Gingers unique drumming, Jack Bruce's groovy bass, and Eric Clapton's early blues drenched lead playing makes for a tasty combination. (Incidentally Eric Clapton's solo on this is a note for note borrowing from bluesman Albert King's solo on the song "Oh Pretty Woman.")
You think this is high, you need to check out their song "Tales of Brave Ulysses". One lyric goes "Tiny purple fishes run laughing through your fingers". In many ways Cream was the ultimate psychedelic band.
"Strange Brew", which was released in 1967, was Cream's second single, and my introduction to the band. It didn't chart nationally, but was a top 40 hit in Tucson, where I still live.
Another Great one from Cream that's worth of checking out is "World of pain". It's my own personal favorite track from them. 💞 Also "Tales Of brave Ullesses" is a Great one from them! 😊👌♥️
I just became a teenager in 1970, I consider myself so fortunate to grow up with such great bands many of whom I saw live in concert, Rock Out Babies....
I'm an old hippie who is a little older than you. I graduated in 1974. Hitched all over the US and lived in communes along the way. The music from the 60s through the 70s is still amazing. I just don't think it can be beat.
I graduated in '73,@@Teresia12; born in '54. Lived in 2 different "cult"-communes for a yr or longer each... Brotherhood of Eternal Love in Laguna in late '60s, and Brotherhood of the Sun in StaBarbara in the mid '70s. A hella fun, but the music was even better. My first concert was Jimi Hendrix in '69!
Their rendition of Crossroads live in the late 60’s is amazing. The fact they pretty much loathed each other by that stage. Poor jack bruce just trying to stop baker & Clapton from killing each other.
Although I love their version of crossroads, because it introduced me to blues. A great version from the cult movie Crossroads by Ry Cooder is my favourite. And I would never have discovered Robert Johnson and all he inspired.
This was Clapton after he had already been in the Yardbirds, Cream was when he was at the top of the game. Listen to Badge, it's an awesome Cream song. Thanks y'all, from Tennessee
Cream actually collaborated musically and artistically with their wives and girlfriends. Some of their songs were co-written with their wives. And they also accompanied them on tours. Very ahead of the times, just like their music was.
React to “Dance The Night Away” it’s another Cream tune. It’s one of their best because Clapton plays a 12 string electric guitar and it makes the song more trippy and psychedelic, plus the drops from the drums is one of the best.
This belongs with the season of the witch....Lex makes a hottie for a witch lol and she gave you the perfect response with a cute witchy laugh when you just ask her whats this theme mean Brad hhahah
Cool groovy song from an iconic group.👍. Really dug the physadelic sound from that time late 60s. Hurdy Gurdy Man by Donovan is really far out, groovy all that good stuff. Badge by Cream is very good one of my favorites
I remember listening to this album (Best of Cream, 1969) back in the day, in my room, late at night on the stereo. I lived with my parents at the time and they were only one wall away, and I always worried about playing it too loud. It was an old stereo with no headphone port, so the speakers were the only option. I'm sure I played it louder than I should have. They never complained.
I was 15 years old when this it's great to hear. It.again ..Eric Clapton my man.Thanks.for.playing . .You guy's are getting good at this. I'm starting.to like.this.channel..Gopd Work my Friends.
Fantastic song! And Probably Greatest/most talented Blues group of all time.. 3 VIRTUOSOs on their respective instruments aswell as great song writers and singers and the way they gelled and just created music as musicians/a band was flawless.. they proved this on their 2005 Royal Albert Hall performances when they hadn't played since the 60s, Jack Bruce was on deaths door (just prior to him passing away!) And yet they played like they'd never been apart in fact they were EVEN BETTER! AMAZING! You should review some of their live 2005 Royal Albert Hall Reunion Concert performances they're AMAZING! ESPECIALLY "Toad" if you like drums! Ginger Baker plays possibly yeh GREATEST drum solo of ALL TIME! (LITERALLY!) VIRTUOSO Jazz Drummer aswell as blues.. check out "Toad" Live 2005, Brilliant! Great review guys! Cheers from London England 👍🎸😎🏴
You are in some rarified air with this one. I don't think it ever made the radio, but it was one of the better songs on "Disraeli Gears", which has many a great tune.
I heard this on rock radio in the 70s and 80s in South Florida. Not heavy rotation - but that was my only music source in those days and I knew this one well!
It was a top 40 hit in Tucson in 1967, so I have always assumed that held true elsewhere. However, a quick check on The Google shows that it didn't chart at all nationally. But then, I've come to learn that our AM stations in that era were a lot more adventurous than most.
@@HisboiLRoi I agree. FM was supposed to be a boon, but it just made it mediocre. It was also the bands fault. In Charlotte AM radio, I heard Lennon's "Working Class Hero", King Crimson, and other things you'd never hear on FM. Guess I prefer static.
Very cool blues rock by Mr Clapton, Bruce and Baker. They didn't last long but left a great legacy. Clapton's fuitar is double tracked. One has that sharp chords, the other has blues leads. Cool tune.
According to Blind Dog Fulton from the movie Crossroads (The one with Ralph Machio not Britney Spears) "The blues aint nothing but a good man feeling bad, thinking about a woman he once loved." The blues is where rock came from and is all about broken hearted men singing about the woman that broke their heart, hence so may songs about it.
Quick Rock history lesson for anyone interested. Eric Clapton got his start in the early '60s as the lead guitarist of the Yardbirds, which played straight British Blues. When they switched to a more radio-friendly, pop influenced sound, he basically accused them of selling out and quit. He went on to do the Blues Breakers project with John Mayall, and then founded Cream - one of the most important bands in the early development of Hard Rock music, which later would branch off into genres like Metal, Punk Rock, etc. Meanwhile, the Yardbirds hired Jeff Beck as his replacement. He stuck around for a couple years, and then left to start his own band. The Jeff Beck Group is less famous to the general public nowadays, but was hugely influential amongst the guitarists of the day. Beck's replacement was a young guitar prodigy named Jimmy Page. But by then, the cracks in the band were growing and they broke up shortly after. None of the original members were particularly interested in the rights to the Yardbirds name, so Page ended up with them by default. He got some guys together for a band that was going to be called "The New Yardbirds", but instead they went with the name Led Zeppelin.
A very young Eric Clapton from 1967 with his first Band, "Cream." A great iconic classic Rock group, that in only a two- or three-year period together put out some of the best music ever.
I was in 6th - maybe 7th grade in 1966-67.... I saved my allowance and bought my first album - Disraeli Gears. My parents freaked out. I believe it is still in a box in the garage. lol
This song was a blues number called Lawdy Mama but the other two didn't like the words so Jack Bruce rewrote the words and the recorded them over the instrumental track they already had and it was a big hit
Ahmet Erdogan signed them up for Atlantic records after hearing Clapton rip the guitar during a break of another band's concert. Of course, Clapton, and later Page, and the Rolling Stones all wanted to record with Atlantic because of its catalog of African-American artists. Erdogan and his brother were sons of the Turkish ambassador to the U.S., and they fell in love with black American music, even staging, at the Turkish embassy, one of the first integrated concerts in Washington, DC.
In 1966, before Cream, a 21-year-old Eric Clapton really began making a name for himself when he joined John Mayall & The Bluebreakers. Their album together, aptly titled, The Bluesbreakers John Mayall With Eric Clapton, pioneered the guitar-dominated blues-rock sound, & is considered among the greatest rock LPs of all-time!!! This is the link to the full album. Hear Eric's roots, understand what an innovator he was, & enjoy the great music!! th-cam.com/video/No0Q8ni084k/w-d-xo.html
To Brad, lyrics are a programming language, to be taken very literally, and must have a definitive meaning. Cream came out of the English hard blues rock scene. Probably White room is my favourite track.
Felix Pappalardi was the bass player. His wife wrote the lyrics to this song. She also did the album cover art work. She ended up shooting and killing Felix in 1982 with a gun he bought for her...
I just got a look at this review and Brad's analogy of being emasculated made me laugh out loud😂😂you guys are great. I just joined and love your reactions.🤗🤗
It's an LSD song. Considered at the time to be acid rock. Strange Brew.. psychedelic. The important thing is to picture it against the background of black-and-white television. The world still in the 50s
4 black brothers with a white drummer created this ICONIC Masterpiece from the 60’s Psychedelic Era Trust me…. You do not want your life to end without hearing this song. “TIME HAS COME TODAY“- The Chambers Brothers - Album Long version, then Live. PLEASE and Thank You. 1,595,589 views so far. YOU will like it too
I just subscribed because I love the music and I really like you two!! I'm 72 and I love all kinds of music which is why I think The Beatles are the best Band ever!! The same guy that wrote "Here there an everywhere" and "Helter Skelter" and "Rocky Racoon" and "Martha my dear" and "WE can work it out"!! Sorry but the Beatles are the BEST ever!! Someone said The Stones had 4 great albums well The Beatles had 13 great albums!!
Correct me if I’m wrong, but I think this came out in 1967! Cream were ahead of their time. Clapton was an absolute pioneer for blues guitar and rock in general
Lex is a keeper, Brad. You've stumbled onto a woman who openly admits that women play mind games to get what they want. Don't ever let her go, dude. She's a treasure.
Family court in the 60's🤣. Wife got the kids, house, child support and alimony no questions asked. Dad saw the kids every other weekend. Even after woman started making good salaries it didn't change except for alimony. Not til the late 90's did it start changing to joint physical custody and shared expenses. But even now it is still skewed to the dad not seeing the kids much.
Some of the early Blues songwriting (during the 60's) was influenced by the songs penned in the 1930-1950's... like in the Mississippi delta region, Louisiana Bayou..... and on Voodoo folklore.
LMFAO 🤣😆. Brad, your recent comments have really gotten a lot better. I'm happy to see you getting into your feelings and train of thought more. Although Lex, has some good opinions about these songs and there meanings. Hers is a womans opinion. And sometimes it is just that. Also back when this song came out. There really wasn't a family court. Sadly it was truly a joke. More than it is today.
This song is the perfect description of the 60's sound.
The drumming is incredible.
Ginger Baker, great drummer.
Ginger Baker didn't just keep time -- he was a soloist performing at the kit.
And Jack Bruce on bass, (and vocals) is great.
He inspired me to tune my floor tom to a low e. It was fun!
Gingers unique drumming, Jack Bruce's groovy bass, and Eric Clapton's early blues drenched lead playing makes for a tasty combination. (Incidentally Eric Clapton's solo on this is a note for note borrowing from bluesman Albert King's solo on the song "Oh Pretty Woman.")
It’s unique because it’s for another song ! ‘Hey Lawdy Mama.’ Felix Pappalardi changed it.
@@robertparker4833 thank you for knowledge!!
This is one of my very favourite Cream songs and one of the very first songs Eric Clapton ever wrote!! 🙂
Always love your videos!!
You think this is high, you need to check out their song "Tales of Brave Ulysses". One lyric goes "Tiny purple fishes run laughing through your fingers". In many ways Cream was the ultimate psychedelic band.
Try doing your homework th-cam.com/video/k1Lke01aWt4/w-d-xo.html
They've already reacted to it 9 months ago - sometimes they don't remember.
I was going to say SWLABR. The lyric "But the Rainbow has a beard" is pretty far out there.
@@dtaylor77 yeah, pretty far out... but wait until they hear "Pressed Rat and Warthog"!
"And the picture has a mustache"
"Strange Brew", which was released in 1967, was Cream's second single, and my introduction to the band. It didn't chart nationally, but was a top 40 hit in Tucson, where I still live.
Brad & Lex, you'll love their song “Badge” !!
Surlechapeau ,
I totally agree with you.
Badge is one of my all time favorite songs.
And come to think about it.
I haven't heard that song in decades.
With George Harrison on rhythm guitar. Great tune!
Badge is my own favorite Cream song
A supergroup. They didn't along very well with each other, but for a couple of years it was pure genius.
Yep… Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker …
It was a violent feud that favored Ginger Baker.over Jack Bruce. Clapton wasn't part of their feud.
Get
2 or 3 decent songs. That's it.
@@TheKitchenerLeslie listen again
Another Great one from Cream that's worth of checking out is "World of pain". It's my own personal favorite track from them. 💞 Also "Tales
Of brave Ullesses" is a Great one from them! 😊👌♥️
1 see above 2 Badge 3 Tales of brave Ulysses
I just became a teenager in 1970, I consider myself so fortunate to grow up with such great bands many of whom I saw live in concert, Rock Out Babies....
Broke up by 1970... The lp was released in '67, when I was 13 yrs young. Listened to it all nite long!
I'm an old hippie who is a little older than you. I graduated in 1974. Hitched all over the US and lived in communes along the way. The music from the 60s through the 70s is still amazing. I just don't think it can be beat.
I graduated in '73,@@Teresia12; born in '54. Lived in 2 different "cult"-communes for a yr or longer each... Brotherhood of Eternal Love in Laguna in late '60s, and Brotherhood of the Sun in StaBarbara in the mid '70s. A hella fun, but the music was even better. My first concert was Jimi Hendrix in '69!
Me too
Me too!
Thank you Lex. More than one song was written by many about the Ladies met while touring…
Their rendition of Crossroads live in the late 60’s is amazing. The fact they pretty much loathed each other by that stage. Poor jack bruce just trying to stop baker & Clapton from killing each other.
Although I love their version of crossroads, because it introduced me to blues. A great version from the cult movie Crossroads by Ry Cooder is my favourite. And I would never have discovered Robert Johnson and all he inspired.
You’ve got it backwards, clapton had to try to stop baker and bruce from killing each other
Baker was clearly a deeply , deeply POS
Love this tune . You guys are awesome!
Psychedelic rock mixed with blues!! One of the best bands of the genre! Great reaction!
When the Cream albums came out, people were wondering how Clapton did the wah-wah on his guitar.
Because they were simple creatures.
This was Clapton after he had already been in the Yardbirds, Cream was when he was at the top of the game. Listen to Badge, it's an awesome Cream song. Thanks y'all, from Tennessee
Eric Clapton taking the lead vocals on this tune.
Great Group!...all great musicians!...R.I.P Jack and Ginger!!
That sure sounds like 60s along with the cover of album , hippie and psychodelic colors. . I have never heard this , first time, good sound
The whole album is good . One of the first songs where you hear Clapton try a vocal .
Brad's insight at the end of the coming to be of falsetto...,very plausible 😂!! Bhaahahaha!
Cream actually collaborated musically and artistically with their wives and girlfriends. Some of their songs were co-written with their wives. And they also accompanied them on tours. Very ahead of the times, just like their music was.
React to “Dance The Night Away” it’s another Cream tune.
It’s one of their best because Clapton plays a 12 string electric guitar and it makes the song more trippy and psychedelic, plus the drops from the drums is one of the best.
That was always my favorite on the album, and now I know why. Gracias!
Same here. Best song on the album. Dance The Night Away is a great song with that Clapton soaring solo.
that's the Beatles/Byrds influence by Slowhand. love it.
not to be confused with the Pasadena band V.H.
This belongs with the season of the witch....Lex makes a hottie for a witch lol and she gave you the perfect response with a cute witchy laugh when you just ask her whats this theme mean Brad hhahah
Cool groovy song from an iconic group.👍. Really dug the physadelic sound from that time late 60s. Hurdy Gurdy Man by Donovan is really far out, groovy all that good stuff. Badge by Cream is very good one of my favorites
Or even psychedelic
Killer groove ! 😎
Just smoked a bowl and drank a beer, perfect song to chill to.🤣
A great example of how Clapton fuzzed up & hotrodded a Freddie King solo. Psychedelic Rock still rooted in the Blues.
Love this!!!! I think SWLABR from same album is even more psychedelic!!!
I remember listening to this album (Best of Cream, 1969) back in the day, in my room, late at night on the stereo. I lived with my parents at the time and they were only one wall away, and I always worried about playing it too loud. It was an old stereo with no headphone port, so the speakers were the only option. I'm sure I played it louder than I should have. They never complained.
Ooooh, this put me right back to an old house party back in the day... bewitching.
I was 15 years old when this it's great to hear. It.again ..Eric Clapton my man.Thanks.for.playing .
.You guy's are getting good at this. I'm starting.to like.this.channel..Gopd Work my Friends.
Fantastic song! And Probably Greatest/most talented Blues group of all time.. 3 VIRTUOSOs on their respective instruments aswell as great song writers and singers and the way they gelled and just created music as musicians/a band was flawless.. they proved this on their 2005 Royal Albert Hall performances when they hadn't played since the 60s, Jack Bruce was on deaths door (just prior to him passing away!) And yet they played like they'd never been apart in fact they were EVEN BETTER! AMAZING!
You should review some of their live 2005 Royal Albert Hall Reunion Concert performances they're AMAZING! ESPECIALLY "Toad" if you like drums! Ginger Baker plays possibly yeh GREATEST drum solo of ALL TIME! (LITERALLY!) VIRTUOSO Jazz Drummer aswell as blues.. check out "Toad" Live 2005, Brilliant!
Great review guys!
Cheers from London England 👍🎸😎🏴
Witches sitting around their cauldron really love this song.
One of the Witches said " This is a Strange Brew "
You are in some rarified air with this one. I don't think it ever made the radio, but it was one of the better songs on "Disraeli Gears", which has many a great tune.
I heard this on rock radio in the 70s and 80s in South Florida. Not heavy rotation - but that was my only music source in those days and I knew this one well!
It was a top 40 hit in Tucson in 1967, so I have always assumed that held true elsewhere. However, a quick check on The Google shows that it didn't chart at all nationally. But then, I've come to learn that our AM stations in that era were a lot more adventurous than most.
@@HisboiLRoi I agree. FM was supposed to be a boon, but it just made it mediocre. It was also the bands fault. In Charlotte AM radio, I heard Lennon's
"Working Class Hero", King Crimson, and other things you'd never hear on FM. Guess I prefer static.
Top 20 in Australia before Sunshine of your love and then White room
Coolest generation ever!.......Millennials, take notes!
Very cool blues rock by Mr Clapton, Bruce and Baker. They didn't last long but left a great legacy. Clapton's fuitar is double tracked. One has that sharp chords, the other has blues leads. Cool tune.
This one, Badge and White Room my favourite Cream tracks.
Dance the night away great song from same album. Great song always overlooked. Lex you so cool!
Great analogy at the end…funny
Lex, you got a '70s soul. 💗👍
The OG Supergroup, Cream.
'Doin' That Scrapyard Thing', 'Deserted Cities of the Heart', 'Badge', 'World of Pain' would all work next, imo. This was fun, tyvm.
A young Eric Clapton on guitar, young Jack Bruce on base guitar and young Ginger Baker on drums. The cream of the crop in musicians....
BASS, Mr. Wizard who believes he's qualified to make the call on what the cream of the crop is. The most boring "supergroup" in the world.
Thank you for sharing this with me
According to Blind Dog Fulton from the movie Crossroads (The one with Ralph Machio not Britney Spears) "The blues aint nothing but a good man feeling bad, thinking about a woman he once loved." The blues is where rock came from and is all about broken hearted men singing about the woman that broke their heart, hence so may songs about it.
I love the psychedelic 60s ! 🫠
Quick Rock history lesson for anyone interested. Eric Clapton got his start in the early '60s as the lead guitarist of the Yardbirds, which played straight British Blues. When they switched to a more radio-friendly, pop influenced sound, he basically accused them of selling out and quit. He went on to do the Blues Breakers project with John Mayall, and then founded Cream - one of the most important bands in the early development of Hard Rock music, which later would branch off into genres like Metal, Punk Rock, etc.
Meanwhile, the Yardbirds hired Jeff Beck as his replacement. He stuck around for a couple years, and then left to start his own band. The Jeff Beck Group is less famous to the general public nowadays, but was hugely influential amongst the guitarists of the day.
Beck's replacement was a young guitar prodigy named Jimmy Page. But by then, the cracks in the band were growing and they broke up shortly after. None of the original members were particularly interested in the rights to the Yardbirds name, so Page ended up with them by default. He got some guys together for a band that was going to be called "The New Yardbirds", but instead they went with the name Led Zeppelin.
A very young Eric Clapton from 1967 with his first Band, "Cream." A great iconic classic Rock group, that in only a two- or three-year period together put out some of the best music ever.
You're forgetting about the Yardbirds, and John Mayall's Blues breakers, years before he joined Cream.
First band?????
Love Cream! Disraeli Gears is a great album.Very Psychedelic! If you want some killer guitar...listen to Crossroads
You can hear some of that falsetto in parts of Spooky Tooth's "Evil Woman".
That straight fire bluesy psychedelia from the 60's
Psychedelic 12 bar blues progression
Probably my favorite Cream song! 🤘
Jack is playing the bass line to ‘Hey Lawdy Mama.’ Felix Pappalardi changed it and pissed him right off. 😎👍🏻
My fave Cream song! Love it. Total psychedelia music.
We need more of Brad singing. In every video.
I was in 6th - maybe 7th grade in 1966-67.... I saved my allowance and bought my first album - Disraeli Gears. My parents freaked out. I believe it is still in a box in the garage. lol
This song was a blues number called Lawdy Mama but the other two didn't like the words so Jack Bruce rewrote the words and the recorded them over the instrumental track they already had and it was a big hit
Ahmet Erdogan signed them up for Atlantic records after hearing Clapton rip the guitar during a break of another band's concert. Of course, Clapton, and later Page, and the Rolling Stones all wanted to record with Atlantic because of its catalog of African-American artists. Erdogan and his brother were sons of the Turkish ambassador to the U.S., and they fell in love with black American music, even staging, at the Turkish embassy, one of the first integrated concerts in Washington, DC.
In 1966, before Cream, a 21-year-old Eric Clapton really began making a name for himself when he joined John Mayall & The Bluebreakers. Their album together, aptly titled, The Bluesbreakers John Mayall With Eric Clapton, pioneered the guitar-dominated blues-rock sound, & is considered among the greatest rock LPs of all-time!!! This is the link to the full album. Hear Eric's roots, understand what an innovator he was, & enjoy the great music!!
th-cam.com/video/No0Q8ni084k/w-d-xo.html
Probably my favorite Cream song
To Brad, lyrics are a programming language, to be taken very literally, and must have a definitive meaning.
Cream came out of the English hard blues rock scene. Probably White room is my favourite track.
I wonder if that lyrics thing is the result of listening to a lot of rap?
How do you know he's
Heard a lot of rap?
@@timpindar I've listened to a lot of rap. I don't think that is the issue. A lot of rap lyrics can be worthless filler.
@@joycegillis4835 he’s often said so as I recall.
Yeah!!😄👍🎸
Felix Pappalardi was the bass player. His wife wrote the lyrics to this song. She also did the album cover art work. She ended up shooting and killing Felix in 1982 with a gun he bought for her...
I just got a look at this review and Brad's analogy of being emasculated made me laugh out loud😂😂you guys are great. I just joined and love your reactions.🤗🤗
It's an LSD song. Considered at the time to be acid rock. Strange Brew.. psychedelic. The important thing is to picture it against the background of black-and-white television. The world still in the 50s
My favorite Cream song
Sweet. One of my faves
Good song great live
The meanest sob in the business Mr. Ginger Baker.
3 insane good musicians ❤️🇳🇴
4 black brothers with a white drummer created this ICONIC Masterpiece from the 60’s Psychedelic Era Trust me…. You do not want your life to end without hearing this song.
“TIME HAS COME TODAY“- The Chambers Brothers - Album Long version, then Live. PLEASE and Thank You. 1,595,589 views
so far. YOU will like it too
Badge is another great song by Cream.
I just subscribed because I love the music and I really like you two!! I'm 72 and I love all kinds of music which is why I think The Beatles are the best Band ever!! The same guy that wrote "Here there an everywhere" and "Helter Skelter" and "Rocky Racoon" and "Martha my dear" and "WE can work it out"!! Sorry but the Beatles are the BEST ever!! Someone said The Stones had 4 great albums well The Beatles had 13 great albums!!
If you haven't yet done a reaction to "White Room," you really gotta. It's Cream's best known song.
Great song. Another great is Spoonful.
The falsetto comment was one of the funniest theories I've heard here.
Correct me if I’m wrong, but I think this came out in 1967! Cream were ahead of their time. Clapton was an absolute pioneer for blues guitar and rock in general
If there's one thing we know about Eric, it's that all his parts were in good working order!
Great selection! Nobody ever seems to do this song.
Hi guys I really enjoy watching your reactions and wish you would start a movie reaction channel I think it would be a hit, you guys rock
I particularly liked one of Brad's "yeah"s.
This is what you call groovy music!
Lex would have been my favourite bohemian hippie chick to hang out with back in the day.....
"Strange Brew" - is in reference to - the 'Electric Kool-aid' - of the late 1960's.
Sunshine of Your Love is a must Team Enjoy
th-cam.com/video/fvHCDnDDGSk/w-d-xo.html
Been done did catch up
Lex is a keeper, Brad. You've stumbled onto a woman who openly admits that women play mind games to get what they want. Don't ever let her go, dude. She's a treasure.
I concur.
Was my morning song when I played guitar. Top of me list!
What it means Brad, is you are a lucky man
Family court in the 60's🤣. Wife got the kids, house, child support and alimony no questions asked. Dad saw the kids every other weekend.
Even after woman started making good salaries it didn't change except for alimony.
Not til the late 90's did it start changing to joint physical custody and shared expenses. But even now it is still skewed to the dad not seeing the kids much.
Lex the term you are looking for is Feminine Witchery 🤣🤣
Great sounding guitar by Eric. Drawing a lot on Albert King.
"Drawing A Lot On": Ripping off
Some of the early Blues songwriting (during the 60's) was influenced by the songs penned in the 1930-1950's... like in the Mississippi delta region, Louisiana Bayou..... and on Voodoo folklore.
Best rock trio…ever.
Hi Brad and Lex, Great song and a Great movie Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas
LMFAO 🤣😆.
Brad, your recent comments have really gotten a lot better.
I'm happy to see you getting into your feelings and train of thought more.
Although Lex, has some good opinions about these songs and there meanings.
Hers is a womans opinion.
And sometimes it is just that.
Also back when this song came out.
There really wasn't a family court.
Sadly it was truly a joke.
More than it is today.
back story is that Eric wanted to write a some with similar tone to Summer in the City
Nice interpretation guys
If these 60's songs seem short, it's because the top30 radio stations put a time limit on the tracks being played.
great guitar!