You may well be right, but the women in The Seventies and later decades, even up into the year 96446 were nice, too, until -Well, you perhaps remember what happened with the milk float?-Also, your point about women in The Sixties being sexier than the passing fair damsels of today, merely proves my point about Taylor; a point about which I am not at liberty to divulge lest the Silver People at Camelot revoke my Tardis licence.
Those girls are now great grandmothers ,great time the sixties I was born 1950 ,where have all those years gone .married in 69 to cute skinny gorgeous blond ,still am still love her
The last of the Kinks' original garage rock singles ... and their best! And smartly chosen by the band as the show opener during their arena rock years.
I'm 72, and agree with this, my band was the Small Faces, but the Kinks preceded them, and when we heard 'You really Got me' at 14 years old it blew us away.
it took very inventive songwriting and playing to rock this hard before guitar distortion was invented, She loves you, I wanna hold ur hand, the early Kinks and The Who, wow, they figured it out the best... then that style of songwriting went away after distortion was created and widely adapted and it became much easier to rock out and play long leads.
i was listening to a Kinks compilation CD the other night. They wrote so many good songs it's incredible, and they were all in different styles, from folky things (A Well-Respected Man) to ragtime (Dead End Street) to vaudeville (Sunny Afternoon) to dance music (Come Dancing) to, of course, their punk songs, (You Really Got Me, Till the end of the Day) and so many more, Victoria, Lola, Celluloid Heroes, Waterloo Sunset. No one stretched their musical boundaries more than the KInks, and created hit after hit through different eras. Dave Davies also wrote some great songs in other veins.
I agree with most of what you say but I disagree about stretching musical boundaries. It's documented that the Beatles experimented with over 40 different types of music during their career.
For info - that black and white movie that features in the video is called, 'Beat Girl' with Gillian Hills (the cool looking Beat Girl with long blond hair) Peter McErney, Oliver Reed and Christopher Lee. It's corny but a good period piece; got some famous actors in it too, in their youth. Oh, yes, great Kinks song in the actual video. What a band the were!
@@FlipDahlenburg 1900 first conditioner, then in the 30s jheri redding, later known for inventing the jhericurl, came out with a creme rinse that was revolutionary, by time of beat girl conditioner was widely available
@@FlipDahlenburg that is not distortion like what is meant by distortion, it seems everyone is stretching the meaning of distortion so much that soon beethoven and mozart will have been the first to use it
@@ratfinkie62 No it didn't. It started in 1976 by lousy, accelerationist communists to mock and denigrate our blessed American revolution. The only good revolution in the history of the whole world, and the only one that matters.
@@ratfinkie62 No it didn't. It started in 1976 by accelerationist communists to denigrate and mock our beautiful, blessed American revolution. The only good revolution in the history of the human race. Therefore the only one that matters.
You really got me and All Day And All Of The Night get all of the love but this is my favorite early Kinks song. love it! And remember I think Dave was only 18 years old in 65 (by the way the year that I was born) crazy !
I was only 6 at the time and didn't understand "girls". I'm 65 now and totally get it. I was so lucky to grow up in the 1960's. The 70's, 80's and 90's were cool too. I've never listened to Taylor Swift and have no desire to. No doubt, my grand kids will wonder what the hell "Grand dad" was on about. Hopefully, they will discover The Small Faces, The Stones, The Who, The Beatles , The Kinks etc etc.................
First time hearing this since about 1975 ish. Fabulous band much missed. Classic track that awakened many memories of good times when I was young and carefree. I love it 🥰
Einer meiner Lieblingssongs, als ich mit 11 Jahren selbst Tonbandaufnahmen machen durfte. Britische Bands wie die Kinkks waren damals bei uns schwer angesagt. Ein geiler Song, der mir auch heute noch eine kleine Gänsehaut macht. Gruß Roland aus Deutschland.
THANK YOU FOR THE GOOD MEMORIES OF OUR YOUTH. I USED TO LISTEN TO RADIO CAROLINE WHEN LIVING IN LONDON IT WAS AWESOME. I STILL LOVE THE KINGS TODAY OVER 55 YEARS LATER. tHAT IS HOW GOOD OUR MUSIC WAS THEN.
Underrated? Not by those discerning listeners who appreciate Ray’s take on the world-his clever little digs, his ironic tone, his unexpected tenderness, his extraordinary ability to be a master story teller. Underrated? Not by those who matter.
The Kinks "Till The End Of The Day" Lyrics Songwriters: DAVIES, RAYMOND DOUGLAS Baby, I feel good From the moment I rise Feel good from morning Till the end of the day Yeah, you and me We live this life From when we get up Till we go sleep at night You and me, we're free We do as we please, yeah From morning till Till the end of the day Yeah, I get up And I see the sun up And I feel good, yeah Cause my life has begun
England's first garage/grunge band! The Kinks were - together with the Who - so groundbreaking. Here they were still in their You Really Got Me phase, but the best was yet to come. Before the band became "Ray Davies & the Kinks", they had great close-harmonies too. And great Go-Go mod dancers too! My favorite track from the early Kinks is Everybody's Gonna Ba Happy, it wasn't a big hit, it stalled at #17.
@@bcrater6400 I was in the radio business during their reign and never heard that. However, I just did some research and found this on Wikipedia: "Following a mid-year tour of the United States, the American Federation of Musicians refused permits for the group to appear in concerts there for the next four years, effectively cutting off the Kinks from the main market for rock music at the height of the British Invasion.[3][49] Although neither the Kinks nor the union revealed a specific reason for the ban, at the time it was widely attributed to their rowdy on-stage behaviour. It has been reported that an incident when the band were taping Dick Clark's TV show Where the Action Is in 1965 led to the ban. Ray Davies recalls in his autobiography, "Some guy who said he worked for the TV company walked up and accused us of being late. Then he started making anti-British comments. Things like 'Just because the Beatles did it, every mop-topped, spotty-faced limey juvenile thinks he can come over here and make a career for himself.'"; subsequently a punch was thrown and the AFM banned them."
This was one of my favorite songs growing up. I imagine that I was, about, 14. I think it was on the B side of one of their singles, if my memory serves me correctly.
Amazing song, amazing music - good to hear that Dave Davies has fully recovered from his stroke and is making music again. Amazing video too. See a very young Oliver Reed at 1:44 - in the role of "Plaid Shirt" Also an equally young Shirley Anne Field at 2:05 who went on to star with Laurence Olivier later that same year (1960) in the Entertainer.
@@lovetarantulas Beat Girl also known as "Wild for Kicks" The blond actress was Gillian Hills. Shirley Anne Field is the brunette with the square cut top jiving with the guy not wearing a tie. "An impetuous teenage girl becomes involved with Soho's beatnik and striptease scenes to spite her staid architect father and her French ex-stripper stepmother." Hilariously bad in places, you can pay to view it on TH-cam but I really wouldn't bother.
@@jeffreycrawley1216 Her grandfather was Boleslaw Lesmian, considered Poland's greatest poet and her dad, Denis Hills, was a famous English adventurer.
Great Spot there, I also saw Barbra strisland at 2.17 as well, And i'm also tempted to think Andy fairweather low was in there as well. Glad someone recocnised gillian hills as well.
I agree. Always, one of my favorite songs from the Kinks. They transition, smoothly, through many motifs. It carries you. A good song is, always, a little journey.
@@chasbodaniels1744 WFIL' s George Michael, Jim Nettleton, , Jim O'Brien( sad tragic parachute mishap took out early Autumn 1983) , Dr. Don Rose . WIIBG' Don Cannon , T. Morgan . And let's not 4get WIPs Wee Willie Webber , and the "Dialing For Dollars, or was that Channel 6 ,which was WFILs hm.base. Those were some days back then! Sadly knew friends whose brothers , and neighbors whose sons fighting in SouthVietnam, where my uncle was kia mid3-1968 , tail end of TET, 10 days B-4 my 11th bday. Remember listening to The Associations beautiful harmonic tune "Everything That Touches You" on WABC ( chime time) ,but that song was slipping to Kenny Rodgers What Condition my Condition Was In" , and The Del- Phonics "Shalalala I Love You" , and Linda Ronstadt's an Stoneponies tune "Beat of a Different Drum " , and The Rascals Tune "It's ABeautiful Morning" , Arthur Conway's "Down On Funky Street" , and Sly and The Family Stone " Dance To The Music" and Simon and Garfunkel " Mrs. Robinson" , and The Ohio Expresses " Yummy Yummy" , which came out late 4/ 1968! Yeh WFIL, WIBG, and WIP , and 93.3 The Marconi Experiment ( later it's WMMR) all played some top 40' , and the underground tunes on WMMR , like Ted Nugent a Journey of The Center Of Your Mind" ,for those trippers.
@@luiscalcano4359 Whoa, you’re quite the rock historian! Those were great times for radio, including the shift from AM to FM’s hipper music from 1967-on.
A cousin of mine was part of a street theater troop in Swingin' London in the mid- to late-60s and then ran a boutique off of Carnaby Street. How I envied her!
I like The Kinks. .. Talent, High Style...and legendary rock group! Good time,,,, British Invasion...The Rolling Stones, The Beatles and next The Kinks! The Kinks 's music forever! Thank you for video.
At that time - barely past bubble-gum pop - this must've sounded so _grungy!_ Like: exactly the music that parents of the era must have detested most; _perfect!_ ;^>
Started work at 16 was an apprentice butcher it was a.nice early summer afternoon and sunny afternoon came on the radio joyous times time machine back please
The lyrics are so upbeat, but the D minor chord gives this suggestion that the singer isn't quite so happy as he's trying to convince himself he is - just Ray's genius....
@@garygritter5701 Thanks Gary, l thought it might have been from the 1964 film ‘ The System’. Not a great dancer was he! I had a pint once in that side street pub in Malta (while filming ‘Gladiator’ ) where he died . It was a tiny place, like sitting in your front room. The woman behind the bar said he was sitting in that seat that you’re in when he collapsed. He was a one off!
Is it my imagination or were women hotter in the 60's or is it just me?
Music was overtly sexual for the first time without being buried in metaphor and innuendo. The girl went wild.
It's the gold lame pants, hot.
You may well be right, but the women in The Seventies and later decades, even up into the year 96446 were nice, too, until -Well, you perhaps remember what happened with the milk float?-Also, your point about women in The Sixties being sexier than the passing fair damsels of today, merely proves my point about Taylor; a point about which I am not at liberty to divulge lest the Silver People at Camelot revoke my Tardis licence.
Women were hotter
Side effects of the birth control pill??
Probably my favourite KINKS hit. Faultless.
endless mini-skirts, transistor radios, paper routes and stingray bikes...couldn't be better as a kid!
Ahhh hey😜🤔✌️🥃🍺🛅 1:30min 🎋😜🥳💨😎🌊🌴🥃💰🌴👣😝🌼🍺🛅👀🏪🔊
All that's missing is Patrick Mcgoohan
I saw them 1 time
Barbara Streisand at 1:21-- 1:25
who is the hot little blond?
I miss the 60s. Cute, skinny girls vs fat, tattooed awfulness today.
Those girls are now great grandmothers ,great time the sixties I was born 1950 ,where have all those years gone .married in 69 to cute skinny gorgeous blond ,still am still love her
Me too ! Mostly overweight with the obligatory tattoos and un feminine dress sense 🥴
Spot on mate women and tattoos what's all that about
Amen brother. Amen!
What a breath of fresh air they were!
Still are.
Women were fit to
Back in the days are we clean❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤🎉😅😊😊😊😊😊😊😊🎉🎉🎉🎉
The last of the Kinks' original garage rock singles ... and their best! And smartly chosen by the band as the show opener during their arena rock years.
I firmly believe that The Kinks were the first ever hard rock band to exist.
I'm 72, and agree with this, my band was the Small Faces, but the Kinks preceded them,
and when we heard 'You really Got me' at 14 years old it blew us away.
if you like this you might like my brothers music. His name is Stu Morris
it took very inventive songwriting and playing to rock this hard before guitar distortion was invented, She loves you, I wanna hold ur hand, the early Kinks and The Who, wow, they figured it out the best... then that style of songwriting went away after distortion was created and widely adapted and it became much easier to rock out and play long leads.
Ray and Dave Davies are the Godfather's of Heavy Metal.
Well, what about The Troggs as hard rock group ?
Another great song from Sir Ray Davies.
if you like this you might like my brothers music. His name is Stu Morris
N
i was listening to a Kinks compilation CD the other night. They wrote so many good songs it's incredible, and they were all in different styles, from folky things (A Well-Respected Man) to ragtime (Dead End Street) to vaudeville (Sunny Afternoon) to dance music (Come Dancing) to, of course, their punk songs, (You Really Got Me, Till the end of the Day) and so many more, Victoria, Lola, Celluloid Heroes, Waterloo Sunset. No one stretched their musical boundaries more than the KInks, and created hit after hit through different eras. Dave Davies also wrote some great songs in other veins.
I agree with most of what you say but I disagree about stretching musical boundaries. It's documented that the Beatles experimented with over 40 different types of music during their career.
Psychadelia - see my friends
@@DonRamiro1 "No one" is a heavy statement. Let's just say they played great music in a lot of different veins. And who can top The Beatles?
For info - that black and white movie that features in the video is called, 'Beat Girl' with Gillian Hills (the cool looking Beat Girl with long blond hair) Peter McErney, Oliver Reed and Christopher Lee. It's corny but a good period piece; got some famous actors in it too, in their youth. Oh, yes, great Kinks song in the actual video. What a band the were!
Adam Faith was there too. He was big back then!
Seen it! That girl is trouble!
This was pre-conditioner for hair, poor girl.
@@FlipDahlenburg 1900 first conditioner, then in the 30s jheri redding, later known for inventing the jhericurl, came out with a creme rinse that was revolutionary, by time of beat girl conditioner was widely available
what a decade the 60's were man wow
A great band, I loved growing up in the 60's
Ray Davies should have been Poet Lauriate, brilliant songwriter!
Message to teens and young adults: your grandparents were way cooler than you are.
I was fortunate to be a high school teenager in the mid sixties....it was a great time.
The kinks are legends 🙂
One of my favourite kinks songs. Fantastic
Nice toof
Fanx
XD lol
One of The Kink's last garage rock hits before moving on to their classic period from 1966 to 1970. A pretty good song honestly.
if you like this you might like my brothers music. His name is Stu Morris
the invention of the guitar effect called distortion is what changed everything from 66 on but no one seems to realize this.
@@joejones9520 Tube amps distort! It was using it on recordings heavily that changed things.
@@FlipDahlenburg that is not distortion like what is meant by distortion, it seems everyone is stretching the meaning of distortion so much that soon beethoven and mozart will have been the first to use it
Nobody could do rock like the Brits. They had it going on. One American band, Paul Revere And The Raiders had some of that well structured punch.
They sucked! Cheesy as hell! Cherokee people, Cherokee tribe. Shut up! Ever hear of the Rascals? Try good lovin.
Bull 💩.
Always loved this song. Two minutes and 17 seconds of 60's magic1
I was 15............this is still the coolest music decade in history !
I have to agree with you.
1:57 Straight punk rock 10 years before it existed! Love the energy!
Not punk, just rock😿RIP
Nope. Power pop. The Who did it much better than the Kinks, by the way.
Punk rock started in 1965.
@@ratfinkie62 No it didn't. It started in 1976 by lousy, accelerationist communists to mock and denigrate our blessed American revolution. The only good revolution in the history of the whole world, and the only one that matters.
@@ratfinkie62 No it didn't. It started in 1976 by accelerationist communists to denigrate and mock our beautiful, blessed American revolution. The only good revolution in the history of the human race. Therefore the only one that matters.
You really got me and All Day And All Of The Night get all of the love but this is my favorite early Kinks song. love it!
And remember I think Dave was only 18 years old in 65 (by the way the year that I was born) crazy !
My love for the Kinks last from the morning until the end of the day. Most probably in my sleep too.
I can never get enough of vitamin 'K'. Play me a Kinks song and I feel good yeah, from mornin'...
The Kinks were the “Alpha Dogs” of the British Invasion…..
oliver reed in checky shirt its him 100 percent
Kinks always had a great drum sound, mick avory is chronically overlooked.
I like seeing sights of 60's london it videos and books what a wonderfull time i was just a kid here in los angeles glued to my radio
Enjoy so much the spirit of freedom of the 60th in those songs, in contrast to a world that is so digitally enslaved now in 2022.
I was only 6 at the time and didn't understand "girls". I'm 65 now and totally get it. I was so lucky to grow up in the 1960's. The 70's, 80's and 90's were cool too. I've never listened to Taylor Swift and have no desire to. No doubt, my grand kids will wonder what the hell "Grand dad" was on about. Hopefully, they will discover The Small Faces, The Stones, The Who, The Beatles , The Kinks etc etc.................
One of the underrated Kinks most underrated songs. Nice job!
Song for song, The Kink Kontroversy is one of the greatest records of the 60s.
It was a favorite of mine for a long time back in the sixties. I had a portable record player and I listened to it constantly.
It was the opening track the first two times I saw them
Great tune!! Great band!
First time hearing this since about 1975 ish. Fabulous band much missed. Classic track that awakened many memories of good times when I was young and carefree. I love it 🥰
Should have bought a 45 single - like I did
Britain was so cool back then, but is not anymore.
The riff.......only the Kinks had these grab you things in them days.....timeless.
WOW, Beautiful girls with NO TATTOOS.
"Yeah, I get up!" hit sooo hard this song lives forever
Einer meiner Lieblingssongs, als ich mit 11 Jahren selbst Tonbandaufnahmen machen durfte. Britische Bands wie die Kinkks waren damals bei uns schwer angesagt. Ein geiler Song, der mir auch heute noch eine kleine Gänsehaut macht. Gruß Roland aus Deutschland.
We are the MODS 🇬🇧
THANK YOU FOR THE GOOD MEMORIES OF OUR YOUTH. I USED TO LISTEN TO RADIO CAROLINE WHEN LIVING IN LONDON IT WAS AWESOME. I STILL LOVE THE KINGS TODAY OVER 55 YEARS LATER. tHAT IS HOW GOOD OUR MUSIC WAS THEN.
IC1 PROPER ENGLAND 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍FIT BIRDS and NORMAL !!!!✌👌😈😉MY ENGLAND ☺g
Underrated? Not by those discerning listeners who appreciate Ray’s take on the world-his clever little digs, his ironic tone, his unexpected tenderness, his extraordinary ability to be a master story teller. Underrated? Not by those who matter.
What a time to be young and alive and be in London.
A lot of things were groovy back then without silly mobile phones, social media and the internet...
Great band along with many others and that's when people had Style.
Swear the guy in the check shirt, dancing, is Oliver Reed?
The Kinks
"Till The End Of The Day" Lyrics
Songwriters: DAVIES, RAYMOND DOUGLAS
Baby, I feel good From the moment I rise
Feel good from morning
Till the end of the day
Yeah, you and me
We live this life
From when we get up
Till we go sleep at night
You and me, we're free
We do as we please, yeah
From morning till Till the end of the day
Yeah, I get up
And I see the sun up
And I feel good, yeah
Cause my life has begun
Words to live by
Love this song . Love the Kinks . They were a great band .
England's first garage/grunge band!
The Kinks were - together with the Who - so groundbreaking. Here they were still in their You Really Got Me phase, but the best was yet to come. Before the band became "Ray Davies & the Kinks", they had great close-harmonies too.
And great Go-Go mod dancers too!
My favorite track from the early Kinks is Everybody's Gonna Ba Happy, it wasn't a big hit, it stalled at #17.
They have never been 'Ray Davies & the Kinks'.
@@YorkyOne
What I meant is that creatively, Ray dominated. He did most of the vocal solos. too.
Grunge?
@@hansmalcolmsen2244
Grunge, garage, whatever. The Electric Prunes were pioneers too. They just didn't realize it. :--))
@@willemvandeursen3105 Once again; GRUNGE?!
KINKS
beatles
stones
...in this order
Absolutely one of their best! Don't know why it wasn't a bigger hit.
Union issues in the USA hurt them tremendously. They were basically black balled.
@@bcrater6400 I was in the radio business during their reign and never heard that. However, I just did some research and found this on Wikipedia: "Following a mid-year tour of the United States, the American Federation of Musicians refused permits for the group to appear in concerts there for the next four years, effectively cutting off the Kinks from the main market for rock music at the height of the British Invasion.[3][49] Although neither the Kinks nor the union revealed a specific reason for the ban, at the time it was widely attributed to their rowdy on-stage behaviour. It has been reported that an incident when the band were taping Dick Clark's TV show Where the Action Is in 1965 led to the ban. Ray Davies recalls in his autobiography, "Some guy who said he worked for the TV company walked up and accused us of being late. Then he started making anti-British comments. Things like 'Just because the Beatles did it, every mop-topped, spotty-faced limey juvenile thinks he can come over here and make a career for himself.'"; subsequently a punch was thrown and the AFM banned them."
This was one of my favorite songs growing up. I imagine that I was, about, 14. I think it was on the B side of one of their singles, if my memory serves me correctly.
It's my favorite Kinks song. Should have been a much bigger hit.
Is that Twiggy?
Amazing song, amazing music - good to hear that Dave Davies has fully recovered from his stroke and is making music again.
Amazing video too.
See a very young Oliver Reed at 1:44 - in the role of "Plaid Shirt"
Also an equally young Shirley Anne Field at 2:05 who went on to star with Laurence Olivier later that same year (1960) in the Entertainer.
So what film has this clip been lifted? Is the Bardot look-alike is Shirley Ann Field?
@@lovetarantulas Beat Girl also known as "Wild for Kicks" The blond actress was Gillian Hills.
Shirley Anne Field is the brunette with the square cut top jiving with the guy not wearing a tie.
"An impetuous teenage girl becomes involved with Soho's beatnik and striptease scenes to spite her staid architect father and her French ex-stripper stepmother."
Hilariously bad in places, you can pay to view it on TH-cam but I really wouldn't bother.
@@jeffreycrawley1216 Her grandfather was Boleslaw Lesmian, considered Poland's greatest poet and her dad, Denis Hills, was a famous English adventurer.
Great Spot there, I also saw Barbra strisland at 2.17 as well, And i'm also tempted to think Andy fairweather low was in there as well. Glad someone recocnised gillian hills as well.
sorry i meant barbra Streisland at 0.39
That is Oliver Reed when he was a lad from Gladiator and many other well-known movies, in several shots, wearing a checked shirt.
When hell raisers fought in bars and destroyed pub crawls to legendary music like this. RIP Oliver Reed 1938-1999.
if you like this you might like my brothers music. His name is Stu Morris
The Swinging 60's in Swinging London!
Groovy 😎
Nice 60's images but not a Kink in sight.....
I know what the Kinks look like, I would rather see more of the long-haired dancer with the purple shirt!
Gorgeous blondie @ 0:45_-_seen her before _maybe a Hammer film _dont know her name
Gillian Hills, the scenes used where from a film called Beat Girl (1959)
many thanks
This song is better than their other rocky early hits. It's melodically more interesting.
Take a listen to Waterloo Sunset
Don’t forget, ‘All day and all of the night’
I agree 100% with @Colin Pumpernickel … this one also has distinctive chord changes and a terrific guitar solo. A total gem.
Cheers Chasbo!
I agree. Always, one of my favorite songs from the Kinks. They transition, smoothly, through many motifs. It carries you. A good song is, always, a little journey.
Kinks were a truly pop psych bad ass British group , remember hearing this in mid 1965 at 8yrs. Old on Philly's WFIL Famous 56 at 8yrs. Old.
I was 6 or 7.
WFIL and WIBG were great Philly stations!
Not so much psych. But I love The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society. One of my favourite records of all time
@@chasbodaniels1744 WFIL' s George Michael, Jim Nettleton, , Jim O'Brien( sad tragic parachute mishap took out early Autumn 1983) , Dr. Don Rose .
WIIBG' Don Cannon , T. Morgan .
And let's not 4get WIPs Wee Willie Webber , and the "Dialing For Dollars, or was that Channel 6 ,which was WFILs hm.base.
Those were some days back then! Sadly knew friends whose brothers , and neighbors whose sons fighting in SouthVietnam, where my uncle was kia mid3-1968 , tail end of TET, 10 days B-4 my 11th bday. Remember listening to The Associations beautiful harmonic tune "Everything That Touches You" on WABC ( chime time) ,but that song was slipping to Kenny Rodgers What Condition my Condition Was In" , and The Del- Phonics "Shalalala I Love You" , and Linda Ronstadt's an Stoneponies tune "Beat of a Different Drum " , and The Rascals Tune "It's ABeautiful Morning" , Arthur Conway's "Down On Funky Street" , and Sly and The Family Stone " Dance To The Music" and Simon and Garfunkel " Mrs. Robinson" , and The Ohio Expresses " Yummy Yummy" , which came out late 4/ 1968!
Yeh WFIL, WIBG, and WIP , and 93.3 The Marconi Experiment ( later it's WMMR) all played some top 40' , and the underground tunes on WMMR , like Ted Nugent a Journey of The Center Of Your Mind" ,for those trippers.
@@luiscalcano4359 Whoa, you’re quite the rock historian! Those were great times for radio, including the shift from AM to FM’s hipper music from 1967-on.
Kinky !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Oliver Reed strutting his stuff there
Feel good each time o hear this song
A cousin of mine was part of a street theater troop in Swingin' London in the mid- to late-60s and then ran a boutique off of Carnaby Street. How I envied her!
Thank fuck for the Swingin Sixties! I don't mean to be sexist nor objectifying, but 60's dancing girls were the hottest ever.
I like The Kinks. ..
Talent, High Style...and legendary rock group!
Good time,,,, British Invasion...The Rolling Stones, The Beatles and
next The Kinks!
The Kinks 's music forever!
Thank you for video.
The Kinks got banned from the USA.
Not sure why. Maybe just the name !
@@davidlamb7524 Very strange...and I didn't know
why....
by the way, The Kinks inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in
1990.
@@davidlamb7524 Union bs. Otherwise they would have been as big as the Who or Stones over here.
Great song..great looking babes!
Killer Kinks!!!
Das ist das schönste Musikvideo das ich bis jetzt gesehen habe. Das ist Lebensfreude.
if you like this you might like my brothers music. His name is Stu Morris
👍👍🤩🤩👌👌
At that time - barely past bubble-gum pop - this must've sounded so _grungy!_ Like: exactly the music that parents of the era must have detested most; _perfect!_ ;^>
Les Kinks, très haut🔝 dans le classement de mes groupes préférés des sixties 💟
Как приятно смотреть на красивых НАТУРАЛЬНЫХ девушек и наслаждаться прекрасной музыкой!
Pretty girls back then!
Immaculate.
if you like this you might like my brothers music. His name is Stu Morris
These were some great days...
Remember it well at 65! Where the time go?
The best never to be repeated.
Started work at 16 was an apprentice butcher it was a.nice early summer afternoon and sunny afternoon came on the radio joyous times time machine back please
Not a tattoo or piecing in sight.
The lyrics are so upbeat, but the D minor chord gives this suggestion that the singer isn't quite so happy as he's trying to convince himself he is - just Ray's genius....
throughly enjoyed this evergreen 60’s fashion , the song , the dance in this video.
Thank you for sharing this flashback video ✌️🇨🇦
OH YEAH ENGLISH BIRDS !!! Let's have a pout !!!
Love this, Love them Kinks💋they get me goin from “ morning til the end of the day”😉
Oh yeh
Did this in band in 68 when i was 14
AND they all became aerobic instructors....
Loved listening to them. Miss those days sometimes.
Sometimes?
Looks likes Oliver Reed dancing in the black and white footage ..Could be wrong?
Yeah it’s the legend himself, from a 1959 Film called beat girl.
@@garygritter5701 Thanks Gary, l thought it might have been from the 1964 film ‘ The System’. Not a great dancer was he! I had a pint once in that side street pub in Malta (while filming ‘Gladiator’ ) where he died . It was a tiny place, like sitting in your front room. The woman behind the bar said he was sitting in that seat that you’re in when he collapsed. He was a one off!
@@garygritter5701 1960 I believe
@@lthompson7625 oh, he was fantastic.
How about all the gorgeous girls?
thass crayzay
Fantastic ‼️😎🔥
As I turn 66 this song holds quite a different meaning.
Oliver Reed sighting at 0:55
Good Eye!!!
Just ❤️❤️❤️❤️
1.5倍速で聴くのが好きです❤
Great song
So good !
The Kinks, the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, the Dave Clark Five, Gerry and the Pacemakers .......... we had great music in 1965.
Don't forget The Troggs
The who, the hollies, small faces, the searches, the yardbirds and a long etc.....