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First Listen to Iron Butterfly - In a Gadda Da Vida (REACTION)

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  • čas přidán 21. 07. 2020
  • Incredible psychedelic insanity from Iron Butterfly tonight.
    Original Video: • IRON BUTTERFLY IN- A-G...
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Komentáře • 358

  • @tonyallen4265
    @tonyallen4265 Před 4 lety +54

    1968 was definitely in the middle of the Psychedelic rock era. I was 8 years old. I got to be raised in the 60s and 70s - the best two decades for music. Lucky me.

    • @DiconDissectionalReactions
      @DiconDissectionalReactions  Před 4 lety +5

      Rock on!

    • @laurab68707
      @laurab68707 Před 4 lety +5

      I agree, best two decades of music ever. I also grew up during these eras. Fantastic time to grow up. Awesome music then.

    • @dolf370
      @dolf370 Před 3 lety +2

      I was also 8 years old 1968, and can't but agree fully with you.

    • @christomashofski9160
      @christomashofski9160 Před 3 lety

      @@DiconDissectionalReactions Hey Daniel! Digging back through a bunch of your oldies that I hadn't seen yet and stumbled on Inna Gadda da Vida. One of my favorites from way back! Was this tracing their trip to find the Garden of Eden, what kind of trip are they taking me on you asked. Hmmm, 1960's, psychedelic.... an LSD trip most likely!! LOL! ...I will say your perceptiveness is spot on accurate with these old classic songs. When you said "this gives me Black Sabbath vibes," "this gives me a Jimi Hendrix vibe," "this part sounds like Santana," "this part is definitely Egyptian," "did anybody else think that pick scrape sounded like an elephant." etc., etc. numerous times.... I'm thinking, Yep, ditto. You hit the nail on the head exactly with each perception! ... This was the one song that I got into the most trouble with my parents over! LOL! I played the old vinyl to go to sleep with one night. They kept yelling at me through the bedroom door, we're trying to sleep! Turn that g*ddamn mess down!! Finally I had the volume shut completely off, listening to only the acoustic vibrations of the needle sliding through the groove. They could still hear it. Dad came storming in the room and nearly whacked the stereo ---no wait, we didn't even have stereo in those days. It was only mono! ---off the dresser he was so mad! Oh, those were the good old days indeed when parents thought we were going to hell for listening to that "awful rock & roll!!" /// Actually there were a few other songs that also got me in a lot of trouble too. The Doors' Soft Parade and the Guess Who's Hang On To Your Life.

    • @MrStillracin
      @MrStillracin Před 3 lety +2

      I was 11 and I can't agree more. bzzzzzzzzz!

  • @markdrechsler5660
    @markdrechsler5660 Před 4 lety +34

    When this was released, most radio stations would not play a 17 minute song. The shorter versions were edits for radio play. The full version appears on the LP.

    • @s51curtis
      @s51curtis Před 3 lety +3

      Unless you were the DJ all alone on the overnight shift, then you would always have a song like this, or maybe Don McLean's American Pie where you could put it on the turntable and take that much needed bathroom break, smoke break, snack break, etc.

    • @silvertube52
      @silvertube52 Před 3 lety +1

      WABX in Detroit played it twice in a row in the middle of the afternoon. The DJ said something like: "I like that, let's hear it again". 😂

    • @emilyflotilla931
      @emilyflotilla931 Před 3 lety +1

      @@silvertube52 I remember hearing of that happening. I'm near Grand Rapids, Michigan and my station there WLAV would play this frequently! They spoke about it, and I went crazy!

  • @miafss
    @miafss Před 3 lety +17

    I had to laugh when you said "I haven't been focusing on the drums."

    • @clara429
      @clara429 Před 3 lety

      the drums play the all song , nobody can miss it .,

  • @fordp69
    @fordp69 Před 4 lety +32

    I was 7 years old when this came out (1968), and I lobbied hard and got the album for chistmas. I must have worn it out, but I still have the vinyl.

    • @armadillotoe
      @armadillotoe Před 3 lety

      I was 16 and playing in a band trying to be too cool.

    • @tomroome4118
      @tomroome4118 Před 3 lety

      I was 13 and wore out two and had to buy a third!

    • @cjgeel1
      @cjgeel1 Před 3 lety +1

      Got it on vinyl, and cd with all versions of it. I play the vinyl more

  • @purplehead9157
    @purplehead9157 Před 4 lety +32

    Not sure if you know but their lead guitarist Eric Brann was only 17, great tslent

    • @purplehead9157
      @purplehead9157 Před 4 lety

      Back then it was called a Fuzz pedal

    • @thatoneguyagain2252
      @thatoneguyagain2252 Před 4 lety +1

      @@purplehead9157 One of the most popular early distortion pedals was called the Fuzz Face. Ten years back or so, a company in Russia was making licensed copies of the Fuzz Face. Almost all of the vacuum tubes still being manufactured come from Russia. Thanks, outdated Soviet technology ! There was also a Russian company called SovTek who manufactured unlicensed clones of the Fender Bassman amplifier.

    • @chadheckman2693
      @chadheckman2693 Před 3 lety

      Unfortunately, Eric passed away in 2003 at the age of 53 from a cardiac arrest related to a birth defect that he had struggled with for years.

    • @xxk295
      @xxk295 Před 3 lety

      Erik Brann, the best guitarist Iron Butterfly ever had, and he was only 17 years old.

  • @edwardthorne9875
    @edwardthorne9875 Před 4 lety +22

    Everyone had this album tucked away. Played at so many partys.
    I was 14 years old, hanging with college kids in a small theater where I used to help out. After rehearsal one night, someone slipped this onto the sound system. Someone turned on the strobe light -- I watched the girls dance... and joined in. It was in fact one of those 'You will not be the same after this' moments.
    You must realize - there was no heavy metal, there was no pick scraping, there were no drum solos in rock, at least not highlighted and solo like this. So glad you have repeated listening to this dirty gem on your own. It was a game changer - everybody should have it as part of their life soundtrack. Nice job - no real analysis needed for this one!

    • @armadillotoe
      @armadillotoe Před 3 lety +1

      I had forgotten how cool strobe lights were in the way back.. Thanks.

    • @sinenominecc
      @sinenominecc Před rokem

      Pretty much yes to everything you said. Hypnotic recording, particularly the drum work.

  • @justafreethinker
    @justafreethinker Před 3 lety +19

    Daniel, Iron Butterfly was one of the bands that influenced all Heavy Metal sound afterward. Proto-Metal if you will. Keep up the great work! Loving the channel.

    • @justafreethinker
      @justafreethinker Před 3 lety +3

      Also back in this time of music, sometimes you just wanted to jam and let the band's talent speak out instead of singing. Makes music even more awesome. You wont ever hear this kind of music today guaranteed.

  • @thatoneguyagain2252
    @thatoneguyagain2252 Před 4 lety +12

    I knew you'd like this when I saw it come up. I was hoping you'd get to this song sooner or later; imagine my delight when it was "sooner". This song was a touchstone of psychedelic music and psychedelic culture. Uncountable legions of fifty-year-olds were conceived while this played.
    I think the most memorable time I watched someone hear "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida" for the first time was my junior year of High School. I played it for an organ-obsessed friend of mine who was looking in all our record collections for any albums with significant organ use. He was absolutely floored, and and immediately had me copy it onto 8-track so he could play it in his car. That day, I also turned him on to the Allman Brothers, which was close as a guy who idolized Keith Emerson and Rick Wakeman ever let himself get to Southern Rock. When my friends went cruising, ours was the car blasting out "Tarkus" or "Heart Of The Sunrise" while everybody else in the parking lot was playing "Free Bird" and "Walk This Way".
    My Grandma got me this album for my tenth birthday - she had no idea what it was (literally said "I don't know what it is"), but I'd asked, so she swallowed her reservations and bought me this weird-looking record. I'd heard it when my local "underground" radio station played it sometimes late at night, and I was transported in a way that music had never done for me before. It opened one of the most important doors in my life, one which I still walk through as often as I can.
    That Christmas was the only time I ever got to show my 8-months-older-and-a-thousand-times-cooler cousin Rickey something cool that he'd never heard. He not only got the album, he also got an electric guitar (a Silvertone, with the amplifier built into the guitar case). Next time I saw him the following summer he and a couple of guys were trying to bang out "Magic Carpet Ride" in the garage.
    I hadn't considered this, but "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida" was probably one of the most influential songs guiding my musical tastes going forward. Because I'd already embraced what could be considered one of the first prog-rock albums, by the time Pink Floyd and Jethro Tull came into my life, I was more than ready. Also, the guitar and organ on this song (along with Led Zeppelin and Jefferson Airplane) made me comfortable with Black Sabbath, Deep Purple and Uriah Heep as soon as I heard them.
    I think the funniest use of the song I ever saw was in The Simpsons. During one of Rev. Lovejoy's interminable sermons, Bart snuck over to the organ and, when the organist wasn't looking, replaced her sheet music with what he'd labelled "In The Garden Of Eden", composed by I. Ron Butterfly. When the song begins, Homer turns to Marge and says, "Do you remember when we used to make out to this hymn?" Cut to the end of the song, and the exhausted organist collapses over her keyboard.
    Note on the album itself: don't even bother with side 1. Only a glutton for punishment would play the other side of this album more than once. When I got the deluxe remastered CD a couple of years back, I tried to play side 1, just to see if it was as bad as I remembered. It was actually worse.

  • @helenespaulding9372
    @helenespaulding9372 Před 3 lety +13

    This is the MOTHER of all psychedelic, stoner songs. You have a cool dad, who must have a cool dad..because this is MY generations music....and I’m your grandma’s age....Saw them live in Denver in 1969 or 70.......very cool....and yeah..everyone was very “mellow”....😁😉

  • @kens32052
    @kens32052 Před 4 lety +8

    I saw them back in 1969 at the Shady Grove Music Fair in Maryland. The drum solo lasted 20 minutes. The whole song sounds like you are traveling on a magic carpet searching for the garden of eden.

    • @davidtcollins1565
      @davidtcollins1565 Před 3 lety +1

      I remember Shady Grove, what a great little theater in the round. Saw John B. Sebastion there early 70's.

  • @michaelescareno7048
    @michaelescareno7048 Před 4 lety +7

    Great reaction to this!!!! My older cousin gave me this album as a present in 1969 when I was 10 years old. The organ player and singer was Doug Ingle, whose father was a church organist. The guitar player was Erik Brann, and was 17 years old when they recorded this. Again, great reaction video!!!

  • @kishka7winecountry
    @kishka7winecountry Před 4 lety +10

    You need to hear the Moody Blues - “Nights in White Satin” make sure it is the long version- around 11-12 minutes Wonderful orchestration!

  • @firebird7479
    @firebird7479 Před 4 lety +8

    Fell in love with this song as a 5 year old. Still love it. Go look for a clip of The Simpsons where Bart slips the music sheet of this song to the church organist. Funny. "Hey Marge, remember when we made out to this hymn?"

  • @Immortalheart66
    @Immortalheart66 Před 4 lety +5

    Great reaction,...true story,...the track you just heard was done in one take.The band didn’t know they were being recorded.The producer said run through it once for a sound check.Hit the record button,.....then went to an upstairs booth.If you listen closely,..you can hear towards the middle,..to the end,..the musicians toggling volume controls on effects or something.When they finished the producer called them into the booth and said i want you to hear some thing.Hence,...one take.....it is so raw sounding.Its genius.Thanks,..great reaction...glad you enjoyed it,....

  • @danielgugliotta1115
    @danielgugliotta1115 Před 4 lety +17

    This is way before Black Sabbath.

    • @21Piloteer
      @21Piloteer Před 4 lety +2

      This came out in 68, Sabbath's debut was 70. 2 years is way before? Lol

    • @GeoffCB
      @GeoffCB Před 3 lety +7

      @@21Piloteer Well, at the rate rock was progressing back then, it was way before!

    • @LyonHall1
      @LyonHall1 Před 3 lety +4

      @@21Piloteer two years in rock and roll is a long time. In the 60s and 70s two years years difference is almost a lifetime with how quickly rock was progressing

  • @scientruths
    @scientruths Před 4 lety +7

    Santana was probably after Butterfly. I heard that Jeff Beck claims to have heard them play this song at a bar in 1967 in California.
    The guitarist for this band, during this time, was a teenager.
    I think the natural precursor to their sound, certainly the organ, is Bach.

  • @joanbounacos8958
    @joanbounacos8958 Před 3 lety +9

    And that's why you listen to the original length song! You mentioned you wanted to turn it up as far as you could. I remember many nights spent in a darkened room lit by candles, lava lamps and black lights, in a
    slightly altered state, listening to this through the BIG Altec Lansing speakers turned up so loud you felt every drumbeat and bass note in your chest. Many times on my radio show I followed it with Deep Purple's " Smoke on the Water." Amazing songs, amazing memory. Thank you and your dad!

    • @53doowopbill
      @53doowopbill Před 2 lety

      Steppenwolf's the pusher and iron butterfly unparalleled iconic songs.

  • @helenespaulding9372
    @helenespaulding9372 Před 3 lety +5

    When you’re stoned, you don’t think about how long it is....just get lost in it.

  • @pbwbrian53
    @pbwbrian53 Před 2 lety +1

    You’re the first reactor I’ve seen who caught the God Rest Ye Merry reference around 19:32! Apparently, the organist was a trained church organist.
    It’s so good to see younger generations catching on to the great music of the late 60s through 70s.

  • @GeraldWalling
    @GeraldWalling Před 3 lety +1

    Released - June 14, 1968
    Recorded - May 27, 1968
    I was born in 1951. Grew up listening to this kind of music.

  • @brucefelger4015
    @brucefelger4015 Před 3 lety +3

    It was first officially certified a Platinum and 4× Multi-Platinum album in the United States on January 26, 1993.

  • @stephenpalmer896
    @stephenpalmer896 Před 4 lety +10

    First time I ever heard this song , I was about your age and I listened to it over and over and over again

  • @aretelivingarts
    @aretelivingarts Před měsícem

    When I was in grade school and learning to play drums, everyone was impressed by anyone who could play this drum solo. Actually, it's very easy to play, but what made the drum solo great is that it sustained a rhythm, it was melodic and had hooks that developed over time. It's still my favorite rock drum solo. It was groundbreaking in its time. A rite of passage.

  • @kishka7winecountry
    @kishka7winecountry Před 4 lety +2

    Just subbed 8/29/20 7:30pm Northern California wine country 67 Yrs old white guy rocker- enjoying today’s youth appreciating our music! WE USED TO SLOW DANCE TO THIS!

  • @Cedar422
    @Cedar422 Před 4 lety +5

    I was in college when this came out, and you nailed it exactly when you said it was a trip song.

  • @8044868
    @8044868 Před 3 lety +7

    For those of you who ever wondered about Bach playing in a heavy metal band.

  • @chadheckman2693
    @chadheckman2693 Před 3 lety +3

    Yes! I was 15 years old in 1968 and bought this album. I called it the "electric elephant". Great minds think alike. Because the title is about The Garden of Eden, I interpreted the electric elephant part as the Devil making an entrance.

  • @stevevasell429
    @stevevasell429 Před 4 lety +6

    This was the 1st time i ever encountered a song that was the whole side of a record.

  • @genov9374
    @genov9374 Před 4 lety +4

    I'm coming to party late, sorry-but the guitar is being run thru a classic "fuzz box". The first ones were lime green and about the size of 2 cigarette pkgs stacked and gave the distortion to the guitar. Also there is a "wah-wah peddle" which gives the ....wah, wah sound. Classic electronics for psychedelic rock era. Thanks Daniel for listening to the sound of my youth with me!!

  • @kishka7winecountry
    @kishka7winecountry Před 3 lety +6

    Another great journey will be Moody Blues’ - “Nights in White Satin” !!

  • @DamnSkippyToo
    @DamnSkippyToo Před 3 lety +1

    You are the first reactor that I've seen react to this song. I've begged others to, but nada. Thank you! The guitar and drum solos in this song are amazing and should be played to every child ever born beginning in the womb. I'm so glad to see your reaction and appreciation! Edited: I always thought the part where the "elephant" comes in is symbolic of the snake tempting Eve. All of the lyrics could be the snake tempting Eve rather than Adam talking to Eve or a man talking to his "love". Maybe that's too spot on, but it's a way to look at it.

  • @kishka7winecountry
    @kishka7winecountry Před 4 lety +3

    You have so much great music to listen to! Let us older rockers recommend songs! ENJOY!

  • @maryk446
    @maryk446 Před 3 lety +2

    The drum solo in the middle was meant to simulate the sound of a human heartbeat. I've always liked this song. I heard it for the first time in 1975 when I was 14. It sounded dated to me. But I listen to it now and I have the reaction that it sounds so stereotypically psychedelic that you almost think it couldn't have actually been written in the real 1960's. . It's as if a rock musician born in 1990 was asked to write "a 1960's psychedelic song" and came up with this.

  • @kanscopeichel491
    @kanscopeichel491 Před 3 lety +1

    I love the switch in timing in the middle of the drum solo, it’s so smooth

  • @supafrogg258
    @supafrogg258 Před 2 lety

    Hi, Daniel! Enjoyed listening with you again. Returned after listening with you my first time, because your observations and insights were thoughtful, interesting, & I wanted to repeat the experience. Good stuff! Yeah, Iron Butterfly pulled off a great one with this arrangement. Reportedly, it was just at first a simple song that Organist, Vocalist, & Songwriter, Doug Ingle, had written, whose arrangement evolved over numerous engagement performances, with the band continually incorporating new ideas. When the band went into the recording studio to put the song to tape, the producer hadn't arrived yet. So, the recording engineer suggested that the band do some playing, for checking sound levels. The engineer started recording, the band started playing the song, and the engineer left the recording studio. The band was fresh, all alone, in a relaxed warm-up frame of mind, spontaneously playing a well-developed arrangement which each band member knew like the back of their hand. By the time the producer arrived, and the recording engineer returned, the band had performed the entire composition. The band's "Sound Check" was so good, that it became the "Master Take" released, which you heard! The band's record label was now in a quandary; what to do with a 17 minute recording? After much discussion, the label took a chance and had the entire 17 minute recording of In A Gadda Da Vida fill up Side 2 of the band's new 2nd album of the same title. The label's gamble paid off! International sales of Iron Butterfly's In A Gadda Da Vida album were so huge, the Atlantic label created a new award for the album's sales, The Platinum Record Award. Because the song's recording was so long, one radio Dee Jay first created his own edited short version, for airplay on his station. The Atlantic label also put out a radio-Dee-Jay-friendly edited short version, to further promote sales via radio airplay. Though radio airplay of shorter versions may have promoted the song some, there were many listeners who had only heard a short version, had heard all this hype about what a great piece it was, and who weren't aware of the 17 minute version, which is what all the accolades were about. As a result, many of those short-version-only listeners, thought the praises were much ado about nothing, and ridiculed the song. But time has settled the worth of this wonderful piece, and it's lovely to see new generations discovering it!

  • @west_nebraska_dude4527
    @west_nebraska_dude4527 Před 3 lety +1

    "A ballad without words" You spot on nailed it!

  • @jd7699
    @jd7699 Před 3 lety +3

    In the garden of Eden.....In a dada Vida STONED

  • @neonpark1874
    @neonpark1874 Před 4 lety +8

    Speaking of guitar riffs - Have you listened to "Layla" by Derek and the Dominos yet? Eric Clapton, Bobby Whitlock, Carl Radle, and Jim Gordon (with Duane Allman of the Allman Brothers Band contributing outstanding guitar work on this track). Interesting back story with this song too.

  • @joemercury100
    @joemercury100 Před 3 lety +1

    1968. I was 16. Went to my first high school dance. They played this 17 minute version. Prior to that, I only heard the shorter versions that were allowed on the radio stations. So, I asked a girl named Meg to dance. The song kept going, and going, and after a bit, the other couples on the dance floor dropped out to rest. It was like a scene from one of those movies. Meg and I were the only ones out there. Made it through, but oh, what a memory. Thanks, Daniel. you took me back yet again! (And yes, I AM that old! lol) Oh yeah, we called it "the elephant," too.

  • @laredolassoo
    @laredolassoo Před 3 lety +1

    You nailed everything from the musical elements to the imagery to the 'sounds like'. And yes, definite Black Sabbath and Santana moments, and God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen.

  • @BaldJean
    @BaldJean Před 3 lety +2

    The riff of "In a Gadda Da Vida" is one of the most iconic ones in rock music.

  • @karloarsch1579
    @karloarsch1579 Před měsícem

    This was the first rock song, with a drum solo. But it is also made like a jazz piece, with solos and everything, even with an oriental twist. On top of that, these kids (guitarist is just 17!!) know their instruments!

  • @zoniekat
    @zoniekat Před 3 lety

    Excellent review, Daniel! (Many months later. Lol) Your joy and appreciation of great music always impresses me. I love your patience, and how you savor every moment. That is a rare virtue nowadays. You have great taste, and exceptional insight. You're getting quite the education with your channel. Too bad you can get college credit. ;) You have tought me so much. Thank you for that!

  • @michaelpennington7800
    @michaelpennington7800 Před 2 lety

    Heavy Metal, 1969, pre Black Sabbath. Iron (heavy) Butterfly 🦋 The one section absolutely sounds like an elephant 🐘. Definitely a journey. What I really like is that the music takes you on a journey of your own interpretation. The Egyptian music takes you through time and the history of us all. Thank you, I've been a fan of this song since 1969 and have never tired of it.

  • @brucefelger4015
    @brucefelger4015 Před 4 lety +5

    Altered state of consciousness

  • @Nikki11369
    @Nikki11369 Před 4 lety +4

    It's always been my favorite drum solo. Very tribal. Kind of Ginger Baker-esque.

    • @Nikki11369
      @Nikki11369 Před 4 lety

      And that journey that it takes you on, best accompanied by some herb for sure.

  • @cat-o-matic
    @cat-o-matic Před 4 lety +6

    Pink Floyd is going to be a blast. 🎵🎙🎧

  • @tonyallen4265
    @tonyallen4265 Před 4 lety +12

    How about Deja Vu or Carry On by Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young? That whole album is super-dee-duper.

    • @michaelescareno7048
      @michaelescareno7048 Před 4 lety +2

      Deja Vu album is a masterpiece. In my opinion one of the 10 greatest albums of all time.

  • @jazzyboy7784
    @jazzyboy7784 Před 4 lety +3

    This is the version the radio DJ put on when he had to go to the bathroom or take a smoke...lol

  • @oldarpanet
    @oldarpanet Před 2 lety

    Iron: dense, solid, heavy.
    Butterfly: ethereal, light.
    Iron Butterfly: heavy & light, at the same time...
    1968. a special time in the history of Rock (n' Roll.)
    This piece was a statement. Heavy and light at the same time.
    It quickly became touchstone of overindulgence and was reviled almost at it's infancy.
    I think, over time, it's become more of a touchstone of a time, where it's meaning, it's importance has come into it's own. It IS a great song (piece of music) and it was a major milestone, which wasn't appreciated in it's own time. It was (perhaps unexpectedly) before it's time. Too much, too soon, in 1968.

  • @artbagley1406
    @artbagley1406 Před 2 lety +1

    Not award-winning lyrics but the music makes up for it. Iron Butterfly capitalizing on late 1960s psychedelia a la Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane: light show, extended playtime songs; plus some Pink Floydish effects. Experimentation with channel switching, long drum solo, mid-East tonal motif, churchy organ, fuzz tone and reverb on guitars, wah-wah pedal and probably more I can't hear. Multiple key changes, undulating switches to various moods; certainly fertile ground for "visualizations" by temporarily mentally altered listeners. Still enjoyable all these years later. Thanks for your insights and commentary ... and seeing you enjoy a classic. And don't forget to thank your Dad for the recommendation!

  • @clara429
    @clara429 Před 3 lety

    8 millions copies the first year and world wide more than 30 millions copies , one of the best drums performers i ever saw , and it was alive ,

  • @ertlk24
    @ertlk24 Před 4 lety +3

    The story goes that the tune was called " In the Garden of Eden" but they misunderstood what was being told to them and they recorded it as "In a Gadda Da Vida" Take it for what it's worth...

    • @ksmileywaisnor9925
      @ksmileywaisnor9925 Před 3 lety

      Lead singer was out partying all night and came to the session wasted. Kept slurring the name of the song. They liked it and changed the name of song.

  • @rk41gator
    @rk41gator Před 2 lety

    As a freshman in college 1968 when this erupted, you can not imagine what an impact it had. The dorm room opposite ours faced married student housing, an enclave for grad students and new mothers, so of course at 1AM they felt it a must to share this distortion with them by placing their stereo speakers on the ledge outside their windows and blasting 'In A Godda Da Vida' to the world. I do not recall if they were expelled or not.
    THOSE tom toms. Tribal! Tell me Phil was not listening the those drums as a 17 yr old. This influenced countless bands. Acid Rock at its prime. Trippy for sure.
    Not only heavy metal but progressive rock were spawned. (great pick up on God Rest ye Merry Gentlemen) CLASSIC!

  • @Merlinsgames
    @Merlinsgames Před 3 lety +2

    I always thought that that weird animal screeching was the sound that Mothra made in the Godzilla movies. Go Mothra!

  • @SpuzzyLargo
    @SpuzzyLargo Před 2 lety

    I've made this comment before, elsewhere, about this record, and I'll say it here. (And I stand by it, because I was a kid in junior high school school when this record came out, so I was there.) Although there had been records before with drums solos, especially in jazz, this recording ignited the extended drum solo in rock concerts from here on out. I remember it started with this song in school, then extended to other songs by high school. The extended drum solo is now a staple of rock concerts, these ~55 years later, fueled originally by this 1968 recording. Heck! Even a year later, Ringo "had" to do a solo on "Abbey Road." In Jan. 1969, Chicago recorded an extended drum solo for their debut LP.

  • @williamturner3809
    @williamturner3809 Před 3 lety

    3 minute version was for the singles' version, the 8 min version for the movie MANHUNTER(1986) the 17 minute version for the album. 1st of the long long drum solos.

  • @danhartman8582
    @danhartman8582 Před 4 lety +12

    Great song , high school days of my past so memories flooding back . Check out so some Steppinwolf Pusher , full version if you get a chance .

  • @toshibautoob
    @toshibautoob Před 4 lety +6

    Great suggestion from Dad. But you absolutely could play guitar like this and I think Dad now needs to buy you a WahWah pedal.

    • @DiconDissectionalReactions
      @DiconDissectionalReactions  Před 4 lety +3

      I bought myself a digital pedal which has a bunch of settings, including wah, for like 85$ I think..

  • @stanleyepperson2992
    @stanleyepperson2992 Před 2 lety

    Just beamed into your channel, during the 1960's, radio stations only played the short versions. My generation was blown away when we heard to 17 minute version.
    One must have day glow posters, black lights everywhere and a strobe light for the full effect.
    👍
    The keyboard player was the singer and his father was a preacher, I suspect the church sounding part was a homage to his father. I heard those same notes the first time I heard this in 1968.
    The guitarist was 17 years old when this was recorded.
    After this drum solo ( the best in my opinion), many bands tried to emulate with their own drummer solos.
    Wah pedal it was.
    There is a Simpson episode where Bart swaps out the church lady's organ music from some church song to "In-na-goda-da-vida".
    Pretty funny!🤣
    Regards!

  • @emilyflotilla931
    @emilyflotilla931 Před 3 lety

    Classic DJ wants to pee and have a smoke song! You've got a great dad there!
    42 years later...I'm reliving the first time i heard it through your ears, it's an honor, seriously! You make me proud Daniel!

  • @tristanblackmore9772
    @tristanblackmore9772 Před 3 lety +3

    If you like psychedelic and progressive you definitely need to check out Pink Floyd. Arguably the greatest band ever. Recommend Comfortably Numb (Pulse version) and studio version, and also Echoes part 1&2 from Live at Pompeii.

  • @TheDivayenta
    @TheDivayenta Před 3 lety

    You can tell the organist was classically trained. I think Cream lifted their riff for Sunshine of Your Love from this intro. This was a high school classic! Sounds like dinosaurs in the middle, doesn’t it?
    Notice how the drummer never gets a break.
    People were definitely on a “ trip” when listening to this !

  • @richardsokolis4668
    @richardsokolis4668 Před 3 lety +2

    Fyi they were the house band at whiskey a go go in l.a.

  • @8044868
    @8044868 Před 3 lety +1

    Perhaps the first [?], and the best hard rock symphony.

  • @Namotasso
    @Namotasso Před 2 lety

    Yes, it's a journey like close to the edge ( Yes ), nights in white satin ( Moody blues , full option ) or many titels from Pink Floyd. 👍
    In history this kind of music was very popular.
    Unfortunately nobody compose something like this anymore. 😔

  • @RosemaryStanley2070
    @RosemaryStanley2070 Před 3 lety

    These guys played at my High School because apparently, the drummer went to our school, they had a light show old-style that looked like that album cover!

  • @billrehberg9271
    @billrehberg9271 Před 3 lety

    As far as I can remember their first L.P. was called "Heavy" by Iron Butterfly. It was the first music that was self described (then) as "Heavy Metal" and that and all of that type of music followed these guys

  • @randygabbert7831
    @randygabbert7831 Před 3 lety +3

    I believe the different lengths of versions the song was for air play on the radio, my guess. I saw them play this for over 20 minutes live!

  • @mrlookin4mr
    @mrlookin4mr Před 3 lety +2

    Considered one of the greatest rock songs of that era !

  • @MisterWondrous
    @MisterWondrous Před 2 lety

    In-a-gadda-dada-vida-dada-dada was a phenom in its preternatural length, relative to other songs at that early time. Other songs worth the listen are "Easy Rider" and "Butterfly Bleu". Many folks learned the drum part. I can play it with my feet.

  • @richardlaswell463
    @richardlaswell463 Před 2 lety

    This was 1968. Black Sabbath was years away. The organ is a Hammond B3, with tube amps. Each particular instrament had its own 'personality' due to the differences in tube quality over their life. The guitar is first heavily fuzzed, then later 'wahwahed'. He also uses attack delay. Not sure what style pickups are used, but it guitar is likely a Strat'

  • @brucefelger4015
    @brucefelger4015 Před 3 lety +3

    They were supposed to play Woodstock, but couldn't get there without a helicopter. the producers were overwhelmed all ready, so Iron butterfly, joni Mitchell and several others never made it.

    • @53doowopbill
      @53doowopbill Před 2 lety

      I never knew that about Woodstock, so cool.

  • @joemercury100
    @joemercury100 Před 3 lety +2

    BTW, for a great riff, check out Deep Purple Smoke on the Water.

  • @cinderellsworth
    @cinderellsworth Před 3 lety +1

    There's a live version of this 17 minute song here on CZcams. This is one of the first albums I ever bought when I was a young teen. The drum solo alone is what drew me into the song in the first place. I have this in my private YT playlist so I can easily access it when I want to go back to a simpler, more civil time in my world. Thanks, Daniel. And here's a link to the live video:
    czcams.com/video/UIVe-rZBcm4/video.html
    (Yes, God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen is definitely in there! :) EDIT: And Yes, I've always heard elephants, too!

  • @pattygoody
    @pattygoody Před 3 lety +3

    One does not pause the 17 minute version of this song! :)

  • @brenthowell8883
    @brenthowell8883 Před 4 lety +8

    It's phoneticly sung. Like you said in your intro, it means in the garden of Eden. Guy's back in the day smoked fat ones listening to this!😝

  • @Ozarkprepper643
    @Ozarkprepper643 Před 2 lety

    Iron Butterfly
    Iron = heavy
    Butterfly = light and floaty
    You know you do have a good ear. The lead singer and keyboard player Doug Ingle's father was a church organist.
    I had the opportunity to see Iron Butterfly in 1969 ASU Activity Center the second time through the drum solo he passed out. It was understandable you could hardly see the stage the smoke was extremely heavy. Likely everyone was tripping as well.

  • @ckstaff
    @ckstaff Před rokem

    The short 3 minute was because AM radio would not play songs longer than 2-3 minutes. Many songs you had to buy the album or just hear the cut up AM versions as FM had yet to come along. GFR-I'm your Captain, Doors-Light my Fire, Moody Blues-Nights in White Satin, Steppenwolf-Magic Carpet Ride, Tommy James-Crimson and Clover, Zeppelin-Whole Lotta Love and a whole bunch more had to chop their songs to get on radio. You are experiencing what 60's stereo tech sounds like on today's tech, that is why the sounds separate from back and forth so much, pretty awesome.

  • @davidcruz8667
    @davidcruz8667 Před 10 měsíci

    Studio, LP, and radio versions. Radio stations tended to prefer songs that were about 3 minutes long, when Queen came out with "Bohemian Rhapsody" they thought nobody would listen to it because it was much longer than usual. But you chose the right version to get the full impact of this masterpiece.
    Now listen to the Edgar Winter Group playing "Frankenstein" from 1973, and Grand Funk Railroad playing "Inside Looking Out" live from 1969.
    I also recommend Deep Purple with "Child In Time ", "Space Truckin'", "Highway Star" and other songs, usually their studio versions will do just fine.
    This is the music we grew up with. Enjoy.

  • @susanmallet766
    @susanmallet766 Před rokem

    (Born in 1951) I was about 17 when this came out.
    No one else here seems to have mentioned a joke I heard around that time.
    It was a year or so later, when I was at college. The joke took this form--
    What's heavier than a Le(a)d Zeppelin: An Iron Butterfly. 🙃
    [I don't remember this called heavy metal music at the time; it was usually called Acid Rock.]

  • @thomasklempin542
    @thomasklempin542 Před 3 lety +2

    They were looking for a band name of complete opposites. Hence Iron Butterfly!

  • @martypringle9201
    @martypringle9201 Před 2 lety

    The media 'version' of the explanation of the song title was the keyboardist/lead singer/composer was 'so tired' (some say drunk) he may meant to tell the group the title was 'In a Garden of Eden'' but it came out 'InaGoddaDaVida'. Sounded more 'socially acceptable of an explanation at the time. In other media, the more plausible explanation was that he was so stoned on drugs that when he sang it, it came out garbled into this title and they went with it.
    Either way, this was an era of heavy metal becoming popular, the strong drug culture, and the ongoing innovations of recording techniques, music equipment, and the experimentation of all the new sounds you could create with the instruments, equipment, production, mixers, endless dubbing and overdubbing, overlays, and so on. Just remember that technical innovation of all kinds and any and all attempts at innovation of sounds and styles was attempted in many songs and art by many artists in this period from 1965/66-1973ish. (See 'Rubber Soul', 'Pet Sounds', 'Sgt. Pepper', etc.. that predate this 1968 song.) This is the song that is/or certainly one of the height of examples of this blending of experimentation: of sound and drug culture and sight. The long examples of ways to create different sound on each instrument at length is the primary thing the song is noted for. (And the drummer's insane endurance through this song!) The blobs, colors, flashes, weird imaginary, dark and light, and virtually anything they could think of was played with to create a new sound...with the idea in these psychedelic rock songs being to create your own psychedelic or perceived images/journey ('Takin' a trip') in your head. It is a 'head-banger' in many different ways. A journey. This type of music was more popularly known as 'psychedelic rock ' and mostly predates the 'heavy' metal music to come, though both mostly concurrent. It came out near the end of my junior high years so I have the original album still. (And no...I never took drugs.) This predates the more well known heavy metal groups who were already formed, but not to come to popularity until the early 1970's like Black Sabbath, Yes, Led Zeppelin, etc. Some of the peers of Iron Butterfly in 1968 were the Amboy Dukes, Deep Purple, Jimi Hendrix Experience, Steppenwolf, and many other groups and artists. Other examples of a 'long song' with many sounds and/or instrument 'solos' would be 'Light My Fire' by the Doors or 'Frankenstein' by the Edgar Winter Group and, of course, many, many more groups.

  • @IYAMNI
    @IYAMNI Před 3 lety

    The overwhelming success of In A Gadda Da Vida sort of eclipsed Iron Butterfly‘s best album, Metamorphosis. They got two new guitar players, Mike Pinera and the late Larry Reinhardt a.k.a. El Rhino, who ditched Eric Bran's fuzzy 70s psychedelic guitar tones and produced some gutsy tube distortion and harmony guitars. The band dropped the psychedelic 60s facade for blue jeans and Harleys and put out a magnificent album with some really driving songs. Check out Rhino's gutsy slide rifs on Easy Rider from Metamorphosis, or Best Years of Our Lives, the slow groove of Stone Believer, and Butterfly Bleu, which reverts to some of the psychedelic stuff in the middle. Anyway I know In A Gadda Da Vida is their big hit but honestly Metamorphosis is their best album by far. It was one of my favorite albums of the 70s and stayed on my turntable for months. Check it out.
    czcams.com/video/tRaWnZMmvgE/video.html

  • @DougsDailyPay1369
    @DougsDailyPay1369 Před 3 lety

    In high school I use to play drum solo using 2 architect scales on desk in drafting class. I know, weird but I was addicted to the song. The scales were beat oh don't ya know!

  • @davidmooney2512
    @davidmooney2512 Před 4 lety +1

    Don't forget URIAH HEEP. Try" Salisbury "they are label as Heavy Metal Beach Boys. 3 gold records. By the way these guys are only 19 And 20 yrs old. Iorn Butterfly that is

  • @bostonvair
    @bostonvair Před 3 lety +1

    Back in the days of vinyl records, this song took up the entire side of the album it was on.

  • @jmweed1861
    @jmweed1861 Před 3 lety

    Bought this LP while a sophomore in HS. Good 6-7 years before Black Sabbath. Was really not into psychedelic music, but loved this song...

  • @williambaldridge1203
    @williambaldridge1203 Před 3 lety

    When I was in high school in 68,69 and 70 almost every guy to play this drum solo on their textbooks or on their desk, and we did

  • @BetterGreta13
    @BetterGreta13 Před 3 lety

    I was nine years old when this came out! It seemed so heavy and ominous to me then! But now I get the genius, of course! Another great review.....

  • @genepurdum2745
    @genepurdum2745 Před 2 lety

    When I was living in the dorm at college, I would often hear the opening organ notes blaring out at 3 a.m. from a guy's room down the hall and know I would not get any sleep for at least 17 minutes.

  • @becuzitsthere4484
    @becuzitsthere4484 Před 3 lety

    My young friend, Congratulations, you have now joined every teenager with a guitar from the last 50 years. I MUST learn this riff!! I LOVE it!

  • @CubsFan2023
    @CubsFan2023 Před 2 lety

    Not sure if anyone else has brought it up, but an interesting note: when Doug Ingle wrote it, he hadn't intended for it to run 17 minutes long; he simply knew there would be room for solos.
    It also appears in "Manhunter", the first Hannibal Lecter film, and Bart uses it as a prank church hymn in an episode of "The Simpsons".

  • @davidmooney2512
    @davidmooney2512 Před 4 lety +1

    Name of song was accident guy was drunk when recording muffle out in a slur and it stuck

  • @legendhasitstudio
    @legendhasitstudio Před 3 lety +1

    Jeff. Beck says he was watching IRON BUTTERFLY IN A CLUB IN 1966 DOING A 30 MINUTE VERSION OF THIS SONG / THE GOD FATHERS OF METAL / RIGHT HERE 👍👍/ DARK

  • @WMalven
    @WMalven Před 3 lety +2

    To play guitar like these guys, it has to be an obsession with you. They say that Jimi Hendrix carried a guitar everywhere he went...everywhere including the bathroom. They say he played it constantly.

  • @Ozarkprepper643
    @Ozarkprepper643 Před 2 lety +1

    LOL you're very first break I have to comment haven't really listened to the drums much I like to listen to them independently. Lol I can't help but think Just Wait!

  • @StatsJedi
    @StatsJedi Před 3 lety

    Been a long time since I heard any version, but not even sure if or when I heard this one before. Got the same "aha" moments you did, "let nothing you dismay", and the elephant. Thanks.

  • @webbtrekker534
    @webbtrekker534 Před 2 lety +1

    This came out the year I got out of the Navy, 1968.

  • @zimjun7
    @zimjun7 Před 2 lety

    25:22 Sounds more like Jurassic Park! Just for the record, hahaha, I was born in 1951. This song has memories for me. My dear late brother who passed on 2018 loved this song! We both did and my friend, Linda. I put thee headphones on her!