Yayyy! Thijs is my dad and his band Focus is CURRENTLY touring in the UK. Yes. Still rocking at 73! Thank you Dough for this fantastic and highly entertaining review. I'll forward it to Thijs right away, sure he'll enjoy it!
Hey, Bella! Seen your dad many times but gonna miss this tour (I'm in Spain for the winter). Here's hoping for another 50-odd years of Focus! (Unlikely, but you never know!) Still one of my top 5 bands and Thijs one of my favourite musicians ever. x
Wow, tell them there is still young folke loving this craziness. Hope he (and the others too) will be able to make music for many years to come. I really love the long version which was aired on danish tv in 75, where the whole band is introduced.
The guitarist, Jan Akkerman, is extremely underrated. He is also a classical guitarist who plays the lute..which is a notoriously hard instrument to play. He studied at the Amsterdam Conservatory when he was younger..
Back then he did win the reader's vote for "The Best Guitarist" in "The Melody Maker" magazine. The magazine was notable for being followed by musicians, many of them finding band through its advertisements set by other musicians and groups.
@@onsesejoo2605 I have been playing guitar for over 20 years and saw him always listed as one of the top 25 or 50 guitarists ever, but I only ever knew this song so I brushed it off. This song has nice guitar but I'd always compare it to the huge virtuosos. It wasn't until the last few years that I delved more into his music and Focus that I saw how incredible of a guitarist he is. Even though he's been previously rated as the top or THE top guitarist in the world, I think he's kind of forgotten. But here's a guy who can pretty much play anything including classical lute. Rock, Jazz, Classical, etc...lead, rhythm, etc. The guy can play it all. I think Doug should listen to the song Questions!Questions?Answers! from Focus next.
@@MR-ml2poAkkerman plays all genres with the heart, he isn't imitating it, he goes deeper he understands it. When you blind, without knowledge, listen to him you think there are different persons playing guitar. That's makes him very special. Only an experienced ear can recognise his typical touch.
@@Contextcatcher Agree. Once I got beyond thinking that the one song they're widely known for is silly...yep, he is criminally underrated these days and easily one of the greatest and best guitarists of all time.
I was 11 years old when I first heard this back in 1972, this, Hawkwind and Pink Floyd got me into prog rock at an early age. Loved this tune...it was so different!
This song was originally done as a warm up for their performances and the audience loved it so much the demand became huge for them to put it on their album, so they did.
Apparently, legend has it that, for the live version, the band were only given a limited time slot which wasn't enough enough to do the whole song at the original tempo. So, being unwilling to play a shortened version, they just played it as fast as they could to fit it onto the time available.
@@rawli987 th-cam.com/video/RFDW9b_ejfI/w-d-xo.html Guess this is the version you are referring too. Great tune, and on this version, fantastic delivery too.
"I can't believe this exists"... The perfect reaction. They are an incredible band and this track brings back so many memories. You can't hear this and not smile.
“I didn’t even know this existed”. Not only does it exist, but it was a fairly major hit on the radio in the early ‘70’s. It was definitely a different time back then.
The three guitar runs are the cleanest, most imaginative and technically perfect in the history of music. Jan was voted "Greatest Living Guitarist" by Melody Maker Magazine in 1972
I've never had heard any guitar playing even close to this before or after this song came out on the radio back then. Didn't know anything about that award, glad to hear it, the man sure earned and desevered it.
Being Dutch, I have to fly the flag for this one. Brian May (Queen) rates Jan Akkerman as one of the best guitarists ,definitely of that era. The reason for the fast live version is time restraints in the 70's. Songs were 3 and a little bit long and they had to try and fit 7 minutes into that. They literally did a time warp
Flying one more flag for Jan Akkerman: Jimmy Page and Ritchie Blackmore have admitted to have visited Focus concerts to check out the phenomenon that JA was.
For those of us who grew up with this music, it is fun to watch Doug react to this music 40 - 50 years later. This particular clip is priceless! Bravo.
When you said "I didn't know this existed", my heart was very sad. It means that millions of people have missed out on this incredible song (from my youth). The studio version had huge airplay in the 70s. We head-banged & danced like maniacs! The vocals were a language of their own, no translation needed. Many decades later, I saw Bobby McFerrin in concert, he also used vocal percussion, etc. Thanks for the bong hits, and for saying "y'all"...excellent review.
Yup, I thank God for allowing this to be preserved so well for us. Just like Heart's "Live at KWSU TV studio" gig which was recorded by college students no less!
@@pit2ryan3 It's from 1971. And yes I have, I AM from that period. Recording studios were mostly crap back then, numerous examples come to mind. This recording (the Focus one, not the rip off cover) is - considering the technical possibilities, the equipment available and the know-how of studio technicians in that era, is exceptionally good. I don't think you know what they had to use back then. I do.
@@Frontdesk99 - Thanks for your kind reply... Though I'm nearly sure that the sound has been remastered here, it's not like it used to be and a bit out of sync too... Regards!
Moving Waves is a masterpiece, timeless, everlasting, the root of progressive rock. Listen to this albun everytime you can, it's good for your creativity and health as well.
@@vagabond197979 Like many other progressive rock bands, we need to listen many times to understand the sense of progression, mainly on very long songs. It happens on classical music and there's no hurry to get to the end. Just sit, "close your eyes and begin to relax..."
So... within the first minute or so we got an explosive minor-key RnR, a drum solo, a yodelling section and A5 soprano singing.... wtf this is amazing!
The reason the live version was so fast was that Midnight Special only allowed just over 4 minutes for the performance and asked the bank to cut the track to fit, but the band decided to speed the whole performance up and see how much of the song they could fit into the time allowed, hence the manic nature of the performance, I think that if used in conjunction with the studio version it is a great bit of fun, but some purists don't like the TV version
@@ljw5768 you got that right. The version that Doug heard was the radio version, which was the “slow” cut. They had the “fast” version on their Dutch Masters greatest hits LP. Peace from Toronto
I remember a different TV appearance, where they got a full 25 minutes. Aside from this, their signature radio hit, they played lots of other stuff, but at the time, I was not at all familiar with it (yet). It came off as a wall of impenetrable sound. It wasn't instantly catchy like Yes or Genesis. Add to that the pretty low-quality video of a garishly lit stage, and the crappy TV and antenna I watched it on, and it was a rather dense experience.
Hope it’s live version, from ‘73, as the manic pace and facial expressions of lead singer add to my enjoyment of the song. But studio version is solid as well 🙂
@@bigstam1234567890 the link i was referring to is actually on the main vid ... my mistake , multiple and profuse apologies forgive me ... i offer you the blood of my unborn child as sacrifice please dont thumb me down ... or ..do either way sorry for the misunderstanding
I gotta say - this is the best Daily Doug by far! Even though I'm not a musician I always love the professional commentary on scales, what notes, etc. I like how you appreciate all forms of music as do I. Here's to many more Daily Dougs!
I love it. Taking a bong hit on this song is needed to fully engage. And honestly this song is exactly what music is all about. Self expression and having fun.
This was a massive hit back in the day. Sylvia was another big hit, with brilliant guitar work by Jan, House of the King the B side. Both worth a listen.
Focus is so much more than this novelty hit. Listen to Eruption from Moving Waves. It is steeped in classical references and the musicianship is astonishing.
LJW: One of the most ignored prog masterpieces is "Eruption". These guys proved they could play with "Hocus Pocus", but with "Eruption" they took their skills and climbed a musical MT. EVEREST.
I prefer the live version of this tune on The Midnight Special; it's significantly faster and more maniacal, but every bit as tight. Plus, I'm old enough to remember seeing that episode of The Midnight Special on it's first airing date, and it was my first exposure to Focus ever. Later that December, The Midnight Special also gave me my first time hearing/seeing Genesis; one of the tunes they did was "Watcher Of The Skies", and I was a Genesis fan from then on. You should sometime do one of your videos on "Watcher of the Skies"...a great progressive rock tune. By the way, the unique vocalizing at about 6 minutes on your Focus "Hocus Pocus" video is an example of "eefing"...yep, it's an actual vocalization technique, that dates back to rural Tennessee about 100 years ago. All the best to you!
They were even better on Don Kirschner's Rock Concert, and they played complete Hamburger Concerto and couple of other tracks from the album. That was in '75
Being American, we will forgive you not to know this amazing band from the early 70´s. The guitar player is actually one of the best from these times, as well as the flute player. But I enjoy your surprises to the crazy stuff that is going on in this song. Welcome to Focus.
I believe there is a version of this song that may make your brain explode. A television show they went on only allowed a short time for them and rather than cut it they sped it up perfectly. Mind blowing craziness!
He was considered best in the world for rock guitarist for a time there in the 70s and I can see why. Doug I have been waiting for you to hopefully react to the song one day, knew you would have to eventually !!
It's fitting that you're smoking up during this. A good way to experience it for the first time. Your facial expressions say it all. I never tire of people seeing/hearing this for the first time.
Doug, I've been watching your channel for a little while now and the fact you are jamming to this song, and doing bong rips, makes me an even bigger fan. What a good time this was watching this video.
WOW...I have heard this song a couple of hundred times in my life. I have NEVER heard this live version. As a hard rock and metal head I absolutely love this live version. Great job Focus!!!
Eruption + Hamburger Concerto + Answers Questions are all Focus tracks that I’d be happy to see you look at any of… a band that doesn’t get enough attention
ABSOLUTELY! 🙌 Their three best epic pieces IMHO. 👌 I think I like the live version of Questions Answers Answers Question on the Live At The Rainbow album better than the studio version on Focus 3, but it's been a while since I've listened to either.
Thijs van Leer once said in an interview that "Hocus Pocus" emerged from unplanned jamming. Actually Jan Akkerman had setup his gear, while the other were still busy. He just played something and came up with this rif. Then the other members joined in and so the song came into existence... It became a huge hit back then.
Doug, they are still playing live. I saw them in a small music venue in Leeds October 2019. Brilliant. They did a 15 minute version of Hocus Pocus with extended drum and guitar solos. The yodelling is still great although understandably the high notes are left to lead guitar!!
I love your reactions to this classic Doug. When you took a hit from the bong I nearly fell over, I think that's exactly what I did 35 years ago when I first heard this!
I enjoyed this very much, although it's a pity in the "Focus live"-part you talked through almost every Jan Akkerman solo because you reacted to every Thijs van Leer intervention. So you missed a lot of brilliant stuff Jan played there.
Jan was shredding long before the term had been invented. Truly an amazing guitarist in every way. Goes from performing classical lute concertos to blues,rock or jazz.
This band was one of the best in the Progressive era. Nothing else like it at the time, and some real musicianship (which was also lacking at that time).
The best version of "Hocus Pocus" is from the "Live at the Rainbow" album. It's BREATHTAKING! (LITERALLY so, as at one point Thijs van Leer yodels for almost A FULL MINUTE, and don't ask me how he breathed!) But seriously, that's not the best of Focus. The very best is "Hamburger Concerto" (it's about actual hamburger patties, with "movements" titled "Rare" and "Well Done", and the cover is the name of the record in the form of a diner neon sign). AMAZING musicianship! No yodelling, but Thijs does redefine the meaning of "vocalese" in several sections, and Jan Akkerman is at his best (and that's saying a lot when it comes to a guitar legend like him!). You should also check their solo albums, especially Jan Akkerman's ever-changing moods over the years. Thijs is also a renowned classical flutist and I suggest you have a listen to "Introspection 3", for example.
Please don't say hocus pocus, it's a slur against Jesus. In Latin, " This is my Body" translates " Hoc es Corpus Meum" and back in the day God's enemies made up the word Hocus Pocus to make fun on His Last Supper.
Plenty more Focus from the 1970s to go at, Doug! Including some absolute epics, and some you may recognise. And of course "Sylvia". But this was one of "the" albums you HAD to own in the early 1970s, as a young male here in the UK. Thijs van Leer and Jan Akkerman... unique! Great band!
Never get tired of seeing reactions to what I call the "drunk and high yodeling leprechaun rock opera"..... especially when it's a reaction by someone as musically knowledgeable as Doug. Glad you enjoyed. Glad you watched the live version of Focus playing the song so you can see the facial expressions of the singer.... priceless.
@@JohnLRice There is an Argentinian musician (Gustavo Cerati one of the greatest in this country) that used a sampled from that track in the song Bocanada from the 1999 album with the same title. It's amazing, listen th-cam.com/video/TEidXw-tAQY/w-d-xo.html
I knew the fast version would blow you away as it even speeds up after the flute solo. The musicianship is astounding. My brother introduced this to me when I was 11 & I'm still entertained by it.
Jan’s lead guitar playing just blew me away when I started playing guitar. Saw this on TV and watched Jan play guitar. His hands moved up and down the neck like a spider. Never have I seen a guitar played like that. Never get tired of this song.
So here's my Focus story. Saw them live at a local college gymnasium around 1971-72 (hardwood floors, omg). One thing that can't be appreciated from the album was the IMMENSE VOLUME that they played at. Jan Akkerman with a gorgeous black Les Paul Fretless Wonder running through 2 Marshall stacks cranked to 11. I think Hocus Pocus was the encore and it was played at ear-splitting levels. What fun!!!
Nicko's first Maiden lead vocal :) Hope he gets suitably paid :) Check out " House of the King " by Focus. It was used as a TV theme in the UK, fits perfectly :)
Doug. Love your work. Focus had a strong classical side - and Jan did some solo work thats great in the vein. If you want to really expand your Focus try the Hamburger Concerto album and especially the 20 minute (or so) title track. Now that would be a real one to get your teeth into. The riff reminds me of the the Beatles "She's So Heavy". Keep up the good work.
I wasn't expecting that rip......and honestly, it was perhaps the most epic I've seen - perfectly timed. Worth noting that Jan was a phenomenal player - sweeps and blistering scale fragments in the very early 70s!
Ding dong Dougie on the bong. I Really appreciated your reaction to Hocus Pokus Focus - got me laughing all the way and yet informative. Brilliant stuff :) Been a fan of theirs since it was released. Please consider Deep Purple in concert with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.
Also, the physical stamina required for that live performance is unreal. Top work by all. I agree the album tempo works far better, but I love the live version so much.
I still remember finding this on TH-cam when I was like 17. I was teaching myself guitar and I had to learn it immediately. The riff was so cool, and Akkerman's solo is still one of my all time favourites.
Can you imagine that such a song was a hit? things were so much wider, possibilities. Focus 2 aka "Moving waves", and "focus 3" are amazing good albums.
Jan Akkerman, back then, said Peter Banks (original guitarist for Yes) was one of few guitarists for which he had massive respect. Peter went from Yes to form "Flash" and whoa, what a guitar player. Please check out "Lifetime" from Flash's second album: th-cam.com/video/AfV-M_J1wkQ/w-d-xo.html
I first heard Hocus Pocus when I was 11 years old and immediately fell in love with it. My brother bought the album that featured Hocus Pocus, the album Moving Waves, which was their 2nd album. I listened to it constantly and fell in love with the entire album. I was hooked and have been a fan of Focus ever since. I'm confident that I have heard Hocus Pocus well over 1,000 times. I am 63 years old now and love it just as much as when I was an 11-year-old. Thanks for your critique, very fun and insightful!
Focus is an amazing band! 1000 people have reacted to this song. It’s their Circus number. But They have so much more. Fabolous musicians! Check out first 5 tracks off the next album Focus 3, or their Magnus opus Hamburger Concerto! And that’s just a start.
Jan is fantastic. No doubt. However, I'd challenge him to play King Crimson's Fracture. Robert Fripp himself says it's impossible to play. He also said that he spends 80% of his rehearsal time practicing that song. There was a guitarist, I don't recall his name, who spent 20 years learning Fracture. His final rendition is excellent, but not perfect.
David: Jan has a more bluesy/jazzy style with feel. Robert Fripp is almost the opposite and probably couldn't do what Jan does. Two completely different musicians who accidentally play the same instrument. And if you want a third: think Paco de Lucia.
Cut my teeth on this album in 1973. One of my earliest influences and probably my first exposure to jazz/rock. Akkerman was amazing. They considered it a joke.
I believe the flute sound is achieved by the player vocalising the notes he's playing on the flute. Ian Anderson from Jethro Tull is one of many exponents of this type of playing.
I have to hand it to you Doug. That really was one of your best videos to date. I had the best time watching your reactions to that song. I knew you wouldn't believe what you were hearing. Focus is a criminally underrated band. Who are just put down as a 1 hit wonder and to a degree it is not wrong. But within Europe they have been well known for DECADES. I applaud you sir for your open-mindedness. Don't let my user name fool you, I listen to a lot of different types of music. Cheers from Scotland.
@CJ'S HARDCORE & PUNK MUSIC VAULT You're forgetting Sylvia off Focus 3 so they were a 2 hit wonder. Strangely never bought Moving Waves but bought Focus 3 (double LP !!) instead. One of the first records I bought I think.
Yes, this song is one of a kind, amazing players and Thijs's singing skills are off the charts. For a second reaction, try the whole B side of the moving waves album.
For a bonus, look up the 45rpm of Hocus Pocus. Its breaks are switched around, so even though it's shorter, it's not all annoying edits. Some copies call the b-side "Hocus Pocus (Fast Version)" or "Hocus Pocus II"--a studio version resembling what they played live.
Hey Doug! Thanx for playing on of my faves from my misspent youth! I have had the great pleasure of seeing and meeting Focus several times on Cruise To The Edge.They always put on a great show and Thijs was always playing something with or for someone. Lots of fun!
Hi Doug. Today I attended a Focus concert in The Netherlands, where the band was founded. After fifty (!) years still touring the globe. Vocalist Thijs van Leer (75 years old) and drummer Pierre van der Linden (76 years old) of the original line-up, performed just as powerful as they did in the seventies, including the astonishing jodeling parts! Former Focus guitarist Jan Akkerman was in 1973 voted 'best guitar player of the word' by the british music magazine Melody Maker. Todays line-up: Thijs van Leer: organ/flute/vocals, Pierre van der Linden: Drums, Menno Gootjes: guitar, Udo Pannekeet: Bass.
When this would come on the radio when I was a kid, which was quite frequent, I would jump around like crazy and play air guitar to this and of course sing the yodel. This was on the radio many times a day during the early to mid-70s. ☺ still love it
The highlights in my mind: "My pants aren't tight enough to hit that note" "Pretty weird so far" oh. Just wait my friend. "I can't believe this exists" and "how did I not know about it" - my reaction back when I happened upon it 😂
I was just a kid when this came out and was getting lots of air time on the radio… it’s still the soundtrack in my head when I have a crap ton of stuff to get done and a short time to do it in.
Saw them in 1973. Crazy wild show. They did the whole album, we wanted more after the encode so they repeated the first two songs from the album over again. Spencer Davis Group opened. The band and the audience where in outer space that night.
Saw them on that tour too. Real music, great virtuoso improvisations one of the best live bands ... ever😀 I would have paid to listen to their drummer on his own, he’s that good.
This was played constantly on the radio and was a huge hit back in the day. I miss the Midnight Special. I fondly remember staying up late on Friday nights waiting to see my favourite bands play. Have you heard Warren Zevon's Werewolves of London? It's a great Halloween song. I loved your reaction!
Amazed you went for this track, Doug. Wouldn't have been my first choice to showcase Focus's excellence, but for Hallowe'en it makes sense! But you HAVE to listen to the rest of the album, as others have said. For a short piece from the same album, check out Focus III, then dive into Eruption, featuring "Tommy" for an emotional rollercoaster.
agree with that entirely. Focus III really showcases their talents. Tommy is excellent from Eruption. I saw them live around the time III came out. I've never really come down! In and Out of Focus is very different and fun too.
I've been a Focus fan since the early seventies and always been thrilled by the artistic creativity of this band. It's been so much fun watching you, Doug, a guy more or less my age, discovering and enjoying Hocus Pocus for the first time knowing what a crazy ride this is... 22 minutes of fun!! You should listen to the genious band- band of genious from the 70's - GENTLE GIANT... you'd get a nice kick out of them!! Albums: Interview, Power and the Glory, Octopus, Aquiring the taste, etc.
On April 7, 1973 I saw Focus at Winterland in S. F., as the 2nd of two opening bands for Yes's 'Close To The Edge" tour...the opening band was Poco. Looking back, it now seems like an unbelievable lineup. But at the time it was one of many great concert lineups at Winterland arranged/produced by Bill Graham. Needless to say most everyone in the audience had been "timing" their hallucinogens to be peaking when Yes arrived on stage...And just as Focus was coming on, so were we. Nothing quite prepares one for the joyful and mind blowing experience we had that evening! I'll never forget it. BTW - These concerts, in the early '70s, happened during my "experimental" college years, well before I met my lovely wife Sandy. Peace and Love to all!
Doug doing a bong rip to Focus is one the greatest things i've ever seen... if he had done this in the church.... *EXPLODE*
Oh . My . God .
New found Doug respect ✊
AMAZING!
Not seen: the two whole pizzas Doug ate after filming the video.
☺
Yayyy! Thijs is my dad and his band Focus is CURRENTLY touring in the UK.
Yes. Still rocking at 73!
Thank you Dough for this fantastic and highly entertaining review. I'll forward it to Thijs right away, sure he'll enjoy it!
Great to hear that your dad is still doing well! This is one of my favorite songs of all time, and my kids like it too!!
Hey, Bella! Seen your dad many times but gonna miss this tour (I'm in Spain for the winter). Here's hoping for another 50-odd years of Focus! (Unlikely, but you never know!) Still one of my top 5 bands and Thijs one of my favourite musicians ever. x
Wow, tell them there is still young folke loving this craziness. Hope he (and the others too) will be able to make music for many years to come. I really love the long version which was aired on danish tv in 75, where the whole band is introduced.
The National Anthem for the Oranje :)
Your dad is awesome! Please tell him I said so.
The guitarist, Jan Akkerman, is extremely underrated. He is also a classical guitarist who plays the lute..which is a notoriously hard instrument to play. He studied at the Amsterdam Conservatory when he was younger..
Yes the lute! His interpretation of John Dowland (e.g. 'Earl of Essex Galliard') on his solo album Tabernakel is the best I ever heard.
Back then he did win the reader's vote for "The Best Guitarist" in "The Melody Maker" magazine. The magazine was notable for being followed by musicians, many of them finding band through its advertisements set by other musicians and groups.
@@onsesejoo2605 I have been playing guitar for over 20 years and saw him always listed as one of the top 25 or 50 guitarists ever, but I only ever knew this song so I brushed it off. This song has nice guitar but I'd always compare it to the huge virtuosos. It wasn't until the last few years that I delved more into his music and Focus that I saw how incredible of a guitarist he is.
Even though he's been previously rated as the top or THE top guitarist in the world, I think he's kind of forgotten. But here's a guy who can pretty much play anything including classical lute. Rock, Jazz, Classical, etc...lead, rhythm, etc. The guy can play it all.
I think Doug should listen to the song Questions!Questions?Answers! from Focus next.
@@MR-ml2poAkkerman plays all genres with the heart, he isn't imitating it, he goes deeper he understands it. When you blind, without knowledge, listen to him you think there are different persons playing guitar. That's makes him very special. Only an experienced ear can recognise his typical touch.
@@Contextcatcher Agree. Once I got beyond thinking that the one song they're widely known for is silly...yep, he is criminally underrated these days and easily one of the greatest and best guitarists of all time.
When this tune first came out, everyone was "WHAT THE HELL????"
And then "Play it again! That's cool as hell!"
Sums it up.
Same thing 40 years later. A friend played the live version to two of us while going out, he said nothing...
I generally just call this song 6 minutes of awesome. No other way to describe it.
Great to get everyone on their feet in the rock clubs.
I was 11 years old when I first heard this back in 1972, this, Hawkwind and Pink Floyd got me into prog rock at an early age. Loved this tune...it was so different!
More like W T F then F ing Amazing
This song was originally done as a warm up for their performances and the audience loved it so much the demand became huge for them to put it on their album, so they did.
this honestly makes so much sense in hindsight.
Apparently, legend has it that, for the live version, the band were only given a limited time slot which wasn't enough enough to do the whole song at the original tempo. So, being unwilling to play a shortened version, they just played it as fast as they could to fit it onto the time available.
And it was incredible. I've watched that video so many times I've lost count.
And thus, Heavy Metal was born!
@@rawli987 th-cam.com/video/RFDW9b_ejfI/w-d-xo.html Guess this is the version you are referring too. Great tune, and on this version, fantastic delivery too.
Great yarn
The studio version feels like slow motion after watching the live version.
"I can't believe this exists"... The perfect reaction. They are an incredible band and this track brings back so many memories. You can't hear this and not smile.
“I didn’t even know this existed”.
Not only does it exist, but it was a fairly major hit on the radio in the early ‘70’s. It was definitely a different time back then.
It was also a staple on classic rock radio in the 90s and beyond. I've heard it _so_ many times.
Hit #9 on the US Top 100 Charts in its day...very different daze.
Songs like Hocus Pocus and Frankenstein by Edgar Winter would never get airplay in today's pop markets...
@@prickyX "Scorpio" by Dennis Coffey & The Detroit Guitar Band...IIRC, hit as high as #4. 2+ minutes of it is a Bob Babbitt bass solo. :-)
IIRC it was a hit at the same time as 'Autobahn' by Kraftwerk. That made an impression on me.
A classical composer who says y’all and rips the bong to a banger, fucking subbed!
The three guitar runs are the cleanest, most imaginative and technically perfect in the history of music. Jan was voted "Greatest Living Guitarist" by Melody Maker Magazine in 1972
I had heard that he was given this well deserved accolade . Great take on what you heard nice to see inside a good ear .
I've never had heard any guitar playing even close to this before or after this song came out on the radio back then. Didn't know anything about that award, glad to hear it, the man sure earned and desevered it.
No Rory Gallagher in 1972. Think it was 73.
Being Dutch, I have to fly the flag for this one. Brian May (Queen) rates Jan Akkerman as one of the best guitarists ,definitely of that era.
The reason for the fast live version is time restraints in the 70's. Songs were 3 and a little bit long and they had to try and fit 7 minutes into that.
They literally did a time warp
Flying one more flag for Jan Akkerman: Jimmy Page and Ritchie Blackmore have admitted to have visited Focus concerts to check out the phenomenon that JA was.
I guess it was not for technical reasons but for commercial reasons.
@@juanar4305 time slot reasons: the segments in the show were prob max 3.5 minutes
Focus is one the best underrated prog bands. Doug listen to the whole album and then check out Hamburger Concerto. Great stuff.
Too right on all counts! I LOVE Hamburger Concerto!
I agree. I'm sure Doug would love Focus.
Absolutely. Moving Waves, Focus 3 and Hamburger Concerto are all classics.
#He really, really needs to do this one
...I will check it out Suzycreamchez...I think I heard this on "King Biscuit Flower Hour"
For those of us who grew up with this music, it is fun to watch Doug react to this music 40 - 50 years later. This particular clip is priceless! Bravo.
The live version is the most amazing rendition I've ever heard. Love it.
The funny story is that the show only gave them 4 and a half minutes to play, and they didn't want to edit it, so the just played it faster
I recently learned that this is not the case. They always performed this song that fast in concert.
When you said "I didn't know this existed", my heart was very sad. It means that millions of people have missed out on this incredible song (from my youth). The studio version had huge airplay in the 70s. We head-banged & danced like maniacs! The vocals were a language of their own, no translation needed. Many decades later, I saw Bobby McFerrin in concert, he also used vocal percussion, etc. Thanks for the bong hits, and for saying "y'all"...excellent review.
Man I remember dancing to this.
Are we going to ignore the EXCEPTIONALLY good recording for that day and age?
Yup, I thank God for allowing this to be preserved so well for us. Just like Heart's "Live at KWSU TV studio" gig which was recorded by college students no less!
Frontdesk99 - This is from the 70s, I mean 1970s, not 1870s! Never played vinyl records from that period?
@@pit2ryan3 It's from 1971. And yes I have, I AM from that period. Recording studios were mostly crap back then, numerous examples come to mind. This recording (the Focus one, not the rip off cover) is - considering the technical possibilities, the equipment available and the know-how of studio technicians in that era, is exceptionally good.
I don't think you know what they had to use back then. I do.
@@Frontdesk99 - Thanks for your kind reply... Though I'm nearly sure that the sound has been remastered here, it's not like it used to be and a bit out of sync too... Regards!
Moving Waves is a masterpiece, timeless, everlasting, the root of progressive rock. Listen to this albun everytime you can, it's good for your creativity and health as well.
Yep, it's an awesome album.
Heh, yeah man, im pretty stoned myeslf
I like your words, it's a important truth!!
I fell in love with Prog Rock, and this will continues for all my life...
In my opinion the root of progressive rock has to be the Beatles Revolver or Sgt. Peppers
@@vagabond197979 Like many other progressive rock bands, we need to listen many times to understand the sense of progression, mainly on very long songs. It happens on classical music and there's no hurry to get to the end. Just sit, "close your eyes and begin to relax..."
After a particularly rough start to the 5th chemo round, this brought me genuine joy. Doug, you RULE!
I wish you well and pray for the best for you.
Wish you well, may all the strength and love in the world be with you!
@@gregorp8406 thank you!
Hang in there!💪
We're just strangers on the net, but I wish you the best in your battle. You've got this!
It's just fun watching super skilled musicians rock out while clearly having fun themselves.
I've been going down the rabbit hole on this channel, and I really needed this laugh today. Thanks Doug!
Happy you are here!
So... within the first minute or so we got an explosive minor-key RnR, a drum solo, a yodelling section and A5 soprano singing.... wtf this is amazing!
The reason the live version was so fast was that Midnight Special only allowed just over 4 minutes for the performance and asked the bank to cut the track to fit, but the band decided to speed the whole performance up and see how much of the song they could fit into the time allowed, hence the manic nature of the performance, I think that if used in conjunction with the studio version it is a great bit of fun, but some purists don't like the TV version
Nah they always play it that fast and the performance is (badly) edited too. Just listen to end.
@@ljw5768 you got that right. The version that Doug heard was the radio version, which was the “slow” cut. They had the “fast” version on their Dutch Masters greatest hits LP. Peace from Toronto
It sounds like they switched it from 4/4 to cut time.
It's about the same speed as the Live At The Rainbow version :-)
I remember a different TV appearance, where they got a full 25 minutes. Aside from this, their signature radio hit, they played lots of other stuff, but at the time, I was not at all familiar with it (yet). It came off as a wall of impenetrable sound. It wasn't instantly catchy like Yes or Genesis. Add to that the pretty low-quality video of a garishly lit stage, and the crappy TV and antenna I watched it on, and it was a rather dense experience.
Hope it’s live version, from ‘73, as the manic pace and facial expressions of lead singer add to my enjoyment of the song. But studio version is solid as well 🙂
sadly no but i linked it so here's hoping 🎸
I hope it isn’t.
@@EvilSean62 what do you mean, it is on the video
@@bigstam1234567890 the link i was referring to is actually on the main vid ... my mistake , multiple and profuse apologies
forgive me ... i offer you the blood of my unborn child as sacrifice please dont thumb me down ... or ..do
either way sorry for the misunderstanding
The Midnight special live version is great.
I gotta say - this is the best Daily Doug by far! Even though I'm not a musician I always love the professional commentary on scales, what notes, etc. I like how you appreciate all forms of music as do I. Here's to many more Daily Dougs!
I love it. Taking a bong hit on this song is needed to fully engage. And honestly this song is exactly what music is all about. Self expression and having fun.
Been listening to this for 50 years and it still knocks me out every time I hear it.
This was a massive hit back in the day. Sylvia was another big hit, with brilliant guitar work by Jan, House of the King the B side. Both worth a listen.
That looked like a massive hit at the beginning of the video 😂
Sylvia is awesome. One of my favorite songs.
Jan was quite the shredder for early 70’s. The live video of this on TH-cam is pretty insane!
House of the King seconded. Love that tune.
sylvia is a masterpiece martin
Focus is so much more than this novelty hit. Listen to Eruption from Moving Waves. It is steeped in classical references and the musicianship is astonishing.
Van Leer didn't really consider his band to be progressive rock; he said in an interview that they only used traditional tonality.
Agreed, Eruption is one of the great epics from the 1970's!
LJW: One of the most ignored prog masterpieces is "Eruption".
These guys proved they could play with "Hocus Pocus", but with "Eruption" they took their skills and climbed a musical MT. EVEREST.
Eruption - such a good track.
Eruption has my vote too.
I prefer the live version of this tune on The Midnight Special; it's significantly faster and more maniacal, but every bit as tight. Plus, I'm old enough to remember seeing that episode of The Midnight Special on it's first airing date, and it was my first exposure to Focus ever. Later that December, The Midnight Special also gave me my first time hearing/seeing Genesis; one of the tunes they did was "Watcher Of The Skies", and I was a Genesis fan from then on. You should sometime do one of your videos on "Watcher of the Skies"...a great progressive rock tune.
By the way, the unique vocalizing at about 6 minutes on your Focus "Hocus Pocus" video is an example of "eefing"...yep, it's an actual vocalization technique, that dates back to rural Tennessee about 100 years ago.
All the best to you!
That show was so great
Fun fact the show wanted the band to cut the song short for time. They refused and instead decided to speed it up to fit the time slot.
I love that one
They were even better on Don Kirschner's Rock Concert, and they played complete Hamburger Concerto and couple of other tracks from the album. That was in '75
My kids got me the Midnight Special DVD set, it is so cool to go back and remember those performances I watched late at night in my youth.
Being American, we will forgive you not to know this amazing band from the early 70´s. The guitar player is actually one of the best from these times, as well as the flute player. But I enjoy your surprises to the crazy stuff that is going on in this song. Welcome to Focus.
I believe there is a version of this song that may make your brain explode. A television show they went on only allowed a short time for them and rather than cut it they sped it up perfectly. Mind blowing craziness!
Jan is a superb guitarist
Jan is a BEAST!
Agreed, can't recall many videos of the early 70's when someone is shredding that much. Should be better known than he is.
He was considered best in the world for rock guitarist for a time there in the 70s and I can see why.
Doug I have been waiting for you to hopefully react to the song one day, knew you would have to eventually !!
Thijs Is pretty amazing to.
The best I’ve ever seen live.
It's fitting that you're smoking up during this. A good way to experience it for the first time. Your facial expressions say it all. I never tire of people seeing/hearing this for the first time.
Doug, I've been watching your channel for a little while now and the fact you are jamming to this song, and doing bong rips, makes me an even bigger fan. What a good time this was watching this video.
WOW...I have heard this song a couple of hundred times in my life.
I have NEVER heard this live version. As a hard rock and metal head I absolutely love this live version.
Great job Focus!!!
Eruption + Hamburger Concerto + Answers Questions are all Focus tracks that I’d be happy to see you look at any of… a band that doesn’t get enough attention
ABSOLUTELY! 🙌 Their three best epic pieces IMHO. 👌 I think I like the live version of Questions Answers Answers Question on the Live At The Rainbow album better than the studio version on Focus 3, but it's been a while since I've listened to either.
Definitely their best epics!
The rest of the Hamburger Concerto is also some of their best work especially Birth
@@martinparker1270 Agreed, not a bad song on the whole album!
Absolutely! These are among my favourites too. One of the best live “rock” experiences ... ever 😀
Thijs van Leer once said in an interview that "Hocus Pocus" emerged from unplanned jamming. Actually Jan Akkerman had setup his gear, while the other were still busy. He just played something and came up with this rif. Then the other members joined in and so the song came into existence... It became a huge hit back then.
Doug, they are still playing live. I saw them in a small music venue in Leeds October 2019. Brilliant. They did a 15 minute version of Hocus Pocus with extended drum and guitar solos. The yodelling is still great although understandably the high notes are left to lead guitar!!
They're still releasing albums, too. I think they've got pieces up to "Focus 11" at this point.
Still playing but in different musician configuration
Gonna see them live in December (hopefully). Very excited!
At The Brudenell! We were there too.
I love your reactions to this classic Doug. When you took a hit from the bong I nearly fell over, I think that's exactly what I did 35 years ago when I first heard this!
An insanely talented band performing a song that seems to elicit joy in every sane sentient being who hears it.
I enjoyed this very much, although it's a pity in the "Focus live"-part you talked through almost every Jan Akkerman solo because you reacted to every Thijs van Leer intervention. So you missed a lot of brilliant stuff Jan played there.
Jan was shredding long before the term had been invented. Truly an amazing guitarist in every way. Goes from performing classical lute concertos to blues,rock or jazz.
This band was one of the best in the Progressive era. Nothing else like it at the time, and some real musicianship (which was also lacking at that time).
5:15 to 5:35 greatest 20 seconds of youtube I've ever seen
The best version of "Hocus Pocus" is from the "Live at the Rainbow" album. It's BREATHTAKING! (LITERALLY so, as at one point Thijs van Leer yodels for almost A FULL MINUTE, and don't ask me how he breathed!) But seriously, that's not the best of Focus. The very best is "Hamburger Concerto" (it's about actual hamburger patties, with "movements" titled "Rare" and "Well Done", and the cover is the name of the record in the form of a diner neon sign). AMAZING musicianship! No yodelling, but Thijs does redefine the meaning of "vocalese" in several sections, and Jan Akkerman is at his best (and that's saying a lot when it comes to a guitar legend like him!). You should also check their solo albums, especially Jan Akkerman's ever-changing moods over the years. Thijs is also a renowned classical flutist and I suggest you have a listen to "Introspection 3", for example.
Please don't say hocus pocus, it's a slur against Jesus. In Latin, " This is my Body" translates " Hoc es Corpus Meum" and back in the day God's enemies made up the word Hocus Pocus to make fun on His Last Supper.
@@auniversalwoman, and how do you suggest I refer to Focus' song instead, if it has always had this title?
@@goytabr HP ?
@@auniversalwoman, nah, this song deserves to be treated by a magical name fitting its magical sound. Besides, I'm not superstitious.
@@goytabr yeah I guess if you honor a sing more than Jesus Christ, you would. But we all will answer for our choices in the end.
This was such a wonderul era of musical creativity. I'm always finding hidden gems of songs and artists that the early 70s has squirrelled away.
If you watch the live version he yodels, plays the flute, whistles, chokes, stutters, stammers and encourages hamsters to sing along.
Indeed! He's awesome xD
Yep, it's insane...
The live version is covered in the last part of the video!
don't forget long yodeling and musical band introduction
Plenty more Focus from the 1970s to go at, Doug! Including some absolute epics, and some you may recognise. And of course "Sylvia". But this was one of "the" albums you HAD to own in the early 1970s, as a young male here in the UK. Thijs van Leer and Jan Akkerman... unique! Great band!
Much of the music you're hearing for the first time, Mr. H., is what I grew up with. Completely delightful to hear your reactions and analysis.
Don't ignore that drum performance! He's one of the best alive.
Never get tired of seeing reactions to what I call the "drunk and high yodeling leprechaun rock opera"..... especially when it's a reaction by someone as musically knowledgeable as Doug. Glad you enjoyed. Glad you watched the live version of Focus playing the song so you can see the facial expressions of the singer.... priceless.
“I think he’s upset with the person who sold him his shirt.” PRICELESS!
Hey, it was 1973!
"Eruption" from this album is a masterpiece!
Eruption is one of my most favorite music pieces by any band or composer in any genre! 🥰
@@JohnLRice There is an Argentinian musician (Gustavo Cerati one of the greatest in this country) that used a sampled from that track in the song Bocanada from the 1999 album with the same title. It's amazing, listen th-cam.com/video/TEidXw-tAQY/w-d-xo.html
I knew the fast version would blow you away as it even speeds up after the flute solo. The musicianship is astounding. My brother introduced this to me when I was 11 & I'm still entertained by it.
Halloween and Iron Maiden covering your song, what an honor!
Jan’s lead guitar playing just blew me away when I started playing guitar. Saw this on TV and watched Jan play guitar. His hands moved up and down the neck like a spider. Never have I seen a guitar played like that. Never get tired of this song.
Jan Akkerman was just on a different level with his playing, he is unbelievable
So here's my Focus story. Saw them live at a local college gymnasium around 1971-72 (hardwood floors, omg). One thing that can't be appreciated from the album was the IMMENSE VOLUME that they played at. Jan Akkerman with a gorgeous black Les Paul Fretless Wonder running through 2 Marshall stacks cranked to 11. I think Hocus Pocus was the encore and it was played at ear-splitting levels. What fun!!!
“I can’t believe this exists” could be the slogan for Focus 😂
I get so much satisfaction from observing people listen to this for the first time!❤❤❤
Nicko's first Maiden lead vocal :) Hope he gets suitably paid :) Check out " House of the King " by Focus. It was used as a TV theme in the UK, fits perfectly :)
"Don't Ask Me" with Myriam Stoppard & Dr Magnus Pyke. When I discovered Focus I was surprised to recognise the TV theme.
@@stevegreen5552 Steve Coogan used it in Saxondale as well. Magnus and david Bellamy were legends :)
Doug. Love your work. Focus had a strong classical side - and Jan did some solo work thats great in the vein. If you want to really expand your Focus try the Hamburger Concerto album and especially the 20 minute (or so) title track. Now that would be a real one to get your teeth into. The riff reminds me of the the Beatles "She's So Heavy". Keep up the good work.
I so agree. And the rest of the Moving Waves is quite excellent. I also like some of the first album where Thijs actually sings.
Focus Live at the Rainbow is one of the greatest live albums ever.
Abso-f++king-lutely !
I wasn't expecting that rip......and honestly, it was perhaps the most epic I've seen - perfectly timed. Worth noting that Jan was a phenomenal player - sweeps and blistering scale fragments in the very early 70s!
He goes even higher with the vocals in the live version 😳😳😳👍
Ding dong Dougie on the bong. I Really appreciated your reaction to Hocus Pokus Focus - got me laughing all the way and yet informative. Brilliant stuff :) Been a fan of theirs since it was released. Please consider Deep Purple in concert with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.
Other iconic hipie song is Frankenstein of the Edgar Winter Group. I fully recomend it.
first record I brought must see old grey whistle test live version
Rock guitarist Dave Ulrich has done an awesome cover of Frankenstein, well worth a listen.
@@u3uu3u Thanks I will
Kirk and Rob of Metallica released a short cover of Frankenstein.
Also, the physical stamina required for that live performance is unreal. Top work by all.
I agree the album tempo works far better, but I love the live version so much.
when I saw their performance, then in the last part, I immediately fell in love with what creativity and talent this eccentric is.
I still remember finding this on TH-cam when I was like 17. I was teaching myself guitar and I had to learn it immediately. The riff was so cool, and Akkerman's solo is still one of my all time favourites.
Glad for you, Doug, that you finally heard this song. It was HUGE in the early '70s.
Can you imagine that such a song was a hit? things were so much wider, possibilities.
Focus 2 aka "Moving waves", and "focus 3" are amazing good albums.
Jan Akkerman, back then, said Peter Banks (original guitarist for Yes) was one of few guitarists for which he had massive respect. Peter went from Yes to form "Flash" and whoa, what a guitar player. Please check out "Lifetime" from Flash's second album: th-cam.com/video/AfV-M_J1wkQ/w-d-xo.html
Who else would call a drum solo "Stop That Banging"? LOL!
@@djhrecordhound4391 I tell ya, we drummers...we get no respect I tell ya!
I first heard Hocus Pocus when I was 11 years old and immediately fell in love with it. My brother bought the album that featured Hocus Pocus, the album Moving Waves, which was their 2nd album. I listened to it constantly and fell in love with the entire album. I was hooked and have been a fan of Focus ever since. I'm confident that I have heard Hocus Pocus well over 1,000 times. I am 63 years old now and love it just as much as when I was an 11-year-old. Thanks for your critique, very fun and insightful!
Doug, I love how you just ENJOY the music, no matter what it is, which was what my generation was all about.
Focus is an amazing band! 1000 people have reacted to this song. It’s their Circus number. But They have so much more. Fabolous musicians! Check out first 5 tracks off the next album Focus 3, or their Magnus opus Hamburger Concerto! And that’s just a start.
You NEED to dive into Focus. They were one of the prog pioneers… the rawness of the recordings is also a beautiful thing as well
Nice fact: readers of Melody Maker in 1973 chose Jan Akkerman as the best guitarist in the world.
Still is.....
Jan’s solo work is amazing 26 cd’s total in collection
Jan is fantastic. No doubt. However, I'd challenge him to play King Crimson's Fracture. Robert Fripp himself says it's impossible to play. He also said that he spends 80% of his rehearsal time practicing that song. There was a guitarist, I don't recall his name, who spent 20 years learning Fracture. His final rendition is excellent, but not perfect.
David: Jan has a more bluesy/jazzy style with feel. Robert Fripp is almost the opposite and probably couldn't do what Jan does. Two completely different musicians who accidentally play the same instrument. And if you want a third: think Paco de Lucia.
@@akaFrits1 - Good point.
Cut my teeth on this album in 1973. One of my earliest influences and probably my first exposure to jazz/rock. Akkerman was amazing. They considered it a joke.
I believe the flute sound is achieved by the player vocalising the notes he's playing on the flute. Ian Anderson from Jethro Tull is one of many exponents of this type of playing.
I have to hand it to you Doug. That really was one of your best videos to date. I had the best time watching your reactions to that song. I knew you wouldn't believe what you were hearing.
Focus is a criminally underrated band. Who are just put down as a 1 hit wonder and to a degree it is not wrong. But within Europe they have been well known for DECADES.
I applaud you sir for your open-mindedness. Don't let my user name fool you, I listen to a lot of different types of music. Cheers from Scotland.
They aren't under rated by those who know...
@CJ'S HARDCORE & PUNK MUSIC VAULT You're forgetting Sylvia off Focus 3 so they were a 2 hit wonder. Strangely never bought Moving Waves but bought Focus 3 (double LP !!) instead. One of the first records I bought I think.
Apparently they are still very popular in Brazil too
Yes, this song is one of a kind, amazing players and Thijs's singing skills are off the charts. For a second reaction, try the whole B side of the moving waves album.
For a bonus, look up the 45rpm of Hocus Pocus. Its breaks are switched around, so even though it's shorter, it's not all annoying edits. Some copies call the b-side "Hocus Pocus (Fast Version)" or "Hocus Pocus II"--a studio version resembling what they played live.
@@djhrecordhound4391 Thanks for the tip, will look it up.
You should give Focus a more in depth look - especially "House Of The King", "Sylvia", "Round Goes The Gossip" and the album "Focus III"
Hey Doug! Thanx for playing on of my faves from my misspent youth! I have had the great pleasure of seeing and meeting Focus several times on Cruise To The Edge.They always put on a great show and Thijs was always playing something with or for someone. Lots of fun!
Hi Doug. Today I attended a Focus concert in The Netherlands, where the band was founded. After fifty (!) years still touring the globe. Vocalist Thijs van Leer (75 years old) and drummer Pierre van der Linden (76 years old) of the original line-up, performed just as powerful as they did in the seventies, including the astonishing jodeling parts! Former Focus guitarist Jan Akkerman was in 1973 voted 'best guitar player of the word' by the british music magazine Melody Maker. Todays line-up: Thijs van Leer: organ/flute/vocals, Pierre van der Linden: Drums, Menno Gootjes: guitar, Udo Pannekeet: Bass.
I remember listening to this when it came out. It grows on you the more you hear it. Just rifs, solos and yodeling. 😂
When this would come on the radio when I was a kid, which was quite frequent, I would jump around like crazy and play air guitar to this and of course sing the yodel. This was on the radio many times a day during the early to mid-70s. ☺ still love it
Me too!
Can't believe a guy with a grey beard has never heard of this amazing band!
The highlights in my mind:
"My pants aren't tight enough to hit that note"
"Pretty weird so far" oh. Just wait my friend.
"I can't believe this exists" and "how did I not know about it" - my reaction back when I happened upon it 😂
I was just a kid when this came out and was getting lots of air time on the radio… it’s still the soundtrack in my head when I have a crap ton of stuff to get done and a short time to do it in.
This is one of my favorite "classic" rock tracks of all times
Saw them in 1973. Crazy wild show. They did the whole album, we wanted more after the encode so they repeated the first two songs from the album over again. Spencer Davis Group opened.
The band and the audience where in outer space that night.
Saw them on that tour too. Real music, great virtuoso improvisations one of the best live bands ... ever😀 I would have paid to listen to their drummer on his own, he’s that good.
This was played constantly on the radio and was a huge hit back in the day. I miss the Midnight Special. I fondly remember staying up late on Friday nights waiting to see my favourite bands play. Have you heard Warren Zevon's Werewolves of London? It's a great Halloween song. I loved your reaction!
Amazed you went for this track, Doug. Wouldn't have been my first choice to showcase Focus's excellence, but for Hallowe'en it makes sense! But you HAVE to listen to the rest of the album, as others have said. For a short piece from the same album, check out Focus III, then dive into Eruption, featuring "Tommy" for an emotional rollercoaster.
agree with that entirely. Focus III really showcases their talents. Tommy is excellent from Eruption. I saw them live around the time III came out. I've never really come down! In and Out of Focus is very different and fun too.
One of my all time favorites
A great example of making a song just for the fun and creativity of it… thanks as always for the great reactions!
I've been a Focus fan since the early seventies and always been thrilled by the artistic creativity of this band. It's been so much fun watching you, Doug, a guy more or less my age, discovering and enjoying Hocus Pocus for the first time knowing what a crazy ride this is... 22 minutes of fun!! You should listen to the genious band- band of genious from the 70's - GENTLE GIANT... you'd get a nice kick out of them!! Albums: Interview, Power and the Glory, Octopus, Aquiring the taste, etc.
Definitely, Gentle Giant would be a treat in store for Doug - I particularly recommend Three Friends and Kerry Minnears contributions!
On April 7, 1973 I saw Focus at Winterland in S. F., as the 2nd of two opening bands for Yes's 'Close To The Edge" tour...the opening band was Poco. Looking back, it now seems like an unbelievable lineup. But at the time it was one of many great concert lineups at Winterland arranged/produced by Bill Graham. Needless to say most everyone in the audience had been "timing" their hallucinogens to be peaking when Yes arrived on stage...And just as Focus was coming on, so were we. Nothing quite prepares one for the joyful and mind blowing experience we had that evening! I'll never forget it. BTW - These concerts, in the early '70s, happened during my "experimental" college years, well before I met my lovely wife Sandy.
Peace and Love to all!
I was there too! Wow, Bill Graham knows how to pick them... I was working for FM Productions at that time. I saw a lot of rock history. What fun!
Focus.... the only band as far as I know that made a song about the universal, timeless, crippling human condition of Needing A Bathroom.... 🙏🏾
Focus were such a crazy band and we loved them in the 1970's just brilliant and bonkers, loved it!
I remeber hearing this on the Dutch and Belgian radio stations back when I was a kid in the early '70s... boy, does that bring back memories!
I grew up in the 70s and this was such a part of my life. Your dad is an amazing man and one of my hero’s