Such as unique style using his Gibson vibrato on his one of kind SG. He is what gave Quicksilver their signature sound. ‘Happy Trails’ one of the best top 10 live rock albums.
I got to see Cipollina with Quicksilver at the Fillmore East. A monumental Who Do You Love. That was a great band! Happy Trails could be the greatest live rock and roll record ever.
He is my cousin. Never met him but did have a wonderful time with his mother at our family reunion up in Shoshone, Idaho. On the Silva / Gomez side, origins are Portuguese.
I was fortunate enough to see him at the Saloon in North Beach not long before he passed I was a young Sailor he absolutely blew the place away RIP John
The first time I heard. Quicksilver Messenger services first album. I was a fan for life. I still bring it out every once in a while just to listen to It over and over. I could never get enough.
Thank you. John was one of the kindest, most self-effacing, hilarious and sarcastic characters I've ever met and had the privilege to know. Our collective loss is still felt today.
His intro to "Who Do You Love" from Happy Trails is so perfectly iconic, the poster child for a whole genre, and quite possibly my favorite 1 minute and 40 seconds of music. I've worn out that album on vinyl, 8-tracK, cassette, and CD.
John and Gary's jams were mind-bending, and it wasn't just the Owsley. QMS, one of the greats, glad i was able to see them perform live along with the other heavies of that era. Thanks for the drop....Aloha
I was 8 years old in London in 1968 when I heard my brother's copy of the first QMS album. John's whipping and snarling guitar sound grabbed my young ears and I was a fan for life.
This documentary is phenomenal! In my teens and 20s, as a San Francisco native, I attended Cipollina's performances more times than I could count. I thought I had collected or seen every recorded note and photograph of Cipollina, but this video had footage and photos both that I had never seen and heard, my heart stopped. The only thing missing is Copperhead. But still, this biography of John is a fantastic tribute and I'm grateful it is posted!
I remember back when I was in grammar school I went to see a midnight show and they played the Fillmore last days . I remember sitting in my seat looking up at the big screen and seeing a 10-ft dino valente and John cipollina jamming on fresh air . They also did the song Mojo . Hey have you ever seen that John cipollina and Link Wray DVD . I got that and I watch it with my friends all the time . And none of them even know who the hell Quicksilver Messenger service is. What a pity 😳
Respect for John and QMS. I always saw their name on all the old posters, they played with all the greats but somehow get overlooked in the wash of history. Once I listened I was hooked. Thanks for posting this video. I learned so much.
QSM lyrics still resound today 2024. "Those who put their faith in fire, then by their faith shall be betrayed. Oh, oh, Pride of man, broken in the dust again." Heard John in a little club in the hills above Santa Cruz one nite away from the concert series. Great jam.
I am dutch, lived in Rotterdam and as a highschool kid, in the early 70s, used to take like ten albums a week home, from the discotheque. One of those albums was QSM's first. Had no idea. I was sold immediately. I was astounded by their version of 'Mona'. Cippolina's play was mesmerizing. I subsequently BOUGHT all their records! :)
At the Ranch Rock concert at Pyramid Lake on the Paiute Reservation on September 7, 1986, a spirit gathering for Jerry Garcia then recovering from a diabetic coma, and a benefit concert for the Paiute Tribe's lawsuit to recover the waterflow to their lake that was being diverted for agribusiness irrigation and killing it (they won!), John Cipollina played with his own bands Problem Child and then Zero, with Kingfish and Bob Weir, with The Robert Hunter Myster Band and with Mickey and the Twilights -- from before noon until dusk, seven or eight hours (with set breaks), possibly his longest performance, or perhaps not. A world class guitarist, he regularly played in small clubs and bars all over the Bay Area. He loved the music and he loved lovers of the music. He would puff down with people on the sidewalk outside the Starry Plough in Berkeley between sets. The tradition of his guitar styling lives on in his influence in his friend and bandmate Steve Kimock's playing, and in Trey' Anastasio's, for two. John Cipollina deserves WAY WAY more honor, respect, and remembrance than he's currently getting in his home territory here.. For one (miinor) thing, he should have a plaque on the sidewalk in front of the San Francisco Bill Graham Civic Auditorium.
I saw Link Wray play a club on Columbus around 94 -- the 365 Club I think. He was a remarkable guitarist, invented all sorts of space music effects stretching way beyond his rock and roll roots. A memorable show.@@bak-mariterry5180
@@thomasboogie734 Phil Charles was a Disc Jockey at KSAN (and before that at KOME) who had played the Man band LPs for years. When Man wanted to meet Cippolina, Phil made that happen. His name might be in the liner notes.
It was my first concert ,1969 winterland. Quicksilver messenger service,Taj Mahal, Commander Cody. What a night. Your only young once, but what a time.
My wife and I are going through the 60s docs, Laurel Canyon, Woodstock and anything interesting in that era. John C had a sound all his own and the more I learn about him the more I appreciate listening to QMS back in the 70s. He was amazing! P.S. I recently bought a Quicksilver Messenger Service t-shirt, red on black!
@peteallcros I have bought a few of those t shirts also Happy Trails, Just For Love plus the one I wore yesterday with the Eagle on the Cover, quite a few more around if you look.
There was a lot of guitar wizardry in those 3 seminal San Francisco bands. Quicksilver had a power duo in Cipollina and Duncan, both excellent with distinct styles that perfectly meshed. The same can be said for JA's Kantner and Kaukonen, and for GD's Weir and Garcia, although by the time the latter duo matured Duncan and Cipollina were no longer together. We might rightly speak here of first and second guitars for all these bands, instead of defining lead and rhythm roles within their sounds. Of course, for the San Francisco scene, Moby Grape was the ultimate example of a band sporting equally talented and divergently complementary guitarists. MG had three of them who engaged in "cross-talk". Steve Stills and Neil Young did it too in BS, and later in CSNY. Today, you can still hear this complementary approach to guitar work when Ron Wood and Keith Richards fire it up. God Bless 'em.
At a pause during a Dinosaurs show at the catalyst in Santa Cruz 1984-5, I asked John if he gave guitar lessons. "Maybe... they'd be really expensive though." i invested in more Dinosaurs tickets and Quicksilver MS records.
At the 5:20 mark in this vid is my HS buddy (the late) Mark Izbits - the first interviewee at the Fillmore tribute. I was also at the tribute concert and had witnessed Cipp at my first Zero show at the Full Moon Saloon on Haight Street in '86 - at many Thunder and Lightning gigs at the Saloon, with the DInosaurs at the Poster Benefit and with the Dinosaurs in GG Park among many other shows. John was the most approachable and friendly rock star I ever met. Loved to puff doobs and chat with fans and was just a warm - cool cat to talk to. RIP
His sit in on the NFA with the Dead on NYE 1978 always gets talked about due to the existing video, but for my money his sit in on the same tune at the same venue (Winterland) two months earlier on 10/22/78 was tops. He should have been bigger and more widely known and praised, nobody sounded like Batman.
When i saw Quicksilver, John Cipollina was already gone...I saw the Gary Duncan/David Frieberg version of Quicksilver....I did have the pleasure of seeing Cipollina in his band Copperhead with Pete Sears...
@akgo Gary Dunan was unfortunate to be in the same band as Cipollina it took a lot of limelight off his playing, watch him on the TH-cam QMS live version of Fresh Air his playing is superb but only Cippolina gets the praise. I love both but don't think Duncan got his fair share of praise.
I saw Cipollina at the Shady Grove on Haight street with that SG and a little cigarette hanging of the guitar neck in the early 80’s with Copperhead. R.I.P. ❤
I saw him a whole bunch of times as part of Terry and the Pirates. He loved playing in clubs, which is where I and friends at the time preferred to listen to music. I'm not frozen in the 60's sound by any means, but he was a straight-up Ambassador of those times and all that which was entailed that was good/high.. Truly Made me sad when I heard he died, sounds like he ran himself into the ground. Kind of amusing, I have this old VCR tape of him from the old days, as well as the tribute cd's that came out after his death.
Yes, and it's not necessary to knock the Dead to say so. Chip sat in often with them and he was the one guitarist who fit in comfortably with them and kicked down. @@zeljkofatzek3670
Initially it appeared as I watched the video that John was among the great guitarists who didn't use a pick. Other such guitarists have included jazz guitarist Wes Montgomery, Dire Straits guitarist/founder Mark Knopfler, and Jeff Beck late in his career. As I later watched the video it appeared that John picked with a pick and his fingers together. He appeared to be doing more than muting strings with his empty fingers. If so I'm sure that technique contributed to his distinctive sound. From what I have heard from the Quicksilver Messenger Service it seems they had great skill but not great songs beyond maybe "Fresh Air." True to their San Francisco roots they were a jam band, and they probably were among the influences of bands such as the Dave Matthews Band and Phish-who has also shown Yes, Frank Zappa and country music influences.
I thought he was from big brother. These bands are before my time. A lot of leftovers came out during 80s (bay area) At the park people everywhere 9 am on the grass indian style, huge circles. I was from LA i never seen that many hippies. I had long hair was metal.15 year old kids asking if i was going to see the dead?) Wtf. You guys listen grateful dead? Fisherman wharf the entire store filled dead shirts.1987 San francisco. San francisco sociable. I traded a guy six pack for acid. I didnt know anybody. I was the only hair metal dude in punk rock club' gilman str? That was different, couple months after 'the quake'. Tectonic upheaval lifted sidewalks foot out of ground. The Stone Death angel, forbidden evil, cacophony speed metal symphony
That was the problem, the Smokey ambience, John was born with severe asthma and he was in too many Smokey places, it killed him. Yeah sure, he lived and died his way and I had a fantastic time seeing him constantly. We left California in 1984, so I didn’t learn John had died for quite awhile. My husband and I laid in bed on NYE 1978 & listened to KSAN broadcasting the Dead closing Winterland. I have the double CD of that concert.
@jimrebr Plus he chain smoked, always a cigarette stuck on the end of his guitar, same as my dad, smoked too much and Emphysema killed him, its horrible watching them trying to breath, he had an oxygen bottle at the end.
Such as unique style using his Gibson vibrato on his one of kind SG. He is what gave Quicksilver their signature sound. ‘Happy Trails’ one of the best top 10 live rock albums.
👌🙏
I got to see Cipollina with Quicksilver at the Fillmore East. A monumental Who Do You Love. That was a great band! Happy Trails could be the greatest live rock and roll record ever.
M...O...N...A... is who you do love!
C--A-L-V-A-R-Y
I love it still. My go to to album. The rawness is right there with Cheap Thrills.
He is my cousin. Never met him but did have a wonderful time with his mother at our family reunion up in Shoshone, Idaho. On the Silva / Gomez side, origins are Portuguese.
Well, your cousin is one of the most influential guitarists ever. And even better, he is known and appreciated only by people of pristine taste..
As a kid, I stumbled upon Quicksilver sometime around 1972. I was instantly hooked and their music resonates within me to this very day.
I was fortunate enough to see him at the Saloon in North Beach not long before he passed I was a young Sailor he absolutely blew the place away RIP John
He remains one of my favorite guitarists,
The first time I heard.
Quicksilver Messenger services first album.
I was a fan for life.
I still bring it out every once in a while just to listen to It over and over. I could never get enough.
I saw Quicksilver play live at least 20 times during my high school years. John Cipollina retains a place in my heart forever.
Happy Trails is still one of my favorites.
Thank you. John was one of the kindest, most self-effacing, hilarious and sarcastic characters I've ever met and had the privilege to know. Our collective loss is still felt today.
Big up for one of the greats.
His intro to "Who Do You Love" from Happy Trails is so perfectly iconic, the poster child for a whole genre, and quite possibly my favorite 1 minute and 40 seconds of music. I've worn out that album on vinyl, 8-tracK, cassette, and CD.
TH-cam music, select, play- repeat...
You and me brother.
John and Gary's jams were mind-bending, and it wasn't just the Owsley. QMS, one of the greats, glad i was able to see them perform live along with the other heavies of that era. Thanks for the drop....Aloha
I was 8 years old in London in 1968 when I heard my brother's copy of the first QMS album. John's whipping and snarling guitar sound grabbed my young ears and I was a fan for life.
♥️
I stopped by his house once with a friend of his from high school, he was very gracious.
Nice remembrance, thanks. RIP
This documentary is phenomenal! In my teens and 20s, as a San Francisco native, I attended Cipollina's performances more times than I could count. I thought I had collected or seen every recorded note and photograph of Cipollina, but this video had footage and photos both that I had never seen and heard, my heart stopped. The only thing missing is Copperhead. But still, this biography of John is a fantastic tribute and I'm grateful it is posted!
I remember back when I was in grammar school I went to see a midnight show and they played the Fillmore last days . I remember sitting in my seat looking up at the big screen and seeing a 10-ft dino valente and John cipollina jamming on fresh air . They also did the song Mojo . Hey have you ever seen that John cipollina and Link Wray DVD . I got that and I watch it with my friends all the time . And none of them even know who the hell Quicksilver Messenger service is. What a pity 😳
JC plays the most pleasing music to my ears on a guitar.
Respect for John and QMS. I always saw their name on all the old posters, they played with all the greats but somehow get overlooked in the wash of history. Once I listened I was hooked.
Thanks for posting this video. I learned so much.
John Cipollina, along with Jorma Kaukonen of the Airplane and Jerry Miller of Moby Grape, was one of my very favorite players
The Grape!!!
I saw John and the Messenger Service a number of times in the early days into the early '70s and they always were ON.
QSM lyrics still resound today 2024. "Those who put their faith in fire, then by their faith shall be betrayed. Oh, oh, Pride of man, broken in the dust again." Heard John in a little club in the hills above Santa Cruz one nite away from the concert series. Great jam.
@peterzabrinske they didn't write that, Hamilton Camp did .
They didnt write that -
But it was better than the original ❤
Like to pay my respects to one of the greatest. Thank you for this.
One of my favorite albums, ' Maximum Darkness' the Man Band with John , a live recording at the Roundabout in England....
Saw him many times with Quicksilver. The band lived a few doors up from my friend Ralph on 18th St. in SF.
Really!? Where on 18th? A holy place 🙂
@@ekwity Just up from Diamond St.
I am dutch, lived in Rotterdam and as a highschool kid, in the early 70s, used to take like ten albums a week home, from the discotheque. One of those albums was QSM's first. Had no idea. I was sold immediately. I was astounded by their version of 'Mona'. Cippolina's play was mesmerizing. I subsequently BOUGHT all their records! :)
Underrated guitar player 🎸
That's for sure!
Thank you for the interesting video love Quicksilver Messenger service
Glad you enjoyed it
John in Quicksilver Messenger Service mesmerized me in 1968 at Phoenix Stadium when they opened for The Who.
At the Ranch Rock concert at Pyramid Lake on the Paiute Reservation on September 7, 1986, a spirit gathering for Jerry Garcia then recovering from a diabetic coma, and a benefit concert for the Paiute Tribe's lawsuit to recover the waterflow to their lake that was being diverted for agribusiness irrigation and killing it (they won!), John Cipollina played with his own bands Problem Child and then Zero, with Kingfish and Bob Weir, with The Robert Hunter Myster Band and with Mickey and the Twilights -- from before noon until dusk, seven or eight hours (with set breaks), possibly his longest performance, or perhaps not. A world class guitarist, he regularly played in small clubs and bars all over the Bay Area. He loved the music and he loved lovers of the music. He would puff down with people on the sidewalk outside the Starry Plough in Berkeley between sets. The tradition of his guitar styling lives on in his influence in his friend and bandmate Steve Kimock's playing, and in Trey' Anastasio's, for two. John Cipollina deserves WAY WAY more honor, respect, and remembrance than he's currently getting in his home territory here.. For one (miinor) thing, he should have a plaque on the sidewalk in front of the San Francisco Bill Graham Civic Auditorium.
Love this info - beautiful comment thanks
And don't forget his awesome live album "Maximum Darkness" with Deke Leonard and the Man band
He also did some shows with Link Wray that are on YT.
PS: FINALLY.... Link Wray is in the RNRHOF.
And QMS still is on the sidelines.
A damn shame.
I saw Link Wray play a club on Columbus around 94 -- the 365 Club I think. He was a remarkable guitarist, invented all sorts of space music effects stretching way beyond his rock and roll roots. A memorable show.@@bak-mariterry5180
@@thomasboogie734 Phil Charles was a Disc Jockey at KSAN (and before that at KOME) who had played the Man band LPs for years. When Man wanted to meet Cippolina, Phil made that happen. His name might be in the liner notes.
It was my first concert ,1969 winterland. Quicksilver messenger service,Taj Mahal, Commander Cody. What a night. Your only young once, but what a time.
♥
I too have Alpha. Fortunately I gave up smoking years ago. I've made it to 70 so far. Peace Chip.
Brilliant, the fool is incredible 🎶🎸
I played bass on a few gigs with Copperhead. John indeed had an instantly recognizable approach.
His playing was full of emotion.
My wife and I are going through the 60s docs, Laurel Canyon, Woodstock and anything interesting in that era. John C had a sound all his own and the more I learn about him the more I appreciate listening to QMS back in the 70s. He was amazing! P.S. I recently bought a Quicksilver Messenger Service t-shirt, red on black!
@peteallcros
I have bought a few of those t shirts also Happy Trails, Just For Love plus the one I wore yesterday with the Eagle on the Cover, quite a few more around if you look.
Thanks for this gem. John was an iconic and real musician. Working until the last moment with passion and honesty. A truly guitar heroe
Well said!
There was a lot of guitar wizardry in those 3 seminal San Francisco bands. Quicksilver had a power duo in Cipollina and Duncan, both excellent with distinct styles that perfectly meshed. The same can be said for JA's Kantner and Kaukonen, and for GD's Weir and Garcia, although by the time the latter duo matured Duncan and Cipollina were no longer together. We might rightly speak here of first and second guitars for all these bands, instead of defining lead and rhythm roles within their sounds. Of course, for the San Francisco scene, Moby Grape was the ultimate example of a band sporting equally talented and divergently complementary guitarists. MG had three of them who engaged in "cross-talk". Steve Stills and Neil Young did it too in BS, and later in CSNY. Today, you can still hear this complementary approach to guitar work when Ron Wood and Keith Richards fire it up. God Bless 'em.
Well said.
At a pause during a Dinosaurs show at the catalyst in Santa Cruz 1984-5, I asked John if he gave guitar lessons. "Maybe... they'd be really expensive though." i invested in more Dinosaurs tickets and Quicksilver MS records.
I met him at the Lone Star Cafe in the mid 80's , just a cool dude.
At the 5:20 mark in this vid is my HS buddy (the late) Mark Izbits - the first interviewee at the Fillmore tribute. I was also at the tribute concert and had witnessed Cipp at my first Zero show at the Full Moon Saloon on Haight Street in '86 - at many Thunder and Lightning gigs at the Saloon, with the DInosaurs at the Poster Benefit and with the Dinosaurs in GG Park among many other shows. John was the most approachable and friendly rock star I ever met. Loved to puff doobs and chat with fans and was just a warm - cool cat to talk to. RIP
I found him very friendly too.
His sit in on the NFA with the Dead on NYE 1978 always gets talked about due to the existing video, but for my money his sit in on the same tune at the same venue (Winterland) two months earlier on 10/22/78 was tops. He should have been bigger and more widely known and praised, nobody sounded like Batman.
When i saw Quicksilver, John Cipollina was already gone...I saw the Gary Duncan/David Frieberg version of Quicksilver....I did have the pleasure of seeing Cipollina in his band Copperhead with Pete Sears...
@akgo
Gary Dunan was unfortunate to be in the same band as Cipollina it took a lot of limelight off his playing, watch him on the TH-cam QMS live version of Fresh Air his playing is superb but only Cippolina gets the praise.
I love both but don't think Duncan got his fair share of praise.
Awesome dude. Thank you for posting this.
Glad you enjoyed it!
3:30 That guitar solo is so incredibly original it's hard to put into words. It sounds a lot like pedal steel. Brilliant.
Cipollina's vibrato was great!
John was one of the last of wild men “hippie” guitar players… he played a little blues, folk, jazz n rock but mostly he was just wild!
I saw Cipollina at the Shady Grove on Haight street with that SG and a little cigarette hanging of the guitar neck in the early 80’s with Copperhead. R.I.P. ❤
To this day Happy Trails is one of my go to records! Great stuff!
I just wrote the same thing. Classic
Was lucky ebough to see gin a few times most notably at The Saloon, the best blues bar in the world.
John was a legend, i just love all that SF acid rock, thats my type of music, gday from melbourne everyone.
A unique Gibson SG.
John + Robbie Krieger: Virtuosos of the SG.
I saw him one night in Northbeach, at Vesuvios
That's right, he was one of what they called "The Big 4" psychedelic guitar heroes from San Fran
That was great 👍.... Thank you!👍
Glad you liked it!
I think the way he used the trem bar is a legit , creative and proper way to utilize it
A forgotten story about
A band of the sixties.
Saw him at the Marshall Tavern....memorable.
I saw him a whole bunch of times as part of Terry and the Pirates. He loved playing in clubs, which is where I and friends at the time preferred to listen to music. I'm not frozen in the 60's sound by any means, but he was a straight-up Ambassador of those times and all that which was entailed that was good/high.. Truly Made me sad when I heard he died, sounds like he ran himself into the ground. Kind of amusing, I have this old VCR tape of him from the old days, as well as the tribute cd's that came out after his death.
Thank you for this!!
American gothic guitarslayer, a true rock god who slayed with a hellava lot more than the guitar, we broke his mold, a one of a kind soul
Génial guitariste
Excellent bio! ty!
Thanks!
Blue Cheer they were in the room! More so than we built this city DBs.
There is no doubt, great Amazing artist
I liked QMS a lot better than the Dead.Great musician with Gary Duncan!!!!
He and Duncan formed one the best twin lead guitar players in the history of music.
Yes, and it's not necessary to knock the Dead to say so. Chip sat in often with them and he was the one guitarist who fit in comfortably with them and kicked down. @@zeljkofatzek3670
Thx for this
Cipollina makes a good work with the British band MAN
Initially it appeared as I watched the video that John was among the great guitarists who didn't use a pick. Other such guitarists have included jazz guitarist Wes Montgomery, Dire Straits guitarist/founder Mark Knopfler, and Jeff Beck late in his career.
As I later watched the video it appeared that John picked with a pick and his fingers together. He appeared to be doing more than muting strings with his empty fingers. If so I'm sure that technique contributed to his distinctive sound.
From what I have heard from the Quicksilver Messenger Service it seems they had great skill but not great songs beyond maybe "Fresh Air." True to their San Francisco roots they were a jam band, and they probably were among the influences of bands such as the Dave Matthews Band and Phish-who has also shown Yes, Frank Zappa and country music influences.
Use to see him at the Salon with the Dinosaurs
Rest in peace Chip
his amp is legendary
Cip was also on man's maxum darkness
Don't forget Copperhead!
Your're right!
I thought he was from big brother. These bands are before my time. A lot of leftovers came out during 80s (bay area) At the park people everywhere 9 am on the grass indian style, huge circles. I was from LA i never seen that many hippies. I had long hair was metal.15 year old kids asking if i was going to see the dead?) Wtf. You guys listen grateful dead? Fisherman wharf the entire store filled dead shirts.1987 San francisco. San francisco sociable. I traded a guy six pack for acid. I didnt know anybody. I was the only hair metal dude in punk rock club' gilman str? That was different, couple months after 'the quake'. Tectonic upheaval lifted sidewalks foot out of ground. The Stone Death angel, forbidden evil, cacophony speed metal symphony
That was the problem, the Smokey ambience, John was born with severe asthma and he was in too many Smokey places, it killed him. Yeah sure, he lived and died his way and I had a fantastic time seeing him constantly. We left California in 1984, so I didn’t learn John had died for quite awhile. My husband and I laid in bed on NYE 1978 & listened to KSAN broadcasting the Dead closing Winterland. I have the double CD of that concert.
@jimrebr
Plus he chain smoked, always a cigarette stuck on the end of his guitar, same as my dad, smoked too much and Emphysema killed him, its horrible watching them trying to breath, he had an oxygen bottle at the end.
Just look for that bat guitar.
QMS were a part of the
San Francisco music scene.
Really one of the three or four major SF bands.
How did he die?
Emphysema, lung disease
You lost me at the Grateful Dead
Q S M, oh I liked them from the very first album
UFO -JAPAN LIVE ...BALLSCORTCHIN'...
Great guitar player .. R.i.P.
1:12 no doubt John would laugh at that bit of honesty. wow eh.
Twang twang geel dee
What about Copperhead . That was a great record .
you're absolutely right.
A sleeping lady extravaganza.
When they say "he died just the way he wanted" how is that? He had lung disease. Sounds like a tough way to go
maybe they were saying he played music in clubs until the end.
He lived the way he wanted, would you want otherwise ??
😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃
Nfa
guy was actually nothing special
Lol, such a clichéd, frustrated guitarist’s kind of comment.
@@poempadgett4664 Actually..NO
oh but he was, sorry you missed it......
Heroe ....❤