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His Majesty
Sorry, but Charlies drumming is bad and awkward on that live version. Such a shame that just a few years after finding a magic flow and rhythmic feel in mid 60's - early 70's that he'd lose it. That silly over emphasised hi-hat snare thang ruined it.
The stones takes on punkish music are like limp willies compared to the stuff they are partially trying to mimic.
The stones doing punk is just embarrassing.
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DandelionPowderman
The Stones never did punk. However, they had the same attitude.
Respectable or Lies aren't more punk than, say, She Said Yeah or I Wanna Be Your Man.
The fact that Charlie changed his technique isn't THAT important here, imo, it's the raw, sweaty blues rock with attitude that comes across to the listener.
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Witness
A generation outlook that the English punk scene seemed to adopt as a common denominator, despite the variation between punk bands, according to those who wrote about it, and in marked contrast to the pop leanings of for instance the Ramones, was the epitet "No future". The anger that was expressed by certain punk bands expressed that slogan and signal. Be it a truth or only a myth about the English punk scene at the time.
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DandelionPowdermanQuote
Witness
A generation outlook that the English punk scene seemed to adopt as a common denominator, despite the variation between punk bands, according to those who wrote about it, and in marked contrast to the pop leanings of for instance the Ramones, was the epitet "No future". The anger that was expressed by certain punk bands expressed that slogan and signal. Be it a truth or only a myth about the English punk scene at the time.
The difference between english and american punk bands is also very evident within the music.
Sex Pistols were dangerous and aggressive. Ramones were bubble gum musically, but with clever and funny lyrics. As dangerous as Donald Duck, to be a bit tabloid
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stoneheartedQuote
DandelionPowdermanQuote
Witness
A generation outlook that the English punk scene seemed to adopt as a common denominator, despite the variation between punk bands, according to those who wrote about it, and in marked contrast to the pop leanings of for instance the Ramones, was the epitet "No future". The anger that was expressed by certain punk bands expressed that slogan and signal. Be it a truth or only a myth about the English punk scene at the time.
The difference between english and american punk bands is also very evident within the music.
Sex Pistols were dangerous and aggressive. Ramones were bubble gum musically, but with clever and funny lyrics. As dangerous as Donald Duck, to be a bit tabloid
And, as John Lydon has pointed out, quite a few years older and a bit more middle class than their English counterparts.
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DandelionPowderman
Respectable or Lies aren't more punk than, say, She Said Yeah or I Wanna Be Your Man.
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DandelionPowdermanQuote
stoneheartedQuote
DandelionPowdermanQuote
Witness
A generation outlook that the English punk scene seemed to adopt as a common denominator, despite the variation between punk bands, according to those who wrote about it, and in marked contrast to the pop leanings of for instance the Ramones, was the epitet "No future". The anger that was expressed by certain punk bands expressed that slogan and signal. Be it a truth or only a myth about the English punk scene at the time.
The difference between english and american punk bands is also very evident within the music.
Sex Pistols were dangerous and aggressive. Ramones were bubble gum musically, but with clever and funny lyrics. As dangerous as Donald Duck, to be a bit tabloid
And, as John Lydon has pointed out, quite a few years older and a bit more middle class than their English counterparts.
Exactly!
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His MajestyQuote
DandelionPowderman
Respectable or Lies aren't more punk than, say, She Said Yeah or I Wanna Be Your Man.
Nice try, but you seem to be confused.
Not one person in The Rolling Stones is putting forth punk attitude in either of those songs from the 60's.
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SpudQuote
DandelionPowdermanQuote
stoneheartedQuote
DandelionPowdermanQuote
Witness
A generation outlook that the English punk scene seemed to adopt as a common denominator, despite the variation between punk bands, according to those who wrote about it, and in marked contrast to the pop leanings of for instance the Ramones, was the epitet "No future". The anger that was expressed by certain punk bands expressed that slogan and signal. Be it a truth or only a myth about the English punk scene at the time.
The difference between english and american punk bands is also very evident within the music.
Sex Pistols were dangerous and aggressive. Ramones were bubble gum musically, but with clever and funny lyrics. As dangerous as Donald Duck, to be a bit tabloid
And, as John Lydon has pointed out, quite a few years older and a bit more middle class than their English counterparts.
Exactly!
There is of course a huge irony.
Whilst aspiring young bands all jumped on the Punk bandwagon to chase success...most of them just wanted to be the Rolling Stones.
[Many who did acheive success have admitted it since.
...and I'll bet there are few ex Punk band members who weren't lucky enough to make it posting on these pages today [me included]
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DandelionPowderman
It's within the music. If not "punk", they're surely putting forth a rawer and meaner attitude in those songs than their contemporaries did.
It's easy, not confusing. Just listen to the original versions
The guitar attack and sounds on both SSY and IWBYM are even rawer and more hard-hitting than that of Respectable, a song described by most rock critics and fans as "the answer to the punks".
+ Mick's singing in the ending of IWBYM is just as dangerous as the Respectable-choruses, imo.
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His MajestyQuote
DandelionPowderman
It's within the music. If not "punk", they're surely putting forth a rawer and meaner attitude in those songs than their contemporaries did.
It's easy, not confusing. Just listen to the original versions
The guitar attack and sounds on both SSY and IWBYM are even rawer and more hard-hitting than that of Respectable, a song described by most rock critics and fans as "the answer to the punks".
+ Mick's singing in the ending of IWBYM is just as dangerous as the Respectable-choruses, imo.
You are confused, there is nothing punk about those tracks.
The rougher presentation and delivery is coming from the R&B rave up thing, the @#$%& you attitude is of the boom boom kind.
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DandelionPowderman
And the R&B rave up thing and punk aren't related because...?
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His MajestyQuote
DandelionPowderman
And the R&B rave up thing and punk aren't related because...?
Everything is related.
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z
I think it's "go take my wife" rather than "don't take my wife".
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DandelionPowderman
And some more closely than others. Now, you are confused
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His MajestyQuote
DandelionPowderman
And some more closely than others. Now, you are confused
No confusion at all here, it's crystal clear that those 60's tracks are not punk.
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DandelionPowderman
The roughness is related to the roughness of punk.
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His MajestyQuote
DandelionPowderman
The roughness is related to the roughness of punk.
In 1978.
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DandelionPowdermanQuote
His MajestyQuote
DandelionPowderman
The roughness is related to the roughness of punk.
In 1978.
Just like She Said Yeah sounds like garage, a forerunner to punk...
Remember that the punks were the first "copycats" here.
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DandelionPowdermanQuote
z
I think it's "go take my wife" rather than "don't take my wife".
Live, he alternates between "go take my wife" and "go fvck my wife". Keith's backing vocals always stick to the latter line
On the studio version it is "don't take my wife".
For some reason...
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DandelionPowderman
Then we need more sillyness around here, surely!