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ZantiMisfit
Um...'Tattoo You' did very well--it went to #1...?
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Glam Descendant
71Tele:
>Thank you, but I know what a "send up" is.
I didn't intend it to be condescending. I know that there are many here for whom English is a second language and I thought the expression would not translate well, so I tagged that definition on at the end for clarity.
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flacnvinyl
The album is called GRRR! but GRRRegory is sticking his tongue out. Shouldn't the album be called 'BLAAAHHH' instead?
The gorilla suit , the gorilla and the album name GRRR, are all, to me, cringe inducingly bad ideas. I remember thinking, seeing Gregory and that cape in SFTD, this is the best they could come up with? Embarassing. In the same category as the inflatable penis, and elephants on stage, which is where Keith once said he drew the line. Actually, elephants on stage sounds pretty neat. A lot could go wrong though!Quote
dcba
It matched Mick's gorilla suit he wore during SFTD...
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CanYouHearTheMusic
I thought it was hilarious and still do. It doesn't look any tackier than the clearly-70s-style inspired cartoony artwork it's aspiring to be. If it was released in the 70s no one would've complained . . .
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R
I loved the gorilla from the jump and understood it was a marketing tool directed at younger audiences, theoretically to bring them into the Stones world with a hip, "that is so random" image. Gregory was created to be down with the kids and perhaps SELL THEM a greatest hits collection. Any music marketer with a lick of sense knows WE all have these songs many times over. At the same time any professional marketeer of nearly ANY product also knows selling much of anything to audiences over age 50 (i.e. Stones fans by and large) is a waste of time. That's why the 18 to 35 year old demographic is the eternal prize.
That said, I'm thinking GRRR! perhaps didn't succeed in the manner to which was hoped. Many of us didn't buy it and the young'uns likely didn't either to any significant degree. It cost too much, was available in too many configurations and the packaging was chintzy and minimalist. Perhaps they shot the budget on the gorilla.
I did notice Gregory was far less omnipresent during the Spring tour than when I saw the Stones in Brooklyn last December. Then they had cartoons of him on the video screen before the show which were quite amusing. I looked forward to my family seeing them in the Spring but they were nowhere to be found nor was much promo imagery around the venue. Perhaps Ford is having a hissy-fit because the campaign bombed. It happens.
Ford DID have one very salient point, however, i.e. the Stones having a large contingent of fans "who are always mad at them."
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CanYouHearTheMusic
I thought it was hilarious and still do. It doesn't look any tackier than the clearly-70s-style inspired cartoony artwork it's aspiring to be. If it was released in the 70s no one would've complained . . .
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mitchQuote
CanYouHearTheMusic
I thought it was hilarious and still do. It doesn't look any tackier than the clearly-70s-style inspired cartoony artwork it's aspiring to be. If it was released in the 70s no one would've complained . . .
The cover is funny but it seems people here try to see what they call "good taste" where there is only humor.
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rollmops
Probably at age 12 , the Grrrorilla would have amused me but for whatever reason at 54 it doesn't;I don't even care about King Kong.
Rock and roll,
Mops
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rogerriffin
i do not dislike Grrregory, viewing at the Merchandise Truck in Newark he is imponent and have some charisma...specially before the encore, when he smells the crowd and knock the screen...
to my kid do not dislike neither...
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alimente
At first, I was not amused. Then I did not like it. After that, I became used to it. Followed by a short period when I actually quite liked it. Then I hated it. After that, it left me cold. Then it made me laugh. At one time it made me cry. And now...guess what.
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"But some fans weren’t as excited about the logo. “A lot of people didn’t like it at all,” Ford says. “That was good. I was glad that they didn’t like it. I mean, the last people who I wanted to please were Rolling Stones fans.”
Ford continues, “They are really nasty. It’s a general rule they have a fan base that just seem to be always angry at the Rolling Stones for a lot of reasons. They’ve got their own grudges. I shouldn’t say that I didn’t really care. I probably did care, but when the Rolling Stones were doing their best work, they were a step ahead of the people that loved them so much. I thought, ‘How cool that I get an opportunity to piss their fans off?'"
[www.rollingstone.com]
Cats Eyes on Between The Buttons - also they were going to use a 3 legged goose for the Decembers Children cover but the goose hobbled away right before the photo shoot, so they decided to change it (bummer).Quote
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Big Al
The Stones have never used an animal in any of their promotional artwork before, have they?
Once, but it seemed to make a bit more sense.
Please don't wet your pants.Quote
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alimente
At first, I was not amused. Then I did not like it. After that, I became used to it. Followed by a short period when I actually quite liked it. Then I hated it. After that, it left me cold. Then it made me laugh. At one time it made me cry. And now...guess what.
It gets you aroused?