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johnh
Hi, interesting answers mine is "Miss You".... bought on pink vinyl with "Far away eyes" on the B side
john
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KeithNacho
A lot of people speak about she's so cold................
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stonesrule
Thrylan, if this goes to court, I'll be your witness!
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Doxa
"Start Me Up" in 1981.
- Doxa
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corriecasQuote
johnh
Hi, interesting answers mine is "Miss You".... bought on pink vinyl with "Far away eyes" on the B side
john
i bought that one too.
wonder how much its worth now.
Jeroen
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Come On
He He He...I hear the clic clac of your feet on the stairs....
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sanQ
I was raised around a music lifestyle. I had been an Elvis Presley nut since I was a baby and had all his records. I grew up with country music like Merle Haggard and George Jones and rock and roll greatest hits albums like the Beatles, Ricky Nelson, Buddy Holly. Then at 10, I started getting tired of Elvis all the time, so I got into Bruce Springsteen's Born In The USA as well as Brian Adams' Reckless album.
The first I ever heard of or saw of the Stones was the8 Start Me Up video. I totally hated it! 8 year old me thought that Mick was a weirdo gay person. When I told my family members about seeing the video they laughed when I did my impression of him. I must have seen this video in about 1983 on some video show hosted by Casey Casem.
What really did it for me was when I first saw the video for Harlem Shuffle in 86 or so. Not only did I love the song, but when I saw Keith, I thought, here is the coolest and most dangerous guitar player and human being ever. I thought he was the bomb! I started playing the guitar thanks to Keith, as I am sure thousands of others did as well.
But seeing Keith in that video, and seeing Mick in a different light, changed my life. I started reading any book I could find in the library and I started collecting every album I could get my hands on and I would sit by the radio and tape any song that came on that sounded like the Rolling Stones. I first heard Miss You, Satisfaction, and Honky Tonk Women this way, then I played them over and over again until I got enough money to buy all their albums. I loved every song.
When I saw the Start Me Up video a few years later, I thought there wasn't a cooler person on earth than Keith Richards. It still amazes me. There is not a person on this earth who looks better with a guitar in their hands than Keith.
But basically, Harlem Shuffle did it for me. It was the gateway song.
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Jayce
I was 12 in 1981, and my older brother had just suddenly died at 15. We had always been Beatles freaks, but in his last year or so, he had started to branch out into other music, which was okay with me -- except for one band: the Rolling Stones. Being so young, I had bought into that nonsense about the "hated rivalry" between the two bands. I was very critical of my brother, and very confused; how could he be so disloyal to the Beatles? I refused to listen when he told me how great the Stones were, and would never listen to those "bad guys."
A few days before he died, my brother had recorded a broadcast of a documentary called "The Rock Years" that aired on 102.7 WNEW-FM New York in the early spring of 1981. He taped the episode devoted to "The Rock Year 1967" by putting the recorder in front of the stereo speakers; this way, it recorded background noise of the room as well. After he died, the cassettes - 120 minute Concertape cassettes - just sat in his room gathering dust. But that summer, a few months after his death, I discovered that tape of 1967 and started to play it. I found that I really liked it -- so much of the music it was playing on the show was just great -- "Sgt.Pepper," the Airplane, the Doors, Hendrix, etc.
Then came the section devoted to the Rolling Stones. After a commercial break, the narrator came on and said, "It was the Rock Year 1967, and the Rolling Stones released a song about a famous groupie - 'Ruby Tuesday'." The song started to play, but there was no way I was going to listen to the Stones. I moved toward the tape recorder to fast forward the tape. Just as I was about to push the button, the chorus came in - and remember the bit above about hearing the background noise? Well, I heard some background noise: my brother singing along with the chorus. Every time the chorus kicked in, there he was, singing right along.
I must have listened to that recording of "Ruby Tuesday" a thousand times that summer.
That's how my brother got me into the Stones.