an amp, disregarded my vox ac30 and opted for the basspayer,s hh transistor 100watt.I remember he just plugged in ,used one hand movement to roll all available knobs to maximum and just laid into the first intro at blistering volume .This was at the rock garden and the acoustics made this small concrete space only amplify this effect.
Some great bass lines
Super, this is so cool, wow. Nice and good ❤️🙏🎼🎶🎵🎸🎤🥁✌️🍀👌
Pub Rock forever!
Monica Walery.Let`s quit that pub,Ok? It`s ROCK.
Monica I'm witcha!
Mick Green, one of the best but too often underrated :/ A unique style, very inventive and full of energy, which has influenced many guitarists. And a very humble musician, who passed away too soon.
There's no one who can ever play a guitar like Mick Green can - so indulge yourself knowing it can never be equalled!
the pirates are the utter proof that punk rock was nothing new, its 1977 and everyone is obsessed with the pistols, clash etc but these blew them all away, absolutely brilliant raw rock n roll, they put most so called punk bands to shame
Sucks
1977 was UK punk time. Punk started quite before, between Detroit, Akron and NYC, back in the early 70's. And this cover from The Pirats of the 1956 Johnny Burnett song is not "punk" per say, but it has the energy of Rock n Roll, and that's ageless... Punk helped re-energize rock, and that's a lot...
The Cramps sounded the same
@@oliviermotteau The UK already had a burgeoning punk subculture before the Pistols. They just put a face on it.
@marcosgonzalez6610 Anyone with even a basic understanding of the history of rock n roll gets the importance of this song to defining a new unhinged sound. The Pirates version here is sensational.
Thanks for posting this gem. It's just as electric as I remember it when I saw them live in the 70's.
I won a dozen hard rock/ punk albums in about 1980.One of them was the Pirates (Black cover)and I never got to play it because some lowlife lifted it at a party.Many years later I got a compilation Pirates CD and loved it to death until that grew legs!!!
Wow! This is amazing...!!!
Our first gig in 1990 was inspired by The Pirates! Still huge fan! Best trio with energy!
Saw them at Wakefield Tech sometime in the early 70's insane energy levels and boy could they ROCK!
What an incredible band! So much energy in their performance.
this is the coolest thing I’ve ever seen
Man I really enjoyed that !
That's how Rock and Roll should be. Playing in small places and the public dancing at 3 foot before the band. Not in big stadiums.
Dingwalls was a brilliant venue. I vaguely remember seeing the pink fairies there.
Proper band. Same as Dr feelgood.
Totally agree!
Absolutely spot on. I've been telling everybody I know that for a while.
I've watched this more than a few times. One of the best things ever!
That rocked!
The Pirates! Harrr!
Super awesome bad ass!!!!
Saw them live several times - always fierce rock - and great.
AWESOME! What a great drummer!
I saw them twice in the late 70s..what a band.....Mick Green was such an exciting player....the gig in Scunthorpe was blistering..anybody remember that?
A great three piece..they should have been huge....RIP Mick.
Thanks to Johnny and Frank.
In history of my hometown, Lahti (the business city), Finland, a punch of Pirates' fans formed up a real badass street gang hanging out at a burger stand. Big guys with a rockabilly hairdo and black leather jackets with the skull and guitars logo.
Pure gold. Pure, gigantic talent! They should have made it to the pinnacle of popularity but it doesn't always work out. Long live the Pirates!!
I absolutely loved this band. Saw them at Dingwalls, the Hope & Anchor and (I think) the Cartoon in Croydon in the 70s & 80s. Mick Green was an absolute guitar hero to me, along with his protege Wilko Johnson. Last saw them at the Half Moon in Putney - on my anniversary in November 2008 (the wife wasn't so impressed!). I finally managed to buy a 1970s Telecaster Custom like Mick's - if only I could play it a fraction as well as he could...
FWIW When I gigged with them in the sixties Mick was using a Les Paul Junior and that was if anything even more blistering than the later Telecaster deluxe!
@@ivancarling '72 Telecaster Custom not a Deluxe
AHH Dingwalls..... What a smashing venue that was.
Let's be honest if you are in a velvet pirate jacket and boots..
You better be able to play guitar!...and my God could he
But of course he could and it looks good too!
Who needs a shirt. Mick Green forever!
Rock In Perpetuity Mick Green, the thinking man's guitar hero...
Wilko's Idol
Amazing! .....how can you not love this?!
God...Dalm. That guitar solo @1:58 CUTS...DEEEP!!! Right into my soul. Holy machine gun nest, Batman!
Enormes!!!!!!!
Stonkingly brilliant.
So much energy. Wish I had been there. Wilko picked a great role mode in Mick Green
This is the first time I even heard of this band "The Pirates"-ROCK N ROLL to the MAX.
These guys are F**** great!!! I love the way they take this old 50's stuff and just rock it right up man.This is 1977?? What happened to them ?? Where are they now?? Next stop-Wikepedia-lol. Fuckin wild ,man.
Frank Srobotnjak I
Geez, I've been living under a rock
I've never heard of these guys ( start throwing stones now)
This was awesome!
We sang the Pirates' praises loudly and extensively in Blitz Magazine back in the day. They got the job done far, far better than most, as is evidenced in abundance here.
I regret looking in Wikepedia-they have had so many lineup changes.They actually began in the 50's and just kept going with various musicians coming and going.
They still fuckin rock. Thank god for TH-cam.
Best UK band ever....the Pirates (pity Johnny Kidd had to leave us so early:()
they were simply the best
Taken from the most AWESOME ALBUM OF ALL TIME!! 'Out Of Their Skulls'. If you can find a copy, do yourself a favour! Mick Green, THE GREATEST!!