Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 5262
Length: 4:33
Plays (last 30 days): 1
Fear's the way we die
You can make the mountains ring
Or make the angels cry
Though the bird is on the wing
And you may not know why
Come on, people now
Smile on your brother
Everybody get together
Try to love one another right now
Some may come and some may go
He will surely pass
When the one that left us here
Returns for us at last
We are but a moment's sunlight
Fading in the grass
Come on, people now
Smile on your brother
Everybody get together
Try to love one another right now
Come on, people now
Smile on your brother
Everybody get together
Try to love one another right now
Come on, people now
Smile on your brother
Everybody get together
Try to love one another right now
If you hear the song I sing
You will understand, listen
You hold the key to love and fear
All in your trembling hand
Just one key unlocks them both
It's there at your command
Come on, people now
Smile on your brother
Everybody get together
Try to love one another right now
Come on, people now
Smile on your brother
Everybody get together
Try to love one another right now
I said come on, people now
Smile on your brother
Everybody get together
Try to love one another right now
Right now
Right now
Silly me. I initially rated this a 7 when it's clearly a 9 and perhaps a 10 when I soak up the lyrics and gain further appreciation.
I Agree!!
"When the one that left us here
Returns for us at last..."
What's that all about? Are we just alien settlers here on Earth?
There's a reason the guy in the picture isn't showing his face.
"When the one that left us here
Returns for us at last..."
What's that all about? Are we just alien settlers here on Earth?
Sorry! I hit the wrong button and gave this comment a thumbs down by mistake
If you hit the wrong button, hit the other one ( the thumbs up in this case) it will cancel the mistake out - then hit the one you meant to and it will sort itself out . Voice of experience, my aim is LOUSY :-)
Bumping this one up from a 9 to a 10.
TRY you may find some peace
This song came out 50 years ago, and in many ways our country was more advanced than it is now as far as "getting together". Political division is destroying our society, and we need more young people to start putting out music like this all over again, since we obviously didn't get the message the first time.
Sorry! I hit the wrong button and gave this comment a thumbs down by mistake
I don't know. Always been there, though.
It's probably Charlie Daniels talking in the studio? Or Jesse?
hippy bullshit
1969. Height of the war. I'm 16 years old praying that my brother and 4 cousins will come home from those friggen rice patty patrols or similar and wondering if I'll be next. 1 year later, 4 students are killed at Kent State during a peaceful protest (never forget). So you sum up this song as hippy bullshit? It just makes me feel sad to read something like this. But perhaps even more sad but not surprised to read it in 2023.
Saw them open for CSNY at varsity stadium in Toronto in late '60s. It was pouring rain in an open-air concert and the band said 'If you'll stand there in the rain we will play on and on', and both bands went on for well over 3 hrs. Very memorable.
OMG, so jealous.
UK here and back then it wasn't that easy to get over that there pond
☮️ ❤️
Well that's a narrow view. Once you get beyond gangsta rap it's much more nuanced - lots of social justice content, for example.
Whenever I want to think how much this gem reminds me of Crosby and The Byrds, I have to remember: Dino Valenti of QMS wrote it!
Love this track.
Such an awesome time to be alive. My band was 'the Byrds' - also loved QMS.... . have a video of them live - Mona.
Much love from over the pond in UK .
This song came out 50 years ago, and in many ways our country was more advanced than it is now as far as "getting together". Political division is destroying our society, and we need more young people to start putting out music like this all over again, since we obviously didn't get the message the first time.
Dude, you must have lived in a different 1969 than I did. The country was totally divided over the War in Vietnam, the Weathermen were blowing up buildings and robbing banks, the Black Panthers, Altamont happened, the Chicago 7, etc. It was a great time to be alive but the country was pretty fucking divided. At least one political party hadn't lost it's fucking mind yet...
You're both right. Back in the 60's, the divide was more of a generational thing, old vs young. Today the divide is not affected so much by age. The divide is about ideological differences that has no or very little relationship to how old you are. imho ...
Yeah, just watched the Netflix documentary.
"Sad" doesn't begin to describe it.
Monday, August 18, 1969:
Midday on NY 87, heading back north to the Canadian border and home in Montreal after spending the craziest weekend of my then-23 years!
Inside that big-ass '68 Ford four-door sedan: Bob at the wheel of this, his company car (oh man, how's he gonna explain that mileage to his boss?); Rod (pretty sure Dennis Hopper copied his look in Easy Rider) riding shotgun; me leaning back against the right rear door, eyes closed, still buzzed, and grinning ear-to-ear from the three-day vibe; Pierre snoring, back to the left rear door in that wide, cushy back seat (they sure don't make 'em like that anymore); sun's streaming in, blue sky, cotton candy clouds floating lazily by....
... and on the car radio, The Youngbloods singing 'Get Together'. Seemed it was in heavy rotation that golden post-Woodstock day, so much so that in each hearing today, I close my eyes and I'm back in the light and sound and smells inside that big old Ford thrumming homeward on that Monday afternoon.
Music-melded memory's a wondrous thing... :)
Fast forward 30 years to Woodstock '99 to see how our society has "progressed" since then.
Message is pertinent today, and will probably be pertinent in 2050.
Come on, people, now
Smile on your brother,
Everybody get together,
Try to love one another
Right now.
With the way the world is retrograding hopefully there will a 2050 to celebrate.
I am also an old man, and remember the bad things you list because I had a drivers license in 1969. But how could you have forgotten the good? Have you become so jaded and cynical that this song doesn't make you stop and think about what humans can achieve if we smile on our brother, get together, and love one another?
I weep for lost optimism.
Aren't there some puppies you should be kicking?
This song came out 50 years ago, and in many ways our country was more advanced than it is now as far as "getting together". Political division is destroying our society, and we need more young people to start putting out music like this all over again, since we obviously didn't get the message the first time.
One person downvoted you.
Must have been Klaus Schwab.
(June 10th 2022)
How big was my surprise when I found it was released over 50 years ago ...
This must be the definition of a timeless masterpiece.
This song came out 50 years ago, and in many ways our country was more advanced than it is now as far as "getting together". Political division is destroying our society, and we need more young people to start putting out music like this all over again, since we obviously didn't get the message the first time.
Sadly as with most forms of communication now, the people who need to hear it the most, never will.
It's amazing to hear these random songs from 1969. I had a traumatic experience at a school camp aged 9 where all the others were 11 and was bullied consistently. I have vague memories of what happened, but much more vivid is the music that was played. This was one of them.
Today, march 2022, it's a whole country being bullied by its neighbour while I'm reading your story, the song still in my head.
The few in power everywhere want the rest of us focused on not getting together. Right, Left, Up, Down, they care not. Tribalist nonsense locks in their power. Follow the money!
"C'mon people now, smile on your brother, everybody get together, try to love one another right now."
This song came out 50 years ago, and in many ways our country was more advanced than it is now as far as "getting together". Political division is destroying our society, and we need more young people to start putting out music like this all over again, since we obviously didn't get the message the first time.
Dude, you must have lived in a different 1969 than I did. The country was totally divided over the War in Vietnam, the Weathermen were blowing up buildings and robbing banks, the Black Panthers, Altamont happened, the Chicago 7, etc. It was a great time to be alive but the country was pretty fucking divided. At least one political party hadn't lost it's fucking mind yet...
See that sign that says "Elephant Mountain" ? I think it has something to do with that.
This song came out 50 years ago, and in many ways our country was more advanced than it is now as far as "getting together". Political division is destroying our society, and we need more young people to start putting out music like this all over again, since we obviously didn't get the message the first time.
The world wasn't together and that's unstable. It overflow to the strongest point to be cured
hippy bullshit
Hummm... this song came on I had to stop what I was doing, sit back and reflect on this song. Thanks Bill and Rebecca... ok...back to Tie-dyeing.
This song came out 50 years ago, and in many ways our country was more advanced than it is now as far as "getting together". Political division is destroying our society, and we need more young people to start putting out music like this all over again, since we obviously didn't get the message the first time.
Wow, some psychopath downvoted you.
What is that "pile of red stuff" in the foreground of the album cover? Is it a pile of natural-casing hot dogs? What is it supposed to represent?
I read some people saying it's supposed to make you think, which one of these 2 mountains on the cover is the referenced elephant mountain... Meaning those are not sausages... Sorry <3
Midday on NY 87, heading back north to the Canadian border and home in Montreal after spending the craziest weekend of my then-23 years!
Inside that big-ass '68 Ford four-door sedan: Bob at the wheel of this, his company car (oh man, how's he gonna explain that mileage to his boss?); Rod (pretty sure Dennis Hopper copied his look in Easy Rider) riding shotgun; me leaning back against the right rear door, eyes closed, still buzzed, and grinning ear-to-ear from the three-day vibe; Pierre snoring, back to the left rear door in that wide, cushy back seat (they sure don't make 'em like that anymore); sun's streaming in, blue sky, cotton candy clouds floating lazily by....
... and on the car radio, The Youngbloods singing 'Get Together'. It was in heavy rotation that golden post-Woodstock day, so much so that in each hearing today, I close my eyes and I'm back in the light and sound and smells inside that big old V-8 Ford thrumming homeward that Monday afternoon.
Music-melded memory's a wondrous thing... :-)
A stab in the dark, but, a brick wall?
I cannot unsee the cryptic hotdog pile.
What is that "pile of red stuff" in the foreground of the album cover? Is it a pile of natural-casing hot dogs? What is it supposed to represent?
A stab in the dark, but, a brick wall?
Yeah, but what do they know? The universe rates this a 10.
Think of it this way maybe. Our entire culture is in a state of gestation. It is struggling to be born. It will be born, but we're not there yet.
I'm giving it a 10. I don't care. One of the greatest songs ever written.
There, I said it.
-All religions-
Sadly, much of the division is fomented by the generation that was around to hear this music originally.
Don't yuck my yum.
What is that "pile of red stuff" in the foreground of the album cover? Is it a pile of natural-casing hot dogs? What is it supposed to represent?
See that sign that says "Elephant Mountain" ? I think it has something to do with that.
This song is absolutely amazing!!!
probably more divided in 1970 than today. That is not to say we are
not very polarized today too. Anyway, the Youngbloods tune gets
a "9" with me....
Sadly, much of the division is fomented by the generation that was around to hear this music originally.
Sadly, much of the division is fomented by the generation that was around to hear this music originally.
Strange world this, and RP halps me link it all together.
Hear hear, unfortunately there's truth in this statement
Come on, people, now
Smile on your brother,
Everybody get together,
Try to love one another
Right now.
I work in a live music club and can tell you they are still singing the same songs.
8 to minus 3...Laptopdog wins the 'thumbs up' contest w/ jp33442 (who came in with a minus 3 on the 'cry me a river crybaby' comment. Which seems to be Laptopdog's point, eh? Let's all "get together" and NOT cry....yeah...that...and smile on your brother....Long Live RP!!
Now it's 20 to -5 (and I'm guessing the down-vote I got was from jp33442; i'm ok with that, and evened it out with my own up-vote)
I'm also upping my 10 rating on this to 11-LEGENDARY - Long Live RP!!
Laptopdog wrote:
Macklemore! Watch the video Glorious (that's really his 100 year old grandmother). Or, have a listen to Same Love. (that's really his gay uncle on the cover). If you doubt his talent, try Thrift Shop and be prepared to laugh. Bill and Rebecca, maybe Macklemore is something for your playlist?
Mackmoney3000 wrote:
What is that "pile of red stuff" in the foreground of the album cover? Is it a pile of natural-casing hot dogs? What is it supposed to represent?
Laptopdog wrote:
What is that "pile of red stuff" in the foreground of the album cover? Is it a pile of natural-casing hot dogs? What is it supposed to represent?
https://rateyourmusic.com/board_message/message_id_is_4858441
keeping together is progress;
working together is success.
Edward Everett Hale
jp33442 wrote:
This song came out 50 years ago, and in many ways our country was more advanced than it is now as far as "getting together". Political division is destroying our society, and we need more young people to start putting out music like this all over again, since we obviously didn't get the message the first time.
Oh cry me a fucking river crybaby
Not to prove the point or anything.
Oh cry me a fucking river crybaby
didn't joe cocker cover that ?
Oh cry me a fucking river crybaby
What is that "pile of red stuff" in the foreground of the album cover? Is it a pile of natural-casing hot dogs? What is it supposed to represent?
There's sliced bread and some sort of red condiment on the wall also.