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"Woodshuck" featured spoofs of Woodstock performers, including Joe Cocker and Joan Baez, as well as parodies of John Denver, Bob Dylan and James Taylor, plus songs performed by fictional groups (e.g., the "Motown Manifestoes" singing "Papa was a Running Dog Lackey of the Bourgeoisie").
John Belushi joined him onstage doing his famous impersonation of Cocker's stage movements. At the time, Cocker was $800,000 in debt to A&M Records and struggling with alcoholism. Several months later, he met producer Michael Lang , who agreed to manage him on the condition that he stay sober.
Belushi also reprised his Lemmings imitation of Joe Cocker. Cocker himself joined Belushi in 1976 to sing " Feelin' Alright? " together. Like many other Saturday Night Live cast members and writers, Belushi was a recreational drug user .
Paul McCartney is petitioning for late English blues-rock singer Joe Cocker to be inducted into the Rock Hall of Fame this year. In a letter dated Feb. 25, and addressed to “rock and rollers ...
John Belushi. People are always comparing John Belushi to Chris Farley, but to be honest, he was a lot weirder than Farley. Don’t get me wrong, they both had explosive energy—but Belushi ...
He lived a bigger-than-life existence, and the film ‘Joe Cocker: With A Little Help From My Friends’ will show the high points, the low points, the frustrations, crippling battles with his ...
Cocker performed a 'duet' of this song with John Belushi imitating Cocker on the third episode of Saturday Night Live's second season, which aired on October 2, 1976. Cocker also performed the song with Huey Lewis on Jimmy Kimmel Live!, which aired on 19 July 2012.
Joe Cocker performs "You Are So Beautiful" and "Feelin' Alright". [5] Belushi "duets" with Cocker on the latter. Richard Belzer, the show's warm-up comedian during season 1, makes a cameo appearance during the cold open impersonating the still-injured Chase, who contributes via phone.