Monday, October 4, 2021

ALBUM OF THE WEEK / Paul Kossoff - Back Street Crawler (1973)

Paul Francis Kossoff (14 September 1950 – 19 March 1976) was an English blues rock guitarist. He was most notably a member of the band Free.

Back Street Crawler is the first solo album by Paul Kossoff. The same year as Free's demise, Kossoff was able to pull himself together, moderating his drug addiction enough to record a solo album, Back Street Crawler, which surprisingly featured contributions from his former Free bandmates as well as Yes drummer Alan White. Original release, 1973.

Molten Gold is not, as has been alleged, a Free reunion; it is a 1972 outtake from the Free album Free At Last, with overdubs.

Time Away features three-fifths of the Mk II Free lineup (Kossoff, Kirke, Tetsu) plus 70s songwriter-guitarist John Martyn, who would in 1975 invite Kossoff to guest on his own tour. The collaboration can be heard on expanded editions of Martyn’s Live At Leeds album.


full album 1973: https://youtu.be/UnPhLqUOgWo  : 


Tuesday Morning: 




Tracks Listing:

A.Tuesday Morning 

B1.I'm Ready 

B2.Time Away 

B3.Molten Gold 

B4.Back Street Crawler (Don't Need You No More)


Personnel:

Paul Kossoff – lead guitar

Trevor Burton – bass guitar ("Tuesday Morning")

Alan White – drums ("Tuesday Morning", "I'm Ready")

John "Rabbit" Bundrick – keyboards ("Tuesday Morning"); organ, chimes, piano ("Molten Gold")

Alan Spenner – bass guitar ("I'm Ready")

Jean Roussel – keyboards ("I'm Ready", "Back Street Crawler (Don't Need You No More)")

Jess Roden – lead vocals ("I'm Ready"); harmony vocals ("Molten Gold")

Tetsu Yamauchi – bass guitar ("Time Away")

Simon Kirke – drums ("Time Away", "Molten Gold")

John Martyn – lead vocals, guitar ("May You Never"); guitar ("Time Away", "Leslie Jam")[2][3]

Paul Rodgers – lead vocals ("Molten Gold")

Andy Fraser – bass guitar ("Molten Gold")

Conrad Isidore – drums ("Back Street Crawler (Don't Need You No More)")

Clive Chaman – bass guitar ("Back Street Crawler (Don't Need You No More)")

JANIS: LITTLE GIRL BLUE - documentary

 JANIS: LITTLE GIRL BLUE - Janis Joplin Documentary with dir. Amy Berg


This is the new Janis Joplin documentary that explores the life and music of the psychedelic queen of the blues. Director Amy Berg shares the film with clips and the trailer, discusses Janis on the Dick Cavett show, and also details her collaboration with Cat Power on the film. The sexual and social impact of Joplin, and the progression of the film from early stages to its premiere is all explored, and we also revisit Berg’s work PROPHET’S PREY, with Ondi Timoner on BYOD.


FILM AND GUEST INFO:

Oscar-nominated documentarian Amy Berg examines the meteoric rise and untimely fall of one of the most revered and iconic rock ‘n’ roll singers of all time: Janis Joplin. Joplin’s life story is revealed for the first time on film through electrifying archival footage, revealing interviews with friends and family and rare personal letters, presenting an intimate and insightful portrait of a bright, complicated artist who changed music forever.


documentary: https://youtu.be/T94YPOkDyuE :




On December 15, 2015, Amy J. Berg released her biographical documentary film, Janis: Little Girl Blue, narrated by Cat Power. 


Thursday, September 16, 2021

Glencoe (prog rock / UK) ; Loving Awareness Band

Glencoe emerged from the ashes of Scottish progressive rock band Forever More, after Alan Gorrie and Onnie McIntyre left in 1971 to form the Average White Band.

The remaining duo of Mick Travis (aka Mick Strode, guitar) and Stuart Francis (drums) formed Glencoe with Graham Maitland (keys) and Norman Watt-Roy (bass). Initially, they played mainly folk-flavoured rock, reflecting Travis's writing and guitar work, touring in 1972 as support to stablemates Wishbone Ash and Deep Purple. John Turnbull, ex Skip Bifferty, Arc and session musician, replaced Travis after the tour.

British progressive rock band, early 1970s. Glencoe was one of those bands people tend to overlook, which is a pity since they have a surplus of significant music to offer.

The second (and final) album from this British prog band originally appeared in August 1973. Glencoe should have been a great success, gigging extensively their live act was superb, quite heavy and very loud! An effective mixing of speed, power and melody that sits very comfortably together. Graham Maitland's piano work sets a driving air to their music that is truly enjoyable. With the added rhythm of Norman Watt-Roy on bass and Stewart Francis on drums, the group's sound is filled to capacity. They disbanded in February 1974 and in March 1974 a third Glencoe LP was made with a different line up and name as “Loving Awareness”.

The band recorded two albums, both with Turnbull, 'Glencoe' (1972) and 'The Spirit Of Glencoe' (1973), and four John Peel radio sessions. In March 1974 a third Glencoe LP was made with a different line up and name as “Loving Awareness”.

Years Active1971 - 1974


Members

Graham Maitland - Keyboards, vocals

John Tumbul - Guitar, vocals

Stuart Francis - Percussion/drums

Norman Watt-Roy - Bass, Vocals


Discography

- Glencoe' (1972)

- The Spirit Of Glencoe (1973)

- four John Peel radio sessions


Glencoe - 1972 (full album) : https://youtu.be/WWOV101jjII :





In March 1974 a third Glencoe LP was made with a different line up and name as “Loving Awareness”.

The Loving Awareness band were heavily promoted on Radio Caroline in 1976 and comprised of:

John Turnbull – Guitars

Norman Watt-Roy – Bass

Mick Gallagher – Keyboards

Charlie Charles – Drums

Unknown vocalist on this track.

(These guys would later find fame and fortune as Ian Dury’s backing band The Blockheads).


https://youtu.be/hyDTSelFkjw :






Janis Joplin - Biography


Biography:

Janis Lyn Joplin (January 19, 1943 - October 4, 1970) was an American blues-influenced rock singer and occasional songwriter with a distinctive voice. Joplin released four albums as the front woman for several bands from 1967 to a posthumous release in 1971.

Joplin was born at St. Mary’s Hospital in Port Arthur, Texas. The daughter of Seth Joplin, a worker of Texaco, she had two younger siblings, Michael and Laura. She grew up listening to blues musicians such as Bessie Smith, Odetta, and Big Mama Thornton and singing in the local choir. Joplin graduated from Thomas Jefferson High School in Port Arthur in 1960 and went to college at the University of Texas in Austin, though she never completed a degree. While at Thomas Jefferson High School, she was mostly shunned, but found a group of boys who allowed her to tag along. One of those boys, a football player named Grant Lyons, played her the blues for the first time, an old Leadbelly record. Primarily a painter, it was in high school that she first began singing blues and folk music with friends.

Cultivating a rebellious manner that could be viewed as “liberated” – the women’s liberation movement was still in its infancy at this time – Joplin styled herself in part after her female blues heroines, and in part after the beat poets. She left Texas for San Francisco in 1963, lived in North Beach and in Haight-Ashbury. For a while she worked occasionally as a folk singer. Around this time her drug use began to increase, and she acquired a reputation as a “speed freak” and occasional heroin user. She also used other intoxicants. She was a heavy drinker throughout her career, and her trademark beverage was Southern Comfort.

Like many other female singers of the era, Janis’ feisty public image was at odds with her real personality. The book Love, Janis, written by her sister, has done much to further the reassessment of her life and work and reveals the private Janis to have been a highly intelligent, articulate, shy and sensitive woman who was devoted to her family.

After a return to Port Arthur to recuperate, she again moved to San Francisco in 1966, where her bluesy vocal style saw her join Big Brother and The Holding Company, a band that was gaining some renown among the nascent hippie community in Haight-Ashbury. The band signed a deal with independent Mainstream Records and recorded an eponymously titled album in 1967. However, the lack of success of their early singles led to the album being withheld until after their subsequent success.

The band’s big break came with their performance at the Monterey Pop Festival, which included a version of Big Mama Thornton’s “Ball and Chain” and featured a barnstorming vocal by Joplin. (The D.A. Pennebaker documentary Monterey Pop captured Cass Elliot in the crowd silently mouthing “Wow, that’s really heavy” during Joplin’s performance.) Their 1968 album Cheap Thrills featured more raw emotional performances and together with the Monterey performance, it made Joplin into one of the leading musical stars of the late Sixties.

After splitting from Big Brother, she formed a new backup group, modeled on the classic soul revue bands, named the Kozmic Blues Band, which backed her on I Got Dem Ol’ Kozmic Blues Again Mama! (1969: the year she played at Woodstock). That group was indifferently received and soon broke up, and Joplin then formed what is arguably her best backing group, The Full Tilt Boogie Band. The result was the posthumously released Pearl (1971). It became the biggest selling album of her short career and featured her biggest hit single, the definitive cover version of Kris Kristofferson’s “Me and Bobby McGee”, as well as the wry social commentary of the a capella “Mercedes-Benz”, written by Joplin and beat poet Michael McClure.

Among her last public appearances were two broadcasts of The Dick Cavett Show on June 25 and August 3, 1970. On the June 25 show she announced that she would attend her ten-year high school reunion, although she admitted that when in high school she had been “laughed out of class, out of school, out of town, out of the state”. She made it there, but it would be one of the last decisions of her life and it reportedly proved to be a rather unhappy experience for her.

Shortly thereafter, during the fall 1970 recording sessions for the Pearl album with Doors and Phil Ochs producer Paul A. Rothchild, Joplin died of an overdose of unusually pure heroin and alcohol, after being off of drugs (clean) for a period of time, on October 4, 1970 at the Landmark Motor Hotel located at 7047 Franklin Ave, room #105 in Hollywood, California, aged only 27. The last recordings she completed were Mercedes-Benz and a birthday greeting for John Lennon on 1 October; Lennon later told Dick Cavett that her taped greeting arrived at his New York home after her death.

She was cremated in the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Westwood, California, and her ashes were scattered into the Pacific Ocean. The album Pearl, released six weeks after her death, included a version of Nick Gravenites’ song “Buried Alive In The Blues”, which was left as an instrumental because Joplin had died before she was able to record her vocal over the backing track.


The 1979 film The Rose was loosely based on Joplin’s life. The lead role earned Bette Midler an Academy Award nomination as Best Actress. As of 2005, two biopics of Joplin’s life are being planned, one called Piece of My Heart starring Renée Zellweger, the other one called Gospel According to Janis. Gospel According to Janis, a biographical film starring Zooey Deschanel as Joplin, was originally scheduled to begin shooting in early 2007, now has a projected release date of 2010.

In the late 1990s, the musical play Love, Janis was created with input from Janis’s younger sister Laura plus Big Brother guitarist Sam Andrew, with an aim to take it to Off Broadway. Opening in the summer of 2001 and scheduled for only a few weeks of performances, the show won acclaim and packed houses and was held over several times, the demanding role of the singing Janis attracting rock vocalists from relative unknowns to pop stars Laura Branigan and Beth Hart. A national tour followed.

Joplin was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995, and was given a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2005. Among the artifacts at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Museum Exhibition are Joplin’s scarf and necklaces, her 1965 Porsche 356 Cabriolet with psychedelically-designed painting, and a sheet of LSD blotting paper designed by Robert Crumb, designer of the Cheap Thrills cover. Also in 2009, Joplin was the honoree at the Rock Hall’s American Music Master concert and lecture series.

In 2013, Washington’s Arena Stage featured a production of A Night with Janis Joplin, starring Mary Bridget Davies. In it, Joplin puts on a concert for the audience, while telling stories of her past inspirations including Odetta, Aretha Franklin, and others. It went on tour in 2016.

On November 4, 2013, Joplin was awarded with the 2,510th star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her contributions to the music industry. Her star is located at 6752 Hollywood Boulevard, in front of Musicians Institute.

On August 8, 2014, the U.S. Postal Service revealed a commemorative stamp honoring Janis Joplin, as part of its Music Icons Forever Stamp series during a first-day-of-issue ceremony at the Outside Lands Music Festival at Golden Gate Park.

On December 15, 2015, Amy J. Berg released her biographical documentary film, Janis: Little Girl Blue, narrated by Cat Power. It was a New York Times Critics’ Pick. Among the memorabilia she left behind is a Gibson Hummingbird guitar.


Source: Wikipedia


Friday, August 27, 2021

Gun (proto-metal, acid rock, psych rock, hard rock, prog rock / England)

Gun were a late 1960s British rock guitar trio who had a single British Top Ten hit, "Race with the Devil" and recorded two albums before disbanding. The band included brothers Paul Gurvitz and Adrian Gurvitz.

Years active: 1967 - 1970

History: 

Gun were renamed in 1967 from The Knack, formed by guitarist/vocalist Paul Gurvitz (born Paul Anthony Gurvitz,  (he was known by the surname Curtis until the early 1970s after which he returned to his original name Gurvitz). The Knack changed their name in the spring/summer of 1966, and the setup was Paul Curtis (Gurvitz) on guitar and vocals, Louie Farrell (born Brian John Farrell,  (who had joined The Knack in mid 1966) on drums, Gearie Kenworthy on bass guitar , Tim Mycroft organ ( Dorset died 1 January 2010), and later for a short while, Jon Anderson of Yes. Gun performed at the UFO Club, supporting bands such as Pink Floyd, Arthur Brown and Tomorrow. Recording sessions at Olympic Studios produced the unreleased single "Lights on the Wall", while in November 1967 they recorded for the BBC alternative music radio programme Top Gear and twice played on air. In early 1968 the band changed its line-up to a trio, with Paul Curtis (Gurvitz) on bass, Louie Farrell on drums and Adrian Curtis (Gurvitz) on guitar.

After being signed to CBS Records in early 1968, the band scored a hit with the opening track from their eponymous album (1968), "Race with the Devil". Jimi Hendrix quoted the song's riff during his song "Machine Gun" at the Isle of Wight Festival in 1970, as did Status Quo on their song "Forty Five Hundred Times" during a stage show at Apollo Theatre in Glasgow in 1976. "Race with the Devil" has been covered by Judas Priest (on the remastered CD version of Sin After Sin), Black Oak Arkansas (on their album Race with the Devil), Girlschool (on their album Demolition), and Church of Misery (on their 1996 demo, released as a split album with Acrimony, and on their full-length LP Vol. 1).

Their debut album's cover is noteworthy as it was the first by Roger Dean. AllMusic described it as having a "distinctive psych-flavoured proto-metal" sound. Their second album, Gunsight was released in 1969. Despite releasing a number of other singles, and an attempt by their record label to identify them with the underground counter-culture, the band had no further hits.

After a short time working separately, the Gurvitz brothers formed Three Man Army in 1971 and recorded three albums. Between 1974 and 1976, Three Man Army became the Baker Gurvitz Army with Ginger Baker, the former drummer for Cream, in the line-up. The trio recorded three albums: Baker Gurvitz Army, Elysian Encounter and Hearts On Fire. During the same period, the Gurvitz brothers recorded two albums under the name The Graeme Edge Band, with drummer Graeme Edge of The Moody Blues: Kick Off Your Muddy Boots and Paradise Ballroom. It was not a touring band, and also featured Baker. Paul Gurvitz now tours as the Paul Gurvitz and the New Army.


Past members: 

- Adrian Gurvitz - guitar

- Paul Gurvitz - guitar, vocals

- Louie Farrell - drums

- Gearie Kenworthy -  bass guitar

- Tim Mycroft - organ


Discography:

- Gun (1968)

- Gunsight (1969)


Rat Race: https://youtu.be/-Ayo55Q92GY : 





Source: Wikipedia

Friday, August 20, 2021

Carol of Harvest (psych folk, prog rock / Germany)

Biography:

Carol Of Harvest was founded in Cadolzburg, Bayern, Germany in 1978 - Alex Schmierer recorded under the revived moniker in 2008

One of the many German bands to release a single album on a private label and watch it grow into a collector's dream. Carol of Harvest played a dreamy blend of Progressive Rock and Folk with female vocals that might be compared with Mellow Candle and early Clannad mixed with Jane, Pentangle and Renaissance. The music has the added edge of long arrangements with Moog synth and acid guitar solos, and in reality has little to do with Krautrock.

The front cover photograph was taken, in Nymphenburg Palace park in Munich, by a friend, Manuel, of Alex Schmierer's then girlfriend Rita.

Members:

Beate Krause (vocals)

Axel Schmierer (guitars)

Jürgen Kolb (keyboards)

Robert Högn (drums)

Heinz Reinschlussel (bass)

(Helmut Reinschlussel - technic)


Discography:

- Carol of Harvest (1978)

- Ty I Ja (2008)


Somewhere at the end of the rainbow : https://youtu.be/MXRNL80je6c :




Tuesday, August 17, 2021

Best Live Performance / Jon Lord - intro solo When A Blind Man Cries (Deep Purple)

Jon Lord on keyboard playing an intro solo of "When a Blind Man Cries"  


https://youtu.be/WNWR-bRVJBQ : 




John Douglas Lord (9 June 1941 - 16 July 2012) was an English orchestral and rock composer, pianist, and Hammond organ player known for his pioneering work in fusing rock with classical or baroque forms, especially with Deep Purple.

Friday, August 13, 2021

SONG OF THE DAY / DeWolff - Birth of the Ninth Sun (Live)

 DeWolff - Birth of the Ninth Sun -  Live in Tivoli Vredenburg, Holland (2021)


From March 14 to March 23, 2021 Tivoli Vredenburg was completely dominated by 'DeWolff's Nonagon Marathon'. In ten days, the band played their nine albums in full in chronological order through a livestream marathon. From their very first EP 'DeWolff' to their latest achievement WOLFFPACK. Every evening a different album in a different special setting and with a bunch of guest musicians. A long cherished wish of the band that finally came true!


DeWolff Nonagon Marathon #2 - Strange Fruits & Undiscovered Plants (2009)

Live in TivoliVredenburg - March 15, 2021


https://youtu.be/ulbaEI5tfuw : 





Source: YouTube


Skip Bifferty (psych rock , pop/ England)


Skip Bifferty were an English psychedelic rock band formed in early 1966. The band featured future members of Ian Dury and The Blockheads.

Years active:  1966 - 1969


History: 

Skip Bifferty were formed when Newcastle upon Tyne band The Chosen Few (featuring Alan Hull, later of Lindisfarne) changed their name and recruited a new singer, Graham Bell, to replace Hull. Managed by Don Arden, father of Sharon Osbourne, the band were given a contract by RCA Records. For RCA, the group released a number of psychedelic singles, including "Man in Black" (produced by Steve Marriott and Ronnie Lane, both then in the Small Faces), and the 1967 album Skip Bifferty, most recently released with bonus tracks as The Story of Skip Bifferty on Sanctuary Records. Some of their songs were covered by established artists such as Cilla Black, The Tremeloes and The Kingsmen, and they built a following on the "live" circuit, including touring with The Who in October 1968.They also appeared in the 1960s cult film Smashing Time, featuring Rita Tushingham.

However, a management dispute with Arden eventually led to the band's demise under that name in November 1968. Early in 1969, under the pseudonym 'Heavy Jelly' and with Paul Nichols replacing Jackman on drums, the band released one single on Island Records, "I Keep Singing That Same Old Song", which received exposure on the Island Records sampler LP Nice Enough to Eat. The name was taken from a joke review in the London magazine Time Out, and confusingly was soon after also used by another group, which featured Jackie Lomax as lead singer, prior to the commencement of his solo career. Uncovered as Skip Bifferty and without a recording contract, the band, now with Fred Wheatley on drums, split soon after.


Members:

Graham Bell: vocals

Mick Gallagher: keyboards

Colin Gibson: bass

John Turnbull: guitar, vocals

Tommy Jackman: drums

Paul Nichols: drums on Heavy Jelly


Discography:

On Love" / "Cover Girl" (1967)

"Happy Land" / "Reason to Live" (1967)

"Man in Black" / "Mr. Money Man" (July 1968)

L.P.: Skip Bifferty (July 1968)

"I Keep Singing That Same Old Song" / "Blue" [as Heavy Jelly] (January 1969)

"Skip Bifferty--The Story of Skip Bifferty " (2003) 



Follow The Path To The Stars:   https://youtu.be/Er40FVq-Ehw : 




Source: Wikipedia

Monday, August 9, 2021

Janis Joplin (Photos)

 






Ramases (prog rock, psych space folk / UK)

Ramases (real name Kimberley Barrington Frost) , born 1 January 1934 (Sheffield, UK) died 2 December 1976, adopted his name after claiming to have been visited by the Egyptian Pharaoh Ramesses sometime during a car journey near his home in Sheffield, England. He began dressing and behaving in an eccentric manner, wearing silk robes and shaving his head, in the style of the Hare Krishna religious sect. He recorded his sublime "Space Hymns" (1971) album at Strawberry Hill Studios at Stockport near Manchester with his wife Dorothy (who he renamed Selket), together with the musicians Eric Stewart, Graham Gouldman, Kevin Godley and Lol Creme, who famously went on to form the Pop/Rock band 10cc, although this religiously-inspired album is far removed from anything 10cc ever recorded. Renowned album cover artist Roger Dean designed the spacey album cover. A second album "Glass Top Coffin" followed in 1975 which failed to achieve commercial success. Tragically, Kimberley Barrington Frost took his own life in 1976 in a fit of depression, aged 42, which makes this marvellous legacy of music he left behind all the more poignant in its appeal. 

Album "Space Hymns" features complete band 10CC , Recorded at Strawberry Studios Manchester, England.

Among the members of the new group he had formed, the nucleus of the future 10CC group (Godley Creme Gouldman & Stewart) played central roles and many superb harmonies and inventive, catchy hooks of this "Space Hymns" album will remind you of the pop-extraordinaire group that later graced the hit charts of the mid and late 70's. An absolutely delightful cult status album every proghead should own, that was a followed a few years later by a much less famous second album "Glass Top Coffin" (but without the 10CC members) which still has moments of brilliance. 

"It was reported by many reviewers and re-issue liner note writers that Ramases' real name was Martin Raphael. However in May 2012, Dorothy, better known to Ramases fans as Sel (or Selket), advised that her late husband, Ramases (real name Barrington Frost) and Martin Raphael were not the same person."


Personnel:

Ramases: Lead vocals 

Sel: Lead vocals 

Eric Stewart: Lead guitar and moog synthesizer

Lol Creme: Lead guitar and moog synthesizer

Kevin Godley: Drums & flutes

Graham Gouldman: Guitar & bass guitar

Martin Raphael: Sitar


Discography: 

- Space Hymns (1971)

- Glass Top Coffin (1975)


Live Child: https://youtu.be/T8HpI4QkaoI : 



Source: ProgArchives


Sunday, August 1, 2021

SONG OF THE DAY / Jakko Jakszyk - Islands

Jakko Jakszyk - Islands

https://youtu.be/pLU9g1CTrPo : 





Musicians:

Jakko M. Jakszyk - vocals, electric and acoustic guitar, keyboards, mellotron, bass guitar

Mel Collins - alto and tenor saxes, flute

Danny Thompson - double bass

Ian Wallace - drums




ALBUM OF THE WEEK / King Crimson - Islands (1971)

Islands is the fourth studio album by English band King Crimson, released in December 1971 on the record label Island. Islands is the only studio album to feature the 1971-1972 touring line-up of Robert Fripp, Mel Collins, Boz Burrell and Ian Wallace. This would be the last album before an entirely new group would record the trilogy of Larks' Tongues in Aspic, Starless and Bible Black and Red between 1973-1974. This is also the last album to feature the lyrics of co-founding member Peter Sinfield.

Progressive rock, jazz fusion


Full Album:  https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXhfRoiJBIissE6cOh0bqouyvin6IflJs


Formentera Lady: https://youtu.be/H7mehbm60YQ :





Musicians: 

Robert Fripp: Guitar, Mellotron, Peter’s Pedal Harmonium and sundry implements

Mel Collins: Flute, Bass Flute, Saxes & Vocals 

Boz Burrell: Bass Guitar, Lead Vocals & Choreography 

Ian Wallace: Drums, Percussion & Vocals 


Peter Sinfield: Words, Sounds & Visions


Featured players

Keith Tippett: Piano

Paulina Lucas: Soprano

Robin Miller: Oboe 

Mark Charig: Cornet

Harry Miller: String Bass


Engineer: Andy Hendrikson

Cover Design & Painting: Peter Sinfield

Equipment: Vick & Mike

Recorded at Command Studios, Piccadilly, London


Outer cover illustration ‘Trifid Nebula in Sagittarius’ by courtesy of The Institute of Technology and Carnegie Institution of Washington


Source: Wikipedia, YouTube