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March 1968 Videos

PEGGY MARCH 1968 -MORE-
AVAILABLE ON BEAR FAMILY BCD 15 602 MORE - ONE OF THE VERY BEST SONGS OF PEGGY MARCH!!! ALL RIGHTS PEGGY MARCH / ARNIE HARRIS
The Hendrix Experience Live in Ottawa, March 1968
A home-made live recording of Jimmy Hendrix
UFO crash Berezovsky, Russian Federation March, 1968
UFO crash Berezovsky, Russian Federation March, 1968. The Secret KGB UFO Files [AVI - Crash + Alien Autopsy] Join host ROGER MOORE in an exclusive investigation into one of the most compelling events of our time. For five decades, American agencies have stockpiled information on UFOs. So did their counterparts behind the iron curtain. Soldiers, scientists and spies all paint a disturbing picture of the KGB's secret campaign. The pair of MiG fighters that tried to shoot down a UFO -- both jets blown out of the sky! Stunning proof that the Soviets recovered something not from this earth! Amazing film footage smuggled out of Russia. Run Time: 87 minutes http://thepiratebay.org/torrent/4348763/The_Secret_KGB_UFO_Files_[AVI_-_Crash___Alien_Autopsy]
60s Peggy March-in der carnaby street 1968-69
Peggy March 1968-69 In der Carnaby street
Cream - Toad (Part 1) March 7 1968 Fillmore West [Wheels Of Fire]
Cream - Toad (Part 1) 7 March 1968 at Fillmore West [Wheels Of Fire] Copyright - 1968 Polydor/Atco Records "Toad" is an instrumental by British rock band Cream and was released on their 1966 debut album, Fresh Cream. The "song", composed by drummer Ginger Baker, is a five minute drum solo (with a brief guitar and bass introduction), and is notable because it features one of the earliest recorded drum solos in rock history. It can also be seen as an early example of hard rock. An extended sixteen minute live version (of which 13 minutes is drum solo) appears on Cream's 1968 album Wheels of Fire. A slightly extended version of this recording, with some additional guitar and bass edited in from another performance, appears on Cream's four-disc compilation album Those Were the Days (1997). "Toad" was given a 10:06 minute rendition during Cream's reunion in May 2005 at the Royal Albert Hall.
WHERE EAGLES DARE (1968) - March [Source Music]
■stereo(URL last "&fmt=18")■ 【Music】 Ron Goodwin ロン・グッドウィン 【director】 Brian G. Hutton ブライアン・G・ハットン 【cast】 Richard Burton リチャード・バートン (John Smith) Clint Eastwood クリント・イーストウッド (Lt. Morris Schaffer) Mary Ure メアリー・ユーア (Mary Ellison) Michael Hordern マイケル・ホーダーン (Vice Admiral Rolland) Patrick Wymark パトリック・ワイマーク (Col. Wyatt Turner) Robert Beatty ロバート・ビーティ (Cartwright Jones) Anton Diffring アントン・ディフリング (Col. Kramer) Donald Houston ドナルド・ヒューストン (Christiansen) Ferdy Mayne ファーディ・メイン (Reichmarschal Rosemayer) Nell McCarthy (Berreley) Peter Barkworth ピーター・バークワース (McPherson) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Where_Eagles_Dare 【Title】 Agenten Sterben Einsam / Dove Osano Le Aquile / Where Eagles Dare
Cream - Toad (Part 2) March 7 1968 Fillmore West [Wheels Of Fire]
Cream - Toad (Part 2) 7 March 1968 at Fillmore West [Wheels Of Fire] Copyright - 1968 Polydor/Atco Records "Toad" is an instrumental by British rock band Cream and was released on their 1966 debut album, Fresh Cream. The "song", composed by drummer Ginger Baker, is a five minute drum solo (with a brief guitar and bass introduction), and is notable because it features one of the earliest recorded drum solos in rock history. It can also be seen as an early example of hard rock. An extended sixteen minute live version (of which 13 minutes is drum solo) appears on Cream's 1968 album Wheels of Fire. A slightly extended version of this recording, with some additional guitar and bass edited in from another performance, appears on Cream's four-disc compilation album Those Were the Days (1997). "Toad" was given a 10:06 minute rendition during Cream's reunion in May 2005 at the Royal Albert Hall.
Cream - Spoonful (Part 1) [March 10 1968 Winterland San Francisco CA (1st show) Wheels Of Fire]
Cream - Spoonful (Wheels Of Fire) [March 10 1968 Winterland San Francisco, Ca. (1st show) "Spoonful" is a blues standard written by Willie Dixon and lyrically based on Charley Patton's "Spoonful Blues". It is commonly associated with Howlin' Wolf, Dixon's longtime collaborator, who first recorded the song in 1960 (as Chess single 1,762), and later included it in his album Howlin' Wolf (1962), also called The Rockin' Chair Album. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame listed it as one of the 500 songs that shaped rock and roll. The song is also ranked #219 on the Rolling Stone magazine's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. The British blues-rock band Cream covered "Spoonful" on their 1966 debut album, Fresh Cream, and frequently played it in concert; their onstage jams on the number could reach past the fifteen-minute mark. The Winterland concert rendition on their 1968 album Wheels of Fire clocks in at nearly seventeen minutes.
Mick Farren - The Battle of Grosvenor Square London 1968
Mick Farren talks about the anti Vietnam war march on the US embassy in Grosvenor Square, London, March 1968. The march turned into a pitched battle between demonstrators and mounted police. (edited down from Days in the Life, The Battle of Grosvenor Square, 2000)
Cream - Spoonful (Part 2) [March 10 1968 Winterland
Cream - Spoonful (Part 1) [March 10 1968 Winterland San Francisco CA (1st show) Wheels Of Fire] Copyright - 1968 Polydor/Atco Records "Spoonful" is a blues standard written by Willie Dixon and lyrically based on Charley Patton's "Spoonful Blues". It is commonly associated with Howlin' Wolf, Dixon's longtime collaborator, who first recorded the song in 1960 (as Chess single 1,762), and later included it in his album Howlin' Wolf (1962), also called The Rockin' Chair Album. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame listed it as one of the 500 songs that shaped rock and roll. The song is also ranked #219 on the Rolling Stone magazine's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. The British blues-rock band Cream covered "Spoonful" on their 1966 debut album, Fresh Cream, and frequently played it in concert; their onstage jams on the number could reach past the fifteen-minute mark. The Winterland concert rendition on their 1968 album Wheels of Fire clocks in at nearly seventeen minutes.