Blind Date with Cream drummer Ginger Baker. Ginger Baker reviews the sounds of May 1970.
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@bernieforkin25635 ай бұрын
Ginger could start a fight in an empty room. 😂
@2009framat5 ай бұрын
A story from around 1980 in Vienna: Baker gave a concert there. After the concert a young woman asked Baker if he could make a short visit to the birthday party of her boyfried who was the biggest Ginger Baker Fan of all time and started drumming lessons some months ago only because of him. The boyfriend could not attend the concert because he had to work and was only living 5 minutes from the concert hall. Baker appeared at the birthday party and congratulated the guy, played a 15 minutes solo on a cheap drum set and left after 10 minutes smalltalk with the guy.
@kgarrett14045 ай бұрын
These Blind Dates sometimes tell you more about the reviewer than the records!
@wellingtonsouza53405 ай бұрын
🫡
@elmolewis91235 ай бұрын
Ginger never fails to amuse. Nice research.
@not_enough_space5 ай бұрын
"So I asked, 'Who's this?' And it was me." 😂
@9thfloorchaos5 ай бұрын
Thanks for posting! It’s good to have these Blind Dates back.
@beezlus_5 ай бұрын
been a while since a blind date, glad they back ! The amount of tunes I’ve added from blind dates in 67’ and 68’ is ridiculous… if there’s any you haven’t covered from those years I beg you to do more 😤
@kevingilhooley20645 ай бұрын
Ginger must have been having a good day, as he almost half liked one of the tracks....more of Ginger please... he's a legend.
@josephesposito34995 ай бұрын
LOL!
@nasty_slapper5 ай бұрын
LOL!
@kevhead15255 ай бұрын
Elevator music King Crimson at the end. Ha!
@marysweeney73705 ай бұрын
Yeah, I wonder who did this version of KC?
@YesterdaysPapers5 ай бұрын
@@marysweeney7370I recorded it myself.
@marysweeney73705 ай бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers Excellent! I love it!
@kevhead15255 ай бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers listening to it again, I now see that it was a "Swinging London" rendition of those songs. Perfect.
@richardgrant4185 ай бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapersI prefer your version. KC’s is so sombre/ doom laden as though something terrible is about to happen Yours is more subtle, intriguing and draws you in - where can we hear the full track and more?
@australianchartentries60sa355 ай бұрын
What a hoot. Loved every minute of it. It’s no surprise what came out of Gingers mouth. He’s still a bloody legend in my eyes!
@kevhead15255 ай бұрын
Self effacing doesn't make up for the sourness. A legend but more of a legend in his own mind.
@CarlDraper5 ай бұрын
Can't take away anything from his drumming though, a legend in that field
@ovelonse5 ай бұрын
Sometimes remember me as the way kids uses to talk through
@williamr38405 ай бұрын
A legend in his own underpants! :0)
@SuperNevile5 ай бұрын
@@williamr3840 Likes talking about himself a lot.....although he ended by saying he was egotistical.
@WeAreColorOfWater5 ай бұрын
Being almost 70 and having grown up in the Los Angeles area, I’ve seen live, hundreds of bands and musicians. Including GB with Cream and everyone on his list. The Jazz-fusion shows I attended were on another level completely. Peter Baker was okay, but NOT as good as he thinks he was. Ian Paice with Deep Purple was humble, and far more impressive for playing early metal-rock in my book. GB’s narcissistic ego driven commentary revealed much about his very real insecurities.
@irish665 ай бұрын
That was absolutely brilliant. Probably the best i have heard so far. Ginger was a hoot.
@kikovazquez72775 ай бұрын
Best "Blind Date" of many I've seen. But then again that was a guarantee when I saw that they actually let Ginger Baker loose to speak his mind. He's not lacking in self-awareness - more like trying to live up to his reputation with cute little apologies thrown in to humanize himself. To not have known this man personally, is to love him profoundly as a musician. Ginger, RIP!
@dreammachine20135 ай бұрын
The drum battle challenge that Ginger issued to former Coltrane drummer Elvin Jones is available on CD 🎉😊
@marvinsmith21165 ай бұрын
Love that green manalishi was here. Got me leaping about.
@redrix37315 ай бұрын
Interesting new voice, fits Papa Ginger's sarcasm quite well, even though he sounds like a BBC panel show comedian. Good stuff!
@mgconlan5 ай бұрын
Pete Johnson's "627 Stomp" was recorded November 11, 1940 with Johnson (piano), Oran "Hot Lips" Page (trumpet), Eddie Barefield (clarinet, alto sax), Don Stovall (alto sax), Don Byas (tenor sax), John Collins (guitar), Abe Bolar (bass) and A. G. Godley (drums). Also, what Elvin Jones really had to say about Ginger Baker RE his solo on "Toad" from Cream was, "They ought to make him an astronaut and lose his ass!" Jones had much nicer things to say about Keith Moon's playing on The Who's "Underture" to "Tommy": "Everything they play, he contains it."
@seanconlon27735 ай бұрын
Eddie Barefield had a regular gig at my neighborhood tavern in Greenpoint Brooklyn in the late 80's. A good player, but not in the best of health. Most of the time he sat while playing. Died of a heart attack in January '91.
@jeffryphillipsburns5 ай бұрын
I’m confused about why Baker was asked to review this. I had the idea he was supposed to review then-current hits?
@YesterdaysPapers5 ай бұрын
@@jeffryphillipsburns The album was reissued that month.
@paulcooper88185 ай бұрын
Peter Green's *_The Green Manalishi with the Two Pronged Crown_* is a stand out -- GB should have kept listening. Nice outro -- long live the king.
@johnsurrey74265 ай бұрын
It’s a phenomenal record! If you don’t like it, the late Ginger, then shut up and go away.
@TundieRice5 ай бұрын
Ehh, he didn’t seem to be into most rock of the time (besides what he was playing) anyway. He seemed much more into jazz, blues and around this time Afrobeat like Fela Kuti and other Nigerian musicians. Even if it’s all very impressive to all of us, Mr. Baker would’ve probably found any way to shit on it, lol.
@danieleyre89135 ай бұрын
Ginger didn’t like it. He was entitled to his opinion.
@philipbrougham63605 ай бұрын
Can't believe he did not even like the fleetwood mac track ,,,the best one on here !
@SuperNevile5 ай бұрын
I couldn't understand why it stalled at No.10 in the the UK charts. The previous three singles were at Numbers 1 and 2. Each of the singles were a different style and GM certainly was progressive. The vinyl had to be played loud to hear all the modes, so I guess Ginger's hearing was going down hill even at this stage. I still play it loud, and there was nothing like it in 1970.
@fueledbylove5 ай бұрын
Ginger delivered precisely what I watch these videos for: a completely honest evaluation of what he thinks about what he is hearing and it's what I find to be very humorous about Blind Date. Seriously, there is no hurt feelings among real professionals so everyone please lighten up.
@chasjohn575 ай бұрын
Excellent! He should have been a writer for Creem Magazine
@jeffryphillipsburns5 ай бұрын
In fact, he was a writer for Cream Magazine.
@chasjohn575 ай бұрын
@@jeffryphillipsburns when?
@buzzawuzza37435 ай бұрын
Was seriously hoping that he would be really grumpy and I got my wish. All thanks to you, YP! Rock on!
@YesterdaysPapers5 ай бұрын
Cheers!
@darrellmayberry77845 ай бұрын
May 1970 was the start of the UK general election that ended in a surprise and in the USA Cambodia Kent State and Jackson State were in the news and to match the theme of dreadfulness that month was the songs Ginger Baker had to review and Baker responded with a grouchy response which I loved. I like when you post at the end of the video the charts of the week and there were some great songs on those charts but not the songs Baker had to review and his grumpy response was a source of humor and I think Ginger Baker has a great sense of humor which made this video enjoyable to watch.
@lib5565 ай бұрын
Ha ha. Ginger is funny... and a bit scary. I really enjoyed that doc about him called Beware of Mr. Baker.
@2009framat5 ай бұрын
I did not enjoy the docu. The film-maker was lousy doing his job and disrespectful. For instance how could he order Baker - an old man in his own home - to remove his sunglasses???!!! This was no real docu about Ginger Baker but more of a documentary of a failure to interview Baker.
@lib5565 ай бұрын
@@2009framat Fair enough. In the end, the man with the power of editing wins. Look at the crap put out by that POS Michael Moore. I don't recall the disrespect of the sunglasses etc. The most vivid memory from the film was of Baker attacking the film maker with a stick at the end.
@2009framat5 ай бұрын
@@lib556 If the most vivid memory from a documentary about a drummer who wrote history in music is his attacking of an unknown and not very talented film-maker then it is more or less the proof of the total fail of this docu. The ego of that filmmaker was much bigger than that of Ginger Baker, Jerry Lee Lewis and James Brown combined together imo. The difference between that three musicians and this filmaker is that they had - in a way - the "right" to act the way they did. I wanted to know something about Ginger Baker and not that filmmaker.
@lib5565 ай бұрын
@@2009framat As I said, fair enough. One has to wonder if the film maker set out with righteous intentions and then, when it didn't go his way... possibly due to his own inexperience/incompetence, he tried to spin it into a hit piece. Justified or not, the stick attack was memorable... if nothing else. On reflection, it reminds me a bit of the afore-mentioned scumbag Michael Moore. He ambushed Chuck Heston (suffering from Alzheimer's at the time) at his home and badgered him mercilessly. He then edited the scene in such a way to try and make out that Heston was a racist. (Heston marched with MLK in 63 when it wasn't yet fashionable). These days, anybody can grab a camera (whether or not they have any business or talent to do so).
@2009framat5 ай бұрын
@@lib556 I wanted to see a docu about Ginger Baker _ his life, his impact in music, his views etc. - but I was not and I am still not interested in the intensions of this filmmaker. The difference to someone like Michael Moore is that if you going to see a film from him you know that this guy is involved in the film. Even if someone does not know him he can get an idea what kind of film he will exspect from infos and descriptions. But someone who is exspecting to see a Ginger Baker docu will be disappointed. It looks more like the making of a Ginger Baker docu. or a long youtube-video and the interviewer has a youtube-channel. There is simple too much footage of this guy in a docu about Baker. There was (or still is) a docu about organist Jimmy Smith from the 1960s. That is how a good docu could be made. The camera-team & interviewers are more or less invisible.
@dwodo215 ай бұрын
It certainly was a crazy era in music, when you can you have Tom Jones and Andy Williams sharing the album charts with King Crimson and Zappa! 😆 …and btw, Ginger is a hoot!!
@markkonzerowsky88715 ай бұрын
You have to keep in mind that 1970 represents the approximate crossroads of chart relevance between the "greatest" generation and the maturing baby boomers. The old guard were having their last hurrahs at that point.
@Beniscool9505 ай бұрын
Thank you so very much for uploading this
@Fordham19695 ай бұрын
Well he was objectively correct about one thing, the remark about Thunderclap Neman sounding like kids, Jimmy McCulloch the guitarist for the group was only 16 at this point, a true guitar prodigy that went on to play with Wings later in the 70s.
@nigden18 күн бұрын
Jimmy was at his best with Maggie Bell and Stone the Crows, after joining Wings, he died aged 26 from an overdose soon after. McCartney, who recruited him said he was one of the best guitarists he'd heard, but also pointed out that he wouldn't listen to anyone about what he was doing to himself, and his demise was sadly inevitable.
@inglepropnoosegarm780119 күн бұрын
I always like people who speak their mind, whether I agree with them or not.
@lthompson76255 ай бұрын
I remember Ray Ennis of The Swinging Blue Jeans getting interviewed . He said he was on one of those 1960s package tours and Ginger Baker was the drummer with ( l think?) Graham Bond . Ennis said Ginger was so obnoxious that he decided to give him a smack on the nose!
@richardgrant4185 ай бұрын
Probably not the only person to have done that to him
@davidellis51415 ай бұрын
I'm sure Ginger & John Lydon got on well during his stint in Public Image LTD in the mid 80's.
@yinoveryang42465 ай бұрын
😅 I think they only met on a "few occasions". Baker only played on one album, and couldn't even remember which songs. From what I can tell that album "Album" was a scam really. Turns out that it was mostly other musicians, because the band was "too young" to be in a studio, according to Lydon. Couldn't play in other words. So they hired anyone that would come in. And apparently Ginger and Tony Williams played drums on it. Steve Vai also offered services on that one
@NewFalconerRecords5 ай бұрын
Actually, it would've been great if John Lydon narrated this video. He would've been perfect.
@richardgrant4185 ай бұрын
@@yinoveryang4246good thing it was only a few times. It probably wouldn’t have taken long at they’d be at each other’s throats … Verbally and probably physically
@yinoveryang42465 ай бұрын
@@richardgrant418 Yup. I suspect no one in the management was dumb enough, even in those days, to allow that to happen. By that stage Mr Baker had red flags practically tattooed onto his forehead.
@stepheng87795 ай бұрын
@@yinoveryang4246Nonsense 😂 Scam?? Followed the tour for 'Album' John McGeough, Bruce Smith were hardly young inexperienced musicians 🤦
@IndiesoulMusik5 ай бұрын
Alvin Lee and Ten Years After are awesome Mr. Baker 😂
@rochford595 ай бұрын
Poor Ol' Eric was a nervous wreck after 2 years of Cream😵...then Ginger turns up,and says to Eric,l hear you're looking for a Drummer for Blind Faith! Oh' Christ says Eric!!🥴
@nickrice75355 ай бұрын
Boy o boy, you gota love Ginger ❤️
@davehire14335 ай бұрын
A couple years later, a kid named Huey Lewis joined Clover.
@seanconlon27735 ай бұрын
They also backed Elvis Costello on his first album.
@josephesposito34995 ай бұрын
GINGER BAKER IS THE GREATEST! AND A VERY COOL GUY! KUDOS TO GINGER!
@redghettosun5 ай бұрын
Ginger actually made some good points about that time period I can respect. Especially about singers trying to be who they're not. Vis a vis - Black. The good ones found their own voice later on (Paul Rodgers, Rod Stewart etc.,) but too many carried on way too long. Mick Jagger tried to sound like he was from the ghetto on a few Stones records. Still makes me chuckle every time I hear it.
@karlsinclair99185 ай бұрын
It's funny because the drums on East of Eden jig a jig are phenomenal and in places totally contemporary. Good old Ginger... his story at the beginning was hilarious. He was right about Tony Williams' lifetime, though.
@samalbaugh93215 ай бұрын
I really love this video I love hearing Ginger talk about some of the acts and artists 1970 s some that I’ve heard some of it I haven’t, but he doesn’t hold back at dig it
@Smithy675 ай бұрын
This is great, thanks!!
@karlschumaker5 ай бұрын
RIP Ginger Baker!!!…Karlido😢🥁😢🥁😢🥁
@karlschumaker5 ай бұрын
Ginger Baker is probably one of the most underrated drummers in Rock and Roll history.Without him,there wouldn’t be any other drummers that were influenced by him…RIP Ginger!!!…Karlido😢🥁😢🥁😢🥁
@karlschumaker5 ай бұрын
Ginger also provided the perfect drum beat along with the guitar and bass playing along with the vocals provided by both Eric Clapton and Jack Bruce in order to make up the super group Cream…RIP Ginger Baker 😢🥁😢🥁😢🥁
@tomrobinson57765 ай бұрын
This was great! Very entertaining to hear Ginger giving his less than enthusiastic views. Fantastic channel!
@northernengland4 ай бұрын
Ginger got the sack from Hawkwind, along with 50 other members who departed including Lemmy, incredible.
@pencilpauli94425 ай бұрын
Don't hold back, Ginger, tell us what you really think! lol
@p0llenp0ny5 ай бұрын
I can't believe this channel only has around 50,000 subs. Criminally undersubbed.
@thediamonddog955 ай бұрын
I like how to voice sounds more emotionaly expressive than before. And that little Harrison/Baker animation. I can't imagine Baker and Harrison getting along well, by the way. 😂
@BegToDiffer995 ай бұрын
Great sense of humor!
@SEGAClownboss5 ай бұрын
Nobody wouldve been madman enough to mix King Crimson and Sabbath in one tune like you did. That was fantastic
@YesterdaysPapers5 ай бұрын
Cheers!
@jerrywatt68135 ай бұрын
Ginger was quite a character ha ha thanks YP Cheers !
@sim0n174 ай бұрын
sounds exactly like the Ginger I met in the 90s, so at least he's consistent and remained true to himself LOL!
@maurogajardo6205 ай бұрын
Live Cream vol. 2 is an favourite of mine
@maurogajardo6205 ай бұрын
And Fresh Cream and Disraeli Gears but on MONO sound
@grokeffer62265 ай бұрын
He really was a Negative Nelly!! Hot Rats had made the charts that month. It's still one of my favorite albums, all-time. 🔥🐀🐀
@mr.snicker-doodles70814 ай бұрын
This is hilarious, I can literally visualize him saying all of this stuff haha...
@daisywrabbit5 ай бұрын
I am immediately listening to Love Like a Man to remind myself TYA don’t suck.
@markkonzerowsky88715 ай бұрын
Make sure it's the Fillmore East live version or Ginger wins the day.
@daisywrabbit5 ай бұрын
@@markkonzerowsky8871 great stuff! thanks. Ginger doesn’t like the rhythm section. Say what you want about Ric Lee, but Leo Lyons is one of the best.
@samp.80995 ай бұрын
The version from the video is different from the version of the song I'm familiar with. Am I missing something?
@YesterdaysPapers5 ай бұрын
@@samp.8099Unfortunately, I couldn't include the studio version due to copyright so what you hear on the video is a live version from that period.
@markkonzerowsky88715 ай бұрын
@@samp.8099 The version you really need is the one on the Fillmore East double live CD.
@Micolash_is_behind_you5 ай бұрын
LOL love Ginger
@archstanton37635 ай бұрын
Green Manalishi, thought he’d of recognised Peter Green ! Ginger takes no prisoners.
@tamomarfernandez75485 ай бұрын
An absolute genius
@Dave_Mayberry5 ай бұрын
He knew Ten Years After, because they played together at festivals….. He’s just being Ginger….
@shinyelbow5 ай бұрын
His story of not even recognising his own work on record was a classic.
@Dylan-co2cl5 ай бұрын
Man,that was so funny,you gotta love ginger and is straight up honesty.
@davidlee77225 ай бұрын
That was hilarious
@chrismoller42725 ай бұрын
I love Claptons quote about Ginger and Jack bitching at the first Creem rehearsal. Sounds about right.
@jean-marcknight88165 ай бұрын
😂 savage review. I am a fan of TYA. I had 1st row early bought tickets for me and my family for Lee and Johnny Winters at the Olympia april 2013, I was so exited to see these 2 legends (and Lee's guitar) for the first time in my life in top notch conditions ... then he died one month before the gig 😭
@YesterdaysPapers5 ай бұрын
Shame!
@Unsung_Earth5 ай бұрын
Great video. Ginger was unique and very humourous here 😎🙂
@Peter-Burbank5 ай бұрын
I’m in a lovely mood today!
@birchward4 ай бұрын
Ginger , was always a man who said what he thought, ( and was not , scared to say it ) ! Its a funny thing , ginger , was in a rehearsal studio , in Acton west , london , near where he , lived and heard , one of my old bands , Clear blue sky , and said to john simms , the guitarist ,would you , like to ,do some work , a few gigs with me in europe , next week , so john said yes , of course , and when he came back , ginger kept his connection with the band and his son , Kofi , joined Clear blue sky on drums ,and his lady done the album cover , art work , for the new album . Its a strange but true thing , , ginger came from Wembley , the same as charlie watts / keith moon , it must have been something in the air ! ha . ha .and all class guys ! cheers ritchie .
@scottjackson1634 ай бұрын
I’m not surprised that he didn’t like Ten Years After, but I love A Space in Time just the same.
@Truckngirl5 ай бұрын
Brutal! But he is very self-aware.
@coldacre5 ай бұрын
fair assessments, all of them!
@SirGamestop5 ай бұрын
Nice to see East Of Eden get some recognition. Some great albums in the charts that week too.
@boomtownrat51065 ай бұрын
It’s been a while but welcome back to Blind Date! I get a kick out of Ginger Baker. Loved GBs Air Force. My one and only time that I’ve seen him in concert was in San Diego in 1972. He was touring with Buddy Miles in what was billed as The Battle of the Drummers. On that tour with them was Nazareth.
@obbor45 ай бұрын
That couldn't have been much of a battle. Buddy was nowhere near Ginger's league. As a drummer anyway.
@YesterdaysPapers5 ай бұрын
That must've been a really cool show.
@boomtownrat51065 ай бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers What was interesting to me about that concert was that I went going in knowing about the talents Ginger Baker and Buddy Miles. The year before in 71, Miles releases the album We’ve Got To Live together, which I really enjoyed. The revelation to me was the group Nazareth. Here in the states, they weren’t really known in 72. I think it was in 1975 when they released Hair of the Dog and their cover of Love Hurts becomes a hit in early ‘76. I’m glad I got to see what the UK, some of the commonwealth, and the Europeans saw before striking gold here in the U.S.
@boomtownrat51065 ай бұрын
@@obbor4 Let’s just say, Buddy was the better singer. Buddy did hold his own, though…
@obbor45 ай бұрын
@@boomtownrat5106 I too saw Nazareth, once along with Alice Cooper, The Kinks, and The Tubes (Anaheim Stadium, summer of 1978) and opening for Frank Marino and Mahogany Rush, in Tampa, 1979. The only time that I saw Ginger was with Jack Bruce, at The Coach House, a club in Southern California, on Ginger's 50th birthday, in August, of 1989. They played lots of Cream songs with a young shredder type of guitarist, a then 18-year-old called Blues Saraceno. Not Cream, and not Eric, but still a great show! Jack gave away a brand-new fretless bass to one lucky audience member.
@hammer44head5 ай бұрын
Wow, only one "the drummer cant keep time" comment, i was expecting the majority would be inaccurate time keepers for whatever band from mean Mr. Baker, haha. Even dissed Fleetwood Mac Green Manalishi, liked it when i was a kid but i'm glad they didnt go in that direction that Greenie (who i love) seemed to want them maybe to go next and instead went with Kirwin's ideas and added Christine also Welch. Future Games and Bare Trees are brilliant albums and the Kirwin - Welch guitar play was excellent along with Chritines soulful singing and keywork on piano, organ. Well Ginger is brutally honest and you cant ask for more than that i guess maybe mercy, yeah mercy. Thanks again Yesterday's Papers for the video and all the work you or you all put into them (which is a lot). Peace out, Hammer!!!
@obbor45 ай бұрын
What direction was that? As far as I know, Peter continued to play sinewy, self-reflecting blues with and without his former band.
@thereunionparty5 ай бұрын
I hadn't quite realised that there were 6 albums and 5 years between Peter Green leaving and Nicks/Buckingham joining, mainly because I prefer the Peter Green iteration of the group. I shall have to check out those albums you mention.
@hammer44head5 ай бұрын
@@obbor4 - just my opinion but i think Pete was well leaving the band even before his meltdown and with rock getting harder in sound and fury that greenie was leaning in that direction with Manilishi, just a feeling but they were moving away from being a blues only band into something more them. They couldnt go on just playing old blues tunes without people getting burnt out on hearing it over and over. Gotta present your own art and they did.
@AndyBibel5 ай бұрын
"This is Doomed. I'm not nice to people am I? Do you give points for trying or what?" Hilarious! Ginger Baker should have had his own show on Telly! 😂
@spockboy5 ай бұрын
Love your channel. Have a suggestion. With today's AI you could literally use Ginger Baker's actual voice, or John Lennon's or whomever to read that quotes you have. It would lend such a level of authenticity that your channel would become HUGE (as it should) : )
@obbor45 ай бұрын
That would be difficult as these are published interviews without voice recodings being available.
@manwithumbrella5 ай бұрын
"With today's AI you could literally use Ginger Baker's actual voice" LOL ... I hope for your sake this is sarcasm, homie.
@spockboy5 ай бұрын
I'm not sure you understand. There are websites with celebrity voice patterns, you write in the text, and the voice of whomever you choose says the words. The technology is so rampant that scams are being perpetrated. A criminal will call you several times (for contrived reasons) and record your voice pattern, and once they have it they will call your parents with YOUR voice stating that you are in jail and need bail money! @@obbor4
@spockboy5 ай бұрын
LOL It wasn;'t sarcasm, but I take your point. : ) @@manwithumbrella
@johnp5155 ай бұрын
@@spockboy Authenticity and AI don’t belong in the same sentence.
@MrMjp585 ай бұрын
I like how musical stars at that time used to comment on the technical aspects of production and guitar sounds etc. It was only a few years later, that all anyone cared about was sociology, fashion sense and image.
@jasontorres77565 ай бұрын
At least he was honest 😅
@maurogajardo6205 ай бұрын
Absolutely Funny
@HansRickheit4 ай бұрын
The music at the end really blew me away. I love the mellotron sound. It sounded like "In The Court of The Crimson King" at first, but then morphed in the song "Black Sabbath." Fantastic! Are you ever likely to release a collection of this music?
@YesterdaysPapers4 ай бұрын
Maybe I will someday! Glad you enjoyed it, Hans. Cheers!
@blahblahoink4 ай бұрын
Gotta love old Ginger...'whose playing drums on that? He should be working in a chip shop' etc...
@KeizerHedorah5 ай бұрын
nowadays british reviews sound like "oi blody el fam, its a royt laugh mate innit"
@nolagospeltracts82645 ай бұрын
I like this narrator.
@globalnomad12215 ай бұрын
God graced Ginger with a long life lol😆
@grahampaulkendrick78455 ай бұрын
Well done on the King Crimson tune (?) at the end.
@YesterdaysPapers5 ай бұрын
Cheers Graham!
@MaxRadin5 ай бұрын
Different narration voice - I like it!
@Claytone-Records5 ай бұрын
That ending/Crimson like tune beginning ~ 6:33 is very cool. Another excellent production.
@YesterdaysPapers5 ай бұрын
Cheers! Glad you liked it.
@Pwecko5 ай бұрын
Two of those tracks were brilliant - Green Manalishi (what is a manalishi?) and Jig A Jig by East of Eden. The latter was guaranteed to get everyone up and rocking at parties. It is superb. Ginger Baker was a sad misanthrope.
@tupkorhajar5 ай бұрын
manalishi = devil
@Pwecko5 ай бұрын
@@tupkorhajar No, it's not. I looked it up after I wrote that. The word was made up by Peter Green. Maybe that was what he meant by it, but nobody had heard the word until he wrote the song.
@tupkorhajar5 ай бұрын
@@Pwecko peter green was interviewed by journalist petar luković (deceased last week) in 1981. journalist asked green what manalishi meant. the answer was: manalishi=devil.
@patricksemple56905 ай бұрын
Loved the mellotron Sabbath cover at the end
@roberthughes39045 ай бұрын
Nice to hear 'In The Court Of The Crimson Baker'.
@annoyingbstard94075 ай бұрын
I don’t know much about drumming or drummers but GB is one of the few I can recognise from a record. Whether this means he’s good or bad I’ve no idea.
@yinoveryang42465 ай бұрын
He was most certainly very good. More as a drummer than as a human being though,
@thecaveofthedead5 ай бұрын
That outro music was amazing btw.
@YesterdaysPapers5 ай бұрын
Cheers!
@DL-oy2qn5 ай бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers What is it? Sounds like King Crimson with a bit of Kashmir thrown in..
@Digibeatle094 ай бұрын
Baker's acerbic observation on the "Ten Years After" track is interesting ("I like people to sing and be themselves"....) - I always thought Mick Jagger's affected Southern States' drawl (on many Stones' songs) had a false quality to it - but look at the standing of the Rolling Stones in rock music history (and of many of those particular songs) 🤠 Funny ol' business rock n' roll !!!!
@chrisbacos5 ай бұрын
Ginger Baker was notorious for his volatile temper but he had a sense of humor too. He wasn't keen on any of these numbers.
@helenohellno27295 ай бұрын
Ginger could bake n shake 👍
@pmers5 ай бұрын
I agree with all that he said.
@modjohnsenglishdisco5 ай бұрын
Check out old Downbeat Blindfold Tests. Hear jazz legends give strong opinions about their peers, even when their guesses are completely wrong!
@trickydick61525 ай бұрын
He didn't make friends but mostly he was spot on. And didn't have no qualms about reporting what a drummer giant thought about him.
@aminahmed22205 ай бұрын
What a fantastic video have a good weekend ❤❤❤❤❤❤😊😊😊😊😊😊
@Wygruce5 ай бұрын
Fascinating stuff as usual. Reading the article on the Creation in the latest issue of Ugly Things reminded me of your work, all sourced from the inkies. Some interesting slants on the birth of psychedelia in that article, I'd love to see you investigate the first mentions of the genre in the UK music press.
@L1V2P95 ай бұрын
Ginger nailed the Tony Williams track. "Anti-people music"...and having no starting and finishing point. Baker may have been hostile, but sometimes things have to be said, and it's refreshing to hear opinions by someone who isn't bothered by the consequences.
@thegoodthebadandthescribbl75605 ай бұрын
Were you busy and asked your dad to fill in? 😂 as soon as I saw ginger baker I knew it would be interesting
@SteveWattse5 ай бұрын
Kenny Ball and his boys were always on the box in the 70s! Forget what show hosted them. Two Ronnies? Val Doonican?
@mackb9095 ай бұрын
I've read that "Ginger" became Peter Baker's (the current chief White House correspondent of The New York Times shares the name) nickname not so much for his crimson-tinged locks as for his fiery temperament. Well-known for the long-standing myriad difficulties in his relationship with Jack Bruce, which long preceded Cream and contributed substantially to that band's demise after little more than two years, Baker was never reticent in expressing his opinions, sometimes even violently, going so far as to assault physically the documentarian working respectfully with him near the end of Baker's life (Baker was well past 70 at the time). I hope it is not too arch to say that that documentarian, Jay Bulger, developed a very gingerly approach to Baker, not knowing what sort of mean spirits he might be in on any given day, and that this did not spare him from Baker's wrath. Is it a surprise Baker vents so much vitriol in this interview? Is it a surprise when a bear relieves herself in the woods? There is no denying Baker's talent, though for my money there are dozens if not hundreds of drummers across multiple genres of music to whom I would prefer to listen (including Tony Williams and others he disses herein), and I demur in the assessment of many (including, I suppose, Baker himself) that he was "the greatest drummer of all time." All I can say is that I am glad I didn't read this particular bitch-fest when it was first published, spring 1970. I was a lad of 14 going on 15 trying desperately to cling to some sense of the promise and idealism of the '60s, already fading fast in the wake of Altamont, the Manson family murders, Nixon/Kissinger's burgeoning war crimes in Southeast Asia (now expanded into Cambodia), the egregious massacres at Jackson State and Kent State, and the bitter remarks of my three-years-older sister's friends that it was all over, whatever "it" was, as they took their last high school acid trips and headed off to college. The last thing I'd've needed was reading Ginger's diatribe. Anyway, still an excellent vid and an excellent sense of where music was heading, not to mention into the vinegary and bilious mind of post-Graham Bond Organization, post-Cream, post-Blind Faith Ginger Baker. Thank you again, YP!