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me too.Quote
BeforeTheyMakeMeRun
I'd always thought it was Mick holding the records.
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treaclefingers
Didn't Keith say Mick was holding the records, in the interview on 25x5?
At least that's what he said...in other words, who knows?!
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swiss
This is fantastic - thanks for posting!
I also thought it was Mick, BUT imagining the scenario it would seem more likely that Keith
would have been walking around with records than Mick. If Mick had a great collection,
which everyone agrees on, why would he have been walking around with his records. Unless
he just bought them, I suppose. But I can imagine Keith going somewhere carrying records.
My favorite quote in that article is "Bo Diddley calls his music Bo Diddley, so where do you
go from there?"
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treaclefingers
Didn't Keith say Mick was holding the records, in the interview on 25x5?
At least that's what he said...in other words, who knows?!
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DandelionPowderman
I always thought that it was Mick who had the records.
However, on the November 25 2012-show, Mick said ..."do you still got those records, Keith?" - referring to their encounter...
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DelticsQuote
DandelionPowderman
I always thought that it was Mick who had the records.
However, on the November 25 2012-show, Mick said ..."do you still got those records, Keith?" - referring to their encounter...
Maybe Keith "borrowed" them!
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DandelionPowdermanQuote
DelticsQuote
DandelionPowderman
I always thought that it was Mick who had the records.
However, on the November 25 2012-show, Mick said ..."do you still got those records, Keith?" - referring to their encounter...
Maybe Keith "borrowed" them!
Maybe
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DandelionPowdermanQuote
DelticsQuote
DandelionPowderman
I always thought that it was Mick who had the records.
However, on the November 25 2012-show, Mick said ..."do you still got those records, Keith?" - referring to their encounter...
Maybe Keith "borrowed" them!
Maybe
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RoughJusticeOnYa
And to mr. Chess I'd say: yeah, right...
(Sounds a whole lot like a Keithism to me, that story.)
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CaptainCorellaQuote
RoughJusticeOnYa
And to mr. Chess I'd say: yeah, right...
(Sounds a whole lot like a Keithism to me, that story.)
I go back to the point about how unusual and hard it was in 1962 in England to do an international order for obscure LP records from a small label in the middle of the far off USA.
It's plausible that if they only had a couple of sales to England per month (or even per year!) that Marshall Chess would remember it. (But I take the point about it being a Keithism though!
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RipThisBoneQuote
CaptainCorellaQuote
RoughJusticeOnYa
And to mr. Chess I'd say: yeah, right...
(Sounds a whole lot like a Keithism to me, that story.)
I go back to the point about how unusual and hard it was in 1962 in England to do an international order for obscure LP records from a small label in the middle of the far off USA.
It's plausible that if they only had a couple of sales to England per month (or even per year!) that Marshall Chess would remember it. (But I take the point about it being a Keithism though!
I read somewhere Mick's father was the trainer/coach (and a gymnastic teacher) of the English basketballteam which went to the USA to play a tournement. Maybe old Joe Jagger buyed some vinyl on Mick's advise and took it home in 1960/61.
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AquamarineQuote
RipThisBoneQuote
CaptainCorellaQuote
RoughJusticeOnYa
And to mr. Chess I'd say: yeah, right...
(Sounds a whole lot like a Keithism to me, that story.)
I go back to the point about how unusual and hard it was in 1962 in England to do an international order for obscure LP records from a small label in the middle of the far off USA.
It's plausible that if they only had a couple of sales to England per month (or even per year!) that Marshall Chess would remember it. (But I take the point about it being a Keithism though!
I read somewhere Mick's father was the trainer/coach (and a gymnastic teacher) of the English basketballteam which went to the USA to play a tournement. Maybe old Joe Jagger buyed some vinyl on Mick's advise and took it home in 1960/61.
He wasn't that old in 1960!
Also, a lot of people got US records via American GIs in England. There was quite a black market in American records.
Quote
RipThisBoneQuote
AquamarineQuote
RipThisBoneQuote
CaptainCorellaQuote
RoughJusticeOnYa
And to mr. Chess I'd say: yeah, right...
(Sounds a whole lot like a Keithism to me, that story.)
I go back to the point about how unusual and hard it was in 1962 in England to do an international order for obscure LP records from a small label in the middle of the far off USA.
It's plausible that if they only had a couple of sales to England per month (or even per year!) that Marshall Chess would remember it. (But I take the point about it being a Keithism though!
I read somewhere Mick's father was the trainer/coach (and a gymnastic teacher) of the English basketballteam which went to the USA to play a tournement. Maybe old Joe Jagger buyed some vinyl on Mick's advise and took it home in 1960/61.
He wasn't that old in 1960!
Also, a lot of people got US records via American GIs in England. There was quite a black market in American records.
Joe Jagger was from 1913, so old enough in 1960 to be the trainer/coach of the English national basketballteam.