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proudmary
For God's sake, it's just ridiculous!
what kind of Establishment do you mean? just to be a millionaire to fly on private jets and hanging out with presidents and movie stars - this is not establishment?
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GetYerAngie
I agree with you, Proudmary - the book sounds promissing. Rockjournalists way to take Keith´s perception for granted and to idolize the man has needed balancing for decades.
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Palace Revolution 2000
His love for the Blues is pure,
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GravityBoyQuote
Palace Revolution 2000
His love for the Blues is pure,
He's bored by the blues.
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proudmaryQuote
GetYerAngie
I agree with you, Proudmary - the book sounds promissing. Rockjournalists way to take Keith´s perception for granted and to idolize the man has needed balancing for decades.
"Jagger might be rock & roll’s most unknowable soul, but Spitz gives him back every bit of his Satanic majesty" - I'm really looking forward to it.
I'm tired of the cult of Keith Richards. There is so much more to Rolling Stones than the guitars, the riffs and multi-day drugs filled sessions in the bathroom. I mean, it's OK, I love it - just it is not all.
And Keith Richards and his admirers gradually turned the Rolling Stones
into yet another rock group ( like Led Zepellin, Queen, name it)
In fact, it's time to look at the Stones from Jagger's point of view
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kowalskiQuote
GravityBoyQuote
Palace Revolution 2000
His love for the Blues is pure,
He's bored by the blues.
How about the Red Devils sessions in the 90's? and how about the album with Jimmy Rogers in 99 or something?
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GravityBoy
Mick Jagger rebel?
Knighthood!!
No one forced him to accept a knighthood.
Mick has become part of the establishment.
Is it really worth selling your soul to be called "Sir"?
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"The best of Jagger playlist"
Jagger: Rebel, Rock Star, Rambler, Rogue is a look at Mick Jagger as you have never seen him before. From bluesy teenager to hardened legendary rocker, Jagger explores the highs and lows of over 50 years of rock n’ roll (with a little glam rock, punk rock, soul music and cocktail party mixed in). Combine with author Marc Spitz’s “Best of Jagger” playlist and you will find yourself on the Mick side of the Glimmer Twins.
1. “Down the Road Apiece” (1965)
A great example of Mick’s improbably credible interpretation (and with his own Cockney affects, hybridization) of the African American vocal style. In less than two minutes, The Rolling Stones version of Amos Milburn’s boogie woogie party starter, made it forever-okay for scrawny white boys to sing lustily about chicken cooked in bacon grease.
2. “As Tears Go By” (1965)
In ’64, Mick and Keith were reluctant to bring this “girly” ballad to the other Rolling Stones and gave it to Marianne Faithfull instead. By ’65, pop seemed to require emotional sophistication and baroque melancholy overnight and Mick bravely manned up to his female side. This is the bridge song, allowing the Stones to compete with the Beatles, Dylan and the Kinks.
3. “Memo From Turner” (1970)
Memo to Turner: keep it in your pants. Why doesn’t Keith Richards appear on what might have been the Rolling Stones’ contribution to the soundtrack for Mick’s film debut, the perverse and still brilliant British gangster film Performance? As they say on Facebook, it’s complicated. Co-star Anita Pallenberg, provocateur director Donald Cammell, enough drug casualties to fully stock a Victorian loony bin all contribute to the first and still un-mended rift between Mick and Keith. But at least we have this gem with Ry Cooder’s sinister guitar and disturbing, cut and paste lyrics indebted to William S. Burroughs. Great on its own but definitely check out the video.
4. “You’re So Vain” (1972)
He comes in on the second verse, just after the guitar solo. He’s not credited, but it was impossible to hear Carly Simon’s number one single and not know who the mystery man was. Maybe the song is about Warren Beatty, maybe it’s about Kris Kristofferson or James Taylor. But the singing… is all about Mick Jagger. The hands down highlight of the Stones early to mid 70s “flakey” period (thanks Lester Bangs).
5. “(You’ve Gotta Walk) Don’t Look Back” (1979)
What do you do when the punks call you a ponce dinosaur and put you on their villians list? You make an album full of stonking, two and a half minute songs about heroin and hustling, and for insurance, you align yourself with the Stepping Razor himself, the Toughest of the Tough, Mr. Peter Tosh; who got crazy respect from even the most vicious of punk rockers. Mick did both and somehow survived the rampant iconoclasm. This reggae-fied version of the Temptations classic is cynical synergy, or if you prefer, image damage control and a little kitschy but the sheer star power of the two makes it a must.
6. “State of Shock” (1984)
At the time Michael Jackson could have guzzled a liter of Pepsi and belched the alphabet and it would have moved vinyl. A song from his teenage years “Farewell My Summer Love” was a top 10 hit. He’d sung the hook on Rockwell’s “Somebody’s Watching Me’ (later immortalized in a Geico insurance commercial) and the track went to number 2. This, however, was the best of the post-Thriller cash in singles; a sexed up Stonesy-riff stunt cast with a real Stone. Mick replaced Freddie Mercury (no small feat) and made the track his own.
7. “Evil” (1993)
Over a year before Rick Rubin patented his stripped down/return to form approach with Johnny Cash and later, Neil Diamond, he paired Mick with Hollywood bar band The Red Devils for a never-released album full of Mick’s favorite blues songs, like this Howling Wolf classic. Evil is goin’ on!
8. “Streets of Berlin” (1997)
During the opening scene of the brutal and homoerotic, Holocaust-set 1997 indie film Bent, Mick croons this cabaret ballad in Dietrich drag, while swinging on an oversized parakeet perch, out decadence-ing and out-Berlin-ing his old cohort David Bowie in one fell (and actual) swoop.
9. “Sweet Neo Con” (2005)
In ’68, Mick marched with the students in protest of the Vietnam War and wrote “Street Fighting Man” in the offing. A decade on, with Thatcher in power, many assumed he’d long made peace with the establishment. Which is why this, easily the most explicit and angry protest song of the Iraq War era, shocked many fans. Hypocritical Christians, Halliburton and W. and Cheney get the gimlet eye.
10. “Pass the Wine (Sophia Loren)” (2010)
Senior citizen revisits undisputed 40 year old masterpiece, armed with digital technology, under pressure to stimulate catalog and somehow does not suck. One marvel of the new Exile on Main Street tracks (this the War-indebted, funky highlight) is that they did nothing to sully the legacy. The other = makes you wanna dance.
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GravityBoy
Some lame excuses for "Sir" Mick.
He's a sell-out.
The honors system makes me want to puke.
Also, anyone got that video Mick made for the marketing team before one of the tours (1989?) where's he's banging on about all the merchandise he's going to sell and how he wants it sold?
Mick Jagger is anything but a rebel and hasn't been for over 40 years.
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GravityBoy
Some lame excuses for "Sir" Mick.
He's a sell-out.
The honors system makes me want to puke.
Also, anyone got that video Mick made for the marketing team before one of the tours (1989?) where's he's banging on about all the merchandise he's going to sell and how he wants it sold?
Mick Jagger is anything but a rebel and hasn't been for over 40 years.