@@marilynryan7822Hello?!!! Because it was filmed in California! (Editted as a post script: The biggest racial divide in our country today, is in rural America. You can debate who lit the match, but it was always there. The demographic is a big, red, republican, racist wasteland of white, "christian", neo-fascist, ignorance.)
Also of interest here, was Carolyne Barry (1943-2015), who was the Shindig girl with the dark rimmed glasses, who was also an actress who made her mark on numerous guest star roles-also billed as Carole Shelyne, who guest-starred on NBC's "STAR TREK" as "The Metron" being in "Arena" (Jannuary 19, 1967), and an episode of NBC's "THE MAN FROM UNCLE" ("The Cap and Gown Affair", April 14, 1967) also billed as Carole Shelyne. Carolyne Barry acted until 2013 before she passed away on June 16, 2015. she had a total of 22 acting credits to her career, but a popular Shindig girl dancer!
Rock, Soul, R&B, Folk, Country, Jazz, Funk, Psychedelic folk/rock - no colour bar, no prejudice, a 'do your thing' zone where everyone belonged. No other variety show was live, pure music, raw unfiltered production. Compare to Jambouree, Ed Sullivan, Smothers Brothers, American Bandstand, Where the Action Is, etc. etc. - no - Shindig! was the real thing. Even these old videos still communicate that positive energy and fresh vitality even now,
Be sure to listen to Donna Loren's acclaimed Podcast: "Love's a Secret Weapon". If you are curious about her early career or what she's doing now, tune in as she reads her memoir, chapter by chapter. With co-host Dr Adam Gerace and Special Guests. th-cam.com/play/PLiWNf08u_-XnvBLugNI1D-MEvuIDab9qk.html or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Terri Garr was one of the dancers and Glen Campbell,Leon Russel, and Billy Preston along with most of the wrecking crew in the house band,also Darleen Love and the Blossoms as back up singers.
I was four years old and watched it religiously. I remember walking up and down the block singing these songs - Sherri, Big Girls Don't Cry, Hang on Sloopy, etc. My hair had never been cut, long blonde hair and in '67 I got a Beatle haircut😅 Everyone was stunned when I went to school. My teacher said, It looks very nice Lolololololll
I saw James Brown live in 1964. You knew then that you where watching something special. Something you’d never seen before and would probably never see again.
I was lucky enough to attend several tapings of Shindig, as I lived close to the studio in Silverlake and headed over there right after school let out. My God, the acts I got to see! I'll never forget Darlene Love or literally running into Lucille Ball who was there to see her son in Dino, Desi and Billy. Good times!
I was 15 and watched the show and listened to the music on my radio as much as I could. I even got in trouble for listening to my transistor radio on an earphone at school. It was a great time to be young.
The best thing about Shindig was getting to see so many of the British Invasion acts, also Motown and it gave 50's rockers a second chance to perform their hits from the 50's and early sixties. Live music, live rock and roll, R&B and pop what a wonderful era for music.
Geez Luise, this VHI retrospective was 33 years ago! My oldest was only 2, and my youngest was still 3yrs away from entering the world. How does time pass so quickly? I wasn't around yet for Shindig, but it looks incredible. I was a 70's kid & 80's teenager, the MTV generation. Just got married and started a family young.
@@misslora3896 Shindig was the first and only show like this in the world music of the teen generation.when they got James Burton to form the ShinDawgs it secured a world audience.
Wow, complex melodies that aren't simply pentatonic clones of every other song. Back before the industry shut down creativity & originality. RIP great music.
Glad I was so fortunate to have lived thru this era. Back when music was music and the talent was beyond definition. Singers that could actually sing and the bands sounded the same live as their records. With all due respect it is a pretty tough row to hoe for those that followed years later. Shindig was certainly a huge opportunity for many to advance their careers. Love it all.
People watching today, who weren’t there, cannot possibly understand how together in the music scene all people were! We loved and embraced the black artists as white teens, same as we did any other band! The racism today is not on account of the white people of my generation, we loved everybody!🤷♂️
The 60s was the definite era for rock, pop, soul, country and all. There was so much creativity going on! And the best part was that we kids were exposed to all kinds on music and enjoyed it. Very much UNLIKE today.
Shindig was one of the very few shows of that era where you get to actually hear the bands play live which was unheard of at that time very cool to see all that good old stuff again
I watched Shindig when I was 10-12 years old. The energy was intense and palpable. I was always riveted by it, so much so that my parents tried to restrict me from watching it. Funny thing though - they could never present a clear cut argument for why. I think the wildness scared them and they didn't want their kid to share in that. Fortunately, none of that stopped me from becoming a professional musician and bringing that wildness to life every time I performed. Now I'm 70 and I'm still doing it. Very grateful to Shindig for that inspiration.
I was 9 years old when "Shindig" premiered on ABC; absolutely the best. My favorite Shindig dancer was Carole Shelyne (later known as Carolyne Barry)--the blond with the black goggle glasses--RIP Carole.
They don't show The Righteous Brothers till the end credits, but they were a big part of Shindig. They had the house band, but also the house singers, The Righteous Brothers, Bobby Sherman, Donna Loren, and The Blossoms featuring Darlene Love to name a few. Watched this every week. Even in the Army overseas, AFN would show them on tv's on base.
I fell in love with jackie de shannon,i tear up with her singing what the world needs now.first time i saw petula clark singing downtown with all the excitement and joy of our sixties.once in a life time.
WHO are the 79 people who gave this a thumbs down?! Donna, this brought back so many wonderful memories (including seeing our dear old friend, Dewey Martin, may he RIP) of a time that can never again be replicated. How extraordinary it had to have been to be such an integral part of something that prompted many of us who were NOT fortunate enough to live on the West Coast to start dreaming of "one day I'm going to..." I finally made that journey 10 years after Shindig went off the air, but have always remembered the sheer sense of awe I felt the first time that I saw the "Hollywood & Vine" street intersection signs. What joy this video evoked in me, personally, and I can't imagine how anyone watching it could fail to feel the same. Whether or not they personally ever "made that trip west." THANK YOU!
@@kentpearson4478 - Do they feel the same way about reading classic literature, since they weren't born yet when the authors walked the Earth? Nothing quite like life in historic deprivation, eh?
When I went to Madera Elementary School wearing my white go go boots like the Shindig dancers, I was floating on a cloud of cool. It was a great TV show.
Shindig! was an American musical variety series aired on ABC from September 1964 to January 1966. PS - glad that some of these recordings survived. PS2 - glad to see Flo and Eddy!
Even though it's been 50+ years, I still remember those Shindig dancers (which was, to be honest, the man reason most guys my age watched the show in the first place). Wow . . .
When I got the VHS tapes of "Shindig!" clips decades ago, Zsa Zsa Gabor singing (sort of) was a complete surprise that gave me repeated attacks of uncontrolled laughter. "Vere that vig-hat on my HEAD!" (9:49).
I may have seen the Aretha performance at that time. Love the part when Aretha hits that high note and Darlene Love says like, "sing that song girl"...lol
I miss these songs and the beautiful people that sang and performed on shindig. I feel so upset when I hear todays music, what a difference and innocence. Much more fun.
I was still in single digits when this was on, not for me, but it was on Friday nights and there was only one tv station … so we watched. With quick eyes you may see Terri Garr with all the dancing GreatGrandMothers!
Can’t believe that we were treated to something this great for free! Who knew it wouldn’t last forever😢 There is no way something this great could be put together today
Dick Clarks American Bandstand had nothing on Shindig! When I see these videos today, it makes me long for these good ole days! The youthful energy of this show could power a good size town! Wayyyy ahead of its time for sure!
Yes it is good music but let’s not forget our parents and grandparents said the same about our music, flush it down. Every generation will say the same thing.
Cudahy 1960 Anyone today compare to James Brown (he wasn’t actually a favorite of mine except for “Try Me” but he was very talented) and Jackie Wilson? Or Nat King Cole? Or The Beatles? Or Elvis? Or ...
An absolutely amazing program. The energy, the production, the talent. Everybody who was anybody appeared. And some who were not yet somebody but would soon be superstars. Probably unique in television and far in advance of anything else at the time. American Bandstand couldn't hold a candle to it. Even the audience got into the action. 🎶🎶🎶🎶🎙🎤🎷🎸🎹🎺🎶🎶🎶🎶❤❤❤
I'm very agree with Sabrina Wilson when she said, those days the performers put feeling in their songs that's why people loved and still love those songs the prof is that today they are considered classics
Oh, Mercy! There was an amazing AM radio station ( KILT ) out of Houston, TX. that simply played all this amazing music, its format was like that of Shindig, Aretha, then the stones, Little Richard, etc. And then the Beatle's new single would play and the world stopped for those few moments.
What a great program! It was pretty innovative in its day. Way too bad it was cancelled. For the first time since American Bandstand, the kids had their own show, full of energy and great music!
I remember watching Shindig every Wednesday night and Saturday night in the mid sixties. Fab and gear show was Shindig a blast from the past. Thanks for sharing the video it brings back memories for me when i was a teenage girl in the mid sixties.
Shindig was nuclear! The quantity of talent on stage at any given moment was unquantifiable! I'll never forget when it hit TV. It was truly unlike any show of the time. The energy would arc right through the TV set and singe the furniture! I'm grateful for my life and cherish every day. However, if I had a time machine, I would go back to this time and be in the audience for every show! Thanks Donna! "Baby, you're the ginchiest"!
I can't understand why this show isn't remembered better, or referenced like the Ed Sullivan show still is. Shindig: Groundbreaking, loaded with talent, and just plain fun. Music for the last 40 years has been so corporately controlled. Back then, anyone could be a "one-hit-wonder" and end up on TV! Shindig is of that era--looser, with teenagers telling producers what they liked and wanted, instead of the other way around. There is a tremendous amount of magic in that. Shindig captured the magic of being young.
@@jeffclement2979 Originality and passion and integrity kept evolving for decades and we thought the bar had been set and it couldn't ever get worse. Boy were we wrong.
As the say, imitation is the finest form of flattery, but at least it was ABC-TV ripping off itself when they created SHEBANG which ran on the weekends, to the best of my recollection and SHIVAREE which was an ABC local show in Los Angeles and may nt be familiar to the world at-large.
@moon glow Absolutely! I used to watch this every time it was on. Shindig! focused on a broader variety of popular music than its predecessor and first aired for a half-hour every Wednesday evening, but was expanded to an hour in January 1965. In the fall of 1965, the show split into two half-hour telecasts, on Thursday and Saturday nights.
This was terrific. I was a kid, Vietnam was unfolding all it's blood and rock seemed to be about hope and expression. Good to recall. Nice work, you guys. PS Never seen a hotter live show than Jerry Lee Lewis. Must've been electric in that studio
Always loved this show. Donna Loren& the Rightous Brothers befoe they were known. Sometimes i only wanted to see them, not those English groups. Late 50's & 60's. First time seeing Gene Pitney, my all time favorite even today.
Prodigious talent both guests and house band and dancers....and as said in the commentary in the video, raw and very real. Insanely good with no lip synching. Really really good and authentic.
Funny, all the 60's artists looked old to me back in 1991.... now watching it they look so young....except for Howard Kalyan....he looked old at the beginning of the 70's, then never aged a day
What never ceases to amaze is that the raucous, youth-obsessed Shindig was taped on the ABC lot on Prospect Avenue in Hollywood - the same studio lot where Lawrence Welk taped his weekly shows for the Geritol "seniors generation". In '81 I was on this lot to view a "Fridays" broadcast & ABC pages informed me where the Shindig! & Welk stages were. Talk about a contrast between 2 generations, music cultures & styles! ABC Television Center - Hollywood in the mid '60s, certainly had both generations entertained on their lot.
I got into rock & roll when I was 8yrs old in 1959 in KCMO & never stopped. Chuck Barry & Roy Roberson were what I first listened to. Now I've been into Pink Floyd since 1971 my favorite band. I have seen them in concert. Other bands The Guess Who, Molly Hatchet, The Outlaws, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Deep Purple, Rare Earth, ZZ Top, Quicksilver, Steppenwolf and many other bands in the 1960s & 1970s. I have seen all the bands in concert except The Guess Who. I also saw Fleetwood Mac and many other bands in concert. Rock On!!!!!!!!!!!
The '50s were my childhood years with Elvis Presley and many others, but I remember them very well. The '60s were my teen years and a lot of girl groups came into play and then The Beatles and the British Invasion and too many groups to list. There were also Motown and many other American groups into my adult years. The '70s groups had even more rock and roll groups including Disco but not all were Disco but it dominated for a while.The'80s brought MTV and although there were some good songs, there just weren't as many. I had to listen to oldies stations to listen to the music I grew up on. VH1 was similar. Things had changed and not for the better. The '90s until today just didn't have it except listening to the oldies. Now there is You Tube and I take advantage of it. I was in my senior year in high school when Shindig came on television, then Hullabaloo. I was born at just the right time.
My background & musical experiences are similar to your own. The only difference is that the British group Keane, who emerged in 2004, really took me by surprise (I'd given up finding anything new I could relate to by then). Their first 4 albums prove, to me, at least, they're as important & relevant to their era as the Beatles to the 60's. Shindig was never broadcast here in UK, but watching it now, it's fantastic!
My favorite program when I was 13 & 14 yrs old! My girlfriend & I used to rush home in the summer for their 1:00 pm show. Some of my fondest memories are if this series, sitting with my girlfriend Lynn in our upstairs back bedroom, at the end of the bed, windows all open with summer breezes blowing through, moving the curtains, ever so slightly as we watched “Shindig”, our favorite series, that carried all our favorite bands & singers! I still remember so many of the groups on this show... Sonny & Cher singing “I GOT YOU BABE”( my favorite song of this era), the dancers & the music! I so loved this show & remember it so fondly!!!♥️💕♥️💕♥️💕
@@mikephalen3162 Not phony .. just natural youthful enthusiasm and exuberance for stellar , genuine talent ... Talent that is very rare today ..👍👍💪 ⭐🎵🎶...😃🙂😎☕☕. ☮️. ☯️🍀🌴
The Shindig Show. Never forget the time it came to Salt Lake City and the no longer in existence, Terrace Ballroom. This fast-paced show shuttled performers from the hotel to the Terrace all evening. After that show, Larry Henley of the Newbeats introduced me to a lovely, blonde-haired young y, Sue Thompson. A friendship that has continued for 55 yrs. What a show it was. So many performers, dancers, props, how did they ever make it all happen and keep it affordable?
usrphil77 I noticed that, too. Almost as if she was was saying 'Go 'head, girl'. I believe they've been friends since forever so it was a nice moment captured.
1962, '63, '64, and '65. I was 12, 13, 14, and 15 years old. This was the scene back in the day...
What a great time to be a teen-ager!
My mom was a teen in those years. She brought the music forward with her! Had me in 65 @19! I remember Christmas of 1965, 8 months old 😎
Me also. Lucky us
What should be noted is that all music no matter race or gender was loved and accepted equally!! I remember, I was there!!!!❤️
One of the reasons it didn't last long in Jim crow middle america.
@waynerog… Not true American Bandstand showcased Black entertainment back then.
@@marilynryan7822Hello?!!! Because it was filmed in California! (Editted as a post script: The biggest racial divide in our country today, is in rural America. You can debate who lit the match, but it was always there. The demographic is a big, red, republican, racist wasteland of white, "christian", neo-fascist, ignorance.)
Me to
well sed!!
Also of interest here, was Carolyne Barry (1943-2015), who was the Shindig girl with the dark rimmed glasses, who was also an actress who made her mark on numerous guest star roles-also billed as Carole Shelyne, who guest-starred on NBC's "STAR TREK" as "The Metron" being in "Arena" (Jannuary 19, 1967), and an episode of NBC's "THE MAN FROM UNCLE" ("The Cap and Gown Affair", April 14, 1967) also billed as Carole Shelyne. Carolyne Barry acted until 2013 before she passed away on June 16, 2015. she had a total of 22 acting credits to her career, but a popular Shindig girl dancer!
I will never forget Shindig! (67yrs. old in 02/2020)
Rock, Soul, R&B, Folk, Country, Jazz, Funk, Psychedelic folk/rock - no colour bar, no prejudice,
a 'do your thing' zone where everyone belonged. No other variety show was live, pure music, raw unfiltered production. Compare to Jambouree, Ed Sullivan, Smothers Brothers, American Bandstand, Where the Action Is, etc. etc. - no - Shindig! was the real thing. Even these old videos still communicate that positive energy and fresh vitality
even now,
Be sure to listen to Donna Loren's acclaimed Podcast: "Love's a Secret Weapon". If you are curious about her early career or what she's doing now, tune in as she reads her memoir, chapter by chapter. With co-host Dr Adam Gerace and Special Guests. th-cam.com/play/PLiWNf08u_-XnvBLugNI1D-MEvuIDab9qk.html or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Back when music actually HAD a melody. And real instruments. And the singers could really sing. I wish I had grown up back then!
Was Darlene Love one of the full time singers on that show?
Terri Garr was one of the dancers and Glen Campbell,Leon Russel, and Billy Preston along with most of the wrecking crew in the house band,also Darleen Love and the Blossoms as back up singers.
Wasn't Toni Basil a dancer on there too ?
@@harvey1954 Yes, she was.
James Burton lead guitar
@@BernardBouchard-qq9kqJames Burton played with all the top artists. For example, Elvis Presley. Also, Ricky Nelson.
@@harvey1954 Toni Basil has a dance room in her home, still rocking out today.
I got white gogo boots because of shindig. I loved that show! Thanks for the memories.
Gretchen coming back in style
Robert DeSantis to bad I don’t have them anymore. 😃
Gretchen were they short ones or the knee high ones?
Robert DeSantis knee high of course😃
Gretchen zipper or pull on?
I was four years old and watched it religiously. I remember walking up and down the block singing these songs - Sherri, Big Girls Don't Cry, Hang on Sloopy, etc. My hair had never been cut, long blonde hair and in '67 I got a Beatle haircut😅
Everyone was stunned when I went to school. My teacher said, It looks very nice Lolololololll
I’ll bet you looked a dream
I saw James Brown live in 1964. You knew then that you where watching something special. Something you’d never seen before and would probably never see again.
I was lucky enough to attend several tapings of Shindig, as I lived close to the studio in Silverlake and headed over there right after school let out. My God, the acts I got to see! I'll never forget Darlene Love or literally running into Lucille Ball who was there to see her son in Dino, Desi and Billy. Good times!
Who all listened to this in 1964 and still listening once again in 2024?
I did and I had my transistor radio to my ear when I wasn’t in school. 93 KHJ Boss radio Los Angeles…
Me. I was in third then fourth grade at this time. Still love all the music and I knew who the artists were. The dancing the fun and exciting.
@@otaku1524 me always
I was 15 and watched the show and listened to the music on my radio as much as I could. I even got in trouble for listening to my transistor radio on an earphone at school. It was a great time to be young.
I was 8 then, 68 now😮
This show was just SO fantastic! And the music was just SO much better than the music of today is!
You said it!
Shindig paved the way for music videos/MTV.
The best thing about Shindig was getting to see so many of the British Invasion acts, also Motown and it gave 50's rockers a second chance to perform their hits from the 50's and early sixties. Live music, live rock and roll, R&B and pop what a wonderful era for music.
Well said!
Geez Luise, this VHI retrospective was 33 years ago! My oldest was only 2, and my youngest was still 3yrs away from entering the world. How does time pass so quickly? I wasn't around yet for Shindig, but it looks incredible. I was a 70's kid & 80's teenager, the MTV generation. Just got married and started a family young.
@@misslora3896 Shindig was the first and only show like this in the world music of the teen generation.when they got James Burton to form the ShinDawgs it secured a world audience.
What a time and a time it was!! My young friends and I would rush home to watch Shingdig!
Wow, complex melodies that aren't simply pentatonic clones of every other song. Back before the industry shut down creativity & originality. RIP great music.
Huge. Those dancers in the background. And everyone is dressed tasteful and stylish... amazing.
Wasn't considered tasteful back then. The hair and mod outfits were horrifying to adults.
Yea, not like the hors of today! No fat peirced tatood ugly broads showing their fat asses and saggy tits
I watched Shindig all the time but also remember Donna Loren from Dick Clark's Where The Action Is. She was the best! ❤
That was talent!! Raw.... I'm honored to have been a part of that era...
What a time to be alive 😉🥰
Love this , just old enough to remember this era, what music , what talent !
Glad I was so fortunate to have lived thru this era. Back when music was music and the talent was beyond definition. Singers that could actually sing and the bands sounded the same live as their records. With all due respect it is a pretty tough row to hoe for those that followed years later. Shindig was certainly a huge opportunity for many to advance their careers. Love it all.
I'm a Brit, but my all-time favourite music TV show is 'Shindig!'!!!
I remember watching this show as a preteen. The music and innovative energy back then was incredibly upbeat and fun.
People watching today, who weren’t there, cannot possibly understand how together in the music scene all people were! We loved and embraced the black artists as white teens, same as we did any other band! The racism today is not on account of the white people of my generation, we loved everybody!🤷♂️
Racism today is on account of the Democrats and race hustlers.
Racist today is a tool used by the socialist democratic party
There is no systemic racism today. It's an ideology fabricated by the MSM and political Leftists. Get real.
My God, some of this footage is just incredible. Aretha at the very beginning---already a phenomenon.
Wow, that was the station I listen too. KFWB ,KRLA, KHJ93,KGFJ Los Angeles back in the 60" Shindig. Dec 2019
KFWB and KRLA ....and don't forget 93KHJ.....all AM radio and all great.
My sons couldn’t believe that without a record player, all music came from 93 KHJ, Boss Radio.
Shindig was a VERY important show. Right place, right time.
The 60s was the definite era for rock, pop, soul, country and all. There was so much creativity going on! And the best part was that we kids were exposed to all kinds on music and enjoyed it. Very much UNLIKE today.
At 7:20 the backup singers' reaction to Aretha Franklin's belting out "It's in His Kiss." They were impressed!!!
Shindig was what I live for back then.James Brown was king! and you had a chance to see all the British bands.
Shindig was one of the very few shows of that era where you get to actually hear the bands play live which was unheard of at that time very cool to see all that good old stuff again
I watched Shindig when I was 10-12 years old. The energy was intense and palpable. I was always riveted by it, so much so that my parents tried to restrict me from watching it. Funny thing though - they could never present a clear cut argument for why. I think the wildness scared them and they didn't want their kid to share in that. Fortunately, none of that stopped me from becoming a professional musician and bringing that wildness to life every time I performed. Now I'm 70 and I'm still doing it. Very grateful to Shindig for that inspiration.
Hurray for Motown, great groups with a fabulous sound along with many other fine groups of the time, lived it and loved it. simpler times
I was 9 years old when "Shindig" premiered on ABC; absolutely the best. My favorite Shindig dancer was Carole Shelyne (later known as Carolyne Barry)--the blond with the black goggle glasses--RIP Carole.
A doll
damn this brings back soooooo many good memories of my childhood! amazing to see this again.
They don't show The Righteous Brothers till the end credits, but they were a big part of Shindig. They had the house band, but also the house singers, The Righteous Brothers, Bobby Sherman, Donna Loren, and The Blossoms featuring Darlene Love to name a few. Watched this every week. Even in the Army overseas, AFN would show them on tv's on base.
I fell in love with jackie de shannon,i tear up with her singing what the world needs now.first time i saw petula clark singing downtown with all the excitement and joy of our sixties.once in a life time.
Music and lyrics by Burt Bacharach and Hal David.
This ‘lil documentary needs to be three times longer. Loved it now, and then as a tiny kid, dancing in my go-go boots!
Same here..lol..my mind goes back to the dances back then..still do most of them..
WHO are the 79 people who gave this a thumbs down?! Donna, this brought back so many wonderful memories (including seeing our dear old friend, Dewey Martin, may he RIP) of a time that can never again be replicated. How extraordinary it had to have been to be such an integral part of something that prompted many of us who were NOT fortunate enough to live on the West Coast to start dreaming of "one day I'm going to..." I finally made that journey 10 years after Shindig went off the air, but have always remembered the sheer sense of awe I felt the first time that I saw the "Hollywood & Vine" street intersection signs. What joy this video evoked in me, personally, and I can't imagine how anyone watching it could fail to feel the same. Whether or not they personally ever "made that trip west." THANK YOU!
People who weren't even born yet.
@@kentpearson4478 - Do they feel the same way about reading classic literature, since they weren't born yet when the authors walked the Earth? Nothing quite like life in historic deprivation, eh?
79 idiotsno doubt
Listening to the Queen of Soul do‘It’s in his kiss’, gave me the goosebumps
A Simpler time - I love being Boomer - Brought tears to me watching - Happy memories -
When I went to Madera Elementary School wearing my white go go boots like the Shindig dancers, I was floating on a cloud of cool. It was a great TV show.
My classmate Deanne wore knee socks pulled up higher than her go-go boots, and got teased for it. “Bullied” probably is a better word.
@@LeslieGMN Will Randy Rainbow help us keep our sanity ?!%!
@@tracymears8230 I hope so.
Shindig! was an American musical variety series aired on ABC from September 1964 to January 1966.
PS - glad that some of these recordings survived.
PS2 - glad to see Flo and Eddy!
Live performances! The Supremes, Darlene Love, Lesley Gore ... Amazing!
It was a great time to be growing up. Thanks!
Even though it's been 50+ years, I still remember those Shindig dancers (which was, to be honest, the man reason most guys my age watched the show in the first place). Wow . . .
When I got the VHS tapes of "Shindig!" clips decades ago, Zsa Zsa Gabor singing (sort of) was a complete surprise that gave me repeated attacks of uncontrolled laughter. "Vere that vig-hat on my HEAD!" (9:49).
Zsa zsa must be as bad a singer as Melania Trump
Lol, no Zsa Zsa, no!
Meanwhile the backup singers are egging her on: “Come on now, Zsa Zsa! Hey, hey, Zsa Zsa!”
I may have seen the Aretha performance at that time. Love the part when Aretha hits that high note and Darlene Love says like, "sing that song girl"...lol
After watching this "Shindig" belongs in the Rock and Roll hall of fame. Period. Thanks.
put Jimmy O Neils can of BOSS HAIRSPRAY in
6:07
Hullabaloo too!
@@sandrasanders706 "Where The Action Is!"
@@argusfleibeit1165 No, not Sonny and Cher and Steve Alaimo.
It was an awesome time to grow up with for sure
I miss these songs and the beautiful people that sang and performed on shindig. I feel so upset when I hear todays music, what a difference and innocence. Much more fun.
A great show. Lesley Gore brightened up every show she was on.
Give a listen to Lesley's "You Don't Own Me". More serious than her other "girly" songs. A real anthem of female empowerment.
nothing against her, but following Aretha in this video was not optimal. Aretha was mind-blowing.
Wonderful presentation, "Real People, Playing Real Instruments". I remember this show.
I was still in single digits when this was on, not for me, but it was on Friday nights and there was only one tv station … so we watched. With quick eyes you may see Terri Garr with all the dancing GreatGrandMothers!
16:06 Bobby Sherman is 81 now, 2024. All the best, sir!
Can’t believe that we were treated to something this great for free! Who knew it wouldn’t last forever😢 There is no way something this great could be put together today
Dick Clarks American Bandstand had nothing on Shindig! When I see these videos today, it makes me long for these good ole days! The youthful energy of this show could power a good size town! Wayyyy ahead of its time for sure!
Except that "Shindig" lasted only a season or two, and "Bandstand" went on for 30+ years.
What a great video. Best music ever. You can take today's music and flush it down the toilet. There'l never be music like that again.
not until somebody begins to work at it
Yes it is good music but let’s not forget our parents and grandparents said the same about our music, flush it down. Every generation will say the same thing.
Cudahy 1960 I know. It’s true. I think late 50s and early 60s was the best and today’s doesn’t compare. What if I’m right? Lol
Cudahy 1960 Anyone today compare to James Brown (he wasn’t actually a favorite of mine except for “Try Me” but he was very talented) and Jackie Wilson? Or Nat King Cole? Or The Beatles? Or Elvis? Or ...
Grandpa?!
Amazingly, "Shindig" lasted only sixteen months (September, 1964-January, 1966), but made a major impact on music, television, and popular culture.
That explains why I missed it. I was six.
I tried to comb my hair like Jimmy O Neil with BOSS HAIRSPRAY 6:01
@@libertyann439 < was 10 !
Amazing! Billy Preston, in that last frame, looked 20 years more mature than in the one with him backing Jackie Wilson!
@@sgraham1hotmailcom he was a teenager
An absolutely amazing program. The energy, the production, the talent. Everybody who was anybody appeared. And some who were not yet somebody but would soon be superstars. Probably unique in television and far in advance of anything else at the time. American Bandstand couldn't hold a candle to it. Even the audience got into the action. 🎶🎶🎶🎶🎙🎤🎷🎸🎹🎺🎶🎶🎶🎶❤❤❤
This show is amazing now I can’t imagine how cool it was back in the day 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Thank you so much! this is amazing Nostalgia with great childhood memories and real music with real talent! what a gem! many thanks!!!❤❤❤❤❤
I'm very agree with Sabrina Wilson when she said, those days the performers put feeling in their songs that's why people loved and still love those songs the prof is that today they are considered classics
I used to watch this show religiously. Had the best bands.
I saw some of these back in the day, but missed many of them because my garage band was playing these songs at dances in Nashville. Fun days!
Oh, Mercy! There was an amazing AM radio station ( KILT ) out of Houston, TX. that simply played all this amazing music, its format was like that of Shindig, Aretha, then the stones, Little Richard, etc. And then the Beatle's new single would play and the world stopped for those few moments.
What a great program! It was pretty innovative in its day. Way too bad it was cancelled. For the first time since American Bandstand, the kids had their own show, full of energy and great music!
I remember watching Shindig every Wednesday night and Saturday night in the mid sixties. Fab and gear show was Shindig a blast from the past. Thanks for sharing the video it brings back memories for me when i was a teenage girl in the mid sixties.
Wow, this brought back memories and made me remember another similar show too called Hullabaloo!
My dad hated them both!!!😂😂😂
Darlene Love is a backup singer for Aretha unbelievable!
Shindig was nuclear! The quantity of talent on stage at any given moment was unquantifiable! I'll never forget when it hit TV. It was truly unlike any show of the time. The energy would arc right through the TV set and singe the furniture! I'm grateful for my life and cherish every day. However, if I had a time machine, I would go back to this time and be in the audience for every show! Thanks Donna! "Baby, you're the ginchiest"!
I can't understand why this show isn't remembered better, or referenced like the Ed Sullivan show still is. Shindig: Groundbreaking, loaded with talent, and just plain fun. Music for the last 40 years has been so corporately controlled. Back then, anyone could be a "one-hit-wonder" and end up on TV! Shindig is of that era--looser, with teenagers telling producers what they liked and wanted, instead of the other way around. There is a tremendous amount of magic in that. Shindig captured the magic of being young.
And we pretty much took it for granted then...it wouldn't be that.good ever again
@@jeffclement2979 Originality and passion and integrity kept evolving for decades and we thought the bar had been set and it couldn't ever get worse. Boy were we wrong.
As the say, imitation is the finest form of flattery, but at least it was ABC-TV ripping off itself when they created SHEBANG which ran on the weekends, to the best of my recollection and SHIVAREE which was an ABC local show in Los Angeles and may nt be familiar to the world at-large.
I wish we had music and shows like this now. I remember Hala Baloo, POP Dance Party and several others.
Hullabaloo
Anyone listening in 2020❓🎶🎼🇺🇸
@moon glow Absolutely! I used to watch this every time it was on.
Shindig! focused on a broader variety of popular music than its predecessor and first aired for a half-hour every Wednesday evening, but was expanded to an hour in January 1965. In the fall of 1965, the show split into two half-hour telecasts, on Thursday and Saturday nights.
@@myk602010 You have a great memory‼️ Thanks for the info! Glad to know you are still listening🎼🎶🎵🎸🎤
@@moonglow1311 I must admit Google is my friend. But I love to Enlighten people when I feel that some facts may be lacking.
@@myk602010 Google is my friend also😃
@@moonglow1311 is that Gary Google?
This was terrific. I was a kid, Vietnam was unfolding all it's blood and rock seemed to be about hope and expression. Good to recall. Nice work, you guys.
PS Never seen a hotter live show than Jerry Lee Lewis. Must've been electric in that studio
Donna you are a Goddess, and I love being alive at the same time as you. Thank you so much for this, it's a record of our real history.
This is unbelievable that they are all playing live, no taped anything. Just great.
Always loved this show. Donna Loren& the Rightous Brothers befoe they were known. Sometimes i only wanted to see them, not those English groups. Late 50's & 60's. First time seeing Gene Pitney, my all time favorite even today.
Prodigious talent both guests and house band and dancers....and as said in the commentary in the video, raw and very real. Insanely good with no lip synching. Really really good and authentic.
How exciting was the music of those times? I left a circus early to get home in time to see the Yardbirds on Shindig.
That was so fun to watch! I was a little kid back then and I sure loved that show!
,,,,,,Yep.
My gosh, this is terrific! Huge crush on Donna Loren! Aretha was fabulous! Roy Head, too cool! Loved hearing from the dancers!
Funny, all the 60's artists looked old to me back in 1991.... now watching it they look so young....except for Howard Kalyan....he looked old at the beginning of the 70's, then never aged a day
That was the show of shows of the time. It was hotter than a $2 pistol. We never missed it. I miss it now
What never ceases to amaze is that the raucous, youth-obsessed Shindig was taped on the ABC lot on Prospect Avenue in Hollywood - the same studio lot where Lawrence Welk taped his weekly shows for the Geritol "seniors generation". In '81 I was on this lot to view a "Fridays" broadcast & ABC pages informed me where the Shindig! & Welk stages were. Talk about a contrast between 2 generations, music cultures & styles! ABC Television Center - Hollywood in the mid '60s, certainly had both generations entertained on their lot.
I got into rock & roll when I was 8yrs old in 1959 in KCMO & never stopped. Chuck Barry & Roy Roberson were what I first listened to. Now I've been into Pink Floyd since 1971 my favorite band. I have seen them in concert. Other bands The Guess Who, Molly Hatchet, The Outlaws, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Deep Purple, Rare Earth, ZZ Top, Quicksilver, Steppenwolf and many other bands in the 1960s & 1970s. I have seen all the bands in concert except The Guess Who. I also saw Fleetwood Mac and many other bands in concert. Rock On!!!!!!!!!!!
Was glued to tv.. old school forever..
The choreography for this show was great!
Those WERE the days. Wow just wow ... Brings back so many great memories. White go go boots. My era ... Good times.
Truly the wonderful years.
The '50s were my childhood years with Elvis Presley and many others, but I remember them very well. The '60s were my teen years and a lot of girl groups came into play and then The Beatles and the British Invasion and too many groups to list. There were also Motown and many other American groups into my adult years. The '70s groups had even more rock and roll groups including Disco but not all were Disco but it dominated for a while.The'80s brought MTV and although there were some good songs, there just weren't as many. I had to listen to oldies stations to listen to the music I grew up on. VH1 was similar. Things had changed and not for the better. The '90s until today just didn't have it except listening to the oldies. Now there is You Tube and I take advantage of it. I was in my senior year in high school when Shindig came on television, then Hullabaloo. I was born at just the right time.
My background & musical experiences are similar to your own. The only difference is that the British group Keane, who emerged in 2004, really took me by surprise (I'd given up finding anything new I could relate to by then). Their first 4 albums prove, to me, at least, they're as important & relevant to their era as the Beatles to the 60's. Shindig was never broadcast here in UK, but watching it now, it's fantastic!
Lovely commentary… thank you, ‘
Ma’am!
@@AndrewVOdom I am a he. A guy.
I just turned 64. My parents were 40s -50s kids. We always had a large table top radio.WRKO 68 am Boston Ma.
My favorite program when I was 13 & 14 yrs old! My girlfriend & I used to rush home in the summer for their 1:00 pm show. Some of my fondest memories are if this series, sitting with my girlfriend Lynn in our upstairs back bedroom, at the end of the bed, windows all open with summer breezes blowing through, moving the curtains, ever so slightly as we watched “Shindig”, our favorite series, that carried all our favorite bands & singers! I still remember so many of the groups on this show... Sonny & Cher singing “I GOT YOU BABE”( my favorite song of this era), the dancers & the music! I so loved this show & remember it so fondly!!!♥️💕♥️💕♥️💕
My favorite television show of all time!!
I grew up during a great time for music!
This so great. The kids are dressed nice and just enjoying the music... this would never happen today.
Yeah, let's have obedient little robots giving faux screams.
@@mikephalen3162 Not phony .. just natural youthful enthusiasm and exuberance for stellar , genuine talent ... Talent that is very rare today ..👍👍💪 ⭐🎵🎶...😃🙂😎☕☕. ☮️. ☯️🍀🌴
@@mikephalen3162 There was nothing "Faux' about it. Just lotsa fun!
The Shindig Show. Never forget the time it came to Salt Lake City and the no longer in existence, Terrace Ballroom. This fast-paced show shuttled performers from the hotel to the Terrace all evening. After that show, Larry Henley of the Newbeats introduced me to a lovely, blonde-haired young y, Sue Thompson. A friendship that has continued for 55 yrs. What a show it was. So many performers, dancers, props, how did they ever make it all happen and keep it affordable?
Check out Darlene Love's reaction to Aretha's vocal at 7:38...amazing voice!
usrphil77 I noticed that, too. Almost as if she was was saying 'Go 'head, girl'. I believe they've been friends since forever so it was a nice moment captured.
,,,,Yep.
RIP Lesley. Shindig was THE BEST!!
Shindig was a really cool show. I remember being turned onto Peter and Gordon. Chad and Jeremy and I think Paul Revere the raiders too