Added: 3 years ago
From: laupsek
Views: 52,214
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  • This song so messed me up. Loved it so.

  • Silly Kids! Wanting to make the world better. The jury retuened the verdict when you silly kids decided to join the machine. YOU TRAITORS! Thanks for giving up.

  • @jJeremyRoot lol

  • @Zupazwami....is it not better being born 60 yrs to late and still loving his music...that just means the man could have done it in any era...TIM BUCKLEY LIVES ON

  • The narrator IS decorative

  • And so... shortly after the production of this video, the stick was surgically removed for the narrators ass.

  • Sadly, songs don't stop the corrupt movers of wealth.

    Here in the US we have been at war since the late 1800's.

    This heartfelt plea to stop murder for profit is met with some inane talking head that attempts to marginalize one lone voice.

    Blood is what I see, blood on many hands. Some profit from it, some ignore and on occasion some speak out against it.

  • when tim died, i died...

  • Fantastic and very impressive song by such a huge and big artist !

    In the same vein as Scott WALKER, Nick DRAKE, David SYLVIAN and few others ones - unfortunately known by very few people and fans even at their own time ! -

    What do they all have and common ?

    With their meditatives, deep and brilliant songs they all guide you to a quite long journey to light the deep inside of your soul / of yourself...

    In those kind of interiors journeys, it always remains something !

    JYF

  • Lmao this narrator is an idiot.

  • Tim and Jeff- evermore..xoxox

  • Probably the best "war-commentator"(coined that term) songs of the 60's. Best two words "Jungle grin" Shivers!!!

  • earlier generations that couldnt stand against to their parents and to the world.

    weak people i guess haha

  • Imagine a conversation between those in that era that died too young. Examples (but not limited to) of Buckley. Joplin. MLK. Lombardi. All those with different belief systems, but a devotion to love and difference making in some fasthion. Maybe, in Heaven, they've had that chat. Would love the results.

  • We over do it?

  • @leafmotif we didn't do enough

  • very old song

    but

    evry one know OLD IS GOLD

  • The narrator is not Leonard Bernstein

  • I was born 60 years too late.

  • same here man

  • Wow, thanks Laupsek...its awesome and beautiful to be able to see this footage...

  • "what these young people tend to say..."

    Right.

  • Thanks kindly Laupsek!

    Thrilled to find _all_ your excellent footage of Tim Buckley :)

  • They always criticized and generalized young people in those days. The cultural revolution of the 60's(youth driven) was generally met with a patronizing and cynical attitude by the status quo.

  • @coyoteguy45 - aye, what a prat that commentator sounds today.

  • Why is that narrator totally critisicing and generalising young people?!

  • If you even have to ask this, then, you are either still young & ignorant, or, old & stupid.

  • I think it was kind of healthy to have this tone directed toward the music of the day; once the establishment embraced the sounds, it died. The same goes for punk. It just fizzled when punk wigs went on sale in the local department stores; same for protest music. All of it gets gobbled up eventually; it's the drive towards the new, I suppose.

  • these gosh darn kiddies jk Tim Buckley is pretty cool and if he were alive today would be forty years my senior

  • He refused to sing this when i saw him.

  • If anyone has this version of this song, only

    without the narrator (please upload it soon)

  • I was about to request the same thing!

  • I don't have the Tim Buckley version

    but I have a cover one, and that's got no narrator...

    you can probably mark this as spam, actually haha

  • Speaking of grandiose--what about your tone of VOICE!!!

  • gotta love the kids.

  • What album is this from?

    Thanks for the help. :)

  • goodbye and hello (1967)

  • Sincere thanks to the person who posted this. The song will be relevant as long as war remains with us.

  • Love the narrator take on things!!

  • Narrator is Leonard Bernstein. This is taken from the 1967 CBS special titled "Inside Pop". Bernstein was generally very favorable towards the new sounds. See the Brian Wilson clip of "Surf's Up" from this special also on YouTube.

  • Thanks.

  • WONDERFUL!!!

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