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Jan. 25, 2025 - Brother Nathanael
01:18:07
Episode 68: Who's Your Favorite Guitarist?
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*music*
*music* Hey there!
Rockwell bought me this pipe.
He's a practical joker.
He's a very practical guy.
He likes Jewish jokes.
Even though he's a goy, he's the best goy I know.
Rockwell, I love you.
See if you can find that Stockhausen score.
It's on the piano.
Check it out.
Okay, hey!
I'm your number one noticer!
Woo!
I'm noticing a lot, you know.
So are you.
You too.
We are all noticers.
Brunswick, put up the, uh, and put it under, pin it actually, my t-shirts.
Hey, I need your support.
I lost a lot of support after the thought police came after me.
You know, priests and all that, the religious types, Pharisees, hypocrites, you know, the Bible is relevant today.
Why can't I get this thing right?
Oh, I'm calling it the wrong way.
Okay.
Where are we here?
Show the t-shirts.
Ronswick, Roscoe, Menachem.
We've got four here, like the four Gospels.
Menachem is actually a Gentile, but he likes to pretend he's Jewish.
Okay.
There it is!
Okay, and then one of you guys, you young guys, I'm going to have a good talk with you young guys.
Put up that and pin it so people can help support me.
I'm continually going bankrupt.
As soon as I think I'm out of it, I go right back into it.
It's my lot in life, okay?
You ever hear of a Jew who's bankrupt?
Well, I am Jewish.
I look Jewish, but I'm an Orthodox Christian.
But tell that to some of the people there.
Okay, here we go.
Let's begin.
Hey, here's a pic of me.
This is the memory lane.
It's a journey down the memory.
Look at me.
Oh, man, that's me.
All squared out.
Oh, I was a good-looking dude, man.
This is my rock group, Rebecca and the Sunnybrook Farmers.
I mean, come on, man.
I was a Jewish hippie.
I could write a book about this stuff.
You know that?
Before we get into who's your favorite guitarist, I could write a book.
I was a guitarist.
I was a lead guitarist.
I played piano from...
I was a kid.
Not like, I think, Kirk Hammett.
I think he started at 16 playing the guitar.
I was playing the guitar when I was 5. Actually, I started with the ukulele.
You know?
And then I graduated to the guitar.
I graduated to the classical guitar.
I studied that.
Then I graduated to the electric guitar.
That's me.
Oh, man.
You had hair then.
I don't have much hair now.
Oh, don't show that.
Uh-oh.
Now I messed up this.
Okay.
Can you get me, Roscoe?
I'm all crooked up here.
There we go.
Okay.
Back to the thing.
Show me that picture.
I'm impressed with how I look.
My goodness gracious.
Where's the picture?
I'm telling you, I, uh, if someone said when I put this up on, at Real Bro Nat, that's my show dad again, at Real Bro Nat.
Check that out.
Uh, he said, oh, you had that mischievous look, mischievous look even there.
I guess I did.
I was a mischievous kid.
All right, I had a lot going for me.
Now I'm not so sure.
All right, let's go back to the script here.
I wrote this all up, but I'm going to go a little off script.
Okay, now I'm going to talk about me a little bit.
Let me see myself.
Brunswick.
Did you find the score of Stockhausen?
Look on the piano.
Look in the bench.
I have to show that.
Okay.
Do you know I can read these things?
Alright, I'm going to talk about guitarists now.
Rock guitarists!
Okay, Jeff Beck, Kirk Hammett, a lot of dudes, Eric Clapton, Jimmy, that's Brahms.
Who else do I have?
This is Symphony No.
5. Da-da-da-da!
See?
I can read this.
I can hear it when I read it.
All right, let's see what else we got here.
The blood money of the Federal Reserve.
No, that's not it.
I study politics, too.
I'm almost sick of it.
Okay, except I think Trump's doing good.
There's a new air.
The economy's booming because of the perception.
That means a lot.
Hey, here's Haydn, the mass.
Missa in Angostis.
This is a famous Nelson mass.
I'm trying to brag about myself because I'm going to do something very radical.
I'm going to talk about rock guitars.
And already the thought police, the religious thought police are on me.
I don't care about them anymore.
I honestly don't.
Okay, here we go.
Schubert.
Mass in A-flat major.
See, there's vocal here.
Dots all over the place.
These are musical notations.
I can read it.
Should I continue to brag about myself?
Did you find Stockhausen?
No, it's there.
Look at the bench.
You did?
No, I forget Stockhausen, but he was great.
Brahms, number two.
Beethoven, number three.
This changed the world forever.
The Eroica.
He dedicated it to Napoleon.
And by the time he wrote this, I forget when he wrote it.
He knew he was going deaf, but we talked about that on another stream.
Okay, let me see my notes here, kid.
First up is Jeff Beck!
Jeff Beck!
I mean, come on, we got a lot of Jeff Beck fans, and they're not going to let me say Jimmy's better.
Well, maybe I won't say he's better, because I'm trying to be very balanced.
And I'm looking at these dudes from a artistry.
Perception.
I'm not looking at their lifestyles.
I'm not looking at what they did with women or anyone.
I'm not looking at that.
I'm looking at their artistry.
And these guys are great artists, okay?
Because I have an ear and an eye for artistry.
I told you, I grew up in classical music.
I'll tell you who else did.
It was Eddie, but I'll talk to you about him later.
Van Halen.
I mean, it's obvious he was a classical pianist by the way he plays guitar.
I mean, that's an easy one.
But at any rate, Jeff Beck.
Now, Jeff Beck was a very serious guy.
I don't think he was into the glamour.
I don't think he was into the sex appeal.
I don't see that in Jeff Beck.
Now, I could be wrong if we got some people talking about him.
He got his start along with these big guys, Eric Clapton and Jimmy Page.
Does anybody know who?
The Yardbirds, For Your Love.
Those three guys were there.
Now, my take on Beck, now you may have your own take on Beck, or your Beck on take, is that he was a very serious artist.
And he was dependent and inspired by...
The rhythm of the drums.
That played a big part.
The drums.
A big part of his artistry.
Because it's not just the guitar, it's the whole package, okay?
Now, I knew from my musical friends that Jeff Beck, like Zappa, who I knew, was fascinated by electronics.
And electrical effects.
And there's nothing wrong with that.
And he incorporated the electronic effect into his guitar virtuosity.
But mostly on his recordings.
I mean, I don't think he could do it much live.
Although Zappa started doing that live.
I'll talk about that.
Now, using electronics, that's why I'm looking for Stockhausen, but we don't have it.
Stockhausen, a great master.
I mean, this man could write a symphony in the style of Mahler, Brahms, Wagner at Stockhausen.
Not John Cage.
Stockhausen and Edgar Varese, great classical masters, used electronics.
Now, Beck's bolero is quite important to me, fascinating to me, because it shows Jeff Beck's appreciation.
For the great classical musicians.
And I think he was into different folk types of music.
I can't remember which one, but there was one that he did this thing based on folk music.
The Hungarian, yeah.
Now, Beck here incorporates Maurice Lovell's great masterpiece, Bolero.
Let's play it!
Hunswick, do it!
Thank you.
Thank you.
Yeah, okay, cool.
That's cool.
All right.
A very fine artist.
There's no question about it.
I mean, I'm not going to go Jimmy, Jimmy, Jimmy!
I mean, this guy was a serious musician.
And he was a very serious guy, you know.
He wasn't into the dramatics or the sex, you know.
And then, you know, no shirt.
He wasn't into that.
He was a very serious musician.
I think he was born...
He would be six years older than me.
I think he...
I think he died at 80. If any of you guys know on the live chat, whatever you call it.
Oh, we're going to do Super Chat!
Get them ready!
But it's not just to ask me stuff.
I want to hear what you think about guitars.
Who do you think are the greatest guitarists?
I probably missed a bunch on here, okay?
But I want to give you a sampling of the people I think are good.
Okay, let me look at my script here.
Next up is the master of the meme.
He's the master of the meme.
He could do some guitar riffs.
Nothing special, but man, he could just get it.
Now, before I get into the meme part of Keith Richards, probably the ugliest guitarist.
In the life of the guitar, he just was one ugly dude.
But he knew what he was doing on the guitar.
Okay, give a listen.
I think this is him live.
Yeah, thanks Rockwell.
He learned guitar playing in the toilet and sicker arse goes a long way from there, Keith Richards!
Come on, play it man.
Yeah, it's a great game.
I picked the wrong clip.
I mean, the man could be very lyrical, but not there.
All right, it doesn't matter.
All right, let me see my script, Rockwell.
What did I say here?
Okay, now.
Where am I? Okay, okay.
So, now, let me show you Splice, a specimen of the master of the meme.
Keith Richards gets first prize.
Show that thing.
Let's give a listen.
Listen to the Counterpoint. Counterpoint.
Counterpoint.
Counterpoint.
That's a meme.
I'm driving in my car When the man goes on the race That's counterpoint.
Between the vocal and the guitar.
All right.
Heath, I'll give it to you, man.
You're not doing any great riffs at all, but man, you got the meme.
And there was counterpoint there.
Did you hear it between the vocal and the counterpoint moving in different directions there?
I mean, it's artistry, okay?
It's mastery, really.
So that's why I'm here talking about this, because I'm already getting hit by the thought police.
I don't care.
You know, it's something.
I think I'm going to go to this now.
You know, they once asked the great composer Giovanni Lossini, the great Italian composer, the barber of Seville, who's the greatest composer?
So Lossini said, oh, that's easy.
Mozart.
But Beethoven's the only one.
Now.
I want to say it's Jimmy, but I ain't going to do that because we got a lot of people who are partisans of Beck, Clapton, Garcia.
I'll give them that, okay?
But what I like about Hendrix is that it wasn't Jimmy.
It was two persons on stage.
Two persons in the recording studio.
It was Jimmy and the other person, his guitar.
No one else has done this.
He's done it.
But first, I want you to check this part out, this component, this aspect, this feature of Jimi Hendrix.
I want you to see Jimi as the performer.
He had a sense of himself.
What a knowing, a knowing of himself that he had something to say that came through.
And it was surely like a religion for him.
Okay, now look, thought police, don't go after me.
He really felt this.
It was a religious experience for him.
You'll see.
Now, whether it was the right religion or not, it was his feeling.
I mean, we are made in the image of God, you thought police people.
Regardless of what a person believes.
I'm looking at the artistry.
I'm looking at the man, too.
The person.
The human being.
That's what I do.
Okay, Rockwell, let's give Hey Joe number one.
The Performer.
The performer, okay?
That's cute.
Jimmy.
Before they killed him.
I'll talk about that.
I'll talk about that.
The whole thing.
Come on, Jimmy.
Yeah!
All right.
All right.
Okay, that's good, bro.
That's good, bro.
There's the man who really believed in himself.
Come on.
He believed in himself.
I love it.
I love you, Jimmy.
I'm praying for you.
If I get in, I'll get you in, too.
All right.
Now, look.
Let's get back to these two persons.
I want you to give a listen very carefully to the next Jimmy.
There are two...
Vocals here.
Two vocalizers.
Number one vocal is Jimmy.
Number two vocal, a separate person, is the guitar.
No one else has done this.
No one.
There was a love affair between Jimmy and the guitar.
And that guitar...
Took on a life of its own along with Jimmy.
I think at Jimmy's burial, and they killed him, he had a Jewish manager among a couple other Jewish managers, and they worked him to death.
I'll talk about that later.
Let's stick to the music.
I think at Jimmy's burial, they should put...
Him in one grave and right next to him the guitar in the other grave.
That's Jimmy.
Let's play that Rockwell.
To him and his guitar Listen.
Hey, Joe.
Where you going with that gun in your head?
Hey, Joe.
I said, where you going with that gun in your head?
*Sings* I'm going out to shoot my old lady.
You know I'm gonna mess around with another band Oh, my click Oh, my click You know I'm gonna mess around with another man.
Now that ain't too good.
Hey, Joe.
I heard you shot your lady down.
You shot her down.
Hey, Joe.
I heard you shot your lady down.
You shot her down.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yes, I did a shot of you.
You know I'm gonna mess around town.
Yeah.
Two!
That's cool He's making love That's loud.
Oh man, come on.
They know what's going on.
These guys know what he's doing.
They know what Jimmy's doing.
And they love it.
Okay.
I mean, I'm just going to say it.
I'm going to say it.
Who's the greatest guitarist?
That's easy, Jeff Beck, but Jimmy's the only one.
But you can have your say, too.
Okay, Rockwell wants me to do a couple super chats.
Here we go.
Do I read this or do I hear this, Rock?
I don't even know anymore.
Jimmy, read it.
Okay, Jimmy says, Shooshank, my buddy, Jimmy was so ahead of his time that he influenced everybody after him, whether they knew it or not, he broke through everything.
Let me tell you something about Jimmy.
This was gotta be a night when I was 16. You know, I started my rock group when I was 14. I showed you the picture, I'll show it again, okay?
Rebecca and the Sunnybrook Farmers.
Now, I knew Jimmy, of Jimmy, before anybody did, okay?
Because I was tied into some people, and they showed me, here's what's coming out.
Are you experienced?
So I took a look at this.
Okay, Rockwell wants to show me.
Okay, that's my group.
I started this in 1914. Rebecca and the Sunnybrook Farmers.
We were the opening act for the Beach Boys.
We were the opening act for Can Heat.
We were the opening act for Alice Cooper, Pro Quo Harum, Jethro Tull.
And that guy was not on this planet, believe me.
And I knew a lot of people.
I knew, remember Buffalo Springfield?
I knew, I met Crosby.
No, not Crosby.
No.
Who was the other guy?
Stills.
I met the guy, the woman he was in love with.
Joni Mitchell.
Yeah, I met her.
All right, so that's me.
Oh, well, that was so cool, Jewish hippie.
Boy, have I changed, man.
I've had some remarkable times in my life.
I'm 74 now.
Wish I was 21. Remember that?
With that girl that everybody said, oh, so one of the priests said to me, he liked it.
He says, that shows you're not gay.
You know, heck, there's all kinds of people with all kinds of opinions.
Where am I here?
I lost my thing.
I got to blow my nose.
I have an allergy.
I'm allergic to people.
Religious people.
All right.
Now, we're going to go, oh, do we do the super chats?
Was there another one, Rock?
Well, yes.
It will take a moment.
So let me talk about Eddie Van Halen.
Now, when I first saw Eddie, you know, I'm familiar with these guys.
I like artistry.
I like mastery.
I don't care what their lifestyle is, but Eddie Van Halen was a straight shooter, man.
He was married, had children.
Wolfgang!
He named Wolfgang, I think that's his only son, after Wolfgang.
Amadeus Mozart.
Because Eddie Van Halen, it was obvious to me when I first started playing, I said, this man is a classically trained pianist.
I mean, it's just so obvious to me.
I can't prove it.
Maybe some of you people on live chat or on Super Chat can tell me.
You can tell me about Jeff Beck, which you know about him.
I mean, I just, I look at the artistry.
I don't look so much at the person or bios or anything, but maybe you guys can tell me.
Now, I'm a classically trained pianist.
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
I mean, Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, da-da-da.
Okay.
Just look at my fingers.
Okay.
And it was immediately obvious to me, okay, we'll get on it, that Van Halen, I was classically trained by the weight plate guitar.
We'll show in a minute.
Okay, Rockwell, you got that super chat for me?
Harrison.
I don't know whether I read or hear or what do I do?
You got to tell me ahead of time.
Read.
Okay.
Hey, brother, it's me again.
Thank God.
Have you written any books in your life?
I ask because I'm reading your articles.
Well, I do articles.
I do videos, and now I'm mostly concentrating on streams, but I've got to get the videos going again.
Nobody reads books anymore.
I'm going to waste my time.
But I'll tell you what I could write, if we're going to make this kind of incognito.
I could write about the great social phenomenon of the late 60s, and how the hippie movement emerged, and how it changed the world, really.
And how what came out of the hippie movement was a great Christian revival in California, where I was.
I was working with Warner Brothers at the time.
I knew Lenny Warrinker.
I knew his right-hand man, Ted Templeman, who introduced me to the Doobie Brothers when they were just getting started.
And my girlfriend in that picture played.
Old Blackwater, Mississippi moonlight keep on shining on me because we were already working with Warner Brothers and Ted Templeton.
He loved Eileen Novog.
We called her Novy.
He got her to play the viola on Old Blackwater.
Look, I know a lot of stuff.
I could write a book about the phenomena.
I forget what I'm even talking about.
Okay, let's go back to the script.
That's what happens.
You get 74. You lose your train.
But I'm really on the locomotive right on the front.
Okay.
In some ways, Eddie Van Halen was not playing the guitar.
He was playing the piano.
I mean, come on.
Give a listen and watch the keyboard.
Looks like a guitar, but it's a keyboard, and his fingers flying all over those keys.
Okay, go ahead.
Camaraderie. - -
I never smoked.
And I don't drink.
There's water in here.
It's very musical.
Very.
It's very musical.
It's poignant.
Sorry I spit.
That's cold.
That's cool.
That's cool Eddie, that's cool.
I love you, Eddie.
I love you.
Good, Eddie.
So beautiful.
It's lovely, isn't it?
It's Schubert.
You do Schubert.
It's obvious.
Watch the piano now.
You gotta do piano.
You play piano now.
Throw the pick away, see?
You don't need that pick.
Oh no, he's still got the pick.
There, see?
Look at that!
Come on!
Come on!
Look!
Okay, stop that.
Stop it.
Rockwell, find where he's playing the piano.
I want to point that out.
He just did it for a small portion.
He just is doing a piano on it.
Can you find that?
This is brilliant.
No more.
Watch this right hand.
Look.
There it is.
There it is.
Okay, good.
I made my point.
I made my piano.
He was brilliant.
A great artist, Eddie.
You know, I think maybe some of you guys can let me know.
I think he died of cancer.
I think he actually...
If I remember, do any of you guys remember?
I think he had cancer of the tongue, and I think it started in the early 2000s.
And then it was cured, and then it came back.
Well, Wolfgang is playing guitar, I guess.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, his son, okay, is picking up the baton, picking up the keyboard.
Okay, what do we got next here?
Okay, Buffbro.
As far as guitarists from your era, brother, that would be the late 60s, early 70s, okay?
Iomi, Blackmore, Robert Fripp, and Steve Howe are some personal favorites of mine.
Iomi was king as far as riffs go.
I'll be honest, I've never heard of these guys.
So can you come back?
You don't have to give me any money.
Just tell us.
Or you can show a clip if that's possible, Rockwell.
Okay, let's go back to my script.
Let us know more about that.
I never heard of them.
I don't know everything.
I know mostly everything, but not all.
Alright, so now...
You like poetry?
Well, Jimmy...
Jimmy could play the guitar with his tongue.
Eddie Van Halen could...
Play the guitar like a piano.
You know, he didn't need to pick.
Okay.
Now we have a poet here.
Who's the poet?
Jimmy?
Little Wing.
Let's play that.
Rockwell.
Very subtle Lovely, lovely.
Lovely.
I like that thing.
Okay.
That's the only way.
She's walking through the clouds.
you you I want you to play that opening by Eddie Halen again.
This is Schubert.
You don't have to play it now.
You can find it, Brunswick.
I'm not sure who's running this thing.
Oh, all of you.
Okay.
Menachem's my new guy here.
Okay, let's go back to my rehearsal, my script here.
You want me to read something, Brock?
No.
Okay, now, uh...
A brief commentary on Little Wing.
It's a little interlude, all right, that Jimmy says, hey, I can do other stuff, too.
Now, here we got an almost forgotten unique artist, Kirk Hammett.
I know there's a lot of Kirk Hammett fans.
Lou Rage, my buddy, pointed him out to me.
I said, what did I miss?
I know this guy, and that's how I put him in.
Now, what did I get out of Kirk?
Really, he combines lyricism, lightness, hop, skip, and a little jump, melody, subtle phrasing, with hard metal, really hard metal, almost unlicitable hard metal.
But that's his artistry.
Okay, I'll go with it, because sometimes I'm hard metal and I get on people's nerves.
He's unique, Kirk.
Hammett.
He's creative and actually, quite frankly, he's brilliant.
Let's play them.
The guy's walking.
It's part of his honesty.
It's in his guitar, the way it works.
I love it.
Oh, oh, unforgiven rage guitar unforgiven rage guitar
solo Yeah, he liked that soprano.
Vroom, vroom, vroom.
Um.
They call this, I think, the unforgivable solo.
I don't know why.
Can anyone tell me why?
You want it, guys?
You don't have to give money.
Just tell me why.
Why is it unforgivable?
I think he didn't do anything wrong there.
Now, Eric.
Come on, you know who I'm talking about.
Eric, where art thou?
The great Clapton.
Come on.
I saw B.B. King live.
That was his hero.
I saw B.B. live.
Now, Eric, performance, staging, guitar that creates a pending drama.
You're on the edge of your seat.
Wow!
All combined with vocal.
Understated.
And believe you me, you are in the presence of greatness.
Let's do Layla.
Beethoven, we'll go.
Let's do Layla.
Beethoven, love this guy!
I love them.
What do you do when you get lonely?
I was waiting by your side.
You can't run in.
I'll be much too long.
Don't sit your foolish mind.
Baby, you got me on my knees.
Baby, you're a man.
You're gonna breathe.
Baby, you're a man.
Darling, what you need's not one of mine.
Trying to give you consolation.
Your man let you down.
Like a gay fool.
Never love with you.
Turn the whole world upside down.
Baby, you got me on my knees.
Baby, you're a man.
Baby, you're a man.
Thank you, darling, please.
Baby, you're a man.
Darling, what you need's not worried about.
Come on, Eric, baby.
Make the best of this situation.
Or I'm finally going sailing.
Please don't say we'll never burn away.
Tell me all my love and pain.
Lay it up.
Jumping on my knees.
Lay it up.
Think it's not a breeze.
Lay it up.
Darling, what you need's not worried about.
Lay it up.
Jumping on my knees.
Make a dog, please.
Darling, what you need's not worried about.
Yes, sir.
Oh, nice.
Yes, yeah, I feel it.
I feel it.
I feel you, too.
Okay, Mark.
I want to tell you something about orchestras.
I grew up in symphony orchestras.
I grew up.
My mother took me and my dad took me to opera.
My dad was an opera buff.
My mother was a symphony orchestra buff.
My mother was an accomplished pianist.
My dad's grandmother was a professional pianist from Austria.
I grew up in this.
And I got to put up with these lowlifes?
It's very difficult for me, I have to tell you.
When you grow up in an upper-middle-class home, and you're a culture to fine arts, and you grow up from the age of three, I'm dancing to Strauss.
I'm dancing to Liszt.
Oh, my.
Okay, I'm not going to kvetch, but it's very hard for me.
It's very hard.
The orchestra, said Muller.
They asked, what are you doing?
What are you trying to do?
He says, I am trying to express the universe.
And he did it with the orchestra.
But the orchestra is a stage.
It's a stage with everybody watching the conductor, the autocrat, the beneficent autocrat, and the audience is there.
Part of it.
I'm telling you, Mueller would love to see that Eric Clapton in the stage and the audience.
I mean, come on.
I'm no prude.
I'm no religious lowlife.
Darn it!
I'm not.
Thank God.
Hustler, my buddy.
That's Brody.
He's my assistant.
Brother, play Alex Collins from Lynyrd Skynyrd.
He did Freebird and Simple Great Guitarist.
I'm a think.
I'm going to learn guitar.
Well, cool.
I'll help you.
But that'll be for part two.
I don't do part twos.
I'll figure out another thing on the great guitarists, okay?
I'll do another thing.
Maybe I'll do the great pianist, too, you know, if there are any.
All right, let's do a little super chat.
Or live chat.
You don't have to give money.
Okay, Boof Brew, bro.
Tommy Uomi.
Okay, yeah.
Black Sabbath, right.
Richie Blackmore, Deep Purple, Rainbow, got it!
Robert Fripp, King Crimson, that I don't know.
Howe was from the band, yes.
It must have been after I started believing in Jesus and was no longer part of the scene.
Listen to his solo on Sound Chaser.
I will after I'm done with the stream.
Thank you.
Maybe I'll do another stream on this if this is popular.
Are we getting action here?
Okay, let's go back to the script here.
Not the script, my little write-up.
All right.
What do we have next?
Oh, what do you think of Peter Green of Fleetwood Mac?
He's terrific.
I miss Fleetwood Mac.
They were very musical.
They were very poetic.
I think, didn't she die recently, the lead singer?
I forget her name.
Nikki?
Okay, he was not just as a guitarist, but he was notorious for renouncing his Judaism.
I didn't know that.
And adopting some sort of messianic thing.
Ah, Ethel Drew.
Is he still living?
All right, I'll look up Peter Green.
Okay.
Green is probably shortened from Greenberg.
All right.
But mostly Green is not really a Jewish last name.
Okay, so let's go.
Let me see what I wrote up, Brunswick.
Menachem, my guys here.
What did I write up?
Okay, one more super chat.
Hey, guys, you don't have to ask me questions.
You don't have to give me money.
Just tell me what you think of the guitarists.
Who are the greats?
But I want to know why, okay?
I'm telling you why I think these guys are brilliant artists.
I still love Jimmy, but the more I look at this, I'm wondering, I should not be so picky.
All right, what do we got here?
Okay, shoe shank.
Man, you keep on coming.
You love clapping.
Love Clapton with blind-faced Stevie Winwood.
Is he still living, Stevie?
Also love Alvin Lee in 10 years after.
Alvin Lee, who did he play with?
See, you got to give me the names of the band, but thanks for the super chats.
Thanks for the 20 bucks.
So you can come back.
You don't have to give me the money.
And tell me, Alvin Lee, who did he play with?
And is Stevie Winwood still living?
I hope so, because he was a very good-looking young guy.
Harrison Simpson.
I think I'm going to hear this.
Have you heard Prokofiev's Dance of the Nights?
What pieces do you recommend from Prokofiev?
Yeah, his Concerto No.
2 is brilliant.
Of course I know Prokofiev, okay?
I saw Leonard Bernstein introduced...
Man, how old was I then?
Because I went to all the symphony concerts in Pittsburgh under William Steinberg, who was kind of a protege in the succession of Mahler, the great German conductors.
Yeah, he was a Jew.
But Prokofiev...
Okay, yeah, Leonard Bernstein.
He introduced Andre Watts.
He was the first Negro.
We called them colored persons back then.
Pianist.
Okay.
And maybe Leonard Bernstein had a crush on him because Leonard Bernstein, you know, swung that way.
Yeah, he did.
But that's okay.
He was a great conductor, probably the greatest of all time, really.
So I don't go into lifestyles.
I go into the artistry.
So I went to see Andrei Watts, Prokofiev's Concerto No.
2, and it had kind of like a Russian tone to it, because he was Russian.
And so Andrei gets up.
Walks in with this huge Negro smile that only a Negro can do.
But he was very handsome.
I think he was half white, half Negro.
And he gets on that piano, and it was like, it's better.
He wasn't doing this, this, this, this, like some of them do, like Horowitz.
Smiling all the time.
I loved it.
Gotta love it.
Look, I'm a musician.
Here's Brodies again, my man.
Speaking of orchestra, John Williams' Duel of the Fates is a great piece of music.
I love it, and we love you, Brodies.
You're doing a great job.
He's my assistant.
He's only 18. This man is sharp as a young man.
Oh, he's up and coming.
You watch him.
Okay, let's go back to my write-up.
Okay, now, we got the fade here, Eric Clapton, and what's next?
Let me scroll down on my stream deck.
I ain't leaving the great one out, okay?
You know the jammer, the great jammer, the blues jammer, they all had a good time.
I knew of the Grateful Dead before any of you.
I was introduced to them way back when I was 15, yeah.
I had a rock band by then.
And I said, listen to this guy.
And it was the first album and everything.
And there was just some very straight tunes, okay?
There wasn't the jam type of thing.
So I knew Jerry a long time ago.
He was very good looking.
He was very thin.
And he wasn't all drugged out.
He did get drugged out, that poor guy.
But I'm going with the artistry.
I'm not going with the lifestyle.
No.
I mean, you can look at some of these composers I put up, and maybe you can go into the lifestyle, you can say, not so hot.
They say that Brahms believed nothing, but I'm telling you, listen to his symphonies, I mean, you had the divinity all through it.
All right, so, excuse me, I ain't leaving Jerry out.
Now, this says it all.
This guy is good.
Listen to this.
I want to set this video up with a quick little introduction.
A lot of people...
Who are critical of The Grateful Dead will tell you that Jerry Garcia was just aimlessly noodling away on his guitar into the LSD-influenced stratosphere.
And there's no doubt that sometimes that can be the case.
No, it's very good.
It's good.
It's like 12-tone.
It's good.
No, it's wonderful.
But, at the end of the day, he was also a massively skilled, technically brilliant guitar player.
And this is my...
Let me say that about this.
This is a master.
This is not the LSC Stratosphere.
This is 12-tone.
This guy knew 12-tone, and that's Schoenberg and his two protégés.
Alvin Berg, who combined tonal with 12-tone, and the other guy, Anton Webern, who was a pioneer.
He kept on moving forward.
Very secretive, too, about what he was doing, because he was moving beyond Schoenberg.
And I studied with the protégé of Alvin Berg.
I studied composition and piano, both.
With Joseph Gabriel Maneri, okay?
He was a microtonalist, but he was a protégé of Alpenberg.
This guy's doing 12-tone.
This is...
Play it again.
This is wonderful.
It's not LSD Stratosphere.
From the beginning.
He's wrong.
...noodling away on his guitar into the LSD-influenced Stratosphere.
No.
And there's no doubt that sometimes that can be the case.
noodling.
Well, it's mastery.
But at the end of the...
I mean, it's almost like an orchestra.
I want guitar because he's using electronics for the echo.
Jerry, bravo, bravissimo.
Okay, now let's continue that.
And then you'll hear the blues guy.
But this is the best of all.
He was also a massively skilled, technically brilliant guitar player.
And this is my go-to example whenever people tell me that Jerry Garcia doesn't have, you know, rock and roll guitar chops.
This is a 1978 performance of one of my favorite tunes, New Minglewood Blues.
And just listen to how Garcia picks his way directly into the rhythm that the band is laying down through the first series of chord progressions.
And then just slams into the second one and lets it fly into the stratosphere from there.
But this little girl sure wish she would.
You know she wish she would.
That's good.
He's having a good time.
He's dead.
We're out of darkness on the freezing.
That's beyond B.B. That's beyond B.B. Okay, good.
He went three steps beyond B.B. King.
Yes, he did.
Great artistry.
Maestro, maestro, maestro.
Okay.
What do we have now?
Anybody want to chime in here?
Shushank, you're beautiful.
Brother.
Lee played with Ten Years After.
Their most well-known hit was I Love to Change the World.
Brunswick.
Can you find that?
And we'll play it.
We'll wrap it up once I get into my little financial pitch.
To help you, not me.
I'm going to help you guys.
Okay.
Do we have anything left here?
Are we done?
Let me look at my...
Cheat-cheat.
All right, now look, because he is the greatest, and maybe we need to honor him because stuff happened to him.
They worked him to death.
I mean, he was on, you can look it up.
Go to the Juggle search, put in Jimi Hendrix, the Dick Cavett show.
The guy's ready to pletze.
And Dick Cavett says, what's wrong with you?
He says, oh, I haven't been sleeping.
I can't sleep.
Why?
He says, oh, I'm working.
I go from one stage performance to a recording studio, then travel here to another.
So this guy, he was on Uppers and Downers, and it was sleeping pills that put him to death, but it was his managers, and his top manager was a Jew, because they're money, money, money.
Poor Jimmy.
He was an artist.
All he could think about is artistry.
I feel sorry for her.
Jimmy, if I get in, I'm praying for you right now.
I want to see you up there, okay?
Now, let me play this, okay?
His phrasing is so versatile, so diverse, and I'd say, this guy, Brahms, would applaud.
Let's play The Wind Cries Mary.
Right now, we've got a song named Wind Cries Mary.
Thank you very much.
We have a song named Wind Cries Mary.
We've got to keep it going real quick.
After all the checks are in the boxes And the clowns have all gone to bed You can hear happiness staggering on down the street Footprints dressed in red
The wind, the whispers, the wind A broom is truly sweeping Of the broken pieces of yesterday's life Somewhere a queen is weeping
Somewhere a king has no wife And the wind cries We're in Forever Come on
Oh my Oh my Oh my Okay
that's good I mean come on That's just pure lyricism.
Oh, man.
That's so beautiful, Jimmy.
So poetic.
So dramatic.
So striking.
And the wind cries Mary.
Can we see that on the camera?
The Holy Virgin.
My protector.
My intercessor.
My Yema.
That means mother in Hebrew.
Okay.
Where are we at now?
Menachem, where are we at?
He's now running the show.
All right, so are we going to read those things?
Did you put those up?
All right, so Evolutionary Lancer.
Brother Nathaniel, check out Adam Jones.
He's a guitar player.
Here's Mirzik III. I think he's a producer.
Check him out on Twitter X. M-Y-R-Z-I-K-3.
He's a producer.
I think he does production work.
Supporter.
Dang.
Brother knows how to strike a chord.
Yeah, I do.
Sometimes it's discordant.
You know?
It is.
But that's part of music.
Okay, here is Ethel Drew.
His real last name was Greenbaum.
I knew it!
If you say he's a Jew and his name is Green, that's always a shortened version to make him look like a Gentile.
Greenbaum, thank you.
Harrison reads 76. Have you heard Prokofiev's Dance of the Nights?
Of course.
What pieces do you recommend from Prokofiev's?
Piano Concerto II. That's the best.
Harrison Reed, 76. No offense, brother.
I'm a very sensitive guy.
I take offense.
But not from you.
The only guitarists I like are my country singers like Marty Robbins.
However, I love the classics you put on.
Because of you, I had Brahms' second and fourth and Beethoven's third.
The Eroica just blew it open.
It changed the world.
Yes, it did.
The Eroica.
He broke out of the classical period.
See, what I love about Beethoven is that he was a rebel.
He said, hey, I ain't got to put up with his stuff.
I'm going to go...
See, the Rokas...
No one mess with that guy.
You don't mess with Ludwig.
You didn't mess with him.
He got pissed at some benefactor.
He didn't care.
Some benefactor's going to tell Beethoven what to do?
No, I'll find another benefactor.
Okay, Mojo Modro.
I admire Pink Floyd for their wide range of instrument mastery.
I'm going to get them on my next one.
I'll call it a different name.
I don't do part twos.
That's a drag.
Adam.
Oh, he's from Bible with Brother TikTok.
Why did you stop posting?
I didn't stop posting.
I'm on that real bronette.
Go to at...
Real Bro Nat.
I ain't stopping posting.
I held off on some videos because I'm working on this live stream because somebody bought this studio for me, and I got to make good on it.
Okay, ascending.
Be at TikTok.
At Servant of God.
Don't listen to this guy.
He insults vicious for his racist behavior being rebuked.
Now, wait a minute.
Wait.
You leave that on.
You put it up.
Now, this guy's a Servant of God.
Now, this servant of God obviously does not know the saints.
You don't know the saints, so you want to call yourself a servant of God?
Now, if you go to what's called the Menaean, which is the daily services of the month, you'll see at the end, but you don't have a clue, man, you'll see a list of saints, 50 of them.
They're all different, and some of them had to tell priests and bishops, go shove it.
So don't give this thing about insulting bishops.
I don't insult bishops.
I just say, hey, if you're not rightly dividing the word of the truth, and that's part of our liturgy, it's not that they do.
We have to make sure they do.
And if they don't, I'm going to call them out on it.
Sorry.
Okay, who's next?
I don't want to deal with these people.
Okay, who's next?
Not a comment.
This is from now Roscoe.
You're at one hour, two minutes of stream time.
We're going to end it.
Now I have a special message for my...
Wonderful young people, okay?
I really do.
Listen up, you guys and girls here.
I know that you're from 16 to 22 because I have huge followers.
Brody's my guy who calls himself some other name on there.
I forget what he calls himself.
He's 18. Now listen.
It's not enough to hate evil when the one's doing it.
Jews, okay?
Yeah, that's great if you do recognize them, but it doesn't really accomplish anything, okay?
We can call out evil, we can call out the ones doing it.
Jesus Christ said, I testify that the world and its deeds are evil, and he specified who was doing it.
He said that to his brothers, okay, at that time didn't believe in him.
Now, uninformed, uneducated, unhealthy, fat, eating too much sugar, This is what the evil Chosenites want of you and for you.
To be uninformed, uneducated, eating a lot of sugar, in debt, eating poison.
Food coloring, watching propaganda, plotting gay miscegenation, on the iPhone with porn, drowning in confusion, and rage-bait social media.
What if I told you every single one of these issues can be rectified?
It can.
Even paying taxes and dealing with the diminishing value of the dollar can be easily dealt with.
Now, I'm not a financial advisor, and this is not financial advice.
I'm not doing that.
But I've done my own research, and believe you me, as a Jewish kid, I grew up with the Wall Street Journal.
The Dow averages on the kitchen table.
Okay, so I know a little bit.
My uncle, by the time he was 40, retired as a multimillionaire in the stocks.
And my other uncle...
My dad's brother, he came from a huge family, was a professional stockbroker.
So I grew up in this.
Now, in a nutshell, you young people, you can open a retail brokerage account and purchase Bitcoin ETF shares within what's called a Roth, R-O-T-H-I-R-A. I'll say it again.
Roth.
R-O-T-H. I-R-A. You don't have to be an old dude thinking of a retirement.
You can do it at the age of 20, which will enable you to own the volatility of Bitcoin and acquire the gains without incurring any taxes.
We haven't always been able to do things like this.
This is pretty novel stuff.
Roth IRA. Now the major changes are, one, retail investing.
You can now open up your own brokerage account with a company like Fidelity Schwab and control.
This gives you control and control what shares you buy.
You can control which shares you buy when you open up a brokerage account.
But Rockwell, who did they open that up with?
Did they open that up with Roth IRA? He'll tell me later.
This gives you control of your own investment, but affords you another way to influence corporations in the U.S. and around the world.
And that's what Elon Musk is talking about.
Anyone notice how Costco's stock has taken a dive after all their diversity DEI drumming?
Okay, number two, ETS. Or more specifically, Bitcoin ETS. ETFs are electronically traded funds.
ETFs that typically outperform hedge funds and mutual funds.
These ETFs basically own a percentage of all the major corporations in the USA or even internationally.
Well, they're the mega corporations.
USA corporations are now mega.
Their expense ratios are lower than actively managed funds.
And in the last year, Bitcoin ETFs that tracked the spot price of Bitcoin have become available.
This is new.
Now, you have to tell us, Rockwell.
Rockwell's helped me with this.
He's a genius.
If this is a Roth IRA or another thing to open.
You can do it within a Roth IRA. Okay, write it down.
R-O-T-H. Next word is capital I-R-A. You can do this with that.
Individual retirement account is an IRA, but you're not even thinking this is something you can think about when you're 20. See, you're not going to retire, but you're going to make money.
You'll quadruple your investment within four years.
Now, three, the Wild West of Bitcoin is over, and Know Your Customer legislation has dramatically squelched the freedom and ease of Bitcoin.
The Fed also hits you with capital gains tax on Bitcoin now, huh?
The Fed?
The Jews?
How do you eliminate taxes?
There is a type of retirement account called, again, Roth IRA. Once you put money into a Roth IRA, you don't pay taxes on any of that money or the gains ever again.
Roth IRA. Start investing in it.
You can withdraw any and all the money at 59 and a half.
What does that mean, Brockwell?
Your contributions after five years of holding...
Okay, you can withdraw any and all the money at 59 and a half your age.
I still don't know what that means.
At 59 and a half years old, So if you're 20, you can withdraw any and all the money when you're 59 and a half.
Okay.
Your contributions after five years of holding the account and $10,000 at any time for the purchase of a first home.
Okay, that may be a little unclear, but I'll talk about this more later.
I'll just give the basic outline.
Right now, the yearly contribution limit is $7,000, which means you can still deposit $7,000 into our Roth IRA for 2024, which is last tax year, as well as for this year.
All right, so I'm going to talk about this anymore because I'm getting a little ready to wrap up, okay?
Hey, get some t-shirts.
Do we have the t-shirts?
I do need support.
I'm not begging.
I'm not making money.
I gotta pay.
Rockwell, Menachem, Roscoe, and who else is here?
Brunswick.
Costs money.
I have a web hosting.
It costs money.
I have a roof over my head.
I pay rent.
It costs money.
Okay, so...
Very wretched people say I'm begging and I'm a Jew looking for a prophet.
It's just terrible what people do to me.
There's the number one noticer.
Is that up on atrilbronat yet?
Pin it.
Can you pin it so people can go there?
You don't have to, but he'll do it.
This guy does everything.
I mean, without Rockwell and Brunswick and now Menachem and Roscoe, I'm finished.
But...
They have to eat, too.
Do we have...
I want to change the world, because I do want to change the world.
Can you get that up, Brunswick?
He's the guy in charge of music here.
Rockwell is a financial expert.
I'm broke.
I'm bankrupt.
He said, well, I don't have any money to put in anything.
All right, so I am just going to give you a few more Super Chats.
You can chime in, and then we're going to play as our ending thing.
I want to change the world.
And I do.
So I'm on a very positive track.
I'm the locomotive.
BHB 1068. Putin is asking for a serial criminal, Fauci, in exchange for peace.
I find this fascinating.
I say, give him Fauci and let his blood be upon us and apart our children.
Fauci should be locked up.
And, you know, they do...
I don't know if they have capital punishment, but they should reinstitute it.
He killed a lot of people, this Fauci.
He really did.
You know, he decided he was going to be famous.
Well, how do you become famous killing people?
Well, just ask the Jews what they're doing in Gaza.
Same thing.
Worse, really.
But they get a free pass.
Fauci should not.
Let's see what happens.
Let's see what Trump does with him.
Okay, do we have any more Super Chats?
I want to change the world.
Are we going to play that?
If we're not going to play that, I'll play something.
You want me to play something?
I'll get my piano out here.
All right.
I can pull it up momentarily, and we're going to do that.
And how about...
Paul McCartney's.
Don't we have a song that things are going to get better?
Maybe we have that all ready to go.
If we don't, let me just wrap this up.
These are great guitars.
Beck, very serious guy.
Eric Clapton, a dramatist.
And he's a very strong man.
In Jewish, we call him a mensch.
And he really is.
Who else do we have?
The pianist on the guitar.
That's Eddie Van Halen.
Then we have Jerry Garcia.
He was already into the 12-tone.
This was not an expedition into the LSD. Stratosphere was not.
I heard what he was doing.
And he even had counterpoint there with the echoes.
All right, I got this one.
Let me see it from the beginning.
Ten years after.
Go for it.
Go for it.
That's me.
I'd love to do it.
Let's do it together.
I'd love to change the world, but I don't know what to do.
I'd love to change the world But I don't know what to do So I'll leave it up to you
So I'll leave it up to you.
Population keeps on bleeding, nation bleeding, still won't be any company.
Population Tax the rich, feed the poor, tell they're all rich no more.
Life is funny, skies are sunny, bees make honey, it's money for me.
That's cool.
I'd love to change the world, but I don't know what to do.
So I'll leave it up to you.
Oh yeah!
Okay.
Okay, I'm going to say something that's going to get me a lot of trouble with religious types.
These are the prophets of today.
Okay?
I'm going to probably get thrown out of the church for saying that.
I don't care.
These are the prophets of today.
These young people.
They're on stage.
They're in the recording studio.
They got something to say.
They're the prophets of our day.
Okay?
Holy SHI.
It's the real Brother Nathaniel.
Yes, I am the real Brother Nathaniel, but sometimes I wouldn't wish it on anyone.
Okay, Patty Leather, give Brother some money.
Get the t-shirt up, then we're going to wrap it up.
Show them the t-shirt.
It's going to be pinned pretty soon, or underpinned, or something like that, or nailed.
They're going to try to nail me to something.
They did it at the end.
Well, I got my pipe out.
I got my microscope out.
Should I say it?
I got my team.
Menachem, Roscoe, Brunswick, Rockwell, the financial genius.
Yes, we love it when you say it.
I'm going to say it.
I'm your number one noticer.
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