@@MrJohnnyDistortion Same. Juke Box Hero and Midnight Blue are his only worth while songs IMO. And I was born in the early 70's, plenty of other great bands/songs out there.
Foreigner's debut album was my first Rock album. I ditched the Beach Boys immediately. Lol. I'm sure my singing along to that vinyl in my room was horrible, but what a blast. Now, all these years later, and of all the bands I've enjoyed across 5 decades, I just never get tired of Lou Gramm's voice.
Being a music lover, I need to express my gratitude in return. Lou's voice helped me in hard times to overcome the death of my close friend because of a malignant brain tumor and to disclose my abilty to write my own poems at the age of 10. One music miracle even happened last summer and it relates to him directly. He never performed in Russia, so your video interview brought a lot of good memories to me.
I was fortunate to see Black Sheep & met Lou a couple times in the mid 80's at a gas station I worked at in Gates, NY. Such a down to earth humble guy to talk with. No ego, attitude, NOTHING, was more interested in hangin with me a bit. Thanks for the memory Lou.
This Host.....is Awesome. He Knows how to just 'Let....his guests.....Talk. Doesn't feel the need to have to 'interject'....every other sentence. Just let's Lou.....Tell the Whole story. Spaces, Breaks, Dead-Air and All. Perfect. Awesome. There doesn't NEED to be someone saying something.........every second. God i loved listening to this. Because Lou....got to just tell it at his Pace. And it made it so much more enjoyable than some 'Hey! check me Out! Host....having to open his giggle hole....or fire 'rapid questions....every 2 seconds. What a breath of Fresh Air!
Thanks for the kind words! I was taught years ago to leave silences, it forces your interviewees to fill that gap and often leads to them telling more than they'd planned... and if they don't, I can just edit it out anyways 😂👍🤘
It's always so interesting to hear the back stories of how bands broke up and others formed through sheer luck. One thing I've learned is that no one becomes an overnight sensation, most achieve success through years of hard work, dedication and patience.
I was about to point that out lol thank you sir, but Lou's not supposed to remember every little detail such as that, lol so I can overlook that, I'm glad everyone was ok in the crash, glad Lou met Mick!
We have "pothole season" every spring, and if your car is damaged during winter (because there's too many potholes to fix), you won't get reimbursed by the NYSDOT.
Record company "executives", music critics, and radio stations held all the cards back then. They could make or break an artist, and loved that they had the power to do so...
@@drillbagKISS spent a lot of lean and hard years as an opening act getting treated like 💩by headliners….therefore they decided to be sure to treat their openers well.
Seen foreigner in early nineties, they were great as a band . However Lou's Voice , i was mesmerized. I thought how can this guy's voice be this good , and be this good live . To too it off , to be so grounded and down to earth , he truly is a great . Long live lou !😎
It's best not to interrupt a person during an interview. They can lose their train of thought. They might also not be motivated to continue talking. This guy did a great interview.
I was always taught that silence is not to be feared. A lot of interviewers hate silence and race to fill it as quickly as possible. Allowing the gap means the guest can collect their thoughts, often prompts them to keep going as well as silence can be awkward. And if they don't... well, it's easy enough to fix in post production 😂 Thanks for watching and glad you enjoyed it.
Great interview and reminiscent of what many rock bands go through when trying to "make it". Lou hit on a great point about looking for a singer when they all wanted to just do covers and not original material. What so many don't realize is that the original material is what separates the ones who make it from those who don't. Granted, today, thanks to world wide internet exposure and streaming sites like this one, a lot of talented musicians are making decent livings doing covers, much to the joy of the original song writers, who get residuals, often times, years later.
I played for 30 years dragging around the trailer ....humping equipment in and out of every dive you can name .Someone stole the trailer out of the lot while we were doing a gig at a biker bar one night. The owners put the word out and the trailer magically reappeared the next day .I opened up for Foreigner at Jannus Landing in St Pete. Best gig ever.
Those black sheep albums are classic! If those 2 albums don’t convince you that Lou’s voice was destined for what the sound and vibe of what foreigner was to become! The opening track from the first black sheep album is killer! Should have been a radio hit! Kingsport Tenn. loves ya Lou 👍 ⚡️space ace Ron⚡️
I'll never 4get Cal Jam2, biggest show I've ever been to! Foreigner exploded onto the stage, Lou grabbed the mic, and everybody was up and singing, Feels like the First Time. They followed Heart, so yeah, everybody was juiced, man. Xclnt scheduling, what a day/nite!😎
I saw Black Sheep open up for Suzie Quattro in the rose garden at Delaware park in Buffalo in a free concert in the mid 70s. There were tons of free rock concerts especially in parks back in the day. Lou mentioned they found a great drummer to replace him. I do believe that would have been Ron Rocco who would go on to play in a band called Light Years from Rochester that Billy Sheehan played bass in. They were great. I did not know who Suzie Quattro was but she was great that day. Turns out she was a female rocker pioneer. Did a killer version of heat wave. Owned the crowd. Black Sheep was great too.
It's a shame Suzi never seemed to get the respect she deserved in the US. She was huge here in the UK (2 number 1 singles) and around the world. Still releasing new music and touring today, too.
@@VRPRocks She is doing a UK tour and playing in my home town in the autumn. I'm hoping to go if I can afford it because I think she would be great live.
Lou Gramm was Foreigner! I could listen to him reminisce all day long. Lou is a class act and always has been. His word meant something then and still does today. His parents I'm sure, were very proud of the son they raised.
The first time I ever heard a Foreigner song was in HS, back in '77. I was on the school bus riding home when the song FEELS LIKE THE FIRAT TIME comes on the radio. I was an instant fan. Loved Lou Gramm's vocals. Bought their debut album right away and later Foreigner 4. Wasn't too keen on their ballads. Their rocking tunes are for me!
Lou has a great musical mind. It's one of the best of all time. What a legend. He is one cool cat with an off the hook voice. He IS the voice of Foreigner.
Lou's comment still holds true about people in this area wanting to play covers to make money. I moved away to pursue an original career and found that I was much happier playing music that I created. I moved back to Rochester to be closer to family and when I got back put together an original project. Released a CD and had some great shows. I've had a record deal and music in a documentary which is more than most and from music I created. I put out solo albums often and enjoy writing and recording. Only a handful of places support original music. Almost all of the others want cover bands. For the most part most people just want to hear covers and could care less about original music. The only ones that do care are other original artists. It's sad but true for this area and I find it frustrating beyond words. I know my time in a cover band is coming to an end. It's sucking the life out of my creative side. I would rather play in front of 5 people playing original music than a cover band that packs the house any day of the week. No passion or emotion in playing covers. Its meaningless at least to me...
I think it's because people want to hear music that's familiar to them. That's great, but it would seem to me that if you really want to make it, you need to do some original music. Personally, I enjoy discovering new music.
That’s funny because I had the opposite experience. I was in an original band in the late 80s through the early 90s in Southern California. That’s when the whole pay to play thing was happening. Kinda stressful trying to “make it”. We cut a demo and had some overseas interest but eventually parted ways. After that I was asked to join a cover band doing vocals. We’d rehearse once a week and play bars on Saturdays. Basically get paid for goofing off and had a lot of fun doing it. My hat is off to you for sticking with it and sounds like you’re successful. I reconnected with my guitar player from our original band Salient a while back and we had the whole what if talk. I told him to look at it as, some people that play an instrument or sing never get in a band, we were in a gigging band and had a few pretty good songs and opened for A few big bands, we “Did” that. I wish you all the best in your venture. Do you have any posts on TH-cam of your music?
@@charliec5653 yes that's it and local clubs want a crowd and if that's what brings in people that's what bands have to do. I mean after all they are in business to make money. Original bands have it hard.
Covers made you. Essentially we all play covers to learn guitar. And if you write a few good songs you spend the rest of your life covering those. And quite a few covers have become great songs in their respective genre. Fleetwood Mac's Black Magic Woman by Santana. 10,000 Maniacs Because The Night by Patti Smith to name a couple.
Brings back bad memories.. that’s why I switched to session gigs. Hated touring. Also today you’d better have a lawyer with you when you start creating .. long long way was my first favorite foreigner song.. still love it today.
What a shame about Lou's old band Black Sheep they sound like a bunch of very ethical guys. Lou is not only a brilliant vocalist but seems a straight up guy, Best Wishes for his health and creativity.
Lou, thank goodness everyone involved in the accident came away unharmed physically. Not everyone in upstate NY in the winter was that lucky. Playing gigs and driving home in the ice and snow with loaded down vans was incredibly dangerous. Especially at 1 or 2am when the only other people on the roads were often drunk. We really took our life in our hands. And not everyone survived. In 1968 Ronnie Dio was playing in his incredibly popular cover band Ronnie Dio and the Prophets. Coming home from a gig on Sunday morning at 2am they had a terrible accident. Ronnie's cousin Nicky Pantas was killed and Ronnie was severely injured. It was horrible and it devastated the community of musicians and bands in central upstate NY.
That phone call would have come regardless of the crash. But then it would have been a decision to leave a working band starting to see success instead of one that had already given up.
Life's funny huh ? One of the best voices ever , a legend and ok , instead of staying on drums , I'll volunteer to sing . Me and millions around the world are glad that you were gracious enough to give up the drums . 😎
If this happens after kiss hit big Gene would have probably hooked them up with equipment the guy is harsh with a big ego but I notice he does help out people a lot
Saw Foreigner on a reunion tour. It was a combination of Mick and the Foreigner name with Lou and his new band after a really good solo record by Lou. Lou had a brain operation but still sang. Jeff Pilson wasn’t in the band yet. Lou’s guitar player who was also in Lou’s previous band played bass. Always loved the combination of Mick with his Les Paul in his unique style and Lou’’s fabulous voice. I know they’ve had their differences but I’m really a fan of both. Kelly is a good singer. But you can’t replace Lou Gramm.
I saw Kiss on their tenth-anniversary-tour. They were on the decline then, and there were few people there. Anyone was free to walk up to the front to see them. They cancelled a lot of shows due to poor ticket sales. Paul was throwing picks, which sailed over many peoples' heads and landed on the floor.
Why do we still shake our heads when we hear about how a label screwed a band ? i knew it at 25 and walked away rather than hand labels millions and walk away with thousands. just look at who and what runs and owns labels and it will tell you alkot about whats happenning in the world.
I think I may vaguely remember hearing of this if it’s the same incident.I was at my aunts house for Christmas in the early 80s and the dj on the radio said something about kiss would be a little late they are having a tough time getting through the snow I don’t know if it said where it was but maybe that’s another incident but it just somehow brought it to mind .This would have been probably ‘80 or ‘81
I don’t know a whole lot about Foreigner, but I remember when the 1978 album “Double Vision” came out. I was in the 9th grade. I don’t know how true it is, but I heard long ago that after Foreigner hit success, Gramm and Jones would consistently fire their other band members to be replaced by new ones. I heard the same thing about Steely Dan.
No they fired Ed Gagliardi...then Iain McDonald and Al Greenwood were next to go..they felt that 4 guys gelled better than 6 in the band...only one new was Rick Wills on bass.
Yeah man these days there are a bunch of foreigners, in Foreigner. That is not one, original member. So are you seeing Foreigner, or a Foreigner tribute band? Unless you actually happen to catch a show where Jones, is playing guitar. Although Kelly Hansen, does do a nice job. & yeah yeah I know, Jeff Pilson is playing bass.
I remember their debut album. They got a lot of likes you could say right out of the gate with a couple good tunes that got plenty of airplay. I saw them open for Ted Nugent one year. Crowd dug em.
One of the best voices in the 70s and 80s no doubt. Someone who deserves to be in The Hall Of Fame and it took too long. What a great singer.
Can not imagine 70s/80s rock without the voice of Lou Gramm
I can
@@MrJohnnyDistortionYour loss.
@@margueritemazzeo2904
No one's loss because he was there. On the radio. I just don't believe in your phrase. 😁
@@MrJohnnyDistortion Same. Juke Box Hero and Midnight Blue are his only worth while songs IMO. And I was born in the early 70's, plenty of other great bands/songs out there.
@@JohnnyUtah-71
Dirty White Boy
Foreigner's debut album was my first Rock album. I ditched the Beach Boys immediately. Lol. I'm sure my singing along to that vinyl in my room was horrible, but what a blast. Now, all these years later, and of all the bands I've enjoyed across 5 decades, I just never get tired of Lou Gramm's voice.
That's like me and my 1st live band I saw.America.
2nd was Ted Nugent!😮😊
Being a music lover, I need to express my gratitude in return. Lou's voice helped me in hard times to overcome the death of my close friend because of a malignant brain tumor and to disclose my abilty to write my own poems at the age of 10. One music miracle even happened last summer and it relates to him directly. He never performed in Russia, so your video interview brought a lot of good memories to me.
A Living Legend ✅🏆. Thank You So Much Lou for all your Fantastic Music Love Forever. Rock n Roll
Such a great story. I really enjoy listening to Lou talk about the old days. He seems like a real nice guy.
Agree 100%
I really hope Lou Gramm will do many more interviews after this year’s last tour 2024
He is so intelligent with lots of history to share
I was fortunate to see Black Sheep & met Lou a couple times in the mid 80's at a gas station I worked at in Gates, NY. Such a down to earth humble guy to talk with. No ego, attitude, NOTHING, was more interested in hangin with me a bit. Thanks for the memory Lou.
That’s good to hear
He always shows a lot of humility
Always seems like a nice person
This Host.....is Awesome. He Knows how to just 'Let....his guests.....Talk. Doesn't feel the need to have to 'interject'....every other sentence. Just let's Lou.....Tell the Whole story. Spaces, Breaks, Dead-Air and All. Perfect. Awesome. There doesn't NEED to be someone saying something.........every second. God i loved listening to this. Because Lou....got to just tell it at his Pace. And it made it so much more enjoyable than some 'Hey! check me Out! Host....having to open his giggle hole....or fire 'rapid questions....every 2 seconds. What a breath of Fresh Air!
Thanks for the kind words! I was taught years ago to leave silences, it forces your interviewees to fill that gap and often leads to them telling more than they'd planned... and if they don't, I can just edit it out anyways 😂👍🤘
@@VRPRocksappreciate your interview style
It's always so interesting to hear the back stories of how bands broke up and others formed through sheer luck. One thing I've learned is that no one becomes an overnight sensation, most achieve success through years of hard work, dedication and patience.
Right.. who knew Pink Floyd had 6 albums BEFORE Dark Side Of the Moon. They were ready to call it a day and fly it..
If you don't love Lou Gramm you're wrong.
😆 True.
IM A 61 YEAR OLD,
OLD SCHOOL ROCK & ROLLER, AND I LOVE LOU GRAMM🤘
So true!
Lou put so much heart and soul in his voice
Such an accomplished singer
KISS was actually on Casablanca records, not Capital.
Good point. Donna Summer also
I picked up on that too. I was thinking to myself, “When the hell was Kiss on Capital?”
I was about to point that out lol thank you sir, but Lou's not supposed to remember every little detail such as that, lol so I can overlook that, I'm glad everyone was ok in the crash, glad Lou met Mick!
@@leeknievel748 i guess Lou gets a pass, but you know us KISS fans. We know all the little details!
Yep...immediately knew Lou was a bit confused about that detail. KISS was one the original Casablanca bands with Parliament, Donna Summer
Those NY thruways are bad in the winter. Our bands van slid off the road driving home from a gig one night. Thank God Lou Gramm chose to sing!
We have "pothole season" every spring, and if your car is damaged during winter (because there's too many potholes to fix), you won't get reimbursed by the NYSDOT.
Record company "executives", music critics, and radio stations held all the cards back then. They could make or break an artist, and loved that they had the power to do so...
Interesting that so many bands that toured with KISS talk very positively about them.
Apparently one thing they always do is look after their opening acts.
@@drillbagKISS spent a lot of lean and hard years as an opening act getting treated like 💩by headliners….therefore they decided to be sure to treat their openers well.
It’s partly cause Kiss got treated so badly in the early days by jealous headliners-and vowed never to be that way themselves, once they headlined.
Good on them....and the exact opposite is what you always hear about Aerosmith. What a bunch of douchebags!
Because KISS rules
Who else thought that the quote in the thumbnail "We almost threw up when we saw the mess", meant that KISS made a big mess somewhere backstage? lol
Didn't Gene have loose bowels?
Gene probably loosened Paul ‘s bowels.
@@edwoll I read that Gene used to sell his shit for 5 dollars per turd.
I was thinking about groupies. 🤣
@@woodybowen5362
It's called "fudge packing" for a reason. 🤣
Fantastic interview....the host is a gentleman, he lets the guest to talk ❤
Seen foreigner in early nineties, they were great as a band . However Lou's
Voice , i was mesmerized. I thought how can this guy's voice be this good , and be this good live . To too it off , to be so grounded and down to earth , he truly is a great . Long live lou !😎
Congrats to Lou & Foreigner finally RRHOF Award! Long Time Coming
Yes, should have been 20 years ago.
Only nominated
@@schumi9xwdcNo..they have been inducted now.
I think that RRHOF is a joke. The bands are all great but the way they organize it is a complete joke.
Inducted, actually. @@schumi9xwdc
It's best not to interrupt a person during an interview. They can lose their train of thought. They might also not be motivated to continue talking. This guy did a great interview.
I was always taught that silence is not to be feared. A lot of interviewers hate silence and race to fill it as quickly as possible. Allowing the gap means the guest can collect their thoughts, often prompts them to keep going as well as silence can be awkward. And if they don't... well, it's easy enough to fix in post production 😂 Thanks for watching and glad you enjoyed it.
Brother is a class act..❤❤❤❤❤
Great interview and reminiscent of what many rock bands go through when trying to "make it". Lou hit on a great point about looking for a singer when they all wanted to just do covers and not original material. What so many don't realize is that the original material is what separates the ones who make it from those who don't. Granted, today, thanks to world wide internet exposure and streaming sites like this one, a lot of talented musicians are making decent livings doing covers, much to the joy of the original song writers, who get residuals, often times, years later.
Lou Gramm! Incredible voice, amazing performer and songwriter too. Love him. ☺️
So great to hear Lou's stories. His fantastic voice is a part of the soundtrack of my and millions of others youth.
I played for 30 years dragging around the trailer ....humping equipment in and out of every dive you can name .Someone stole the trailer out of the lot while we were doing a gig at a biker bar one night. The owners put the word out and the trailer magically reappeared the next day .I opened up for Foreigner at Jannus Landing in St Pete. Best gig ever.
Cool story. Bikers don't eff around.
Awsome
Lou seems rather humble and unaffected for the heights he has achieved. Good for him, I hope he lives well.
I CAUGHT Black Sheep a number of times in Rochester back in the 70's....also saw them open for KISS. Loved this band!
Those black sheep albums are classic! If those 2 albums don’t convince you that Lou’s voice was destined for what the sound and vibe of what foreigner was to become! The opening track from the first black sheep album is killer! Should have been a radio hit! Kingsport Tenn. loves ya Lou 👍 ⚡️space ace Ron⚡️
Not sure. Kiss has been known to treat their opening bands very well. Just listen to acdc or rush or judas priest. All very positive towards kiss
Lou had Alien chops. One of the all time greats
Yeah they got a standing ovation because of this man’s amazing voice.
I'll never 4get Cal Jam2, biggest show I've ever been to! Foreigner exploded onto the stage, Lou grabbed the mic, and everybody was up and singing, Feels like the First Time. They followed Heart, so yeah, everybody was juiced, man. Xclnt scheduling, what a day/nite!😎
I saw Black Sheep open up for Suzie Quattro in the rose garden at Delaware park in Buffalo in a free concert in the mid 70s. There were tons of free rock concerts especially in parks back in the day.
Lou mentioned they found a great drummer to replace him. I do believe that would have been Ron Rocco who would go on to play in a band called Light Years from Rochester that Billy Sheehan played bass in. They were great.
I did not know who Suzie Quattro was but she was great that day. Turns out she was a female rocker pioneer. Did a killer version of heat wave. Owned the crowd. Black Sheep was great too.
It's a shame Suzi never seemed to get the respect she deserved in the US. She was huge here in the UK (2 number 1 singles) and around the world. Still releasing new music and touring today, too.
@@VRPRocks She is doing a UK tour and playing in my home town in the autumn. I'm hoping to go if I can afford it because I think she would be great live.
I saw her a couple of years before covid, still full of energy, great show. If you can manage to go I'm sure you'd have a great night👍🤘
Haven’t heard that name in a long time. Ol’ Leather Tuscadero
@@craiggerrard5117 I can testify that she is great live!
I am excited about the new album. I know the songs will be great because Lou is a great singer and songwriter
I saw Foreigner 1984 in Memphis, great show!
I was there for that one!! Dam they were so good!!!
Lou Gramm was Foreigner! I could listen to him reminisce all day long. Lou is a class act and always has been. His word meant something then and still does today. His parents I'm sure, were very proud of the son they raised.
Lou had an excellent upbringing by his Italian-American parents in Rochester New York..his Dad and Mom were both musicians also ..nice people.😊❤
The first time I ever heard a Foreigner song was in HS, back in '77. I was on the school bus riding home when the song FEELS LIKE THE FIRAT TIME comes on the radio. I was an instant fan. Loved Lou Gramm's vocals. Bought their debut album right away and later Foreigner 4. Wasn't too keen on their ballads. Their rocking tunes are for me!
Very interesting interview ❤
Lou has a great musical mind. It's one of the best of all time. What a legend. He is one cool cat with an off the hook voice. He IS the voice of Foreigner.
Lou's comment still holds true about people in this area wanting to play covers to make money. I moved away to pursue an original career and found that I was much happier playing music that I created. I moved back to Rochester to be closer to family and when I got back put together an original project. Released a CD and had some great shows. I've had a record deal and music in a documentary which is more than most and from music I created. I put out solo albums often and enjoy writing and recording. Only a handful of places support original music. Almost all of the others want cover bands. For the most part most people just want to hear covers and could care less about original music. The only ones that do care are other original artists. It's sad but true for this area and I find it frustrating beyond words. I know my time in a cover band is coming to an end. It's sucking the life out of my creative side. I would rather play in front of 5 people playing original music than a cover band that packs the house any day of the week. No passion or emotion in playing covers. Its meaningless at least to me...
I think it's because people want to hear music that's familiar to them. That's great, but it would seem to me that if you really want to make it, you need to do some original music. Personally, I enjoy discovering new music.
Same in Syracuse
That’s funny because I had the opposite experience. I was in an original band in the late 80s through the early 90s in Southern California. That’s when the whole pay to play thing was happening.
Kinda stressful trying to “make it”. We cut a demo and had some overseas interest but eventually parted ways. After that I was asked to join a cover band doing vocals. We’d rehearse once a week and play bars on Saturdays. Basically get paid for goofing off and had a lot of fun doing it. My hat is off to you for sticking with it and sounds like you’re successful. I reconnected with my guitar player from our original band Salient a while back and we had the whole what if talk. I told him to look at it as, some people that play an instrument or sing never get in a band, we were in a gigging band and had a few pretty good songs and opened for A few big bands, we “Did” that. I wish you all the best in your venture. Do you have any posts on TH-cam of your music?
@@charliec5653 yes that's it and local clubs want a crowd and if that's what brings in people that's what bands have to do. I mean after all they are in business to make money. Original bands have it hard.
Covers made you. Essentially we all play covers to learn guitar. And if you write a few good songs you spend the rest of your life covering those. And quite a few covers have become great songs in their respective genre. Fleetwood Mac's Black Magic Woman by Santana. 10,000 Maniacs Because The Night by Patti Smith to name a couple.
Im glad you are well !! I have that first album !! 💥💯👍
I would love to hear Lou Graham sing and play the drums at the same time like Phil Collins and Don Henly
One of my all time favorite singers
Brings back bad memories.. that’s why I switched to session gigs. Hated touring. Also today you’d better have a lawyer with you when you start creating .. long long way was my first favorite foreigner song.. still love it today.
He sounds like a really nice guy
That was really cool of Kiss I wonder if that was Bill of Big John that told them to play an encore song and to contact Capital?
Black Sheep's first album was incredible -- some of it reminded me of Free (Fraser, Rodgers, Kossoff, Kirke). Of course, the vocals were superb.
Keep the stories coming Lou
Foreigner 4 was the very first album I bought as a kid. I wore that album out. Lou’s voice is one of the best from the late 70’s and 80’s
KISS should have gotten some rehearsal gear and back lined them.
Lou was one the best singers in the rock era!
Can you imagine auditioning to be the lead singer of a band with Lou Graham in the room?
Gramm
Autocorrect doing the old auto-incorrect thing, I bet!
I think Lou is on his final tour right now. It really sucks to think about him retiring, music won't be the same without him participating.
What a shame about Lou's old band Black Sheep they sound like a bunch of very ethical guys. Lou is not only a brilliant vocalist but seems a straight up guy, Best Wishes for his health and creativity.
KISS was never on Capital records. They were on Casablanca. In 1983 they went to Mercury Records.
Oh crap, Charlie beat me to it! 😂
Lou Gramm is Foreigner period. One of my favorite singer's of all time . Kelly Hansen from Hurricane is ok but Lou is way better
Oh and then we popped out, long way. Enjoy them so much.
This man is a treasure. So underrated
I love Foreigner. In the 70’s they were just huge. One great album after another. Lou sounds like a great guy.
This is mothing to do with kiss being bad towards lou. He praises kiss and their kindness towards him
It doest say anywhere that Kiss was bad to Lou, so what's your point?
Tag just says there was a disaster while they were on a tour with Kiss. Doesn't say Kiss had anything to do with it.
Lou Gramm su voz y su espíritu son inigualables ❤❤❤
Lou was one of rock's best singers.
Lou, thank goodness everyone involved in the accident came away unharmed physically.
Not everyone in upstate NY in the winter was that lucky.
Playing gigs and driving home in the ice and snow with loaded down vans was incredibly dangerous. Especially at 1 or 2am when the only other people on the roads were often drunk.
We really took our life in our hands. And not everyone survived.
In 1968 Ronnie Dio was playing in his incredibly popular cover band Ronnie Dio and the Prophets. Coming home from a gig on Sunday morning at 2am they had a terrible accident.
Ronnie's cousin Nicky Pantas was killed and Ronnie was severely injured.
It was horrible and it devastated the community of musicians and bands in central upstate NY.
As he states in the video, he wasn't in the truck involved in the accident.
@@michaeldavid6284 That was really poorly written.😭 I corrected it. Thanks for the heads up.😃
Hard to believe they might have relegated one of the all time great vocalists to just playing drums.
Many memories,Lou gave it his all.
That first Black sheep album was badass. I loved it.
I’ve seen this man five times in concert I love foreigner
That phone call would have come regardless of the crash. But then it would have been a decision to leave a working band starting to see success instead of one that had already given up.
Life's funny huh ? One of the best voices ever , a legend and ok , instead of staying on drums , I'll volunteer to sing . Me and millions around the world are glad that you were gracious enough to give up the drums . 😎
If this happens after kiss hit big Gene would have probably hooked them up with equipment the guy is harsh with a big ego but I notice he does help out people a lot
Saw Foreigner on a reunion tour. It was a combination of Mick and the Foreigner name with Lou and his new band after a really good solo record by Lou. Lou had a brain operation but still sang. Jeff Pilson wasn’t in the band yet. Lou’s guitar player who was also in Lou’s previous band played bass. Always loved the combination of Mick with his Les Paul in his unique style and Lou’’s fabulous voice. I know they’ve had their differences but I’m really a fan of both. Kelly is a good singer. But you can’t replace Lou Gramm.
The gig was actually Dec. 14th, not Dec. 24th. It was at the Orpheum Th. in Boston.
Lou starts Christmas EARLY!!!!
I always thought he had a good "Rock" voice for his style of music
I saw Kiss on their tenth-anniversary-tour. They were on the decline then, and there were few people there. Anyone was free to walk up to the front to see them. They cancelled a lot of shows due to poor ticket sales. Paul was throwing picks, which sailed over many peoples' heads and landed on the floor.
Why do we still shake our heads when we hear about how a label screwed a band ? i knew it at 25 and walked away rather than hand labels millions and walk away with thousands. just look at who and what runs and owns labels and it will tell you alkot about whats happenning in the world.
Lou is one of the greatest voices if not the best!
I think I may vaguely remember hearing of this if it’s the same incident.I was at my aunts house for Christmas in the early 80s and the dj on the radio said something about kiss would be a little late they are having a tough time getting through the snow I don’t know if it said where it was but maybe that’s another incident but it just somehow brought it to mind .This would have been probably ‘80 or ‘81
great interveiw
Absolutely, Lou Gramm. And Foreiner Should be in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame!!!! Get them in there now!!!!!!
I don’t know a whole lot about Foreigner, but I remember when the 1978 album “Double Vision” came out. I was in the 9th grade.
I don’t know how true it is, but I heard long ago that after Foreigner hit success, Gramm and Jones would consistently fire their other band members to be replaced by new ones.
I heard the same thing about Steely Dan.
No they fired Ed Gagliardi...then Iain McDonald and Al Greenwood were next to go..they felt that 4 guys gelled better than 6 in the band...only one new was Rick Wills on bass.
5-2-1950 Today is Mr. Graham's 74th birthday! 🎂
What great bandmates Lou had in Black Sheep. Im gonna check out some Black Sheep now.
You won't regret it..Lou was great back then..young and hungry..you can hear the soul in his voice 🎉🎉
What a great singer you are.
Yeah man these days there are a bunch of foreigners, in Foreigner. That is not one, original member. So are you seeing Foreigner, or a Foreigner tribute band? Unless you actually happen to catch a show where Jones, is playing guitar. Although Kelly Hansen, does do a nice job. & yeah yeah I know, Jeff Pilson is playing bass.
I agree , covers is a place where original musicians go to die . Personally I hate covers and cover bands , when I do play them , it’s my own feel …
Foreigner is just a former shell of it's self now.
Zero original members
@@robpaxson4455
I know little about the band. 😂
@@bentheredonethat-lx6nhIt's just a cover band now..even Mick Jones doesn't play with them due to ill health..there ya go
@@margueritemazzeo2904
Thanks, I was just being sarcastic is all. 👍
I remember buying a Black Sheep album with Lou(is) Gramm(atico) his real name.
Lou is a legend.
Loved Black Sheep!
Such a nice guy..
Man to see smashed drums would kill me...
Interesting Story.Legend👍🏼
Juke Box Hero such a fantastic track, Lou's vocals really make it.
I remember their debut album. They got a lot of likes you could say right out of the gate with a couple good tunes that got plenty of airplay. I saw them open for Ted Nugent one year. Crowd dug em.
The crew probably got caught in a snowstorm before they hit the ice,snow blindness is a bitch.
Bands usually own their stage gear.
Braddah
You have a ceiling fan spinning above your head
The Boston show was at the Orpheum
that's really crummy that the record company didn't help them out. Made me mad and it wasn't even my life. LOL