When I was a kid, I saw this, Conan, the life of Brian, stir crazy, brewsters millions ,Cheech n chong , star wars , neighbors. 1941, Ghostbusters, in a few years span , at the theatre . Had no idea how fortunate & enriching it would be to see all these movies . Even the Simpsons couldn't come close to re- doing these flicks . There will never be another music biz royalty- packed movie like the Blues Brothers.
I saw these guys a very long time at Chicago's Blues Fest. Very cool. They called it Jane Bynre's Honkey Fest that year because blacks were boycotting it for reasons long forgotten my me.
It used to get worse than that in my old miners' working men's club in Barnsley, Yorkshire, if they weren't happy with the band. They had to leave fast, or they'd be smashed to bits. They'd mix that up with trying to strip the singer, if she was female, or playing strip poker on stage, or on the dance floor. They were a strange people those miners. Still are!
@@richardtroiano8280 I also liked this movie a lot, and among so many other funny scenes was the car that at the end of the movie it disassembles as if it had completed its mission.
I love this scene and can't believe this is literally the first time I caught this editing blooper. At 2:04 you see John/Jake going for the bullwhip and at 2:08 again, he goes from standing there then notices the bullwhip and goes for it. Shows I enjoy the movie so much that it took literally just looking at the right place at the right time to notice! lol
Yep I grew up there and I was 13 when this movie came out. My mom hated it and bust a gut when Elwood said where they were. I now live in the Chicago area as an architect but this movie was an influence on why I wanted to live here.
Brings me back to the drive-ins that peppered the San Fernando Valley in my youth. 3rd row was my favorite, back up the '70 el camino, slip into the bed and crack open the Coors. Life was good.
That was after a bar in Texas that has chicken wire around the stage. It's called Gilley's in Dallas Texas and they did through bottles. Used to be one tough bar although I believe it's been chilled. I was there when the chicken wire was up and a whole lots of fights happened.
"Rawhide" is a Western song written by Ned Washington (lyrics) and composed by Dimitri Tiomkin in 1958. It was originally recorded by Frankie Laine. The song was used as the theme to Rawhide, a western television series that ran on CBS from 1959 to 1966. Members of the Western Writers of America chose it as one of the Top 100 Western songs of all time.
used to love this film as a kid!!! got videos of me and my mate singing (well trying to) some of these songs 😆 ah the good old early 2000s 😆 saw the film mentioned on a video I was just watching and now I'm sat watching clips of the film and omg the nostalgia is real!!!
Believe in Angels... He showed up for the show! The back of his shirt read Believe in Angels! It was John Belushi. He walked right by at the Abba show. Guess where? That was cool!.
The irony is that country and blues were always related. One of the greatest blues songs, "Move It On Over," was written by Hank Williams. One of the Carter Family's early recordings was "Worried Man Blues."
watched this movie from age 9 till about 13 for the car chases....then watched another 20 times after that for the comedy once i was old enough to get it.
I noticed some guy dancing on a table! I was stationed in Germany in the 80's and was at a club in Munich called The Oklahoma. This German country band The Texas Riders started playing Hank Williams Jr's song Born To Boogie and my friend Sean Miller of Apoka FL jumped up and did the same thing. We all grabbed our beers. Our German friends looked at me what is he doing!! 🍺🍺🍺 Prost!! 😀😀😀
Anyone thats played a live gig can relate to this - be it music, stand up, acting.... shifting your act to suit the audience is both crucial and cruel (on you). But usually worth the effort. You're there to entertain them, not show them how to be entertained.
To me, it's apples and oranges - completely different venues. I think both are masterpieces. Ray Chareles, Aretha Franklyn and Cab Caloway - fantastic.
How many country songs could this band possibly know to fill a whole evening? They both open and close with the same song, and the list they got probably had most of the modern (at the time) country hits that everyone knew.
@@analogman9697 the way i read it, that was always the joke anyway. they tried to impress them with what they were passionate about, then played the theme song from a tv show that was already old 30 years ago for *hours* and either no one noticed or no one cared.
And John candy and ray Charles James brown cab Calloway Minnie the moocher aretha Franklin Carrie fisher Henry Gibson John lee hooker Kathleen freeman Jeff Morris Charles Napier Gary mclarty layne Britton pinetop Perkins Carolyn Franklin James Avery Lou perryman luis Contreras and Ralph foody
I grew up in the south in the 70s and played in bands. Despite the cliche county music was out amongst the young people.If you played Spencer Davis Gimme Some Lovin people would be rocking out and dancing like crazy and if you played Raw hide they would laugh you off the stage
On a quiz show I was watching this evening one of the contestant's topic was The Blues Brothers. The car chase section had the record for the most smashed up cars in a movie. They probably should have had a question about the stage wire!
Such an iconic performance by a pair of comedians and a killer backing band. There is nothing else like the Blues Brothers.
Priceless!
When I was a kid, I saw this, Conan, the life of Brian, stir crazy, brewsters millions ,Cheech n chong , star wars , neighbors. 1941, Ghostbusters, in a few years span , at the theatre . Had no idea how fortunate & enriching it would be to see all these movies . Even the Simpsons couldn't come close to re- doing these flicks . There will never be another music biz royalty- packed movie like the Blues Brothers.
I saw these guys a very long time at Chicago's Blues Fest. Very cool. They called it Jane Bynre's Honkey Fest that year because blacks were boycotting it for reasons long forgotten my me.
@@richardkey4289 Yeah, good old times. Remember when we were young and crisp? Now we're just and.
The best movie 🎥👌!!!
Love how they started throwing bottles when they were pissed, then threw even more when happy! Love this movie!!
Must be how they roll in that club, that would explain the chicken wire protecting the stage...
They were throwing in jubilation instead of anger lmao
It used to get worse than that in my old miners' working men's club in Barnsley, Yorkshire, if they weren't happy with the band. They had to leave fast, or they'd be smashed to bits. They'd mix that up with trying to strip the singer, if she was female, or playing strip poker on stage, or on the dance floor. They were a strange people those miners. Still are!
That's the funniest aspect.
bahaha yeah it's so good.
This movie will never age.
It will always be top shelf entertainment.
What a classic..oh how we miss the 80's..the Blues Brothers were legendary!
@@richardtroiano8280 🕶🎤
@Ughra Yuvakov More like literally 1980.... not a single memory of this film from the 1970s because it's an 80s film...
@@richardtroiano8280 hi
@@richardtroiano8280 I also liked this movie a lot, and among so many other funny scenes was the car that at the end of the movie it disassembles as if it had completed its mission.
I agree
Legendary movie. One of the best of that decade, and of all time. No movie can touch the star power Blues Brothers had.
Another Ackroyd gem.
So talented they can sing both types of music country and western.
I watched this movie a hundred times, then I stopped counting. What a great movie.
Never gets old. Watch it all or a ten minute snippet. Pure gold.
@Gallows Pole that my friend is a great tradition...one that I have now adopted
0qQppq @Praise Jesus, Repent or Likewise Perish
This movie is just a masterpiece.
Proves 2 things. Everybody has Soul. And a great band can play anything.
This movie came out when I was in high school. Good memories, great movie. Still one of my favorites!
ICONIC! One of the BEST movies ever made! Still find it hilarious after all these years!
I love how there is just randomly a bullwhip hanging above the stage. Authentic country bar indeed.
I love this scene and can't believe this is literally the first time I caught this editing blooper. At 2:04 you see John/Jake going for the bullwhip and at 2:08 again, he goes from standing there then notices the bullwhip and goes for it. Shows I enjoy the movie so much that it took literally just looking at the right place at the right time to notice! lol
Yeah its the same scene, same take, but from a different camera and wide angle. Much of this movie was improv and one take shots.
omfg geeeez i NEVER noticed that one :D awesome buddy xD
Had to look at it twice. Good catch!
@@MrWolfSnackHighly doubt it's the same take
Yep..... Kokomo, Indiana..... that's where I spent the 70's....... this scene defines it
Yep I grew up there and I was 13 when this movie came out. My mom hated it and bust a gut when Elwood said where they were. I now live in the Chicago area as an architect but this movie was an influence on why I wanted to live here.
Brings me back to the drive-ins that peppered the San Fernando Valley in my youth. 3rd row was my favorite, back up the '70 el camino, slip into the bed and crack open the Coors. Life was good.
First movie I went to see with my now Husband, back in the day. Brings back great memories!
I don't know whose idea it was for the audience to throw bottles regardless of whether they were happy or mad, but it was genius!
It's the equivalent of ECW fans throwing chairs!!! I love it!!
That was after a bar in Texas that has chicken wire around the stage. It's called Gilley's in Dallas Texas and they did through bottles. Used to be one tough bar although I believe it's been chilled. I was there when the chicken wire was up and a whole lots of fights happened.
@@charlie6629 Gilly's in Irving Texas was opened way after this movie. The original was in Pasadena, Texas.
@@kharnac3973 Thanks for the update. It's been a long time since I was there,
@@kharnac3973 it's not 'the original' ... it was a 'thing' back in the day across the South ...
RIP and long live John Belushi (January 24, 1949 - March 5, 1982), aged 33
You will always be remembered as a legend.
"Rawhide" is a Western song written by Ned Washington (lyrics) and composed by Dimitri Tiomkin in 1958. It was originally recorded by Frankie Laine. The song was used as the theme to Rawhide, a western television series that ran on CBS from 1959 to 1966. Members of the Western Writers of America chose it as one of the Top 100 Western songs of all time.
Wonder why in every youtube video there is a comment of someone giving explanations that nobody asked for.
@@dabisu
It's just tidbit information, for those who didn't know, just trivia(l), like your comment! 😂😉👍
Legendary and iconic Blues Brothers !!! Great movie
I love that it didn’t even phase them when the crowd threw stuff. They were like, “you hear sumthin?”
My favorite scene. I love how the guys sing "Stand By Your Man."
Did you always stand by your Partner(s)?
used to love this film as a kid!!! got videos of me and my mate singing (well trying to) some of these songs 😆 ah the good old early 2000s 😆 saw the film mentioned on a video I was just watching and now I'm sat watching clips of the film and omg the nostalgia is real!!!
If anybody ever asks "What music do you like?" the answer is always "I like both kinds. Country and Western"
Probably the best comedy/musical ever produced...darn near perfect...i nearly died when the customers throw bottles for bad or good songs 😆
Darn perfect!
Watch out people that's going on with the whole world 🌎 now 🤔
Dam... those were the days! The Blues Brother, Monty Python Holy Grail, Slapshot...on and on.... dam, miss the days.
I watched first time BB when was 6, now I’m 48 and still listen soundtrack and watch move at least 3 time a year.
Believe in Angels... He showed up for the show! The back of his shirt read Believe in Angels! It was John Belushi. He walked right by at the Abba show. Guess where? That was cool!.
Great Comedy performances, Great Soundtrack, Greatest Car chase ever. Great Film. RIP John Belushi!!
Watched this Movie when it first come out and still watch it to this day, one of the funniest movies ever😎😎
What kind of music do you play here?
Both kinds.. Country and Western.... Classic!!!
Always puts a smile on my face when I play this movie
my all time favorite movie, i've watched it about 50 times and would watch it another 50.
Wer den Film nicht gesehen hat, ist selber Schuld....Weltklasse
Absolutely loved the Blues Brothers...
The irony is that country and blues were always related. One of the greatest blues songs, "Move It On Over," was written by Hank Williams. One of the Carter Family's early recordings was "Worried Man Blues."
True
watched this movie from age 9 till about 13 for the car chases....then watched another 20 times after that for the comedy once i was old enough to get it.
RIP John Belushi, Donald "Duck" Dunn, Alan "Mr Fabulous" Rubin & Matt "Guitar" Murphy.
My favourite film of all time, so many amazing scenes all the way through, coupled with the best music.
They need this in the oscars
No,too big for that anemyc circus
I noticed some guy dancing on a table! I was stationed in Germany in the 80's and was at a club in Munich called The Oklahoma. This German country band The Texas Riders started playing Hank Williams Jr's song Born To Boogie and my friend Sean Miller of Apoka FL jumped up and did the same thing. We all grabbed our beers. Our German friends looked at me what is he doing!! 🍺🍺🍺 Prost!! 😀😀😀
Good save with that theme from Rawhide! They certainly won the audience over with that one!
Later on they do a great blues song that brings it...Stand By Your Man.
@@floydvaughn836 I know! The people loved that, too! I remember one guy sitting all alone, sobbing into his beer during that song.
@@waynemacfarland1546 yeah, the one with no woman...
@@floydvaughn836 He probably had a woman and lost her recently. She either died or broke up with him. Either way, he took it pretty hard.
@@waynemacfarland1546 yes, he knew pain for sure
Einer der besten größten lustigsten Filme aller Zeiten...💯💥💯💥💯
Elwood:
What kind of music do you usually have here?
Claire:
Oh, we got both kinds. We got country *and* western
Oh we like both kinds, Country and Western :D
Anyone thats played a live gig can relate to this - be it music, stand up, acting.... shifting your act to suit the audience is both crucial and cruel (on you). But usually worth the effort. You're there to entertain them, not show them how to be entertained.
One of the Worlds greatest Musicals👍🏽🧬😎🇺🇸
the red nex. stand by your man. says it all
wha geweldig toch xxx.B&B. 2022.
The best part is that this is an Elwood special rather than Jake’s vocals.
LOVE IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!BEST MUSIC MOVIE EVER MADE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Absolute Classic! Just the best movie ever made. Forget The Godfather. This film is America.
To me, it's apples and oranges - completely different venues. I think both are masterpieces. Ray Chareles, Aretha Franklyn and Cab Caloway - fantastic.
The way the owner of the joint says "That ain't no Hank Williams song!", like if they was making a sacrilege, always cracks me up 😂
We got both kinds, we got country and western!
“ we got both kinds of music ... country AND western “
😃
Legend says they´re still playing that song.
I really like the Good Ole Blues Brothers Boys Band from Chicago.
How many country songs could this band possibly know to fill a whole evening? They both open and close with the same song, and the list they got probably had most of the modern (at the time) country hits that everyone knew.
If you know one country song, you know a thousand.
@@analogman9697 the way i read it, that was always the joke anyway. they tried to impress them with what they were passionate about, then played the theme song from a tv show that was already old 30 years ago for *hours* and either no one noticed or no one cared.
They also did Sink the Bismark but the film was later list.
One of my favorite scenes in the whole movie. That part is so hilarious.
Epic with with Dan n Belushi
Best musical in movie history 👌🏻
This is simply so classic.
Still throwing stuff, but now it's happy throws.
Any entertainer who's performed at Bob's Country Bunker would know what this is like!
I love this movie so much.
"Hey Jake there's gotta be at least seven dollars in change here!"
“We listen to both kinds of music, country AND western”.
Ten years later they’d LOVE Gimme Some Lovin’ in Days of Thunder.
Tis movie is a masterpiece... RIP John.
おーっなつかしー😆
好きやったなぁ🎵
ええとこ場面抜いてくれてありがとー🥳
Rest in peace John belushi you will be sadly missed by us all
And Duck Dunne too
And John candy and ray Charles James brown cab Calloway Minnie the moocher aretha Franklin Carrie fisher Henry Gibson John lee hooker Kathleen freeman Jeff Morris Charles Napier Gary mclarty layne Britton pinetop Perkins Carolyn Franklin James Avery Lou perryman luis Contreras and Ralph foody
still one of the greatest films ever..plse dont let them remake this..
We e got two types of music round here! Country and Western!
So we just gonna ignore the fact that Gimme some loving sounded really good as well ?
XD 2:37 - Jake hits the bullwhip and the cigarette goes flying like "NO SMOKING!"
I know the whole song thanks to these guys
This is an alarmingly accurate portrayal of Kokomo, Indiana.
ROFL! When I was single, if a guy didn’t like this scene, he didn’t get far with me.
I grew up in the south in the 70s and played in bands. Despite the cliche county music was out amongst the young people.If you played Spencer Davis Gimme Some Lovin people would be rocking out and dancing like crazy and if you played Raw hide they would laugh you off the stage
I played in a band too. It depended on the bar.
@@jfkesq - Still does. Got to know your audience.
Country is more than the South.
@@earl2688 Yup. It was Country _and_ Western!
Call me crazy, but I'm a Californian and I love Rawhide. lol
Brilliant. RIP John Belushi.
I love that the audience is still throwing beer bottles And no ones getting hurt by the shards of glass 😆😅
Simple movie traveling across America awesome !
These two were awesome
Hate the song - throw bottles. Love the song - throw bottles. Got it 👍
“Who turned out the lights?” Classic!
A true classic with sooo Much talent
Super geil ...
Blue brothers is my favourite movie omg
Great sound mixing, they're definitely singing.
Фильм!!! Гениальный!!! Смотрел много раз и ещё буду!!!
@Правый Берег Братья Блюз
Cropper's like: How did I end up in a place like this? 🤣🤣
Legend has it they've still not finished removing the glass shards from the studio to this day..
I love this legendary movie!
Never seen an episode of Rawhide in my life.
But damn if this isn't one of the greatest bits of music I have ever heard.
Try and catch an episode. The main character Rowdy Yates was played by a young Clint Eastwood. He was at the top of his game even back then.
"That ain't no Hank Williams song!" I'll have to use that whenever the music isn't good
This was when SNL was great ! Jim Belushi was good, but John was SUPER !
The Good Ol Boys were soooo late, the bar owners should have been happy to have any band.
True
I LMAO when Bob came out of the men's room and a beer bottle nearly missed him!
best film ever
This movie made me an expert on SCMODS.
That was my favorite scene from the movie.
On a quiz show I was watching this evening one of the contestant's topic was The Blues Brothers. The car chase section had the record for the most smashed up cars in a movie. They probably should have had a question about the stage wire!