Anyone who was alive during the 60s know of all of these bands. What a great time for rock music. ❤
@JayThatsMe4 ай бұрын
As a child of the 50's and 60's I will never let my music of that era fall off my radar. Period.
@taylordw4 ай бұрын
Once the music of your youth drops off your radar, it’s rocking chair on the front porch time.
@iwanbottos51284 ай бұрын
Are you and previous commentator friends .Very similar stories,
@justanamerican90244 ай бұрын
Of course, the music we grew up with is the fabric of our lives
@jack002tuber4 ай бұрын
@@taylordw That way we can keep on rockin'
@DexterHaven4 ай бұрын
Ok, boomer, keep playing your Pat Boone records. hehe
@theywentforfaygo4 ай бұрын
These bands are not forgotten and are celebrated by millions of us. They are a part of music history and will live on
@John_Wick20244 ай бұрын
Absolutely..my youth
@VLind-uk6mb3 ай бұрын
Is this list nuts? The Seekers? Judith Durham may have had the greatest female voice in popular music of all time. And the songs are timeless and unforgettable -- I just have to hear an opening chord and it all comes back to me.
@bluebellbeatnik4945Ай бұрын
they only live on if the younger generations embrace them which isn't happening...
@markleaman83134 ай бұрын
Im a child of the 50s and none of these band have dropped of my radar, Alexa plays them every day for me!
@markmurphy96414 ай бұрын
Mine too..
@burtongillies8264 ай бұрын
I’ve still got a couple of Chambers Brothers 3:31 albums and nothing to play them on.
@markleaman83134 ай бұрын
@@burtongillies826 that's sad, check out the used electronics stores, you may find a hidden gem!
@bruceraymond21144 ай бұрын
You beat me to it. I grew up in the 50's and 60's and was familiar with all of these bands. I haven't forgotten any of them.
@mudnducs4 ай бұрын
You’re not alone brother
@peterstudley18044 ай бұрын
These groups are NOT forgotten, I play this stuff all the time. Have you ever wondered why no one ever whistle anymore ? Because there's bugger all worth whistling to. For the last few decades, music has gone down the crapper.
@DoubleMrE4 ай бұрын
Down the crapper is right. Since the turn of the century, I’ve added less than one song per year to my music collection. The victory of style over substance is virtually complete now-a-days. 😖 It all started with MTV imo.
@edwarddowd95024 ай бұрын
I don’t know,while I love the 60’sand70’s music, I like some of later stuff too along with a lot of 30’s 40’s 50’s music. One of my favorite bands is The Dollyrots,a pop/punk band from LA by way of Tampa
@lowreywhitson3 ай бұрын
@@DoubleMrE15:00
@DoubleMrE3 ай бұрын
@@lowreywhitson What’s your point? The Searchers don’t have anything to do with what I was saying. 🤔
@patriciajrs46Ай бұрын
Yes, it has.
@barbaraolson6783Ай бұрын
Great program, just love the music of 1960’s- 1970’s ! None of the music was under the radar, it was played constantly on the radio, in homes, offices and study groups. Music was everywhere. Concerts were the best time, music festivals, one of the best memories ever. Listening, singing, dancing, always.
@jeankeats32004 ай бұрын
This is when music was real music.
@pippadawg70373 ай бұрын
The songwriting was so good back then that it sounded like a team of studio veterans helped them write and play every note. Which they did. When Ringo sang that "he got by with a little help from my friends", he meant it. And lip-synching didn't just happen on TV shows. To this day your pop concerts are more like karaoke nights on steroids!
@thewinkler66474 ай бұрын
They have not vanished....that's the beauty of music, it never dies, exploring on platforms like YT is great.
@donwayne13574 ай бұрын
Give Middle Of The Road a listen.
@thewinkler66474 ай бұрын
@@donwayne1357 heard of them, I certainly will, thanks.
@HoustonRebel4 ай бұрын
And thanks to Thomas Edison for inventing a machine to record them to help make them timeless.
@MarkRoberts-bj2me3 ай бұрын
These groups have not been forgotten by the chics and the cats that grew up in the 60's. This vid should be called Great Groups of the 60's Kids of Today Have Never Heard. You gotta feel sorry for them considering the many talent challenged "musicians" recording the artificial corporate noise of today.
@phylliselizahb10413 ай бұрын
This kinda show makes me wanna do radio again. MMom (WRUW 1972-1990)
@doughartley35134 ай бұрын
The Seekers will never been forgotten.
@michellepeoplelikeyoumurde83734 ай бұрын
Owe it all to Tom Springfield and uk public
@reb10504 ай бұрын
It's really hard to comment about these bands of the 60's. Born in 1949, played drums for a local small town garage band in South Arkansas from 1964 until 1970, I remember them all. I even had the opportunity to meet a couple of them when they played at a local college. When I retired back in 2012, one of the first things I did was buy a set of drums to go into my "man cave". Now, at 74, I still play along with all those sounds of the 60's and 70's. These groups may have fallen off the radar for some people, but they are alive an well out in what I affectionately refer to as, The Boom Boom Room. One set of drums, a 200 watt stereo system, and four 100 watt speakers, all nestled into a 12x20 "Man Cave". The old man still likes to ROCK!
@jenniferdnoseworthy23484 ай бұрын
🤘🏻
@CarlFrreeland4 ай бұрын
Yeaaa that's brill mate,I wish I could play the drums again,not looking likely tho,lo
@lylemoors41943 ай бұрын
Good on you. We certainly remember the 60's a lot better and differently than the naive announcer who is obviously blank about our music era. Keep on rocking. Wish I could play with you. Good drummers are so hard to find here.
@reb10503 ай бұрын
@@lylemoors4194 I had to read my post over again and I cannot find anywhere I claimed to be a "good" drummer. Actually, I wasn't a very good drummer back in the 60's. But when I told my son of my intentions to get a set of drums, I also said I really didn't know why. His response? "Because they're fun". And you know what? He was right. I may not be very good, but I have a lot of fun with them and it also gives me the opportunity to listen to songs of my youth.
@bradknopp65023 ай бұрын
Well, sorry you don't think of yourself as 'good.' You already know, though, long as you're breathing, it's never too late. I think you should get a few other musicians together in your 'cave' and Really start rocking it. Who knows, it could lead to some fun performing... I have a friend in his '60s, who is now a drummer in a locally regularly performing band.
@Allen-fi4ke4 ай бұрын
"Time Has Come Today" by the Chambers Brothers is one of the most underrated psychedelic songs ever produced.
@janicebailey28983 ай бұрын
I agree. Still one of my favorite all time favorite songs
@RBAILEY572 ай бұрын
No other song captured the tragic, tumultuous year of 1968, or the entire decade of the 1960's, like "Time Has Come Today" did.
@garywallenphd8852 ай бұрын
A very cool song I still listen to today.
@chriscook56133 күн бұрын
I think I have all their albums
@hebneh4 ай бұрын
Being 70 years old, I certainly remember all these people. The reason they may no longer be known is the fault of the rigid playlists of oldies radio formats in subsequent decades, which reject a substantial segment of popular music of the past.
@richardpeddie20604 ай бұрын
The Seekers fallen off the radar, do me a favour, they were touring right until shortly before Judiths death in 2022 and Manfred Mann morphed into Manfred Mann's Earth Band and is still touring today, Manfred still playing keyboards as well as ever at 83 years of age !
@mkhnly4 ай бұрын
In 69, 70, they became Manfred Mann Chapter 3 a moody jazz version
@robert.m46764 ай бұрын
I hope in20 some years from now I’ll be an 80 year old who’s still active. I took care of my pops who turned 80 in 2014 until his death in 2018 was very much inactive and it was tough caring for him because he wanted to die at home. It was the least I could do for him after all he did for me.
@MrBsbotto3 ай бұрын
@@robert.m4676Bravo, mate! No choice, right?!
@VLind-uk6mb2 ай бұрын
I have a 4-disc set of the Seekers -- some of the best pop music of the period. And some lovely covers of classic songs. Because they had voices, and could play.
@jazzandbluesculturalherita25474 ай бұрын
That Aussie lass in The Seekers (Judith Durham) had a Hella powerful voice!
@johnwest79934 ай бұрын
She sure did.
@farnthboy4 ай бұрын
A true Aussie treasure - sadly gone but never forgotten.
@paulcurtis53174 ай бұрын
I had the mad hots for her when I was a young lad 😃
@lawrenceklein35244 ай бұрын
I will always remember her voice and her brilliant delivery. Rest In Peace ❤
@jazzandbluesculturalherita25474 ай бұрын
@@lawrenceklein3524 Yes, clear, bright, strong, more of an Alto than a Soprano. Perhaps a Mezzo Soprano?
@KristineHrabina4 ай бұрын
They have never dropped off the face of the earth, YOU HAVE!!!
@SamtheMan05084 ай бұрын
They haven't fallen off my radar.
@Thomas-qr3zv4 ай бұрын
I agree , to a true 60’s music fan we remember
@Thomas-qr3zv4 ай бұрын
I’ve seen Mark Linsey solo recently. Paul Revere in his own version of the group was actually more entertaining
@robert.m46764 ай бұрын
Nor mine even if I was born in 66. I still love the music my mom and pops played during my childhood. Elvis and The Sweet come to mind first. My dad bought me Little Willy thinking it fit me perfectly. I couldn’t have been 5 alongside Hound dog were played over and over. I loved those alongside hearing American top forty on the weekends and of course Paul Harvey news. Good day!!
@SamtheMan05084 ай бұрын
@robert.m4676 I loved the top 40 with Casey Kassem too, as well as Paul Harvey.
@Royalchess14 ай бұрын
Vintage, Thanks for the memories!!
@racketman2u4 ай бұрын
A lot of nitpicking in the comments, but this video deserves kudos for highlighting the great bands that for some reason have slipped from the wider public conscious. I still get a kick out of listening to the big hits of my childhood, like Manfred Mann's "Pretty Flamingo" or the Fifth Dimension's "Up, Up and Away". We need more of these great old songs in movie soundtracks, perhaps! I bet they would get a lot of new young fans.
@blackislepeastoo4 ай бұрын
The Seekers have NEVER fallen off the radar, Durham's voice is immediately recognisable.
@Waterfalls20163 ай бұрын
Sadly she passed away last year.
@joemc19604 ай бұрын
Herman's Hermits didn't fly under the radar, they were one of the biggest bands in the US in the '60s. And had a lot of hits
@stepanbandera52064 ай бұрын
Until "The Who" opened for them in 67.
@dunebillyofswanbeach42944 ай бұрын
@@stepanbandera5206 A mammoth underbill if there ever was one. Comparable to Hendrix opening for the Monkees. There's a reason that Herman's Hermits never recorded a 'Live at Leeds' album. /s
@gbsk124 ай бұрын
I would say of any of these bands their downfall was the biggest from outselling the Beatles to rarely hearing them today
@abberationify4 ай бұрын
Yea, strange really, Like the Dave Clark Five, they were far more successful in the US than in the UK, where there was a lot of talented groups they had to compete with at that time.
@ronaldyardley89654 ай бұрын
@@dunebillyofswanbeach4294 A Damn Good Reason!!😁👍
@farleyxwilbur38674 ай бұрын
A child of the 60s and I'll never forget. In fact, much of this music is still loved, even by young people, because it was music. The garbage of the 90s to now is what will be forgotten.
@edstein56424 ай бұрын
I lucked into seeing Jan & Dean perform with The Beach Boys in either 1978 or 1981… it was billed as “Beach Boys & Friends” because Jan’s ability to perform was in doubt at every show. He’d been seriously injured in that infamous car wreck at J&D’s peak. Anyhow, the BBs took a break… Dennis Wilson came to the mic & said “Ladies & Gentlemen, please welcome a Southern California legend!” A spotlight came on a guy at a 2nd mic & we heard “Well, the last thing I remember doc is I started to swerve…” & the stage lights came on, The Beach Boys were all on stage & they ripped into “Dead Man’s Curve”. It was unbelievable. They backed J&D on their biggest 6 hits. Jan was palsied from his wreck injuries & had a sheet of lyrics to follow & he sang heartily & whatever vocal impairment he had was swallowed up by the BBs harmonies. About 11,000 gave them a standing ovation for their set in the show & Jan was in tears. All the BBs gathered around him & gave a group hug to him. It was extraordinary.
@MrBsbotto3 ай бұрын
Aw, Ed, that's just EXCELLENT! Thank you so much for sharing that epic memory. What a classy thing for the Beach Boys and the crowd to do!
@eleni19682 ай бұрын
Ed Thank You for this memory trigger. I remember when this concert happened inspite of the fact I was about 13 y.o. at the time. It was 1981. Shortly before that concert happened, there was a made for TV film about Jan and Dean. I remember watching it here in NYC [where I'm from] and many of my classmates, especially the boys, had seen it as well. I always wondered if Jan was still alive and if so in what condition was he in at the time.I remember the evening news had highlighted the fact that the BB had featured J & D and the response they had gotten. In someways Jan & Dean made it possible for the Beach Boys to exist and thrive during the height of the British Invasion. I'm glad to have watched the movie about them. So when Jan & Dean had gotten a standing ovation by the audience and they also had gotten hugs from the BB I could appreciate why and what these 2 guys had been through. Especially since Jan should NOT have survived his circumstances. Yes I remember it was "Dead Man's Curve". Cheers from NYC
@Waterfalls201625 күн бұрын
I remember a few decades ago I think that I heard about his wreck and that concert. I’m gonna have to go back a find that story again. Thanks for sharing this.
@VLind-uk6mb3 ай бұрын
This list is insane. Jan and Dean? DC 5? Herman's Hermits? Manfred Mann? FORGOTTEN? By whom?
@stalbansbiker2 ай бұрын
Exactly
@willemvandeursen3105Ай бұрын
Herman Hermits I could never take serious. Manfred Mann was great from the very start. 'Davey's On The Road Again'!
@TheOriginalDroidАй бұрын
Yeah... My kids are in their 20's and know all of these bands. Of course because of me 😊
@YS-fr6nu6 күн бұрын
@@TheOriginalDroidyour good man , my kids are in 30’s & where forced listen to & from al sports games lol , they thank me know 😄😃😀
@valeriepickens25334 ай бұрын
I'm 64 years old, and for the first time in my life, I know what the band members of the band " The Archie's " look like! Thank you!
@jeankeats32004 ай бұрын
You took the words right out of my mouth!
@davidcolin65194 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, I doubt that the photo is actually of "the band" as they were session musicians who performed Sugar Sugar. The photo is probably from some BS publicity shoot.
@robomaster48824 ай бұрын
@@davidcolin6519You are correct. Just like The Grassroots, although after a hit record under that name a band was hastily formed to tour. Then had a string of more hits. Who played on those hits? Probably studio musicians.
@YS-fr6nu6 күн бұрын
Yes totally,great song eh 🇨🇦 lol
@diannespalding65424 ай бұрын
Most of these groups haven’t fallen off the radar. Many just got old and retired. The Seekers were super popular right up until Judith Durham passed away recently.
@burningblue12543 ай бұрын
I loved them and she was fantastic. In Australia Waltzing Matilda by The Seekers is the unofficial National Anthem. Heaven has a new angel.
@PuppydougАй бұрын
@@burningblue1254 "Waltzing Matilda" by The Seekers an unofficial anthem? Perhaps you've confused it with "I Am Australian". But agreed, there's a new angel in heaven. Her name is Judith.
@robertthompson69584 ай бұрын
In the sixties all these bands were in their 20’s. If still alive today they’re in their 80’s. And that’s why they’ve fallen off the radar of time.
@mham13304 ай бұрын
Led Zeppelin, The Rolling Stones, and The Who could be next, to fall off from the Radar. Janis Joplin as well, even though she is dead.
@sarahjeannepeterson55364 ай бұрын
The leader of The Temptations is still alive (and, I believe, performing).
@hiroehayes5934 ай бұрын
Wrong ! This music will live on forever, even if the artist doesn't. Un like most of todays bad music 🤔 🎶
@edwinsimmons31064 ай бұрын
😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅even earlier this this week 😅even e😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅er rYou reeu erreeru
@robertthompson69584 ай бұрын
@@hiroehayes593 …. Think of the music of your grandparents. The roaring 20’s. Swing and big bands. This music was super popular then but you’ll hear these tunes occasionally. The tunes of the 60’s may meet the same fate as time passes on and musical tastes change.
@633squadrongoodwin4 ай бұрын
Hippy Hippy Shake was not the Searchers, it was the Swinging Blue Jeans !
@stevebengel13464 ай бұрын
He said they covered it
@633squadrongoodwin4 ай бұрын
@@stevebengel1346 The Searchers didn`t cover it !
@stevebengel13464 ай бұрын
@@633squadrongoodwin you're correct, I see that the Searchers charted the same week as the Swinging Blue Jeans and that's probably where the confusion comes from
@petegregory5174 ай бұрын
Didn't think it but was gonna check it.
@Eirran24 ай бұрын
They even called Blood, Sweat & Tears a canadian collective. Never knew New York City was in Canada but that's where they started in 1967
@innertube474 ай бұрын
Procol Harum’s Whiter Shade of Pale videos are very popular. The original has 124M views, the live in Denmark one has 104M. They are often on “reaction” channels too, so, no, they aren’t forgotten
@mistermattmoose4 ай бұрын
conquistador was a great song too
@TooLooze4 ай бұрын
I'm 75 and whiter shade is one of my warm-ups for guitar and vocal every day.
@willemvandeursen31054 ай бұрын
They stood high above other 60's bands. I still don't understand why only their first album and Grand Hotel sold well. After 'Whiter Shade of Pale' they released 'Homburg', it was a top ten hit, but too similar to 'Pale'. With the emotional Salty Dog single, and armageddonian instrumental Repent Walpurgis, they were at their utmost best. All-time classics!
@randyacuna5643Ай бұрын
Procol harum is a classic rock band. They had a sound all their own. They have about 12 albums and I play at least 9 most all the time with many of the other groups that are metion here.
@willemvandeursen3105Ай бұрын
@@randyacuna5643 I wasn't wild about their five last five albums. They all have one track I really like, but the rest....nah. Gary Brooker made a few solo albums too. I miss the procol harum in them.... I realized that the original band behind Gary was very, very good.
@mudnducs4 ай бұрын
Whiter Shade of Pale…a GREAT song
@Richard-ic3ix4 ай бұрын
Followed up by the far less famous but still great Homburg.
@AlanBinfield3 ай бұрын
Played at my wedding 1973
@kathleentewksbury3634Ай бұрын
I melt every time I hear that song. ❤
@rjb63274 ай бұрын
Judy Durham passes in 2022 at 79yo. Rest in peace Judy.
@randomloafer4 ай бұрын
💔
@MrCtsSteve4 ай бұрын
I still listen to all this music .
@MrCtsSteve4 ай бұрын
I was born in 66 . I've always loved this stuff
@patriciajrs46Ай бұрын
Several, me too.
@seanhoward55624 ай бұрын
A lot of these legends aren't forgotten by us oldsters. They just weren't/aren't popular with later generations.
@TheFamousFile-USАй бұрын
As a fellow fan of timeless classics, I completely understand the joy of revisiting those iconic bands from the '50s! There's something so comforting and uplifting about the music that shaped our youth-it never fades. It’s wonderful that Alexa helps keep those tunes alive every day, bringing back cherished memories and keeping the spirit of that golden era alive in our hearts.
@z5123454 ай бұрын
Back in the 60's I had a band from Winchester Ma.that opened for the Dave Clark 5 in the Boston Gardens. It was a moment in my life I will never forget, 27,000 people to see the DC5.
@dunebillyofswanbeach42944 ай бұрын
That's a great date to land. What brought that opening gig about?
@z5123454 ай бұрын
@@dunebillyofswanbeach4294 That was their american tour, one of many.
@pgroove1634 ай бұрын
love the DC5..... Mike Smith was a great vocalist...
@pattypeace30973 ай бұрын
Yes, he was. His rendition of "You've Got What It Takes" is still one of my favorite vocal performances of anything.
@debswatching18 күн бұрын
What was the name of your band?
@margaretcottingham59202 ай бұрын
My parents were young adults in the 60s. I grew up listening to a huge stack of 45s from these artists and many, many more... Good times and great music!!!
@susanschley42654 ай бұрын
Love them all still listen to all their music
@DennisRodehaver4 ай бұрын
No.#1 my Sr year in high school Wolly Bully. We loved that song. 1965.
@PatriciaMcmullen-p7n4 ай бұрын
You forgot one of my favorite groups of the 60s... Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels. So many great hits when I was ateen. Now Im 74.
@pattypeace30973 ай бұрын
Yup
@derekstocker66614 ай бұрын
Thanks for this, some of the greatest sounds ever in pop and Jan and Dean are sure up there with the surf sound! Brilliant, well done on these!
@willemvandeursen3105Ай бұрын
J&D were heavily influenced by the Beach Boys. ....Or was it the other way around? 😁
@aguerra13814 ай бұрын
"People Got To Be Free". One of the best songs EVER!
@colinbaker39164 ай бұрын
The Seekers continued to play intermittently until Judith Durham died in 2022. In the 1990s, one of their most successful songs in their home country was I Am Australian.
@Waterfalls201625 күн бұрын
It broke my heart to hear about Judith’s passing and I think very close to when Olivia Newton John passed away. Two very talented women.
@muffassa67394 ай бұрын
😊 I always loved the bands and the wonderful music 🎶 ❤
@digitalbrand29303 ай бұрын
Thank you for posting these artists
@Knards4 ай бұрын
Lets remember, the Seekers attained cult status in Australia, and the band was never forgotten. Judith's death produced widespread mourning there
@PuppydougАй бұрын
And in the UK too.
@neverforget65234 ай бұрын
The Searchers never fell of radar of time. Still they are very present on radio. Iconic songs that will be heard for all times.
@glynnwadeson56054 ай бұрын
Judith D had a great ,rich distinctive voice, and I’d forgotten how good it was, it’s such a long time since I last heard them.
@glynnwadeson56054 ай бұрын
Sam the Sham and the Pharoahs were one hit wonders in the UK
@lorrianehancock-martinez79484 ай бұрын
Needles and Pins was co-written by Jack Nitszche and Sonny Bono.
@tsf5-productions4 ай бұрын
P. R. & R. (Paul Revere and The Raiders) - One of my favorite all-time rock groups. So fun to watch in performance! "Journey to the Center of Your Mind" (1968) - a great tune! The Seekers- enjoyable to listen to let alone watch. Great blended talent (Rest in Peace, Judith) Sam the Sham and The Pharaohs - "Hey There, Little Red Riding Hood" ... a cute tune. Sergeant Barry Sadler - 9 million copies of "The Green Berets" - a solid 1965 hit! Jan & Dean - several good tunes they had. The Marcels - "Blue Moon" a continous tune that is fun to listen to. The Searchers - several hot hits in the early to mid 60's with, one of my all-time favorites from them: "The Rainmaker" (1968). B.S. & T. (Blood, Sweat and Tears) so talented! Herman's Hermits - now that group had good manners! Peter Noone is a fantastic guy! The Rascals - Wow! And, how great was the '67 and '68 hit tunes made them a great memory. Manfred Mann - Umm... The Fifth Dimension - One great blended group that stands out. The Youngbloods - 1969's big hit: "Get Together" made them known. The Shadows - Oh so talentd and popular for many years! Poco Haram- Everytime I hear "A Whiter Shade of Pale" (early 1967) always reminds me of my very first "official date" and Gayle A. Dave Clark Five - another all-time favorite of mine that band leader, Dave Clark led and made more popular (in my opinion) the Rogers Drum Company...he could perform great snare drum and high-hat cymbals flare, I thought. Yep...the D.C. Five was the greatest threat to The Beatles, as the teen magazines of that era said. The Kingsmen - "Louie Louie" ... an easy song to play to the "risky 'F-Bomb' word". And, if I understand/remember, those guys came from my birth hometown: Indianapolis. The Archies - cute tunes in their best two years. I have their Greatest Hits album.
@hollywoodharriet134 ай бұрын
Great bands and great music that I still listen to today.
@KathyWaldo-o9nАй бұрын
Gary Puckett & the Union Gap. Tight band, massive hits that threw Beatles off the charts & yummiest face to watch of any lead singer.
@debswatching18 күн бұрын
I met Gary Puckett during the 1986 Monkees’ Reunion Tour. Gary was dating Morgan Fairchild at the time!
@maxv68374 ай бұрын
I thank god every day that I did not grow up in the age of rap "music" 🎊💃🍹
@robmontier37703 күн бұрын
The only good rapper is around a Twix.
@sallymiller13594 ай бұрын
These were iconic classic bands that required talent to be appreciated and deemed legendary. Who can even sing like the Seekers anymore? When you are raised with expectations to succeed and it takes talent to get there, people remember. Many of these bands were in it for the love of music, not the almighty dollar. They had integrity. I see very little of that today in anything and pop culture reflects this downward spiral. I am glad I came of age in that era. I remember all of them and I'm sure those of us who grew up then do, too. I see nothing like the classics today. It isn't required to even get radio play. SAD
@JaneMurray-di3gq4 ай бұрын
Well said 👏
@richwood6784 ай бұрын
1955 chiming in:-) best music ever! Who can ever forget...
@thom-mark64434 ай бұрын
Gone but not forgotten. My Gen X and Millennial sons have this music on their playlists.
@scottbubb29464 ай бұрын
Oh hell, I wasn't even born until 1969 and I know, and love, all of these great bands. My 24 Y.O. daughter knows, and really likes, most of them. Great music is immortal, and so are the people who made it. As long as humans have ears, someone will be listening to these wonderful bands.
@lindapriorirish84 ай бұрын
you forgot little red riding hood... #1 hit here in MN, Sam M and the Pharos
@jeankeats32004 ай бұрын
Hey!!!! GREAT CATCH!!!!!! I remember that song and when it was a hit too!!!!!
@TooLooze4 ай бұрын
Red Riding Hood is associated with one of my favorite teenage memories. I was a junior in high school in '66.
@MelissaThompson4324 ай бұрын
"Hey There, Little Red Riding Hood" is at least as good as "Wooly Bully."
@JayAr709Ай бұрын
Hekkuvvan oversight
@nickpiscione871224 күн бұрын
Better
4 ай бұрын
These bands live on forever on the radio and KZbin,they are not gone or forgotten! But it was a nice trip down memory lane.😊
@willemvandeursen3105Ай бұрын
YT is a cornucopia that keeps delivering. YT was the best invention after the wheel!
@lordfancourt28793 ай бұрын
You really did a disservice to Procol Harum, a brilliant and long-lived band. Progressive rock is where they are mostly placed and they recorded albums well into the '90s and beyond. They were one of the first bands to play live with a full orchestra and have toured the world over. Gary Brooker, the pianist, lead singer and main songwriter passed away in 2022. A unique rock band with a long history.
@paul-ld9vhАй бұрын
I agree totally!
@AnneTerry-jb7mpАй бұрын
Yes I saw them play live with full orchestra at the London palladium October 9th 2018. It was a fantastic performance and night ❤❤❤R.I.P.Gary xxxxx
@BenjaminShulman4 ай бұрын
Forgotten? Are you nuts? Turn on any oldies radio station and you’ll hear all of these people.
@georgeschubert96524 ай бұрын
ARE YOU KIDDING ME??? These groups are alive and well in many of our memories. Typical media not doing any true research.
@nztrekker4 ай бұрын
The Seekers were still in the pubic eye until Judith Durham passed away two years ago.
@MMMarvelous4 ай бұрын
Blood Sweat and Tears has had almost 200 people who've been in the band over their almost 60 years, but they're still touring to this day, so they're definitely not a forgotten band.
@paulsawtell39914 ай бұрын
They did have some musicality about them though; unlike the vast majority of the rest.
@MMMarvelous4 ай бұрын
@@paulsawtell3991 If you have a band with horns in it, you know there's some good players in it, at least above-average. James William Guercio produced BST's 2nd album and also produced most of The Buckinghams hits, but was mainly known for producing a dozen of Chicago's early albums & also his Caribou Ranch Studio in Colorado where everybody & their mama recorded in the 70s. He liked bands with horns in them obviously. Elton John recorded his 1974 album at Caribou & that's why he named it that, plus he did 2 more albums there afterward.
@adrinathegreat30954 ай бұрын
None have vanished under the radar, some have retired, many have died, virtually all get played on commercial radio and they are still getting royalties
@WillyBluefield4 ай бұрын
Oxymoron alert ... true legends are never forgotten.
@terereynolds69826 күн бұрын
I grew up in the 60's and 70's. I'm 66 and I haven't forgotten them, their music helped me get through some pretty rough times when I was a kid. For many of us kids, music was all we had. My best friend was more like the sister I didn't have, but we as close to being sister as you could get, we still text every day. We would hold our hairbrushes like microphones and act like we were giving a concert, it was silly, but fun.
@buddy38864 ай бұрын
One thing about the 60s groups no two songs ever sounded the same ,not like groups of today.
@paulsto65164 ай бұрын
I remember when we could hear Johnny cash, Tom jones, Rolling Stones and Simon & Garfunkel on the same radio station, in the same afternoon!
@AlanBinfield4 ай бұрын
Correct!!!!
@AlanBinfield3 ай бұрын
Bang on mate!
@Brian_Patrick4 ай бұрын
"Chambers Brothers, who actually were all brothers..." /me looking puzzlingly at the drummer...
@June-d5q4 ай бұрын
Brother from another.
@markmoriarty73884 ай бұрын
@ Brian Patrick The four Chambers Bros were brothers, with the white drummer, Brian Keenan.RIP. Both Lester Cambers the youngest brother and Brian Keenan were freinds of mine. Their song " time Has Come Today " is considered to be the most embryonic song of the later 60s.
@dunebillyofswanbeach42944 ай бұрын
@@markmoriarty7388 And 'Time Has Come Today' has been deftly interpreted by Steve Earle among others. It ranks among the best of songs written during the 1960's Civil Rights struggle.
@AmazingColorizing4 ай бұрын
Drummer, Brian Keenan was the White Sheep of the family.
@bdickinson67514 ай бұрын
@@markmoriarty7388 Loved that song then and even more today!
@mjhzen83134 ай бұрын
The Chambers' brothers move from Mississippi to California was a good one. Frankly, moving from Mississippi would be a good move for anyone.
@brotherbob35694 ай бұрын
Come on down and visit us on the coast. Great place to live.
@jimmycain86694 ай бұрын
Mississippi is heaven for black folks
@frankdardano31824 ай бұрын
I remember most of these,but Im 72,and liked music.These people are almost a hunded years oldThe Searchers needles and pins,hippy hippy shake,others so great!
@willemvandeursen3105Ай бұрын
These singles didn't highlight their vocal harmonies. It was with Needles and Pins that they progressed. They also had excellent single B-sides: I'll Be Missing you, and the magnificent EP The System! My father, not a 'pop' fan : I like these Searcher guys better than your Beetels!"
@thomastimlin17244 ай бұрын
I saw Jan and and Dean with the Beach boys in Concert, and the Marcels in a Motown type concert. They were fabulous.
@gulfgypsy3 ай бұрын
My husband needed a triple bypass and his surgeon told him his prognosis was not good. Still my husband said he'd risk the surgery rather than not. The hospital where he was had a large, state of the art cardiac unit. The patient was brought directly from the OR to their private room for recovery. I was in the room waiting for him and saw him being brought in, still intubated, but his skin was the most beautiful, healthy pink - He'd been so ill for so long, so grey and ashen that seeing the flush of his working better was the most wonderful sight. Once they had him hooked up to telemetry they suggested I keep talking to him to help he come out from the deep sedation of surgery. I put my hand in his and played The Seekers 'I'll Never Find Another You' and he closed his fingers around my hand. In that moment, still intubated, still not fully out of the sedation, I knew my beloved would be alright. That surgery gave us 3 more precious years together. He is still my someone and I know we'll be together again.
@jazzandbluesculturalherita25473 ай бұрын
@@gulfgypsy Wow, how precious! I totally teared up and shook at reading this. So glad you had that final period together.
@lyndanance48123 ай бұрын
Bless you 💓
@1blastman3 ай бұрын
Great story, that my favorite Seekers song also.
@tjwhetstone4753 ай бұрын
I'm so sorry you lost your husband and best friend! He will most likely be back, according to the Bible it says there will be a resurrection of the righteous and the unrighteous! Only Jehovah God knows what category he falls into, but either way, he like many, many others will be back in the new world!
@jazzandbluesculturalherita25473 ай бұрын
@@tjwhetstone475 Yes, Man & Woman were the only part of God's Creation He created in His own image. Meaning that He gave us an everlasting soul. All humans, then, will be resurrected, and will live forever; that is, by way of our everlasting souls. Some to live forever with God in His presence, the rest to live forever in the Outer Darkness, separated from God, forever.
@pattyhall50604 ай бұрын
You need to play some of each band's songs. Less talk. More music!
@josephcooper66923 ай бұрын
KZbin restricts the max length of song cuts.
@SickAgain42934 ай бұрын
There is no band here I have forgotten! I remember them well!
@michaelmuzafarov81254 ай бұрын
Freddie Star and The Star boys -1964 Liverpool . The Scorpions -1965 from Manchester
@hiroehayes5934 ай бұрын
All Wrong! Not true ! Just because the bands are gone does not mean the music is. This great music lives on forever and ever ! 🎵🎶
@hiroehayes5934 ай бұрын
Maybe off most radio stations, but there are still some 1960's & 70's stations that play these bands everyday. My local one is KRVR, The River, 105.5 here in the San Joaquin valley, California. 🎵🎶
@deirdre1084 ай бұрын
Double-shot Of My Baby’s Love by The Swinging Medallions. Garage Rock at its finest-even sounds like it was recorded in a garage! Who could not love one of the most recognizable organ riffs in rock?
@gogoyubari3664 ай бұрын
They're not forgotten!
@paulsawtell39914 ай бұрын
Nostalgia isn't what it used to be...
@greggabel72384 ай бұрын
I was born in 1963, Jan and Dean never would I forget as I got older
@JuanLopez-ef5pr4 ай бұрын
Forgotten and sixties will never belong together.
@berenicehickey97554 ай бұрын
Born '57. Know them all! At 19 I became part of the punk rock explosion in London....
@janicebailey28983 ай бұрын
Agree. I was born in 1956. At 10 I had a transistor radio that I carried evetywhere. Only had am radio that went off the air early in the evening. I kept in on all night so I wouldn't miss a song when it came back on. Yes mom bought lots of batteries.
@1blastman3 ай бұрын
What about - Mama's and Papa's? Blues Magoos? Left Banke? Them? We Five? Ventures? Nazz? Wind in the Willows? Sons of Champlain? Quicksilver Messenger Service? Blue Cheer? Moby Grape? Alexis Koerner? Cyril Davies? JoAnne Kelly? Groundhogs? Savoy Brown? The Herd? Grinder Switch? Poco? Atlanta Rhythm Section? Fallen Angels? Love? Traffic? Blind Faith? Derek and the Dominoes?
@alexpaton28182 ай бұрын
Wow some greats there Loved ARS. I think they ve all passed now from that band
@sirslice4 ай бұрын
Proof that even a phony AI voice can sound bad. Warning: Some of the info, in this video, is inaccurate.
@mrled85554 ай бұрын
You mean like the "trio" of the Youngbloods? (while every picture shows a foursome)😅
@ursula85683 ай бұрын
Bad AI authorship strikes again!
@lds12314 ай бұрын
Yes, some flawed commentary, but still very nostalgic and entertaining.
@stephenhensley56314 ай бұрын
You didn't mention Mandela, THE BIGGEST SOUL GROUP FROM CANADA ! George Oliver was the white James Brown . Check out the song "opportunity" and love-itis.
@Anglovox4 ай бұрын
I think, "Spanky & Our Gang" deserve mention....GREAT singles!
@steves.944019 күн бұрын
What a wild, fantastic and super collection of some of the best groups in da '60's. The best of times and, of course, some of the best tunes to hit the air, stage and beyond. So do remember listening to these songs (and more) while in Vietnam 68/69 and back stateside. Still have many LP's in my collections of these groups as well. Never tire of listening.
@jackschwartz17834 ай бұрын
I just ran into Peter Noone a couple weeks ago at a Truck Stop in the middle of the night but I didn't realize who I was talking to until later. Hermans Hermits played in a town in Iowa the next night.
@bendiksen502 ай бұрын
These groups are not forgotten. Procol Harum's A Whiter Shade of Pale is everlasting. And we remember the Young Rascals, the Seekers, the Shadows, the Searchers, Blood Sweat And Tears..... etc.
@oldad734 ай бұрын
The Seekers reformed and went on to make many more hits. Judith Durham died two years ago.
@HemiVicАй бұрын
As a Record collector, former Radio DJ, and Music historian, my heart and soul still live in the mid 1960’s. All of these bands mentioned in this news piece, I listen to today! It’s currently the year 2024 and my musical taste has never changed and never will!
@brendadrew8344 ай бұрын
Also a child/teenage of the 1950s and 60s! At least we can listen to their lasting legacies on KZbin or a CD! "Nothing is permanent", one of the major teachings of Buddhism! "Those were the days my friend, we thought they'd never end"...Mary Hopkins, British singer, remember her??
@BonnieHaynes-gg4nk3 ай бұрын
I will never forget Mary Hopkins
@BonnieHaynes-gg4nk3 ай бұрын
However front man Sir Cliff Richards is still going strong.
@Dragondave10004 ай бұрын
The Seekers later got back together and were touring in the UK, Australia and New Zealand, celebrating 50 years during this period.
@PuppydougАй бұрын
Agree. And this clown channel tries to tell us they'd fallen under the radar, long forgotten. TERRIBLE research (if any) on this channel.
@cathyhouston4 ай бұрын
Don Kirschner DID NOT create teh Monkees, he was their musical director
@peterliston16974 ай бұрын
Saw Mike Pindar of The Searchers before Covid at The Sunshine Festival in Worcestershire, He was brilliant
@633squadrongoodwin4 ай бұрын
Mike Pinder was with the Moody Blues, Mike Pender was with the Searchers.
@peterliston16974 ай бұрын
@@633squadrongoodwin I was never any good at spelling. D stream in a scondary modern school on Worcester
@633squadrongoodwin4 ай бұрын
@@peterliston1697 No worries mate, wasn`t being picky, just didn`t know for sure who you meant, enjoy your day.
@tommyboyindy11574 ай бұрын
Actually, I’m surprised how well the music of the Monkees has held up.
@marguskiis77114 ай бұрын
Mike Nesmith was a bit too talented to make bad music. He was a good actor too.
@tommyboyindy11574 ай бұрын
@@marguskiis7711 : damn right
@tommyboyindy11574 ай бұрын
@@marguskiis7711 Lorraine is a killer song no other Monkee could have written or performed. Mike was a talent.
@davidurman55954 ай бұрын
Yes, some of the stuff they did was really good. Going Down (sung by Mickey Dolenz) is a super-hot jazz-rock number telling a story that starts out in the depths of misery and ends up on top of the world. It gets me revved up and puts a big smile on my face every time.
@sandrisjansons15154 ай бұрын
Apparently judgment of which bands or singers one consider ''forgotten'' depends on the age. Those who lived and listened music in 60's and 70's never called some of the above mentioned bands forgotten , or one hit wonders , or underrated.
@henriettechristensen21354 ай бұрын
As a European born in 1967 I have heard about approximately 15 of these bands ... Partially thanks to a local radio-DJ playing Searchers etc all the time
@michaelfischer8412 ай бұрын
Paul Revere and the Raiders -- GREAT Band !
@michaeleasterwood65584 ай бұрын
All these bands are remembered
@smilanesi983 ай бұрын
Squeezed out whatever nickles, dimes, and quarters to buy so many of these songs back then. They never fade from memory.
@davesubers34154 ай бұрын
Ai might want to forget them but we never will!
@roywood98914 ай бұрын
Thank you for the encouragement. Been playing for decades. Fear failing in front of a crowd. Want to gig solo. Not hide behind a band.
@kevinbergin66744 ай бұрын
How could you not have heard of Procul Harum? Their guitarist Robin Trower had huge success in the USA during the 1970's