Youtube Music Videos.


The only place I find new music is on YouTube and I use my computer based music server to access it. I’d like ask everyone to share their favorite video cuts. The following is my current fav.

http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DXhwKuWvRXx4%26feature%3Dshare&h=oAQGfsqZhAQH-iexOQdpO1sJn-nmFujOCmJSMKO5u3_YKhg
vegasears
Ive discovered much, new to me music on youtube.I also enjoy some of the systems that are posted too.I really enjoy some of the older black and white videos from the great,,and not so great artist of the past. Some of the old cartoons have some great music too,they really went all out on a lot of those.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-rQJ6KQjDG0

This link resonates with me. Damn, it was a great time for music!
Try the latest videos from the Java Jazz Festival on Youtube. Surprisingly good sound and good camera work. There is a whole range of artists performing.
Youtube is one of the greatest things on the internet - you can find true videos of even the most obscure things. For music, some of my favorites are:
New-to-me Nina Hagen. Some of her music is fabulous, much is awful. This was the first I saw of her, fascinating and strange:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9xi4O4RvlnQ

Then there are versions of well known songs like this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lCCKy34MJqY&list=PLFC5AC5E6E1C07AB0&index=11&feature=plpp_video

I could go on, but I'll make myself stop.
You Tube is great for performance videos. It's pretty much essential to me if only for the Tommy Emmanuel performance videos. A post from A'goner Dracule directed me to TE playing Mason Williams' "Classical Gas". I'd heard TE on recordings, but had never seen him play. Because his usual repertoire doesn't bark up my favored tree, it wasn't until I SAW him playing on You Tube that I gained a full appreciation of his virtuosity.

This is about as good a pop fingerpicking performance as I have ever seen:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S33tWZqXhnk

Emmanuel plays an acoustic 99% of the time, but You Tube also features this one of Tommy rockin' out on an electric (pardon the bad camera work) which is a great change of pace:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lwx0wLGxfgg

For me, You Tube is a great resource.

Marty
Vegasears ,have you tried Spotify,Pandora ? Both are awesome recourses for finding new ,great music.
Another YouTube fan here.
I like the fact you can find obscure stuff on it.
Case in point...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VIC1vvP2IpE&feature=player_detailpage

Closing song from the movie, "The American" w/George Clooney got me interested. I found it and this band on YouTube.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s2KSJ0ld5Ls&feature=player_detailpage

Hope someone else will enjoy it.
This is beyond fantastic...Humble Pie - "Black Coffee" live on The Old Grey Whistle Test.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ylviT4C0cmQ&fmt=22
Wish this thread was seeing as much activity as, say, "What's on your turntable tonight". Regardless, thanks to Vegasears for starting it. Been running a Mac Book Air into the stereo via MF DAC & V-Link. Watching full screen videos the last couple of nights. It's been fun. New music (to me) worth getting excited about.

In that regard, might I recommend for your consideration....

Lindsey Buckingham

If I didn't insert the link properly, search, Top Tracks for Lindsey Buckingham "This is the Time" in You Tube. This guy has amazing chops and so do the others in the band. It'll pick you right up after a brutal day at work.
OK - part 2 for anyone suffering a cold or the flu - here is something that will cure it.

Steve Winwood - Dear Mr. Fantasy live

You think the song is gonna end, but then he kicks it up a notch. Oh, yea, EC is on stage, but you won't miss him.

Please play it LOUD.
Ghost,

That version of "This Is The Time" is available on a bootleg 2 cd set called Live at The Coach House. It's a rip off in that it's sold as a double CD, but the 2 discs are actually the same (ah, bootlegs). The good news is that it's often available cheap and, judging from the recording, it was one absolute monster of a r'n'r show. SQ is better than average for a bootleg. This one has been in heavy rotation in my car for many years.

BTW, the studio version of the song (on Out of The Cradle) features a very different solo. That solo is one of my favorites, too, in that it is somewhat unusually constructed and virtually ignores the vocal melody line. You might want to check it out if you're not familiar.

Marty
Marty - I was really hoping you would pick up on my addition to this thread. Glad you did. We'd previously separately posted to another thread about LB with similar opinions on his talents. Believe it or not - I don't have ANY of LB's solo work....Admired his playing w/the Mac. Maybe air play saturation of the band when he was in it...I don't know. The You Tube stuff is really opening my eyes even more. I'm kind of thinking his solo stuff is a little "heavier" than FWM's pop - a good thing. I will definitely be checking out "the Cradle" and his other stuff for pending purchase. There's a bunch of video of him doing solo acoustic on You Tube. He is just an excellent guitarist. I love the voicing he uses on his instruments too. Also love the craziness & over the top emoting in his vocals as on the "This Is the Time" video. Ciao, baby.
Ghost,

Lindsey's still my #1 guy.

He doesn't have a great voice, but - as you observed - he sells a song with everything he's got. IMHO, he's that rarest of combinations; a brilliant pop songcrafter (a left brain skill) and a crazy ass rock n roll wildman (100% right brain). His seething anger at the women who've betrayed him (at least in his mind/lyrics) is usually evident, and IMHO this adds intensity, even if the music is frothier pop.

He's also the single quirkiest guitar technician that I've ever seen: he employs everything from banjo rolls to (his variation of) classical resquesado strumming. His repeated bends on electric guitar speak to a certain obsessive nature and his fingerstyle acoustic playing is both fantastic and very personal. At the end of the day, there's just about no one I'd rather listen to work a guitar.

BTW, he's done some heavier stuff with Mac ("I'm So Afraid" and "Come" are extended electric guitar workouts and he also reinvents some of the pure pop into rock when Mac plays live. "Eyes of The World" (a rework of Pachelbel's Canon in D as a single/album track) is a screamer in concert.

His solo stuff is all over the board. "Out of The Cradle" is IMHO a pop masterpiece. The three before that wander all over - '50's retro pop to flat-out prog rock - it's pretty clear to me that he was trying to distance himself from Mac style pop. These three IMHO are more for compleatists, tho "Go Insane" is impressive in it's own right.

The three most recent solo efforts are all fabulous....but, but, but...

While "Gift of Screws" is really reminiscent of Mac (when it's rocking) and pretty easy to like, both "Under The Skin" and "Seeds We Sow" are dense, acoustic, finger picking explorations. Not for every taste, but two of my all-time favorite records. SQ on "Skin" drives some people nuts, VERY heavily processed sound - but it's in service to the songs.

Both of the official live CDs "Small Machine" and "One Man Show" are worthwhile. The latter - just LB, guitar and effects, is a pretty astonishing display of his technical virtuosity (both on guitar and electronic manipulation).

Good luck exploring his catalog, nothing out there quite like it.

In case you hadn't noticed, I'm a fan.

Marty
Marty - thanks for the comments...good overview of solo LB. It'll help deciding what to buy first. You are way more informed than I on the technical aspects of guitar playing but after watching quite a few of LB's performances on YouTube - can certainly understand why you are a fan.
Ghost,

Always happy to share my passion for Lindsey's material with anyone who might be interested. Just enjoy and spread the word.

Marty
I'm jealous. I've heard it 10,000 times, but this will be your first. As Franki Valli put it "Oh, what a night!".

Happy listening.

Marty

PS The record covers a lot of ground. One example: the last acoustic guitar solo piece is not identified by title on the CD. It's actually a transcription of Rodgers and Hammerstein's "This Nearly Was Mine" from South Pacific. On Broadway, this was a featured number in a hit play. For me, it was only when I heard Lindsey's take on "Cradle" that I understood why.