My partner lived that moment. On April 23, 1961 he was a handsome 23 year old living in Manhattan and by some accident of history he managed to have a ticket (he wasn’t a particular fan of Judy Garland at the time but his roommate insisted that he go with him). Even though my partner is bedridden today and living in a long term care facility he can still remember that night vividly. He tells me that it seemed as if every celebrity in America was present and even before the overture started there was such an incredible buzz of anticipation in the air that the atmosphere was nothing short of electric. Once Judy came out and began to sing the connection between her and each member of the audience was so instantaneous that it felt like a swift punch to the gut. From that moment on it was almost impossible not to be swept away by everything she did. Through song after song Judy and the audience fed off each other until finally the entire space seemed to be enveloped in a powerful and overwhelming feeling of love. My partner tells me that there was something more going on in that room that night than just a mere concert. It was a complete coming together of hearts and souls, a quality he says that the recording only hints at. As my partner puts it, “You just had to be there to understand what really happened. All of us-all 3000 people-we were all one.”
@johndalton31808 ай бұрын
Your partner is a lucky man. Wow.
@starcrib8 ай бұрын
Fascinating: it seems to have been a "TIME LOCK"- for instance *( Kennedys Assassination or 9/11 World Trade Twin Towers)- Where a confluence of cultural memory, a Juggernaut of collective cultural aspirations and deep wounding unraveled with the sheer force of cosmic destiny in time and space 3,000 people were live wires conjuring a reflection of infinite mirroring. I think your partner was absolutely correct. ✨️🫵🏻🫵🏻🫵🏻🫵🏻🫵🏻✨️✨️🇺🇲🌿🇺🇲
@chiaralistica8 ай бұрын
Wishing your partner all the best in their journey...
@jadezee63168 ай бұрын
but did you have a partner? sheesh
@rlmack58 ай бұрын
Enviable!
@rlmack59 ай бұрын
This is IT! ... Listen to this double record through at one go, and you'll never be the same again. Miss Garland was a natural genius.
@jennapherhague57289 ай бұрын
Incomparable‼️♥️
@ginakearney41469 ай бұрын
The Man That Got Away very much knocked me out. I was just so floored by it. You could have heard a pin drop during the pauses if a pin was dropped because the audience was *so* quiet during that performance. You can just tell how mesmerized they were watching this. Then that absolute crescendo of applause and the roar that broke out at the end. My gosh.
@josephcjoejoelast78829 ай бұрын
But for God's sake, skip this video. Yes, do as @rlmack5 instructs you. Go listen to that concert in one go and LIVE IT!! Believe us. You will indeed imagine/ dream/ fantasize that you are there. Let your heart break. Then let it laugh. Let your soul triumph. Then "Do it Again". Experience the record of this night as it was meant to be experienced. Without idiots pulling out their goddamned phones and watching it on a tiny smartphone screen. Or worse yet, a notepad. Now go. I hear the orchestra starting the overture!! Peace.
@UncleDuTheWatchman9 ай бұрын
This is true. I'll never forget my first play through.
@Buckboy20248 ай бұрын
Hear, hear!
@robwyckoff39829 ай бұрын
I found a slightly used vinyl copy of this years ago for $7.50 and thought, "meh, what the hell? Not really my thing, but I heard it's a classic." Then, I played it...immediate fan for life. No live recording before or since has made me feel like I was actually there when it happened. The energy is contagious.
@13blackcatzzz7 ай бұрын
You found a steal!
@carlosfernandez13006 ай бұрын
And that’s just the vinyl - the full digital recording with the vamping in between songs makes it even better
@excrono29 күн бұрын
I recently what found what turned out to be the LA pressing of this album at a Goodwill and there was life before and after hearing “I Cant Give you Anything But Love”. I felt that magic and so did the audience in 1961. Sax solo had me wrapped around it’s little finger.
@jcnyc90878 ай бұрын
Judy was at the apex of her stellar career with her incomparable Carnegie Hall concert, the recording of which forever cemented her rarefied status among the 20TH century's great entertainers! Forever Judy!
@mjd45029 ай бұрын
In regards to San Francisco, someone told Jeanette MacDonald about Judy’s quips in the show. Jeanette’s response was, “as long as it’s Judy!” Jeanette had a sense of humour.
@cuucnsbfl99139 ай бұрын
Joe W. Says: My late Mother - who was born in 1926 - so was almost the same age as Judy Garland - used to say that she Adored seeing Jeannette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy singing together in the movies when she was a girl - it gave her a sense of what Romance Really WAS - and she watched them every chance she got! Mom grew up in a musical household and she dreamt of becoming a Boogie Woogie pianist herself - but opportunity knocked, she accompanied a friend to a job interview in the 1940s and ended up being offered the job (her friend wasn't!) - in Miami - my mother became a Stewardess for TWA and ended up flying all over the Caribbean and Latin America! This would become a trove of memories when she ended up marrying a very dashing and handsome member of the Ground Crew and being a 1950s Housewife (No Pressure THERE, LoL!) - many years later, when I was accepted into Art College, my mom told me, "Never Give Up Your Dreams!" I believe Judy Garland Didn't. She Blessed the world with her gifts. My mother never became famous. However, she blessed many people with her loving Spirit. USE Your Gifts, people! Give the World what you've Got!
@rmp74009 ай бұрын
@@cuucnsbfl9913 Indeed & share with joy😊 However, if the opportunities do not present themselves during this lifetime...remember that Eternity is forever, and there is music indeed in the Heavens❤
@windstorm10009 ай бұрын
@@cuucnsbfl9913beautiful. I spiring. Thank you !
@waynedaves50899 ай бұрын
You could be jabbed by worse. Greatest performer. The American "Edith". Judy. I have a photo of her I had framed, arms down by her side, small feet akimbo shoulders slumped chest out, chin down, about to SORE... From a great distance, you know it can only be Judy. A gift from the Gods.
@MrCrowebobby8 ай бұрын
@@waynedaves5089 Evidently, Jeanette used to make unkind remarks about Judy's looks when Judy was younger. And much as I love Judy, no one has ever been the American "Edith" if you're talking about Edith Piaf. I saw her at Carnegie Hall. It was the greatest theatrical experience of my life.
@belorama89 ай бұрын
Nope, it doesn't matter what else I was doing! BKR Just dropped and the thumbnail has Judy on it!!
@andresbecerra11839 ай бұрын
Literally. Like sorry clients, the meetings will have to wait.
@pedroozy9 ай бұрын
SO TRUE!!!!!
@michaelcain93249 ай бұрын
Me too.
@katecoffee47449 ай бұрын
Amen!
@ginakearney41469 ай бұрын
SAME. Just sat down for lunch and I couldn't hit play fast enough.
@tiio22089 ай бұрын
To this day, Judy remains an icon of immeasurable status. Few artists could hope to achieve what she has with this concert and the subsequent live album. Her voice, as often, was not perfect that night - she had shaky moments and sometimes her voice would crack. It's her story, her energy, her love for music & Judy herself that made this show the "perfect concert". Her voice was like no other and her delivery of any song was nothing short of impeccable. Making Judy the sole focus of this show was a brilliant decision. On top of that, she had a fighting spirit that you rarely find in artists (to this degree). It could've been the worst night of her life and she'd still try her hardest to put on a fabulous show.
@ILikeDemocracy73 ай бұрын
Right there with you!
@1aikane8 ай бұрын
As a singer, having 26 songs ready for performance is no easy task. Very impressive!!
@Nikki-tx6kh8 ай бұрын
Yeah, that's a whole Eurovision final ( a very European reference), and that's performed one performer per song, the smae person doing them all...she had some stamina.
@LaurenceDay-d2p7 ай бұрын
She had sung them all dozens of times.
@andyroo93819 ай бұрын
Judy Garland At Carnegie Hall is an incredible album. The best, and only way, to listen to it is relaxed and all at once. It demands this level of respect. Even though she is performing at Carnegie Hall, it feels so personal. You can, easily, imagine yourself there in the audience with Judy. It's an experience.
@stevers629 ай бұрын
Absolutely, and play it LOUD to get the feel.
@berliozophile9 ай бұрын
You nailed it!
@rlmack59 ай бұрын
Amen
@TangSongs9 ай бұрын
Best live album ever!
@anairenemartinez1659 ай бұрын
Is it in youtube? I thought this was it, not a freaking lecture.
@youleftyourgoogleaccopenon54719 ай бұрын
My father bought me this album when I was in high school I was a huge and still am a huge Judy Garland fan. He said he was here and grown men were sobbing in the audience. That’s how great this was.
@charlottewood49339 ай бұрын
Judy’s private life breaks my heart, but her talent fills my heart with joy
@Mrvictorfernandes9 ай бұрын
Outside of Karen Carpenter, Maria Callas and Billie Holiday, Judy is one of the very few singers who can still reduce me to teary eyed goosebumps within less than thirty seconds, ever since I was exposed to her at about 10 years old. "Do It Again" from the Carnegie Hall album never fails to tear my insides apart for being so seductive and yet so heartbreakingly vulnerable in its subtle delivery... Goddamn... 😭
@antoniodre9829 ай бұрын
Same, heavy on Billie Holiday
@mervyngreene66879 ай бұрын
I would include Aretha Franklin to that list.
@Mrvictorfernandes9 ай бұрын
@@mervyngreene6687 Aretha's gift is incredible. I love her to bits. "Amazing Grace" is one of my all time favorite albums. She hits me in the feels without doubt, but, for some reason, (I don't know why) it takes a while for her voice to penetrate and reduce me to a sobbing state to the point of sanctification. Whereas, the three women I mentioned have been bringing me to tears within less than half a minute since I was about 10 or 11 years old and continue to do so, which says something. Singers like Judy and Aretha (as well as Karen, Maria and Billie) seem to possess this ability of letting their listeners subconsciously take in the depths of their emerging emotions and face them with a sense of hushed wonder. It's otherworldly, for want of a better word.
@mervyngreene66879 ай бұрын
@@Mrvictorfernandes I think it is an example of the old adage that "art is personal." I understand your reaction to Billie, Karen, and Judy. There is something fragile and vulnerable about their voices. I think that there are a lot of women who are "technically" better singers. But very few had the ability to touch us in such a visceral way. On the other hand, Aretha and Maria (Jessye Norman and MAYBE Sarah Brightman) are SINGERS! They have it ALL! And, EVERYONE knows it: *I don't really like that kind of music, but, yeah, she is great!"
@TrangPakbaby8 ай бұрын
Her rendition of “cottage for sale” literally rips my heart out. Such a beautiful woman inside and out.
@allancuseo74319 ай бұрын
Great job. I was there for both nights - in the audience and backstage with her in the dressing room. I was also in NYC for the funeral and was at Stonewall the night before the riot. Yes, Judy was an influence. It was only her music on the jukebox and we all wept and held each other. Did she cause the riot - no. She was the final straw after years of raids and abuse.
@Silvestre-jx7ez9 ай бұрын
Wow! Thank you for sharing your important personal stories of history with us. It is very generous of you to do so.
@meganmurderpint81199 ай бұрын
Wow- what an incredible experience. I’m sure you have fascinating stories!
@allancuseo74318 ай бұрын
oh I do
@gaylefranklin8 ай бұрын
My goodness! Amazing…. Thank you, so much for sharing this history. “She was the final straw..” that hit me me so powerfully! Bless you, Allan
@chiaralistica8 ай бұрын
@@allancuseo7431you should write a book. I'm sure it would be a best seller! What an experience you've had.
@Richie8a8y8 ай бұрын
I picked up a copy in 1982 somewhere in Greenwich Village. I knew it was special and enjoyed listening to it often. In 2006 I discovered two ticket stubs for the second evening and a note about the evening. I own property but the album and its contents on my prize possession.
@ChickenxBoneless9 ай бұрын
This live album is my favorite to clean to. I play it every time I have to move to a new place. Judy was a gem and deserved better.
@mcolville9 ай бұрын
One of my new favorite hobbies is pausing BKR videos and reading all the other articles in the quoted newspapers.
@brendano54409 ай бұрын
I just can't believe that people spoke of the greatest entertainer of her time. The studios destroyed her with drugs along with her mother but she plowed through and did such a great job starting at a very young age. They said when she was learning her songs she never made a mistake. I just love this woman and her daughters. I don't like when people speak badly of her. Rip love.
@kimquinn77289 ай бұрын
Her singing of Stormy Weather always rips my heart out and blows me away. Began listening to the Carnegie Album at 11 years old. Now, I'm 64, it just gets better and better. She was 4'11" physically but she was a collosus of heart and voice. Love, love, love.
@alpe19879 ай бұрын
I’ve listened to the live album on and off over the years and I do feel it’s the best live album of all time and only Judy Garland could achieve such status
@kencarole84153 ай бұрын
I agree that was a magical night That concert had it all of course the great Judy great songs great Orchestra. Judy was in great voice that night. The greatest live album ever recorded still after all these years.
@cassiecarpenter9 ай бұрын
There’s a reason they called her “leather lungs” - she’s a motherfucking rockstar and it’s on full display on this album (of course I own it). 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
@stanleycostello96109 ай бұрын
In spite of all the books, articles, reminisces, TV shows and movies about Garland, we shall never know what made her tick. It's been over a century since she was born and we are still fascinated with Judy.
@frederickcombs86619 ай бұрын
i knew someone that saw this and he said many in the audience just sat for the longest time once the show was over. it was like they needed to reacclimate, rest and able themselves to deal with JUDY being done and off the stage.
@juniorjames70769 ай бұрын
My parents were immigrants from the French Caribbean, so I grew up in the late 70s listening to both Black Caribbean, Latin, and European orchestral/vocal arrangements from the '40s to the '70s. Judy Garland was next to Edith Piaf, Nana Mouskouri, and Ceclia Cruz in my mother's Saturday evening playlist.
@flazeda87438 ай бұрын
Bel héritage l'ami. ❤👋
@AC000099 ай бұрын
I was raised on Judy Garland movies that my Grandma dearly loved. When I was old enough to learn about her life it totally broke my heart the way she was used, abused, and ultimately destroyed by almost everyone in her atmosphere. Thank you for the great deep dive into this amazing concert.
@WobblesandBean9 ай бұрын
The men who made Hollywood were all horrid, horrid people. Especially to women.
@hyperballadbradx64869 ай бұрын
It's no over statement that this recording is the greatest live album in history. Judy is stellar. She puts her very heart and soul into every word. Even the fluffs are purely heaven! Thanks for this and always championing Judy and her legacy. I will love her forever.
@AxelQC8 ай бұрын
The Man that Got Away is one of the most beautiful songs ever written.
@srothbardt7 ай бұрын
Right!!
@eamonndeane5876 ай бұрын
A True Classic of a Torch Song. It's my Favorite of all the songs Judy Garland originated.
@baratheda7774 ай бұрын
The song hits so hard
@Hannahgs9 ай бұрын
When I was in high school (2009/2013) was around the time records were coming back into style, modern artists were releasing things on vinyl and I wanted a record player so bad! I got one for Christmas one year along with a bunch of my parents'/family's old vinyls. My dad (an avid thrift store shopper) had even bought me some more he had found at a local thrift shop to us, one being Judy at Carnegie Hall. At that point in my life, I primarily knew Judy from two movies I loved: Wizard of Oz and Meet Me in St Louis. The record blew my mind lol. To this day, Judy at Carnegie Hall is one of my most listened-to vinyls and I will listen to it in any other format as well if I'm away from my record player. I have it on CD, Spotify, and as an actual purchased download on my ancient iTunes account lol. It is what made me fall in love with Judy and her voice and to read and consume any info I could on her life. I related so much to her, her struggles and her insecurities and her addiction issues. I'm getting a tattoo of her lol. I don't think it's for everyone, her voice is so unique and that era of music can seem dated to a lot of people. But to me, it genuinely is one of the greatest nights in entertainment history. I hope, if there is an afterlife, Judy knows so many people loved her for HER. For her talent and charisma and hard work. And wished the best for her even outside of all of that. I hope she is resting. Also, she was always gorgeous. Until her final days, a gorgeous talented true performer and she deserves to be recognized for that instead of constantly torn down like she was. I genuinely hate how the media, still, feels the need to be negative about women. Let's look at even the most like universally loved and gorgeous women of history since Judy: Marilyn Monroe, Jayne Mansfield, Princess Diana, Anna Nicole Smith, Britney Spears...all faced so much abuse by the public and by the media. I hope with all of the stories that are now being made public about their time in the spotlight we as a culture can finally stop the cycle. Treat stars and the women in our own lives like the human beings they are.
@harlow91759 ай бұрын
Comedian Jack Carter said old timers said Al Jolson was the greatest entertainer. After seeing Judy at CH he said "Jolson would have opened for Judy Garland!" Still a powerhouse of a record.
@openquin19 ай бұрын
I read a book by Mel Tormé about working on The Judy Garland show and he told a story about her singing Over the Rainbow and how affecting it was, she said don't come tomorrow because you'll be disappointed, mainly because the tear during the song happened at exactly the same time, which demonstrated that Judy was an actress first who happened to be a great singer.
@stanleycostello96109 ай бұрын
I have that book. I remember him saying that.
@stevers629 ай бұрын
…and Judy began calling him Mel Torment after their working relationship went sour, so take that book with a grain of salt. For a less egomaniacal and more balanced/researched book about the Judy Garland show was Coyne Steven Sanders book “Rainbows End”. Excellent book if you haven’t read it.
@anairenemartinez1659 ай бұрын
I read during the Palace run, on Boadway, she was often drunk. Matter of fact, somebody actually saw her, and yes, so very drunk. She wasn't at her best, then one night the audience rioted. She was shocked into reality, you gotta be good, best, every time. She sat on the stage and sang Under the rainbow a capella....she had them, again, in the palm of her hand.
@MrZviswerd8 ай бұрын
He was referring to her Palace Theater concert. And his point was that she was such a consummate performer that she could control the real emotion she actually felt. Her tear was staged and genuine. That is showmanship.
@jadezee63168 ай бұрын
yes,,this is true...and shows exactly what great singing is all about...acting
@mauriboquitas9 ай бұрын
It's hard for me to measure the impact Judy has had on my life. I discovered her at a very complicated time in my teens and just latched onto her as a lifeboat. It was the voice. Before I saw any of her films I was already very well acquainted with her sound, and this record in particular, because something about it resonated with the turmoil I was feeling. It was as if she could vocalize all the things I could not. Every crack, every wobble. And yet, she kept on singing through it all. Always at the risk of falling apart, of her instrument failing her. And I loved her for it. Nobody has been more vulnerable onstage, or more generous with her audience. And it's hair-raising the way you can hear them loving her back. Clapping, yelling, begging for more. Just the way I did so many years after them. She made it through, which made me think I could do it too. And now hearing BKR break down the tracks I've loved for so long is a very special experience. Thank you.
@marabanara9 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your love of Judy Garland. I adore her and loved her as a child, watching all the daytime tv broadcasts of her films. I’m 40 now but always loved her and still do. Her voice is magical but more than this, she seems to give some of her soul to each performance. Just incredible.
@juniorjames70769 ай бұрын
My parents were immigrants from the French Caribbean, so I grew up in the late 70s listening to both Black Caribbean, Latin, and European orchestral/vocal arrangements from the '40s to the '70s. Judy Garland was next to Edith Piaf, Nana Mouskouri, and Ceclia Cruz in my mother's Saturday evening playlist.
@BroadwayGuy9 ай бұрын
I feel EXACTLY the same way.
@akrenwinkle9 ай бұрын
@@juniorjames7076 Celia.
@samazwe9 ай бұрын
I've been praying for times like these😭 This album experience is the closest I'll ever get to time traveling. For the past 9 years it has become a regular ritual of mine to dress up and sit down to listen to it without interruption. I wish it had been recorded on film, but the audio alone paints a vivid picture of what that night might've been like. Also, apparently Julie Andrews was in the crowd, too😮 Thank you so much❤
@JoyKeaton9 ай бұрын
Oh my gosh this actually sounds like such a fun way to relisten to this great album! ❤
@RandyWilsonESQ9 ай бұрын
This the best critical piece on her Carnegie Hall concert/ album period. Finally the focus is on Judy’s skills and talents and her vision of herself as an artist 🎉👍👏 thank you for giving Judy her due
@carlosgabrx9 ай бұрын
Just paused Cowboy Carter to watch this one. BKR + Judy = gold for sure.
@jacobmilburn13189 ай бұрын
Lmao same
@markgregorio3779 ай бұрын
Shut your pie !!! Get on with the concert!!!! We ant to hear Hudy NOT YOU!!!
@samazwe9 ай бұрын
Glad she also mentioned it in passing😂 If it doesn't win album of the year then the Grammys are truly dead. Opening track alone is already an all-timer
@tonyphillips11128 ай бұрын
when I was 13, my mother took me to Record Town and bought me this album. this was in 1983. I played the sh%t out of it. it's one of the best albums in the world. thank you so much for sharing this.
@tristan90us8 ай бұрын
I saw Judy in concert twice in 1961 doing the same show she did at Carnegie Hall with Mort Lindsay. Of course we stood on our chairs and shouted Brava. I saw Barbra in 1962 at the Blue Angel in an audience of 18. So lucky.
@wildsmiley9 ай бұрын
As a massive, massive Judy fan, I truly appreciated this fantastic video. She is my #1 favorite singer.
@rbfrondoso3209 ай бұрын
An hour of Judy Garland. . . YESSSS! ❤❤❤
@riorobbie9 ай бұрын
This event changed my life. My 7th grade Musi teacher asked me to do a report on Judy’s concert at Carnegie Hall. I have the record and cd. When I listen to it,I feel I was there.😊
@hiyahandsome9 ай бұрын
Thank you for covering my favorite album for over half a century and one of the legendary moments in show biz herstory, Judy Live At Carnegie Hall! It is a lasting testament to her amazing talent and never ceases to thrill and amaze.
@reparativetherapycenter7149 ай бұрын
BKR is simply the best review of movies and concerts I've ever seen. The analysis is so detailed and indepth that leads to meaningful dialog, proof of what is really true or false, and is entertaining as well. Terrific work. We need authentic critiques and information like this that truly educates and entertains.
@robbriner95757 ай бұрын
When I noticed the "Judy at Carnegie Hall" graphic on the title card of this video I skipped over it because I remembered listening to the original 2-album set on my dad's stereo in the mid to late 1960s and thought I knew all about it. But, now I just watched this 1+ hour video and realized after only a minute or two that I didn't know it at all. Now I do. Now I can put it in context and appreciate it as a key piece of American cultural history (including the Al Jolson digression). Thanks to BKR for threading the needle of copyrights and cliches to launch a major refresh in 2024. It pays homage to a period in time that has almost disappeared. Michael Jackson and Judy Garland had remarkably similar life trajectories.
@PokhrajRoy.9 ай бұрын
My little gay brain is so happy this exists so thank you and a bigger thank you to Judy Garland for existing.
@Thelma73619 ай бұрын
My trans awakening was watching Garland in wizard of OZ as a young child in the mid ‘80s. She’s just so delightful I wanted to be like her so much. So endearing and pretty. I hope her memory lives on in future generations. Watched Meet Me In St Louis today, so smitten with her and I’m not remotely into women. Such an icon. It’s hard to accept her life was so troublesome for so long. Its heartbreaking,
@Buckboy20248 ай бұрын
I’m right there with you!
@Smith6262-ep8fx7 ай бұрын
I'm glad you are here, too.
@PokhrajRoy.7 ай бұрын
@@Smith6262-ep8fx Thank you
@oxmead9 ай бұрын
I play this all the time. I rank it as the top live concert EVER! The stories she tells are pure genius. I can only imagine how exiting it was.
@akrenwinkle9 ай бұрын
Judy had a set of stories she would tell to gain breathing time and each time it sounded like she had just thought of it, and was speaking off the cuff.
@DavidVarkonyi9 ай бұрын
I remember first I was disappointed on the song listing when I first got the cd many years ago. When I listened to it from being to the end it all made sense and it became my all time favourite live albums EVER! Her voice is in top form, her monologues between some of the songs are so entertaining and hearing everything on the record even her steps, every breath it makes you feel like it’s happening at this moment! Still sounds fresh after all these decades!
@jswjanjan8 ай бұрын
I have listened to this album a thousand times since I was a teenager. This tribute is so beautifully appreciative. Thank you. ❤🎉😊
@melodyc1239 ай бұрын
I forget that Judy has sounded like Judy her entire life!
@TerriKnight-x3s3 ай бұрын
She died so young! 😓
@Buckboy20249 ай бұрын
I sat on the living room floor of my family home when in junior high school and cried with joy. You still have the original vinyl album set.
@Buckboy20247 ай бұрын
So did I!
@MooTelevision9 ай бұрын
It’s really nice to hear some positive and happy stories about Judy Garland’s life. Everyone always wants to focus on the negative stuff. This video was so elegantly made.
@mrob19696 ай бұрын
Bought the original double-LP on eBay as a college graduation gift for myself... Best live concert I've ever listened to. Garland was one of my first crushes, and I still have a soft spot for her.
@kencarole84153 ай бұрын
Me too.
@gilbertobrien72618 ай бұрын
At last, something on KZbin that is considered, intelligent, thoughtful and not full of gush or rant. It's an involving assessment of a star, a great singer and her place in the culture of the last century. Thank you.
@ILikeDemocracy73 ай бұрын
My mother bought me this double album when I was in junior high school. I was home on a legit sick day. She brought it home on her lunch break. I had read about it in advance. I put the record on, sat down on the living room floor and listened. I cried with joy and laughter and incredulous wonder. A day I’ll never forget.
@austinwoods4669 ай бұрын
Listened to this album today and I'm 8 songs in and so far it really is an incredible performance. As good as it gets really. Hats off.
@BroadwayGuy9 ай бұрын
BRAVO! James Mason, Garland's co-star in a "A STAR IS BORN" remarked that he worked with a lot of actors and actresses, but only one genius: JUDY GARLAND. This is THE BEST video you have ever done done because you are FINALLY dealing with an artist who interprets the complexities of the human condition rather than an "entertainer." You place Garland's Carnegie Hall triumph in context, but the focus is properly on Garland as an artist in full control instead of the usual "before and after" trashing of her as a drugged-up, out of control mess of a train-wreck. Whereas Barbra Streisand seeks "perfection" to the point of being off-puttingly egocentric, Garland embraced imperfection as part of humanity and reality in performance. Her imperfections made Judy human; and Judy's humanity made her "accessible" and relatable in a way nobody in show-business has EVER been: before or since. Judy didn't operate from an obvious, cold or calculated "bag of tricks", as most "entertainers" do. You could never catch Judy in a lie, because she had dynamic talents and a jumble of emotions and feelings, and that's what she worked with, and that's what she still captivates us with today. Judy couldn't give us anything but love, baby... and her talents, and her emotions, and her FEELINGS... and we will love her eternally for all that.
@fitnessfreak78519 ай бұрын
The legend, the star, Miss Judy Garland!!!! ❤❤❤
@WOMENOFTROY8 ай бұрын
I’m so glad you insightfully delineated that the strains and rawness of her voice was part of the power of this album. When I first heard it, THAT was what drew me in and made me want to listen again. Those breaks and imperfections were so filled with life and experience that it made the songs infinitely more compelling than merely a lovely sounding tone.
@lissiz34329 ай бұрын
You're really spoiling us with these +1 hour long videos
@michaelcoyle4879 ай бұрын
Am I watching this on my lunch break instead of eating? YES!
@b.g.66967 ай бұрын
Seeing Streisand and Garland perform together really put things in to perspective for me. I never thought of Streisand and Garland as contemporaries, them being about 20 years apart in age. But if we still have Barbra now at 80...we could have had Judy all the way up to 2002, maybe even later. I always knew her death was tragic, but I never thought of her as dying young until i realized how much more time she could have had, and for how much longer we could have had her. she could have been alive in my lifetime even.
@cheric356 ай бұрын
Babs hasn't had a mainstream voice since the 80s
@b.g.66966 ай бұрын
@@cheric35 ok? I'm not saying they would have been active, just that they're still around.
@StevePetrica8 ай бұрын
I discovered this album in 1979, and it's been on my playlist for 45 years. Thank you for filling in all the background that I sort of inferred but didn't really know. You're right about the endless ovations at the end. Greatest night in entertainment history? It would be hard to think of a greater one!
@corgeousgeorge9 ай бұрын
Incredible, absolutely incredible. She was dead two decades before I was even born but she is just such a modern marvel as well as a throwback to a time I never knew. Your work Be Kind is so well done and it is so well appreciated!
@Advent35469 ай бұрын
It's always exciting when BKR talks about Judy Garland again
@schwarzroterose9 ай бұрын
More than a hour of Judy? Count. Me. IN!!!!
@Spiderman7Bob79 ай бұрын
I love the way this is done . The narrater is excellent . I have always been a great Judy Garland fan . I was introduced to Judy with her wonderful MGM musicals as a kid . So I knew the 'movie star Judy Garland , not the concert Judy . And then when she started doing those concerts of course I saw 5 of her concerts in Chicago where I live . And I saw the exact concert here in Chicago before it hit Carnegie Hall and it was the thrill of a lifetime . She was magnificent . And the Capitol Recording taken from the concert has never been out of print . It still sells . After all of these years Judy Garland has been a topic by many , fans and professonals . Judy Garland was one in a million . It is a 'damn' shame that she had a rather sad life . She deserved better . A great director who did some of her TV Shows said she was the most mismanaged people in show business . And this is so true . I wish that Judy had more of a 'backbone' like a barbra Streisand . Oh well Judy's gone now , but we still have Judy's movies , recordings and TV Shows . Whan an entertainer .
@paillette20109 ай бұрын
As a kid in the early 70’s my grandmother played that album like crazy.
@andrewblack17339 ай бұрын
I just read the Clarke biography. I’m more obsessed with Judy than I’ve ever been. When I saw that BKR was doing a video on this night, I shrieked. I’m teaching a class on 1940s actresses and this will likely be assigned. I say this after watching the first four minutes. I have that much faith in BKR!!
@pattongilbert9 ай бұрын
A truly wonderful tribute to a legendary artist. Thank you for teaching us more about Judy.😊
@danielcantu23889 ай бұрын
I will never forget the first time I heard this double album at a friends dinner party.
@velvetbees8 ай бұрын
I remember those days. We did not appreciate her nearly as much as we should have. It seemed like she would be always be there. Like she was immortal. But she wasn't. I am glad she did this concert. It's at least one if not the best concert of all time.
@txsailor829 ай бұрын
I played her vinyl non stop today. Love her voice I can feel her pain, joy and love
@oscarruvalcabaperez37399 ай бұрын
I was a teenager when I first heard this record, growing up in the seventies into the eighties. Rock, disco and, later, new wave and technopop ruled. ¿But who was to put a voice to all the anguish, all the despair, all the loneliness of growing up a gay teenager in a hard and condemning latin family? Then came Judy. I had heard and seen her before, in the MGM movies, the very pretty and likable girl next door with very polished songs and a voice that always lingered on the girlish. I was feeling so sad, so angry, so desperate for so many things I needed to say but couldn¨t. I heard this record: not all the songs had the same impact but one in particular, Stormy Weather: all the desperation, all the almost frightening loneliness and anger, even the menacing thoughts of self destruction stemming from not being permitted to be myself and love another seemed.to be there . This was not a girl, this was not an actress, this was a woman, a very sad, angry and lonely woman, opening her soul for me to find my own reflection on it. Contrary to what some people say, I didn¨t feel she was only singing for me, I felt she WAS SINGING ME; this was Judy. And this was Judy at Carnegie Hall. Thank you for this GREAT VIDEO, thank you for all your videos, I love your channel and always feel like it´s a great celebration when you post one.
@MSonnyday5 ай бұрын
A week after this video came out my Mom and I went to our local community libraries book sale and while looking through the CDs to find albums my Mom would enjoy, you wouldn't believe how happy and excited I was to come across the CD for this concert. My Mom is a huge lover of Judy, so she was also happy I found it, but she was surprised by my reaction.
@sarahsanders45109 ай бұрын
Such an incredible video, I’ve never listened to a Judy Garland record before but I downloaded this album immediately after finishing the video and it truly is just a spectacular experience.
@TheVistakay9 ай бұрын
This was an hour of chills for me. Wow. What a masterful analysis of Judy, her style, and this particular concert. Thank you, BKR. You have outdone yourself. More, please.
@MichaelMoorePDX9 ай бұрын
Though an ardent gay male fan of Judy from childhood, i didn't hear this album until my mid-20s. I remember being struck by the roaring men in the crowd and coming to the inevitable conclusion that the majority of them must be gay. Projection? Maybe. But i would have been screaming with them. My favorite line from the concert is "I'll sing 'em all and we'll stay all nigh!"
@scooteranthony6297Ай бұрын
Why this concert was never filmed is a tragedy.. Such an incredible talent.. "The Man That Got Away" performance is unbelievable.
@jayvee27929 ай бұрын
I owned this album….. listened to it and loved it
@petitereader32809 ай бұрын
Imagine my excitement as a huge Judy fan when I saw the thumbnail!! 🤩Judy at Carnegie Hall is my favorite live album!
@solotrohumano8 ай бұрын
Judy was treated badly by the media. I really became obsessed with her way before the movie "Judy" came out, and when I watched it, I did like it but didn't love it. Her story is larger than life. Her talent was mesmerizing. I have listened to this album several times, and it makes me happy that her legacy still endures through the young audience (i'm 28). May Judy Garland never be forgotten
@ournb58119 ай бұрын
Judy was the queen of a comeback!
@dennett73mk7 ай бұрын
I saw her live at the Boston Common in 1967 when I was 17. Went early and sat right up front. Quite a show from what I remember. A lot of it now is just a blur. Hey, I'm almost 75 now!
@paulenglund85584 ай бұрын
I saw her at Boston Garden in 1961, part of the tour leading up to the Carnegie Hall concert. A wonderful experience that I remember fondly. The whole audience was mesmerized.
@TroyTalks.9 ай бұрын
The point you made at the end really slapped me in the face because I hadn't realized that in a world of streams and playlists and algorithms, i actually DID sit and listen to Beyoncé's latest album Cowboy Carter all the way through - and how much of a success it is to drop a body of work in todays music industry that can accomplish that. So kudos to her. Anyway, i have to commend you for this video essay. Thanks for posting this. I rarely see a commentary about Judy Garland that is overwhelmingly positive. (And the sound of her heels clicking on stage would have got me in my feels too, it really reminds you that these things actually happened).
@taylormaddux84339 ай бұрын
Wow, I rarely see a commentary about JG that *isn't* overwhelmingly positive.:)
@SaxonC5 ай бұрын
When listening to Judy at Carnegie Hall, you can literally feel the electricity and the frenzied audience who went absolutely nuts! I’ve never heard such reaction nor even felt anything like it in any other album! The greatest singer of all time
@rivaridge72119 ай бұрын
I first heard this album in 1975 (yeah, I'm old - LOL!) and it blew me away. I still listen to it via a CD which I got some years back. To this day, Judy's live version of "I Can't Give You Anything but Love" floods my eyes with tears. The greatest and most heartfelt/heartbreaking love song anybody ever sang, in my view. I am commenting before I watch the video, but it's worth noting that Carnegie Hall was part of a multi-city tour - Garland was in great voice throughout, and her audience reaction just as enthusiastic in Buffalo, NY (at the famed Kleinhans Music Hall) as it was in Manhattan's great Carnegie Hall.
@eirikastokes96523 ай бұрын
Just... incredible. Simply incandescent and beautiful and raw and big and small and victorious and forlorn and...just the perfect performance. Vocal talent, emotive acting through her voice, banter with the audience...no one ever has, is, or will ever be able to do the damn thing like Judy.
@DavidN3699 ай бұрын
The Greatest Entertainer in Show Business History in The Greatest Night in Entertainment History meets The Greatest Entry in Be Kind Rewind History, period. Thank you.
@JimBobH139 ай бұрын
This was the best "Be Kind Rewind" yet. Thank you.
@NoelleTakestheSky7 ай бұрын
I can’t get through this version of “Over the Rainbow” without crying. I found that out the hard was a long time ago-while driving. Thankfully, I was at a red light when the tears started. It sounds so tired, yet triumphant, like a heartfelt and gracious goodbye.
@Swimdeep9 ай бұрын
I adore you for giving your take on a true Icon and Legend. I had to listen is chapters because it’s painful to listen to all of Ms Garland’s unending difficulties. Her talent has entranced me since I was a tiny child and now I’m in my sixties.
@PeaceFan117 күн бұрын
That Album is EXTRAORDINARY..Simply BRILLIANT!!!! SOOO MANY Amazing Songs...Especially "Come Rain or Come Shine "....THAT song just lays me OUT!!! xoxoxoxoxo
@alexwallace61209 ай бұрын
Thanks. I did attend the concert as only 1 yrs. Old. I hear the album at new friend's until1979, when I was 19. I Fellin love with the adult Judy's voice. I listened to it ,while visiting him ,hanging out, drinks ,and getting ready to hit the bar. I didn't buy my own album, And I don't know why. Inthe1990's,started listen in to her more and got the CD.I do Love her voice, it is wonderful and Beautiful.
@bepbopbrooke9 ай бұрын
I stumbled onto this album by accident and have been obsessed with the entire thing ever since. every song you bought up made me literally start cheering - amazing analysis so glad more people get to here her like this♥️
@melthinks9 ай бұрын
One of my best friends introduced me to Judy with this album over 30 years ago. His birthday (the first since he died last summer) was yesterday, so the timing of this video is bittersweet. Judy at Carnegie brings me such lovely memories and makes me miss my friend even more than usual. ❤
@stottie929 ай бұрын
"Judy Garland at Carnegie" was the first vinyl I bought! Thank you SO MUCH for covering this so masterfully. I guess what I love about Judy was her ability to excite and thrill *everyone*. I remember reading Julie Andrew's autobiography and her vividly recalling how "Come Rain Or Come Shine" ended with audience hysteria (no exaggeration!) Ellen Freed from the NCY Woman notes: "[the] standing ovation throughout the hall that lasted for several minutes-supposedly precipitated by Julie Andrews’s rising from her seat." Judy really was a master! (And double thanks for finally explaining the Jeanette MacDonald reference. I probably could have worked it out myself over these years, but its been like a little tease each time I listen to the record!)
@FritzandtheOscars9 ай бұрын
I have to be honest that I was never a big Judy Garland fan and also didn’t know much about her but Izzy’s videos have constantly increased my interest in her and this is her masterpiece. Being unfamiliar with the concert, I knew right away that this video would be absolutely fascinating and it exceeded all expectations. It draws you right into “Judy’s world”, being educational without stuffy but entertaining from start to finish. I couldn’t think of a more worthy tribute to a true legend and a legendary event that I will surely listen to as soon as possible.
@bugpal3 ай бұрын
Whenever I am asked what concert I would like to go back in time to see, this is the one. You can feel the joy and electricity and excitement coming out of the speakers.
@GeoffArnold19 ай бұрын
Wonderful video, thank you. It was very personal for me, because my father, Bob Arnold, was the Grammy-winning engineer on that recording. Two points: (1) it wasn't his fault that the tape ran out, and (2) although he was gay, he never wore fluffy pullovers!
@walterlongacre70099 ай бұрын
Thank you for this. Im in my 70s, and a fan of Judy's my entire adult life. Carnegie Hall, which I bought as a teenager when it was released knocked me out. Ill never forget the first time I heard it, never. I was especially happy when the complete concert CD was released, including Judy's stage banter between songs. If you dont have this, buy it. Prepare to be transported. "...the most I've had is JUST...a talent to amuse." Judy, Judy, Judy... never to be forgotten.
@marabanara9 ай бұрын
We have been BLESSED by BKR!! Quick, get the popcorn, comfy blankets, drink of choice and put the phone on Do Not Disturb! BKR HAS A JUDY VIDEO!!! This is NOT A DRILL!
@Gert-c2b5 ай бұрын
I must say: I am so grateful we got a Barbra Judy collab before it was too late.
@MrCrowebobbyАй бұрын
But we didn't get their best moment -- the rehearsal of the song -- according to all who were there.
@maxmalakooti26289 ай бұрын
As someone who has been listening to this album since they were 13 years old (I'll be 26 in two months), I can not tell you how appreciated content like this is. The thorough research, the humor, the sympathy, and the awe that you put into your work is extraordinary. Thank you for spotlighting what could be considered Judy's best work. xoxo