Nick Lucas - Walkin' My Baby Back Home (1951)

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024
  • Watch Nick Lucas sing his hit song 'Walkin' My Baby Back Home',

Komentáře • 72

  • @unwrought9757
    @unwrought9757 Před 3 měsíci +5

    I love the fact that he plays the same guitar in all of his videos here ranging from 20’s to 50’s. What a singer and a stylish guitar player he was!

  • @LeoVibriAndBoggo
    @LeoVibriAndBoggo Před rokem +6

    RIP Nick Lucas 1897-1982
    you will never be forgotten...

  • @Jam-m7m
    @Jam-m7m Před rokem +3

    I own a 1936 Gibson Nick Lucas, Brazilian Rosewood Adirondack top, it is one heck of a guitar

  • @Holly1960-
    @Holly1960- Před 6 lety +11

    Nick Lucas: (born August 22nd 1897 - died July, 28th 1982, age 84) Rest In Peace!

  • @MrCliveDavies
    @MrCliveDavies Před 9 lety +15

    An historic performance! His vocals and guitar style are so interesting!

  • @Supremesfan1
    @Supremesfan1 Před 15 lety +5

    Nick Lucas was fabulous in the fifties. This was one of my favorite 1951 songs. I bought the record immediately after it came out. I saw Nick Lucas many times throughout his career.

  • @Lowdenjim
    @Lowdenjim Před 8 lety +13

    Does music ever get better than this? Pure gold.....

  • @gopetogle
    @gopetogle Před 8 lety +15

    Just discovering these old Nick Lucas vids and it feels like I've found the original version of McCartney's 'granny music' (honey pie etc.). Pure gold!

    • @gordonmorris6359
      @gordonmorris6359 Před 4 lety +1

      I wouldn't be surprised if The Beatles covered this song, many oldies like it were in their repertoire as can be heard on their BBC recordings from 1963, Side By Side for example.

    • @googleisretarded7618
      @googleisretarded7618 Před 3 lety

      Nah, Paul's old-timey influence is earlier than this. 1920s/30s. Al Bowley would be an example. Listen to his 'Love is the Sweetest Thing.' (You won't regret it).
      Also, 1930s Fred Astaire.

    • @derby2510
      @derby2510 Před 2 lety

      @@googleisretarded7618 This is a 30s song, but the real Paul influence was the English vaudeville style, not this jazz-inflected pop music.

    • @Goldenrod01
      @Goldenrod01 Před 2 lety

      @@googleisretarded7618 nick Lucas was at the peak of his popularity in the late 20s/early 30s. This performance is from later in his career. He originally recorded this track in 1931

  • @organgrind
    @organgrind Před 10 lety +10

    Genius really.

  • @shmuelpapirnikov1168
    @shmuelpapirnikov1168 Před 9 lety +9

    'WHAT A GUITARIST!

  • @user-zp4bd7xn1b
    @user-zp4bd7xn1b Před 7 měsíci +1

    Classic so many memory in there!

  • @silversrayleigh7624
    @silversrayleigh7624 Před 2 lety +1

    Listening to this in the year 2022 hats off to the legend Nick Lucas

  • @300bluebooks
    @300bluebooks Před 14 lety +2

    I just watched him in Show of Shows and had no idea he had such a long film career... that's wonderful! he was one of the best parts of that film. What a talent!

  • @garry57
    @garry57 Před 14 lety +4

    What tasteful guitar playing and singing. I think every young guitar player today should spend a long time learning the Nick Lucas song book. We all did when I was young. What a joy! Thanks for sharing all of this great music

  • @bunkerman99
    @bunkerman99 Před 3 lety +3

    An Original Guitar God.

  • @rogeralsop3479
    @rogeralsop3479 Před 5 lety +2

    Wonderful song.

  • @howardstern666
    @howardstern666 Před 15 lety +3

    Nick Lucas was amazing, and I love checking out his videos spanning the '20s through the '80s. And he looks a bit like Kramer from Seinfeld here!

  • @ggeorge4144
    @ggeorge4144 Před 6 měsíci +2

    I learned to play guitar taking lessons from the Nick Lucas guitar method in 1957. At 81 I still play, mostly classical and fingerstyle popular songs. I never could sing.

  • @OrlaQuirk
    @OrlaQuirk Před 5 lety +2

    Thank you. I had never heard that version before. My fave is still Annette Hanshaw's version from 2 decades before. She's here on CZcams.

    • @thendrjazz
      @thendrjazz Před 4 lety +3

      Interesting that of the people that did this tune in the 1950s, Lucas was the only one who actually did it when it originally came out in the early 1930s.

  • @robertgreen3702
    @robertgreen3702 Před 2 lety +1

    My boyhood hero !!
    🎸👍👍

  • @sylviahacker6695
    @sylviahacker6695 Před 5 lety +1

    He's wonderful!

  • @beatle9239
    @beatle9239 Před 3 lety +1

    He was a pretty good singer. This is the first I have heard of him.

  • @Yverian
    @Yverian Před 3 lety +1

    He makes that guitar playing look so easy and effortless, but it isn't. And he has it tuned some way that I've never even heard of. Amazing performance.

  • @peraspera.4286
    @peraspera.4286 Před 7 lety +1

    I LOVE DIS SONG

  • @jeremyhenry7280
    @jeremyhenry7280 Před 6 měsíci

    All time great.

  • @jamesewanchook2276
    @jamesewanchook2276 Před rokem

    pretty groovy dude in his day., an better than 99% these days... .Nick's a star!!

  • @vin.handle
    @vin.handle Před 2 lety

    A good looking fellow and a unique interpretative style.

  • @vAIERIEHARPER121
    @vAIERIEHARPER121 Před 15 lety

    great song were singing it in my choir class

  • @dxmxo9427
    @dxmxo9427 Před 5 lety

    What a Talented Handsome guy :)

  • @Ezdduf4kuZ
    @Ezdduf4kuZ Před 14 lety

    I've never heard of Nick Lucas, but I've heard of this song...oh yes. I might of heard it just once, just once is good enough for a song that I drool over, anyway to make a long story short, it was probably on my mother's kitchen radio that I heard it and I beliee it was done by none other than Johnnie Ray. Now Johnnie's version is unav. at this time, and I was surprized but that is the way with many doowop/early R&R era...unav. Great cover...3 1/2 stars but Johnnie's gets 5 stars! THX

  • @LStrachey
    @LStrachey Před 13 lety +2

    so fine!

  • @itsdarkinhere
    @itsdarkinhere Před 14 lety

    Depends on what remake you're referring to. The adaptation to Swedish made by Beppe Wolgers and preformed by Monica Zetterlund not only captures the spirit of the original, it also captures the spirit of Stockholm as it used to be.

  • @BixLives32
    @BixLives32 Před 10 lety +16

    Fantastic! Lucas had one heck of voice! Why do people miss this? Also, he had James Taylor's open-string technique about 70 years before Taylor! Notice that Nick almost never leaves 1st position! All of you advanced Jazz players, -look, see?! You may have NOT thoroughly investigated the power of 1st position!? And all you new players; remember that first position made both Lucas and James Taylor big stars. -E.g. open strings combined with Jazz voicing can become a most powerful comping method.
    I studied with the late, GREAT Richard Lieberson. Richard, as a strict traditionalist, and would rightly reprimand me every time I tried to employ an open string while arranging a song. This is because traditional Jazz orchestra rhythm (what Mr. Lieberson was so patiently trying to teach me) does NOT allow for open strings. A open string breaks the Jazz voicing sound and prevents quick transposition of KEYS. In trad-Jazz playing, an open strings is usually a BIG no-no. Notice, that trad-Jazz players never use kapos. But here is Nick Lucas the grand daddy of Jazz playing in first position and COOKING!
    Nick Lucas had some great buddies. E.g.; Eddie Lang, Carl Kress, Dick McDonough, Eddie Durham, Lonnie Johnson, etc. Check out the guitar duos of these cats. The new electric recording technology that became the standard by 1926, was a similar technology leap as were CDs and home high-fidelity kits in the 1940s & 50s. This new recording technology allowed the acoustic guitar to be heard!
    The technology specifically allowed the guitar to be mostly a rhythm instrument for a combo or orchestra. The electric guitar had not been invented; -Lloyd Loar left Gibson in 1924 because Gibson turned down his design for a new ELECTRIC guitar. Single note leads were still beyond the technology of the day, yet notice that Lucas can be heard above the orchestra and plays several chords with single note picking. This can only be attributed to the great RCA/Westinghouse engineers of the day -No one beat RCA/Westinghouse!
    HOWEVER; the new recording technology allowed the guitar to play GUITAR DUETS which allowed the players to play just about anything they wanted. Often a single guitar would comp a great singer, E.g. Bessie Smith & Eddie Lang on "Kitchen Man" is required listening...and fun!
    Not until Eddie Durham ca.1936 would this begin to change. But it was Charlie Christian ca. 1941 who blew the lid off! Simply because he had a 4 watt class-A amp with a 12" dynamic speaker along with a primitive pickup using iron bar magnets that weighted over 5 lbs! There would be no ceramic magnets or AlNico for several years.
    I LOVE watching Lucas move. And, I sure wish this vid had more resolution so that I could see his hands better. But, just knowing approximately where his hands were in a song is sufficient .
    Much thanks to the person whom posted this video and PLEASE post more if you have them!

    • @lazyrrr2411
      @lazyrrr2411 Před 5 lety +1

      Kripes Jack (Bix) - write a Book - or PUT something on Your Own Channel
      Don't go giving away the secret of open position 😬 loudmouth !

    • @curbmassa
      @curbmassa Před 4 lety +1

      FYI, he's playing in "C" on the film but you're hearing it in "D" so he would have had a capo on the 2nd fret when he recorded the audio. No doubt done because it was a better key to sing it.

    • @dantep4966
      @dantep4966 Před 2 lety +1

      @@curbmassa no he had his guitar tuned a whole step up all the time

  • @ianboard544
    @ianboard544 Před 8 lety

    Interesting. Saw his 'tiptoe through the tulips' from 1929 and looked for more.
    Very good phrasing. Surprised I never heard of him before.

  • @PiinkTuliip
    @PiinkTuliip Před 12 lety

    hahaha his face makes me happy.

  • @jerryking45
    @jerryking45 Před 2 lety

    He sounds like that lead singer from the Ink Spots most recently from Shawshank Redemption fame.

  • @1024rocket
    @1024rocket Před 12 lety

    My grandpa only sings this song. It's the only one he knows

  • @tricolorpicks
    @tricolorpicks Před 14 lety +1

    @Ezdduf4kuZ I've never heard of Johnnie Ray. Nick Lucas was one of the first, (if not the first), to record this song in Feb. 1931and it charted a #8 Hit for him in '31.

  • @longjonwhite
    @longjonwhite Před 11 lety +2

    So... Pop videos didn't begin with MTV then ? Or even Bob Dylan's Subterranean Homesick Blues ? Or even this! I just noticed a bunch of earlier ones down the side bar.

    • @janjohansenmusic
      @janjohansenmusic Před 5 lety +1

      Jon White Like Grimm bros folk tales didn’t start with Disney! 😄

  • @harrywongitbeso
    @harrywongitbeso Před 6 lety

    I just love this performance 😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊 available in cd format ????????????

  • @busessuck1
    @busessuck1 Před 13 lety +2

    reminds me of cliff edwards

  • @Anonymous-c4p
    @Anonymous-c4p Před 2 lety

    🎶"gee but it's tough when you don't get enough, walking yer baby back home"💞😏⚘

  • @musket-hc1fc
    @musket-hc1fc Před 4 lety

    This is Nick's song. No one does it as well as he did.

    • @mitchrodee
      @mitchrodee Před rokem

      Have you heard James Taylor’s version? czcams.com/video/46ZzJQA-uOA/video.html

  • @archduncan
    @archduncan Před 4 lety +1

    The guitar seems to be tuned up a tone/step. Interesting.

  • @shmuelpapirnikov1168
    @shmuelpapirnikov1168 Před 9 lety

    WAS SUNG BY DONALD OCONOR IN THE MOVIE WITH THE SAME NAME.

  • @janjohansenmusic
    @janjohansenmusic Před 5 lety

    Is it possible to get hold of a copy of the transcript in the beginning? Snader Telescriptions?

  • @Dons166
    @Dons166 Před 5 lety

    Early music video

  • @JMonk26
    @JMonk26 Před rokem

    Anyone catch the name on that guitar?

    • @stepno
      @stepno Před rokem +1

      "The Gibson" Nick Lucas Special model was the first "artist model" named instrument from Gibson, if I remember something I read somewhere long ago. Deeper body than usual, 12 frets to the body (later 13 and 14), distinctive inlays etc.

  • @paulbariohay3213
    @paulbariohay3213 Před 8 měsíci +1

  • @Darlexis
    @Darlexis Před 5 lety

    Hilarious! He cut the second verse!

  • @res9249
    @res9249 Před 5 měsíci

    Came here beacuse Tiny Tim!

  • @douggoodhill
    @douggoodhill Před 3 lety

    Dylan played a Nick Lucas guitar. It was longing to play a song with substance.

  • @plixypl0x
    @plixypl0x Před 2 lety

    He has the largest upper lip I've ever seen.

  • @whs1pmjazz
    @whs1pmjazz Před 12 lety +1

    Voice doesn't fit the song too well

    • @musket-hc1fc
      @musket-hc1fc Před 6 lety

      Patrick Reilly: Why do you think not?

    • @Anonymous-c4p
      @Anonymous-c4p Před 2 lety

      @@musket-hc1fc 🦗🎵🦗🎵🦗🎵🦗