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crumbling_miceWasn't it both nights? My memory has possibly got this wrong and apologies to keith if it was just the first night. Still doesn't detract from my point that as any of the guitarists on here will testify, that opening riff to SMU is possibly the easiest of all the Stones riffs. Theories about his scarf getting in the way are nonsense... strange that none of the band seem to realise. Chuck Leavell as musical director you would think might have raised an eyebrow...nothing. Still think it was intentional for some bizarre reason.Quote
DandelionPowderman
Both nights?
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DandelionPowdermanQuote
crumbling_miceWasn't it both nights? My memory has possibly got this wrong and apologies to keith if it was just the first night. Still doesn't detract from my point that as any of the guitarists on here will testify, that opening riff to SMU is possibly the easiest of all the Stones riffs. Theories about his scarf getting in the way are nonsense... strange that none of the band seem to realise. Chuck Leavell as musical director you would think might have raised an eyebrow...nothing. Still think it was intentional for some bizarre reason.Quote
DandelionPowderman
Both nights?
Yep it sure was both nights.
I just asked Bärs if he thought Keith flubbed it both nights because of nerves.
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schwonek
Ok. He gets it all wrong. Why does it sound so right on Sweet Summer Sun I wonder?
Because he played it correctly later in the song. A cut and paste-job...
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trainarollin
At 1:10 on the above Van Halen Jump Clip, you see Wolfie handing out a guitar pick with fingers clearly off the bass neck...you can still hear the notes.
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sodapop
To me it looked like - in the 1st Hyde Park Show - that his scarf (one of them anyway) got caught in the strings. One of the previous responses postulated that he may have forgot what open tuning he was in (E v. G). As a guitar player this makes a little sense - but - most of the Stones tunes in open tuning are in G - and the fact they've played Start Me Up hundreds of times - I have a hard time agreeing with this theory.
I listened to the 2nd Hyde Park intro a few times. Keith does cuts off the announcer a little - and this I feel was not an accident. I think he wanted to play the intro in an authoritative manner as to quiet the snickering critics from the night before. To my ears - he didn't 'flub' it - it sounded a little flat to me - like he was trying to hard.
As far as the other comments saying Keith doesn't care anymore, or can't play anymore....well....I think they care as much as they need to at this stage of their career. I believe the Stones feel that people are on to them now...and it's getting a little harder for them to try and convince everyone that these shows just aren't for the money. I mean look at the set lists. Keith is in his 70's now. I never thought he was much of a guitar player - but has always been one of my favorites ---if that makes any sense to you. But I'd say his guitar playing has greatly diminished. Some of the solos he takes are wildly out of tune, tempo and seem rushed. I could go on and on here and bash how Keith sounds now a days but it would not seem right to me. I'm 45 now - and I'll NEVER forget the day when my older brother came home with a few Rolling Stones records. I was in maybe 4th grade. I haven't been the same since. I guess that's why Keith is one of my favorites and this is how I choose to remember the Stones.
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schwonekQuote
DandelionPowdermanQuote
schwonek
Ok. He gets it all wrong. Why does it sound so right on Sweet Summer Sun I wonder?
Because he played it correctly later in the song. A cut and paste-job...
Actually I just realized that Sweet Summer Sun is the second night Start me up. And that flubber wasn't as bad as the first night one.