Robbie Robertson - Tele-Man of The Band - Ask Zac 103

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  • čas přidán 28. 06. 2024
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    The late Robbie Robertson and The Band turned the music world on its collective ear with the release of Music From Big Pink. Extended guitar solos, fuzz, psychedelic references, and screaming vocals were nowhere to be found. Instead, the listener found the understated guitar, storytelling songs, thoughtful arrangements, and brother-like vocal harmonies. In today's player spotlight, we take a look at Robertson's early days with the Hawk, through the mid-era of The Band, mainly focusing on the period of time that Robertson played a Telecaster. We also take a look at the black Tele he was gifted by Dylan, which was modified through the years and was his main guitar through much of the Band era. Robbie passed away on August 9th, 2023 at the age of 80.
    open.spotify.com/playlist/65w...
    Gear used:
    1959 Fender Harvard with stock Jensen P10R
    1957 Fender Esquire with added neck pickup. Restoration and aging on the body by Dan "Danocaster" Strain. Bridge re-wind by Ron Ellis
    Strings:
    D'Addario NYXL 10-46
    Pick:
    Medium-Heavy
    #askzac #robbierobertson #telecaster

Komentáře • 341

  • @danvitale1825
    @danvitale1825 Před 2 lety +28

    When I was younger, I always wanted to do Band music. But whenever I got into a country band, they said it was too rock, and whenever I got into a rock band, they said it was too country. Shows how unique and special the Band was.

  • @Sasketchejuana_man
    @Sasketchejuana_man Před 10 měsíci +10

    I was getting really into The Band and discovering much of their music. I had unknowingly bought a black tele with a white pickguard a week ago.. RIP Robbie Robertson.

  • @brucemarston5344
    @brucemarston5344 Před 2 lety +8

    Robbie is definitely one of the most innovative guitarist of the 60s&70s. Always made them short, sweet and left you wanting more. The last waltz showed he could out guitar anyone. Still want more.

  • @rmcgue33
    @rmcgue33 Před 2 lety +47

    Love Robbie’s playing. The solo in King Harvest is so melodic and has so much taste. Thank you for this episode!

  • @texastoneamps
    @texastoneamps Před 2 lety +5

    Nice bio. A few notes:
    "Robbie started a whole school of guitar playing up in Canada"- It was called "white funk" - like you said, Robbie's harmonics were more "funky sounding".
    After Tour '74, Bill Graham called Robbie one of the two or three most selfless lead guitarists, and "the best, bar none" of any guitar player who plays with a vocalist, in unison with the singer.
    In the 1976 summer tour, Robbie used two Music Man amps together, a 210-HD One Thirty and a 212-HD One Thirty, because "nothing else got loud enough" although they "broke down a litle too much" for him. The Music Man amps were scary loud.
    He got the idea to put the humbucker on his Tele because Rick Danko did it first. Pete Traynor also gave Rick some bass amps, until he switched to the 300 Watt Ampeg SVT with the 8x10" cab, to go with his Ampeg fretless bass.
    Jonathan Taplin and John Simon both said that Robbie wrote the songs, and Larry Campbell said that Levon wasn't a writer.
    Also check out "Mystery Tain" by Greil Marcus, where he write about The Band, and Robbies Rolling Stone interview in 1970.
    The song, "Jawbone" is inspired by the Tele thief...

  • @MrMojoRiiisin
    @MrMojoRiiisin Před 2 lety +31

    The Band are the best American band from Canada ever

    • @LuisSilva-yu6ty
      @LuisSilva-yu6ty Před rokem +3

      Agree.

    • @End-Putler4eva
      @End-Putler4eva Před 10 měsíci

      3 of the 4 members were Canadian 🍁. Another band that we lost sadly due to Border Jumping. The list of artists/musicians is too long to mention ...

    • @drummer78
      @drummer78 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@End-Putler4evaThere were 5 members of The Band, so it would have been 4 out of 5 from Canada.

  • @seangrexa4707
    @seangrexa4707 Před 2 lety +8

    Amazing how the Band kind of flew under the radar (at least as far as radio play) yet had profound influences on Eric Clapton, George Harrison, Elton John, etc. Like many of that era, they produced an incredible body of work in a short period of time. As I get older, I have come to believe that 60s - 70s music is indeed classic and will stand the test of time as some of the best ever. It was a very special time and might not be matched for some time to come.

  • @pyrostooge78
    @pyrostooge78 Před 2 lety +8

    Robbie is one of the great underrated guitar player and songwriters - Rick is one of the great underrated bass players - Levon is one of the great underrated drummers - and so on with the whole band. Me and my friends would sit around and play music and listen to The Band all the time - and wonder how and the hell they weren't more popular.

    • @amaj7313
      @amaj7313 Před 2 lety +1

      UNDERRATED😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡😡

  • @doncummings3915
    @doncummings3915 Před 2 lety +12

    Here is a great story about Ronnie Hawkins....I am a retired musician and was doing a home show in Toronto, Ontario and a kitchen cabinet company had hired Ronnie to front their booth at the show, and my booth was right next door, I had my own walk in bath tub company at the time...for three days I jawed it up with Ronnie Hawkins, and heard more stories about the Rolling Stones, Janie Joplin and on and on and on...the most memorable three days of my life, and if any one wants to know, I will spit in the eye of anyone who doesn't say a kind word about The Hawk, he came to Canada to play because of the race strife south of the border. and even though I got to see him in the Golden Rail here in Hamilton, On, it wasn't till a few years back when I got to sit down with him for three days...a pure gentleman and one hell of a story teller....

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 2 lety +1

      NICE!!!!

    • @tomcarl8021
      @tomcarl8021 Před 2 lety

      Wait a minute, Ronnie Hawkins came to play Canada because of the racial strife in the American South? Explain that..
      Now, I can see if Ronnie was black and wanted to leave the south...but he wasn't. Far from it.
      No, Ronnie left the South to play Canada because there was a market for him up there. Simple as that.
      Did he also tell you he marched right behind Dr King in Washington in 1963?

    • @josmotherman591
      @josmotherman591 Před 2 lety

      You are a lucky man..

  • @jdguitarmusic
    @jdguitarmusic Před 2 lety +34

    Really enjoyed this episode Zac. I’ve been a big fan of the Band since I got into Dylan in the early 70’s - Robbie’s playing on “Blonde on Blonde” especially moved me as a young guitar player. You’re right about the first 2 Band albums - they changed rock music, and led people like George Harrison and Eric Clapton in to new directions in their music.Loved your intro to “The Weight” - really captured the Robbie sound.

    • @matthewchunk3689
      @matthewchunk3689 Před 2 lety +4

      The Band remind of this old jam band called The Grateful Dead. They had a guitarist named Bob who could voice a chord every which way.

  • @otissss71
    @otissss71 Před 2 lety +2

    Robbie switched to strats post hawks dylan tour...he said he preferred the stratocaster overall but that it just wouldn't stay in tune. Hendrix showed him how to pre stretch strings and later clapton showed him how to tighten the claw and use a piece off wood to block the the bridge/hardtail it.
    A large majority of the band/dylan recordings are Strats....throughout the Hawks his 1st expensive non Sears guitar was indeed a Tele...Dylan's first electric newport 65 was a Strat (this is before Hendrix had come along) and Bob too found tuning issues so Robbie suggested albert buy Dylan that maple neck black and white 66 european tour tele...robbie now owns that tele but it's heavily customized

  • @malakaisilverman9913
    @malakaisilverman9913 Před rokem +2

    I used to see Robbie around Santa Monica all the time. Got to meet him briefly. He was very cool and could see how much admiration I had for him. It really was like meeting a hero. Those songs, man. those songs.

  • @stokemeister7929
    @stokemeister7929 Před 2 lety +4

    Ive always thought how fun it had to have been hanging out writing and playing songs at the big pink.

  • @josephsantos4733
    @josephsantos4733 Před 2 lety +6

    I love listening to when the band performed at the Isle of Wight with Bob Dylan. Thats some good tele playing from Robbie

  • @mannylopez973
    @mannylopez973 Před 2 lety +1

    I am the nephew of legendary Roy Buchanan my name is Manny Lopez was married to his niece Carla... Robbie Robinson is a great guitarist ..thank you for sharing the biography of his guitar playing and his life I was married to Roy Buchanan's his niece Carla Clermoms. Thank you for sharingt Robbie Robertson story by accident I came across your site Coyote red skies that's my stage name going to buy his books thank you

  • @tomst.antoine7742
    @tomst.antoine7742 Před 2 lety +2

    Like you, I also own and have read and re-read the many books on The Band. The Band was the greatest.

  • @Southern.child86
    @Southern.child86 Před 2 lety +10

    Thank you for not getting into their differences, but focusing heavily on their similarities: Robbie and Levon. Both completely underrated and underplayed, in my opinion. I didn’t think much of them when I first heard them in my teens, but now at 35 I can say their one of my favorite “Band”’s to listen to. I will definitely be checking out the suggested reading, thanks Zac!

  • @ZionForman
    @ZionForman Před 2 lety +21

    love Robbie Robertson, for me a great example of his playing style is his solo at the end of To Kingdom Come on the Music from Big Pink

    • @tysonmindham2986
      @tysonmindham2986 Před 2 lety

      That song doesn't get talked about much. But every fan of The Band knows it, and praises it.

  • @oldmanlearningguitar446
    @oldmanlearningguitar446 Před 2 lety +3

    The piece of gear of Robertson’s that most of the old guys around here in Southern Ontario remember the most is his Gibson GA400 because it was really really loud. This is for the days of the Hawks and earlier.

  • @tedgay8427
    @tedgay8427 Před 2 lety +8

    As a teenager in the mid-80s I saw "The Last Waltz" on PBS. After that I put aside the Clapton, SRV and Betts records and started trying to cop Robbie's licks off of The Band's records. Then in '87, Robbie's first solo album came out. It's still one of my desert island records. Next for underated guitarists, Mike Henderson. Cheers!

    • @jimmanire3646
      @jimmanire3646 Před 2 lety

      Henderson!

    • @MrChopsticktech
      @MrChopsticktech Před 2 lety

      Robbie's solos from The Last Waltz had way too many pinch and artificial harmonics for my taste. Don't forget that there were overdubs and mistakes were fixed in the studio before it was released.

  • @kellygrant3074
    @kellygrant3074 Před 2 lety +1

    'Look out Cleveland' might be my favorite. I love how abrupt the end is.

  • @cutchopweld5717
    @cutchopweld5717 Před 2 lety +3

    Traynor amps kicked A$$. They still do. They are legendary for their quality/durability!

  • @paulmcconnon2721
    @paulmcconnon2721 Před 2 lety +1

    Great episode on Robbie Robertson Zac. I don`t think there is enough made about his song writing and guitar playing and technique. The Band gathered influences from different genres and fused them altogether creating their own unique sound and style. Vocally, Levon, Rick and Richard conveyed so much emotion. Not many singers can touch a person like the way they did. Five special people that should never be forgotten. Zac, why does nobody talk about Danny Gatton any more. He was such an extraordinary player, an untouchable force of nature.

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 2 lety

      I have done a video on Gatton, and mentioned his Rhythm video many times.

  • @kurtpaquette7721
    @kurtpaquette7721 Před 2 lety +8

    Big fan of Robbie’s playing. Would love to see an episode on Terry Kath, One of my favourite tele players! Love the videos Zac🤘

  • @derwynpowell7689
    @derwynpowell7689 Před 2 lety +1

    Certainly enjoyed Robbie's book "Testimony". A great read and his details on the Hawks early days are well documented in the book. Canada can be proud of the Band's musical legacy they left us. Music from Big Pink was a big game changer. Rock on...... Cheers.

  • @kevo3985
    @kevo3985 Před 2 lety +8

    I think the band is the most severely under appricated group there loved by people who know what's up but I can't belive how many people I've met who never hers of them, Richard, Rick, Levon, Robbie sadly the last guy name escapes my memory right now for some reason, they were so talented and versatile by far one of my all time favorite groups ever, love the video defiantly subbing and wish you the absolute best

    • @cutchopweld5717
      @cutchopweld5717 Před 2 lety +4

      You hit the nail on the head. Drastically underrated both for their killer music but also for their Influence on music. They were the first band I remember refusing to be labeled as one style. They played all styles (rock, folk, country, jazz, blues and more) and blended them into beautiful music. I think their Influence can be heard alot in the next wave of Country rock especially (Allmans, Skynerd, Marshall Tucker) etc. They made it ok to "take what you need and leave the rest" of whatever style you feel.

    • @wylstyle
      @wylstyle Před 2 lety +3

      Garth Hudson.

  • @wri6345789
    @wri6345789 Před 2 lety +1

    As a teenager, I used to watch and hear Ronnie Hawkins and The Hawks play at venues around Northwest Arkansas (Ronnie's home stomping grounds). The first time I heard Robbie play, I was blown away by his blues style. He would stretch those strings and crank up his Fender 4/10 Bassman, and it would literally bring the house down! Every guitar player that heard him during those days wanted to play just like him. When I first heard Big Pink, I was a bit disappointed that he didn't play in the same style that I had remembered from earlier years. However, the departure from their former blues style is most likely what took them to the top...

    • @wri6345789
      @wri6345789 Před 2 lety

      I remember a few years later that both Robbie and Rick were both playing through Traynor amps, designed by their good friend Pete Traynor...

  • @ZeppelinUK
    @ZeppelinUK Před 2 lety +1

    Hi Zac, great video once again highlighting one of the best bands of the late '60's in my opinion and Robbie one of the great Telecaster players of the period!... 🎸🙂

  • @msmoniz
    @msmoniz Před 2 lety +1

    Six Nations is the reserve he spent time at. It's about a 30-40 minute drive from where I live in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada where if you know your Rock n Roll history is where Ronnie Hawkins and Conway Twitty would play a lot of local clubs, being that Hamilton is 1/2 way between Buffalo at the border and Toronto, both about 40 minute drives on either side.

  • @jackstraw522
    @jackstraw522 Před 2 lety +3

    Robbie is one of my big inspirations as a guitarist

  • @chrisquinn9104
    @chrisquinn9104 Před 2 lety +5

    He also played an Epiphone Riviera like in my photo
    It really seemed like just everybody but The Who went earthy after the band. Clapton quit Cream, the White Album, Beggars Banquet, etc… They were inescapable. Sad irony that drugs had such a devastating effect on them, despite the olde timey initial presentation

    • @koDaffi
      @koDaffi Před 2 lety

      The Band was wrecked by drugs as well. Except for Garth for the most part. Grand Marnier and Cocaine led to Richard Manuels suicide. They were all addicted to heroin and cocaine to the point that Levon left the group to go home to clean up cold turkey at his parents house. They had to buy pounds of cocaine for The Last Waltz at $30-40k a piece for everybody. Robbie was so strung out he was a skeleton. After The Band broke up Robbie and Martin Scorsese rented a house in Beverly Hills where they covered all the windows and would go on coke binges.

  • @stevesuv
    @stevesuv Před 2 lety +1

    I love Levons King Bisquit stories when he was a kid. Buying the doughnuts. Great book. Sonny Boy. WOW!

    • @kevindean1327
      @kevindean1327 Před 2 lety

      Sonny Boy Williamson with Robert Jr. Lockwood on guitar. Lockwood was a HUGE influence that few people know about. He was on dozens of records at Chess. The King Biscuit shows were highly influential. I read where BB King said that on the plantation they always listened to the show during lunch break.

  • @j.b.55
    @j.b.55 Před rokem

    It’s so interesting that they wrote these epic historical American tropes…and that Robbie could channel this from his Canadian/Toronto upbringing. I’m an entertainment cameraman in Toronto and have interviewed and chaired with Robbie dozens of times in his later career. He’s definitely passionate….and he’s the ‘Paul McCartney’ of The Band’. Levon had recently passed, I asked him about his feelings. They loved each other as brothers for sure. He said he mended things with Levon just before he passed. I sensed that Robbie has some regrets, guilt and sadness….and that Levon wasn’t really able forgive him. Levon did heavy drugs, went broke, got cancer and died nearly penniless. Know one knows for sure what the circumstances were but them. Friendships, bands, Marriages…all difficult struggles for people who love each other. Certainly some of the most pure music ever written.

  • @saltwatersaddletramp7229
    @saltwatersaddletramp7229 Před 2 lety +7

    The intro to the Weight is timeless and pure magic.

  • @brianhaji112
    @brianhaji112 Před 2 lety +1

    SEE THE MAN WITH THE STAGE FRIGHT...JUST STANDING UP THERE TO GIVE IT ALL HIS MIGHT , HE GOT CAUGHT UP IN THE SPOTLIGHT , BUT WHEN HE GETS TO THE END, HE WANTS TO START ALL OVER AGAIN !! ROBBIE & RICK TWO DUDES THAT ROCKED N ROLLED

  • @imannonymous7707
    @imannonymous7707 Před 2 lety

    Being torontontian myself and both a dylan and band afficianado . I was thrilled to see this episode. You took me to school Zac

  • @markroylance1584
    @markroylance1584 Před 2 lety +1

    I bought Up on Cripple Creek in 1969 or 1970..... Fascinated by their sound and their look when I saw the second album cover..... Then I flipped the single over!!!! Life-changing moment! And to have THREE singers of such individuality in a band? Ridiculous!

    • @tomst.antoine7742
      @tomst.antoine7742 Před 2 lety

      That album cover photo was taken in the rain. Great cover...

  • @ranchoricardo
    @ranchoricardo Před 2 lety +4

    Great episode, Zac! The Band weighed heavily on my understanding of what a "band" should/could be when I was growing up. Though their first two records should really be listened to by anyone who loves music, I would also recommend Robbie Robertson's 1st solo album as a must have -- especially considering the amazing guitar sounds on that particular record.

  • @MacTeee
    @MacTeee Před 2 lety +3

    Zac love your vids...BTW you tripped the over sensitive Canadian Alert system ;-). Yonge Street is pronounced like Young and Robbie spent a lot of his youth on Six Nations Reserve just outside of Brantford, Ontario. Keep up the great work!!!

  • @WillyPDX94
    @WillyPDX94 Před 2 lety

    Another great episode. Thanks, Zac.

  • @lordofthemound3890
    @lordofthemound3890 Před 2 lety +1

    Great playing with Dylan in ‘66. He was way hot for 1966. Only a few other people in the world were doing what he was doing on guitar at the time.

  • @lewistyler462
    @lewistyler462 Před 2 lety +1

    There is a great line in Barney Hoskyns book about Robbie's sound in the Hawks as being like, ''thousands of birds screaming'', which I think was attributed to Robbie himself. Then of course there is that, ''thin, wild mercury sound'', as Dylan described his style during the '66 tours.

  • @wongnaichungrd
    @wongnaichungrd Před 2 lety +5

    Hey Zac great topic for a post. I've yet to watch but let me tell you I always loved Robbies playing a lot more with a Tele than a Strat. Dylan '66 World Tour (no better live band at the time, just listen to the concert releases) and the first 3-4 Band albums. Brilliant stuff. His Rockabilly meets R/B with Dylan was incendiary with fire and attitude but not a note out of place. Then the Band Albums with a beautiful restrained Curtis Mayfield influenced attitude. Played more notes later on with the Strat which appealed to me less, though the guitar work on Dylan's Going Going Gone is brilliant, but in his prime he was revelatory!

  • @joncaradies3155
    @joncaradies3155 Před 2 lety +1

    Whoa !!!! Right on , Zak !!!! I still listen to the Band all the time .... They were just amazing talents , all of them . They all brought something to the table that made the whole . Each was integral to the Band .
    Probably my favorite solo by any guitar player ever is Robbie on the LP 'Rock of Ages' the song is 'The Unfaithful Servant' . It's just jaw dropping and filled with emotion ...... Anywhoo .... Thanks for another great episode , Zak !

    • @wongnaichungrd
      @wongnaichungrd Před 2 lety

      Oh yeah that's a killer solo and he even makes a virtue of a minor fluff. What a song too! So beautiful, sad and gothic.

  • @chuckg3475
    @chuckg3475 Před 2 lety +3

    Agree 100% on the Levon book. I read it several years ago and absolutely loved it. I was surprised to learn about the rift between Robertson and Helm. 2 sides to every story. I watched the Last Waltz again after reading the book and got a whole different take. Nothing diminishes the brilliance of the music!

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 2 lety

      Totally agree!

    • @volkmarschocke1586
      @volkmarschocke1586 Před 2 lety

      yes, Chuck G - and Martin Scorseses' und Robbies' encore "ONCE WERE BROTHERS" is even more deplorable in screwing up "THE STORY THE BAND" than "THE LAST WALTZ"

    • @hannejeppesen1809
      @hannejeppesen1809 Před 6 měsíci

      You might want to read Robbie's book Testimony or for a more balanced view Barney Hoskyns biography of The Band "Across the great divide". No one is blameless, all had their faults. However, I think Levon was too bitter, and didn't take responsibility for his own drug use and perhaps mishandling of money. According to Hoskyns book they all made a lot of money.

  • @BluegillGreg
    @BluegillGreg Před 2 lety +2

    His highly individualistic playing on Bob Dylan's Planet Waves is right out front, especially the Tele playing on Going, Going, Gone and the 6 string acoustic on Dirge. Pretty raw and exposed, powerful if you're into that.

  • @TotallyTuberous
    @TotallyTuberous Před 2 lety +3

    The Band was undoubtedly a major phenomenon in the late 60s music scene. I was a huge fan, and am to this day. I sometimes wonder how things would have gone if Bob Dylan hadn’t had his motorcycle accident. Here’s how I remember that time, from my vantage point as a university student in California: Bob had become hugely influential; an oracle for a generation, was continuing to evolve, and then just disappeared with news of his accident. In the following year, there was scant information about what had happened. Was Bob alive? In a coma? Permanently disabled? But a few signs of life began to emerge, notably, the release of You Ain’t Goin Nowhere (The Byrds), The Mighty Quinn (Manfred Mann), then Big Pink. That album signaled that Bob was indeed alive and creating. My friends and I regarded it as a “message from Bob”. It had unique credibility because Robbie Robertson’s name was among musicians listed on Blonde On Blonde, and he had co-authored songs on Big Pink. The album and The Band had been anointed by Bob Dylan. All that followed received well deserved attention.

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 2 lety +1

      Well said. Did not hurt that Bob painted the cover.

    • @TotallyTuberous
      @TotallyTuberous Před 2 lety +1

      @@AskZac Oh, yeah, I'd forgotten about that detail!

  • @glenkepic3208
    @glenkepic3208 Před 2 lety +1

    Nice work, Zac !
    I loved Up On Cripple Creek as a kid of 12 in '69 but never bought anything.
    '76 or so, there's a guy on the cover of Guitar Player Magazine at a local shop that i didn't recognize.
    Sorta plain cover shot, etc...
    Owner "That's the guitar player for The Band". Bought it.
    Strat player then. Debated whether it was Robbie or Steve Winwood got Clapton playing a Strat.
    All i know is my most memorable moment now from The Last Waltz is EC and Robbie jamming on Further On Up The Road and after the intro, Clapton almost drops his guitar,,,upper strap slips,,, "Whoa!!!".
    Robbie jumps in and cranks things up.
    Gonna look for "Showdown At Big Sky". Great track.
    Thanks for the memories !

  • @hearpalhere
    @hearpalhere Před 2 lety

    Awesome playing Zac! Really enjoyed the episode, thank you!

  • @Bill-se4gr
    @Bill-se4gr Před 2 lety +1

    You really did capture what it was like to hear Big Pink for the first time when it came out way back when, and appreciated how you focused more on Robbie’s talent and contributions than the infighting that quite frankly I suspect goes on in bands all the time. Btw, I always see the Chris Hillman book on your shelf (also have the Beatles Gear book). To me, Chris is another one of those incredible talents who has been so influential well beyond his songwriting and playing with the Byrds. Well done Zac!

    • @WillyPDX94
      @WillyPDX94 Před 2 lety

      I've had the same thought many times. I wish Zac would post a complete bibliography of his library with comments on each book.

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 2 lety

      I'll do more episodes on my books.

  • @redlandsaxman
    @redlandsaxman Před 2 lety +2

    Fantastic episode. I loved your intro licks and I’m a huge fan of the Band.

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 2 lety

      Glad you enjoyed it, Lonnie.

  • @vayabroder729
    @vayabroder729 Před 2 lety

    Yes! The one I requested! 😉 Thank you, sir!!

  • @davegallagher7428
    @davegallagher7428 Před 2 lety

    Hey Zac I have been a fan of the Band and Robbie Robertson for decades. I’m pretty sure I discovered them 1st thru Joan Baez cover of “The Night they Drove Old Dixie Down” RR truly is a great songwriter and as you stated an underappreciated guitar player. This video was really a treat, thank you so much!

  • @fernandes5986
    @fernandes5986 Před 2 lety

    Tank you for the video Zac. The band are my favourite band.

  • @kjatexas3679
    @kjatexas3679 Před 2 lety

    One of my favorite guitarists. Saw the band live, three or four times in NYC.

  • @budbays4588
    @budbays4588 Před 2 lety

    I had the good fortune to see Bob Dylan in Memphis Tn. in 1966. His band was The Hawks with Robbie Robertson playing guitar. They were so great! I saw The Band in 1971 again in Memphis. They were also Great!

  • @matthewstigall8337
    @matthewstigall8337 Před 2 lety

    Outstanding video Zac!

  • @pinhorn
    @pinhorn Před 2 lety +3

    An important record is Ronnie Hawkins version of 'Hey Bo Diddley' /'Who do you love'. Very exciting solo by Robbie and the tone he gets is amazing considering it's the early 60's. Every guitar player in Toronto wanted to sound like him. He was responsible for many Telecasters being bought.

    • @epajanssen
      @epajanssen Před 2 lety

      Good shot! It’s pretty incredible to hear all that string bending and amp overdrive and then realising it was recorded in 1963! I think that makes him one of the very first to do that, even before Bloomfield and Clapton?

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 2 lety +1

      Its on the playlist. open.spotify.com/playlist/65wx3DVBWs7rNGY4BoiRhc?si=20b1befff7aa4986

    • @BenPrevo
      @BenPrevo Před 2 lety +1

      @@epajanssen Check out the 1961 62 roy buchanan stuff.

  • @elainarose6073
    @elainarose6073 Před 2 lety +1

    You could be the coolest dude on the tele planet. Thanks for all the goodness!

  • @TheHamebusk
    @TheHamebusk Před 2 lety +4

    OUTSTANDING! Growing up in Oklahoma City in the 60's, The Band was always "my" Beatles. Still are...

    • @tonybaldini6818
      @tonybaldini6818 Před 2 lety

      I traveled across the country this past summer, playing music everywhere, stopped in OK City and Norman because one of the bootlegs of the Band when they were the Hawks has a song where Levon says "I'd like to dedicate this to our friends down in Norman." It's the Onyx Club 1965 OK City recording. Did you ever see them live as the Hawks?

  • @jordansmith5978
    @jordansmith5978 Před 2 lety

    Awesome video! Informative and interesting

  • @johnr8820
    @johnr8820 Před 2 lety

    Robbie is a fantastic songwriter and underrated guitar player..he has an incredibly unique style with hybrid picking and the pinch harmonics. He always played with taste and he always gave the song what it needed if anything. A great live player too. One of my favorite tones of all time comes from his little so called “black box” on “Tears of Rage”. What a sound.

  • @davehenriksen2073
    @davehenriksen2073 Před 2 lety

    Most enjoyable - thank you.

  • @waynehicks1969
    @waynehicks1969 Před 2 lety

    Pure gold..

  • @joshuakoyukuk6381
    @joshuakoyukuk6381 Před rokem

    Zac, i gotta say. I love the indigenous artist content.

  • @jeffgerndt2813
    @jeffgerndt2813 Před 2 lety

    Another fine episode!

  • @steveturner6770
    @steveturner6770 Před 2 lety

    Excellent playing Zac.

  • @davidjessee7701
    @davidjessee7701 Před 2 lety

    A lady use to play an organ at the walking horse show at our local county fair in Russell Springs ky. ( boy home of Steve Wariner) and she played through a speaker that had a spinning horn.... it was very distinctive sounding..
    Great for horse shows...

  • @aaronlalli3730
    @aaronlalli3730 Před 2 lety

    Beautifuly done...really dug it

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you so much 😀

  • @timothydaniels504
    @timothydaniels504 Před 2 lety +1

    I grew up in Toronto when Ronnie Hawkins and the Hawks were more or less the house band for southern Ontario. If you had a car and the time, you could see them play 5 nights a week. A really interesting record that people should Google is The Stones That I Throw by Levon and The Hawks. It really hints at what’s coming on the Big Pink album. I don’t think Robbie was in that version of the Hawks but he was busy in New York with Dylan and John Hammond Jr.

  • @StandbyCymbalist
    @StandbyCymbalist Před 2 lety

    Thx for covering The Band sir!! Their funkier songs, along with the Beatles, CCR, Simon & Garfunkel, and jazz albums on Blue Note get me interested in making music as a teen.

  • @guitareveryone
    @guitareveryone Před 2 lety +1

    Great storytelling of Robbie and The Band. Robbie was a great songwriter and a good guitarist. I also heard Robbie tell the story of when Eric Clapton wanted to join the band and Robbie remarked about the fact that he’s the guitar player so where would Eric fit in. Lol. The Last Waltz has some stuff with him and Clapton on stage that I enjoy watching too.

  • @mikeb1841
    @mikeb1841 Před 2 lety

    Fantastic episode!!! Love The Band and really enjoyed how you did a great deep dive on RR!!
    Being a person who grew up around Toronto, I don’t think I’ve ever heard Yonge St pronounced like that. Never noticed the phonetics of the word lol

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 2 lety +1

      I was wrong....

  • @stevehobbs6686
    @stevehobbs6686 Před 2 lety +1

    Love The Wheels on Fire book

  • @Rybanez120
    @Rybanez120 Před 2 lety

    Great video and also nice jacket! As a 30 something I sort of backed my way into loving them by way of 90s artists like Counting Crows, Wallflowers and then alt country via Lucero. Took me a while but once I dived in, a big part of my taste snapped into focus as that ‘Americana’ label you mention, of which they were the instigators.

  • @hoagyguitarmichael
    @hoagyguitarmichael Před 2 lety

    Great primer on Mr. Robertson. That "So Many Roads" record was my introduction, along with Hammond's Leiber and Stoller produced "I Can Tell," on which Robertson burns the house down.

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 2 lety +1

      I was trying to remember which latter album had more of RR's playing. There it is. I will add it to the playlist! Thanks, Michael!

  • @TheOlmecindian
    @TheOlmecindian Před 2 lety

    Awesome video of knowledge like always 😎

  • @philiphalpenny9761
    @philiphalpenny9761 Před 10 měsíci

    Wonderfully detailed appraisal in such a short space of time. Loved The Band's tastefully understated music since the first time I heard it. I have subscribed on account of this video. I wonder if you have analysed the soulful, surrealist music of Lowell George. His abstract genius isn't celebrated enough...

  • @michaelbutler2312
    @michaelbutler2312 Před 2 lety

    great video. robbie is one of my favs. note that there is a great video documentary about the band also.

  • @chokkan7
    @chokkan7 Před 2 lety

    I have a home in Dardanelle, AR, and it's famous in the area as a place where Elvis used to stop to gig back in the day, so I can imagine that Robbie and the Hawks passed by here as well. Can't even imagine how his exposure to the unpasteurized South might have warped his impressionable young mind back in the day; Roy Buchanan's birthplace (Ozark) is just down the road a bit...

  • @xxREmaniacxx
    @xxREmaniacxx Před 2 lety +1

    If you want to hear badass Robbie tone, listen to Live at Royal Albert Hall on the Stage Fright Deluxe version

    • @xxREmaniacxx
      @xxREmaniacxx Před rokem

      The intro to The Weight is pure tone zone!

  • @tomrutledge5621
    @tomrutledge5621 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for your perspective, Zac. I lived in the Hudson Valley in New York; for a time, and the point-of-view there was that Robbie’s songwriting consisted of writing his name on the sheet music sent to the publisher. Haha. (I knew that wasn’t true). Thanks for your insight into his Tele playing, as I only ever saw pictures of him with that Strat/sans middle pickup. Great stuff as usual!

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 2 lety +1

      I bypassed the Strat era. Yes, there is much conjecture on writing credits.

  • @pinhorn
    @pinhorn Před 2 lety

    When I saw ' Levon and the Hawks' around 1965 he was playing a blond neck Tele' through a tweed Gibson GA400 amp.

  • @freddymclain
    @freddymclain Před rokem

    My ex was a big Dylan fan, so when he came to town (Houston) during the mid 70's with The Band, I took her to the concert. The thing that struck me about the bandstand was the number of butterscotch teles sitting around. It seems like there were maybe a dozen of them, but that's probably wrong.

  • @gwcjr2102
    @gwcjr2102 Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome!!! Love The Band! It’s funny if I ask people if they know them they say “no”. If I name some of there songs they usually know most of them! Lol! Great video sir keep it up!!! Thanks!

  • @RedRose4711
    @RedRose4711 Před 2 lety

    Excellent video.

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you very much!

  • @zakkwyldesliver
    @zakkwyldesliver Před 2 lety +4

    The Band were a group of guys who could pass their instruments off to the next guy and still sound terrific.
    Doubtful that we’ll ever see anything like that again.

    • @REM1956
      @REM1956 Před 2 lety +2

      Los Lobos does that quite a lot too. As you imply, that multi instrumentalist talent in the same band is very rare.

    • @zakkwyldesliver
      @zakkwyldesliver Před 2 lety +1

      @@REM1956
      You’re right, although Los Lobos (and The Band) were around before my formative years. I was thinking more in a modern context.

    • @kevo3985
      @kevo3985 Před 2 lety +2

      Exactly they are one of a kind and I've never herd nothing but gold from them

    • @REM1956
      @REM1956 Před 2 lety +1

      @@zakkwyldesliver I agree. I'm 65. Elvis's "Don't Be Cruel" was #1 on the Billboard charts the week I was born. I can only think of those two bands who fit that criteria. Bands with rare talent is an understatement.

  • @nightshiftblues
    @nightshiftblues Před rokem

    Wonderful video.

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před rokem

      Thank you very much!

  • @LOVERGEIST777
    @LOVERGEIST777 Před 2 lety

    I like how you play it!

  • @Coolbeans1492
    @Coolbeans1492 Před 9 měsíci

    Man i love robbie Robertsons guitar playing bc hes in a elite class of player that played for the song. Guys like george harrison did that sort of thing and i think thats the reason their work lasts for so long. When clapton went solo thats also how he approached guitar. I also love bob dylan and my dream guitar is a black early maple cap tele w nitro and the small logo. Otherwise its gotta be a black slab rosewood board tele with the single ply guard on it.
    Robbie robertson is so influential and his music is so different and always was. If the beatles laid out the platform that most 60s bands would follow the band powered by robertsons song writing carved their own way. Likewise dylan was also another one of those artists that was inimitable.
    As a player the ideal setup to me is the aforementioned dream tele through either a vox ac30 or a tweed fender bassman/blackface super reverb.

  • @bastardsonofretkillr
    @bastardsonofretkillr Před 2 lety +1

    Zac…Loved this, thanks…your Harvard sounded fantastic….Robbie information thanks

  • @adamdarmstaedter1256
    @adamdarmstaedter1256 Před 2 lety

    My grandparents lived between Mountain View and Melbourne in BFE NE Arkansas in the middle of nowhere in the mountains. Levon Helm had a house right near there somewhere.

  • @jimpage601
    @jimpage601 Před 2 lety

    Bought "So Many Roads" second-hand while bumming around NYC in the mid-60s. Who ARE these guys?!?!? Saw the Band three times with Robbie and three times post-Robbie. Always a stellar group; Weider is brilliant and his instruction DVDs are magic. Last time I saw Levon he was jamming with Steady-Rollin' Bob Margolin, Hubert Sumlin, and Mookie Brill. YASSIR!!! Thanks, ZAC!

  • @meb2126
    @meb2126 Před 2 lety

    Lovely! ❤

  • @timothydaniels504
    @timothydaniels504 Před 10 měsíci

    Freddie Keeler played in David Clayton Thomas’ band the Shays. They were a fantastic band and Freddie was on the road to becoming a legend himself. Sadly, someone in San Francisco spiked his drink with a powerful dose of LSD and it really messed him up. The other Tele star out of Toronto via Germany was John Kay who’s band the Sparrow went on to become Steppenwolf. Born To Be Wild is pure Toronto Yonge Street r&b with organ and Tele riffs. They all had that ice pick in the ear sound.

  • @majortwang6211
    @majortwang6211 Před 2 lety

    well done

  • @robertsigafoos6025
    @robertsigafoos6025 Před 2 lety +1

    Zac, you’ve done your homework! Great low key examination of Robertson’s style and influences. Thanks for not including any bad mouthing of him and Levons bad blood. I believe after the “Last Waltz” show\album they still remained as a band and made that dud album “Islands”. How about a disertation on Roy Buchannon!

  • @1rwjwith
    @1rwjwith Před rokem

    Loved his book and the movie Once Were Brothers. Even though he still. Tells the same stories over and over now ! Robbie is a colossal figure in American music of the 60’s , 70,s and beyond. I just don’t see any empirical evidence that Levon was a songwriter, He DID GET SOME SONGWRITING CREDITS with The Band, JEMIMAH SURRENDER and LIFE IS A CARNIVAL as co writer . Anyway great episode.

  • @jakebermel6193
    @jakebermel6193 Před 2 lety +3

    I love how you pronounce Yonge St. It's really just pronounced "young"! (source: me, a former Torontonian). Great video, Zac. Spreading the Robbie gospel like you do is always appreciated.

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 2 lety

      The 3rd mention of my mispronunciation. I am sorry

    • @jakebermel6193
      @jakebermel6193 Před 2 lety

      @@AskZac Please, no apologies necessary! In true Canadian fashion, I'm sorry for pointing it out. No harm, no foul.

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 2 lety

      @@jakebermel6193 I have been on that street, and I am sure my friend told me the right way to say it. I just forgot.

    • @kevindean1327
      @kevindean1327 Před 2 lety +1

      @@AskZac Word of warning Zac. Don't get into an "I'm sorry" thing with a Canadian because they'll out "sorry" you every time. Sorry to point this out but I'm Canadian, sorry!!!

  • @mikeadams4605
    @mikeadams4605 Před 2 lety +1

    Tele-man but mostly remembered for playing that Gold Strat during the Last Waltz

    • @koDaffi
      @koDaffi Před 2 lety

      He had it dipped in bronze. There's a Fender video on youtube of them restoring it.