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Would you stand up and walk out on me?
Lend me your ears and I'll sing you a song
And I'll try not to sing out of key.
Oh, I get by with a little help from my friends
Mm, I get high with a little help from my friends
Mm, gonna try with a little help from my friends
What do I do when my love is away
(Does it worry you to be alone?)
How do I feel by the end of the day,
(Are you sad because you're on your own?)
No, I get by with a little help from my friends
Mm, I get high with a little help from my friends
Mm, gonna try with a little help from my friends
Do you need anybody
I need somebody to love
Could it be anybody
I want somebody to love.
Would you believe in a love at first sight
Yes, I'm certain that it happens all the time
What do you see when you turn out the light
I can't tell you but I know it's mine,
Oh, I get by with a little help from my friends
Mm, I get high with a little help from my friends
Mm, gonna try with a little help from my friends
Do you need anybody
I just need someone to love
Could it be anybody
I want somebody to love.
Oh, I get by with a little help from my friends
with a little help from my friends.
Here's a subtitled version for those of us without enough LSD in our bloodstreams- I did some wonder loaf.
i hope this link is still good because it''s good fun.
The way I understand it, there is no "true" alcoholic (as opposed to..."not really" or "sorta" alcoholic?). You either are or you aren't. But so what if he was or wasn't drunk at the time? Joe's vocals came out just fine for this.
Speaking of alcohol, I've wondered for years how much raw talent it must have taken to overcome the prodigious amount Steven Stills appears to have drunk before probably his strongest solo work, "Black Queen".
Kudos to SRV for having the guts to quit alcohol and keep playing guitar like he did.
He took a mediocre Beatles song and made it horrible.
Respectfully disagree, but this comment is totally hilarious...
Outstanding
I Agree!!
"Whaaaaaaaeeeeerrrh bleeehhhhhghrrrr yeh yah ya"
Brilliant.
Saw him live 30 years ago...he was tired and shallow in voice compared to Woodstock 69
I enjoyed the show, but the years and the road had clearly taken their toll. That was then and this is now.
I will never forget seeing him in the movie for the first time. I thought " how brave this guy is...a spastic cripple with his movements, belting out this tune....what an amazing performance".
Performances of a lifetime...Joke Cocker and his band in Woodstock 69 movie"....along with many others, think ....Santana....Richie Havens....Sly and the Family Stone....and so many others at that magical moment.
Now at 66 years old with tears in my eyes, I reflect on how blessed that I was to be a young teenager living through it all...how being born in 1952....I saw elvis on black and white tv for the first time while my parents howled in laughter at his movements...
Now I fade away, but I will always cherish the rich tapestry of music that my generation lived through...and now...it is all dying away as I am.
Regards,
Bruce Smith
Ottawa, Canada
Jan. 10. 2019
PEACE
I have more than 10 years on you but feel the same about the music we experienced starting in the 60s and some before that. Mad Dogs and Englishmen had some of the best.
I have never seen a comment on RP that got 55 likes so you really hit a chord there.
Stay well!
Saw him live 30 years ago...he was tired and shallow in voice compared to Woodstock 69.
I enjoyed the show, but the years and the road had clearly taken their toll. That was then and this is now.
I will never forget seeing him in the movie for the first time. I thought " how brave this guy is...a spastic cripple with his movements, belting out this tune....what an amazing performance".
Performances of a lifetime...Joke Cocker and his band in Woodstock 69 movie"....along with many others, think ....Santana....Richie Havens....Sly and the Family Stone....and so many others at that magical moment.
Now at 66 years old with tears in my eyes, I reflect on how blessed that I was to be a young teenager living through it all...how being born in 1952....I saw elvis on black and white tv for the first time while my parents howled in laughter at his movements...
Now I fade away, but I will always cherish the rich tapestry of music that my generation lived through...and now...it is all dying away as I am.
Regards,
Bruce Smith
Ottawa, Canada
Jan. 10. 2019
PEACE
Have a safe and peaceful journey.
Yes! "Sloppy" : that pretty much nails whether a listener likes or hates Joe. Janis Joplin had the same guts-on-display approach. Nuance and polish be damned. This is the exact opposite of Playing It Cool.
Another thought: Eddie Vedder has a similar shaggy, shambolic style, but he'll never come close to Joe's power.
Third thought: my God, those backup singers. They had better be in "Twenty Feet From Stardom."
Those backup singers appeared with him on Top of The Pops, just about the only way you could hear pop music in the UK in the mid 60s. They had figures and presence to match their vocal chords. Along with JC the effect on a 14yr old was visceral...
That's Jimmy Page on guitar.
I enjoyed the show, but the years and the road had clearly taken their toll. That was then and this is now.
I will never forget seeing him in the movie for the first time. I thought " how brave this guy is...a spastic cripple with his movements, belting out this tune....what an amazing performance".
Performances of a lifetime...Joke Cocker and his band in Woodstock 69 movie"....along with many others, think ....Santana....Richie Havens....Sly and the Family Stone....and so many others at that magical moment.
Now at 66 years old with tears in my eyes, I reflect on how blessed that I was to be a young teenager living through it all...how being born in 1952....I saw elvis on black and white tv for the first time while my parents howled in laughter at his movements...
Now I fade away, but I will always cherish the rich tapestry of music that my generation lived through...and now...it is all dying away as I am.
Regards,
Bruce Smith
Ottawa, Canada
Jan. 10. 2019
PEACE
I enjoyed the show, but the years and the road had clearly taken their toll. That was then and this is now.
I will never forget seeing him in the movie for the first time. I thought " how brave this guy is...a spastic cripple with his movements, belting out this tune....what an amazing performance".
Performances of a lifetime...Joke Cocker and his band in Woodstock 69 movie"....along with many others, think ....Santana....Richie Havens....Sly and the Family Stone....and so many others at that magical moment.
Now at 66 years old with tears in my eyes, I reflect on how blessed that I was to be a young teenager living through it all...how being born in 1952....I saw elvis on black and white tv for the first time while my parents howled in laughter at his movements...
Now I fade away, but I will always cherish the rich tapestry of music that my generation lived through...and now...it is all dying away as I am.
Regards,
Bruce Smith
Ottawa, Canada
Jan. 10. 2019
PEACE
Consider yourself fortunate that your parents found Elvis hip gyration hilarious. My grandparents made my dad turn it off because they were so offended!
Are you sure about Winwood? I know Cocker performed with him later, but I don't remember him being credited on this track. AFAIK, the band in this recording was:
Jimmy Page
Chris Stainton
B.J. Wilson
Tommy Eyre
You're right. Maybe he noted Winwood as he did play on other tracks on this album. It was a hell of a group of musicians on the album...
Not only
Steve Winwood
Chris Stainton
Are you sure about Winwood? I know Cocker performed with him later, but I don't remember him being credited on this track. AFAIK, the band in this recording was:
Jimmy Page
Chris Stainton
B.J. Wilson
Tommy Eyre
Took it to a whole new level!
Not only
Steve Winwood
Chris Stainton
I enjoyed the show, but the years and the road had clearly taken their toll. That was then and this is now.
I will never forget seeing him in the movie for the first time. I thought " how brave this guy is...a spastic cripple with his movements, belting out this tune....what an amazing performance".
Performances of a lifetime...Joke Cocker and his band in Woodstock 69 movie"....along with many others, think ....Santana....Richie Havens....Sly and the Family Stone....and so many others at that magical moment.
Now at 66 years old with tears in my eyes, I reflect on how blessed that I was to be a young teenager living through it all...how being born in 1952....I saw elvis on black and white tv for the first time while my parents howled in laughter at his movements...
Now I fade away, but I will always cherish the rich tapestry of music that my generation lived through...and now...it is all dying away as I am.
Regards,
Bruce Smith
Ottawa, Canada
Jan. 10. 2019
PEACE
No, it may feel like like you're fading away (and who am I to tell you otherwise?) but you're not entirely, for sharing with us younger guys. I truly believe that passing on beats passing away
. As for the music, it's still pretty much there for us to listen to. Nice one with the tapestry, Carole King wouldn't disagree
Thanks again and keep sharing
Edit: re-reading this, I'm chuckling to myself. Younger? In relative terms, possibly, but being 43 I hardly qualify as young Then again, I think my mental age wavers between 8 and 17 (on good days!) so that must be OK then :-)
Blessings to your memories. That's the fabric of life. Keep on Rockin'
-EE
NastyStuff wrote:
I enjoyed the show, but the years and the road had clearly taken their toll. That was then and this is now.
I will never forget seeing him in the movie for the first time. I thought " how brave this guy is...a spastic cripple with his movements, belting out this tune....what an amazing performance".
Performances of a lifetime...Joke Cocker and his band in Woodstock 69 movie"....along with many others, think ....Santana....Richie Havens....Sly and the Family Stone....and so many others at that magical moment.
Now at 66 years old with tears in my eyes, I reflect on how blessed that I was to be a young teenager living through it all...how being born in 1952....I saw elvis on black and white tv for the first time while my parents howled in laughter at his movements...
Now I fade away, but I will always cherish the rich tapestry of music that my generation lived through...and now...it is all dying away as I am.
Regards,
Bruce Smith
Ottawa, Canada
Jan. 10. 2019
PEACE
And nobody covered Joe Cocker like John Belushi. Also without peer!
NastyStuff wrote:
I enjoyed the show, but the years and the road had clearly taken their toll. That was then and this is now.
I will never forget seeing him in the movie for the first time. I thought " how brave this guy is...a spastic cripple with his movements, belting out this tune....what an amazing performance".
Performances of a lifetime...Joke Cocker and his band in Woodstock 69 movie"....along with many others, think ....Santana....Richie Havens....Sly and the Family Stone....and so many others at that magical moment.
Now at 66 years old with tears in my eyes, I reflect on how blessed that I was to be a young teenager living through it all...how being born in 1952....I saw elvis on black and white tv for the first time while my parents howled in laughter at his movements...
Now I fade away, but I will always cherish the rich tapestry of music that my generation lived through...and now...it is all dying away as I am.
Regards,
Bruce Smith
Ottawa, Canada
Jan. 10. 2019
PEACE
I enjoyed the show, but the years and the road had clearly taken their toll. That was then and this is now.
I will never forget seeing him in the movie for the first time. I thought " how brave this guy is...a spastic cripple with his movements, belting out this tune....what an amazing performance".
Performances of a lifetime...Joke Cocker and his band in Woodstock 69 movie"....along with many others, think ....Santana....Richie Havens....Sly and the Family Stone....and so many others at that magical moment.
Now at 66 years old with tears in my eyes, I reflect on how blessed that I was to be a young teenager living through it all...how being born in 1952....I saw elvis on black and white tv for the first time while my parents howled in laughter at his movements...
Now I fade away, but I will always cherish the rich tapestry of music that my generation lived through...and now...it is all dying away as I am.
Regards,
Bruce Smith
Ottawa, Canada
Jan. 10. 2019
PEACE
There was a girl in High School that looked an awfully lot like Winnie Cooper. I had the hots for her, too.
There was a special ed kid in school that was pretty sure she was Winnie and he was also pretty sure that he was Kevin.
For Frank Zappa, tobacco was an essential food group.
So sad he was damaged by alcohol,, and left us too early. RIP Joe!
The way I understand it, there is no "true" alcoholic (as opposed to..."not really" or "sorta" alcoholic?). You either are or you aren't. But so what if he was or wasn't drunk at the time? Joe's vocals came out just fine for this.
the BEST cover of this song
https://video.search.yahoo.com/search/video?fr=ie8&p=john+belushi+i+get+by+with+a+little+help#id=1&vid=c57c4646236bf934ff18a0bd03f10f43&action=view
I could go along with that, but I'd put "Handsome Johnny" by Richie in there too.
of course, if you ask me again in an hour, I might not think so, but for now .. .
there's a new guy in town
It might not be the choir by itself, maybe just a crappy sound engineering?
Agreed.
Watching him do it on stage, it's easier now to see the amount of emotion he contained in this. Now, it's a 9.
Yes! "Sloppy" : that pretty much nails whether a listener likes or hates Joe. Janis Joplin had the same guts-on-display approach. Nuance and polish be damned. This is the exact opposite of Playing It Cool.
Another thought: Eddie Vedder has a similar shaggy, shambolic style, but he'll never come close to Joe's power.
Third thought: my God, those backup singers. They had better be in "Twenty Feet From Stardom."
Watching him do it on stage, it's easier now to see the amount of emotion he contained in this. Now, it's a 9.
lily34 wrote:
i just watched that this past weekend and laughed and laughed just like the first time i saw it.
That bears repeating! Best cover ever.
i just watched that this past weekend and laughed and laughed just like the first time i saw it.
I suspect Mt Cocker is very high on Bill's all time fave artist list.
I only grew to like him in relatively recent times.
Some 10 days ago, I was in awe watching him, a young lion roaring godlike at Woodstock.
Now recent pictures of him are everywhere. How weird; I know it's the same man, but it's weird. Age is weird. (I'm just saying what I felt... not trying to add a line to anything.)
Love the Woodstock version...particularly the part when the hairy shirtless dude offstage swings when the band hits it!
Yep. That's it.
Normally I prefer the original version of a song, but this one is one of the rare covers even better than one of my favourite songs ever.
Original: 9
Joes cover: 10
fully agree! (only for me a 9)
Yep. That's it.
Normally I prefer the original version of a song, but this one is one of the rare covers even better than one of my favourite songs ever.
Original: 9
Joes cover: 10
1. Beatles are by far my favorite band ever. They are the greatest, amazingly so even after 40 plus years.
2. Your comment is absurd. I will gladly loan you all that you need to buy a clue. Joe did the most fantastic original interpretations of some very good songs, this being the best of the bunch.
Everybody under the covers with me loves The Church!
You are welcome in my mushrooming multitude of churches anytime!
Love this cover... we be dancing like bowlegged gypsy muleskinners....
Everybody in my churches loves this classic cover...
Everybody under the covers with me loves The Church!
Indeed, back in the time this was recorded we went to a concert of his in a town called Hamilton, (downunder in little NZ) - JC was TERRRIBBLLLEEE, drunk, couldn't remember lines, out of tune -
but i do like this song and glad he cleaned up his act
So he did sing out of tune. Did you stand up and walk out on (him)?
Everybody in my churches loves this classic cover...
Indeed, back in the time this was recorded we went to a concert of his in a town called Hamilton, (downunder in little NZ) - JC was TERRRIBBLLLEEE, drunk, couldn't remember lines, out of tune -
but i do like this song and glad he cleaned up his act
I guess it must be high on Bills personal fave list.
That's cool! I'm going to be watching that, from now on.
And as much as I love this, it's the theme to Wonder Years for me.
I don't get the above comment. This is one of the few Beatles covers that actually brings something to the table. Judy Collins' "In My Life" comes to mind as another.
Maybe the only time you can say that about a Beatle's song.