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slewan
simply put: more than 95% of the audience isn't interested in jamming. They want just greatest hits. No jamming is the price you've got to pay to play to 50.000+ crowds
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24FPS
That's not a rock band up there to jam. That's a traveling Broadway show, timed to the nth degree. It stopped being anything spontaneous, or inspiring, over 30 years ago. There was a little wiggle room in 1999, but that's long gone. Keith is lucky enough to get through the songs now, contributing his part which has shrunk considerably. The bass don't swing, the piano tinkles, the sax section has a hole in it. It's over. It's like comparing an Indian Casino Mike Love's Beach Boys gig to a Brian Wilson concert where he does ALL of Pet Sounds. This band still called the Rolling Stones is a shadow of what was. I can't imagine traveling around and hearing this version night after night, same song after same song. It would bore my nuts off.
Now, Brussels '73, that's a horse of a different color....
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crumbling_mice
When they did jam, they were very very good at it, but as many have pointed out, there hasn't been much jam with this band since 81/82. I think you have to look to their roots to understand why. The Stones, like many bands from the 60's were inspired by American blues - usually short songs, they developed and were steered into cranking out 3 minute singles and that continued well into the more recent years. So it's little surprise that when they go on tour the songs are kept near to their original timings, that way you get to do a two hour set and cram in as many hits as you can, thereby keeping the majority of your audience happy.
Jam bands like the Dead, Allmans, Phish etc generally weren't big in the singles hit making market and so their audiences were content to smoke, drink drop their chosen stimulants and sit back to enjoy the trip. Often the bands were on the smae trip and it all melted into one experience....this was never really the Stones' approach, they preferred to sort themselves out and then deliver to the audience and move on to the next town.
My favourite example of the Stones jamming is the 72/73 versions of YCAGWYW with Keith laying down some amazing guitar chops intertwined with Taylor, Keys and Charlie. Superb!
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24FPS
That's not a rock band up there to jam. That's a traveling Broadway show, timed to the nth degree. It stopped being anything spontaneous, or inspiring, over 30 years ago. There was a little wiggle room in 1999, but that's long gone. Keith is lucky enough to get through the songs now, contributing his part which has shrunk considerably. The bass don't swing, the piano tinkles, the sax section has a hole in it. It's over. It's like comparing an Indian Casino Mike Love's Beach Boys gig to a Brian Wilson concert where he does ALL of Pet Sounds. This band still called the Rolling Stones is a shadow of what was. I can't imagine traveling around and hearing this version night after night, same song after same song. It would bore my nuts off.
Now, Brussels '73, that's a horse of a different color....
That´s a very pessimistic way of seeing things, imo. The Stones today are as good as they were in 1995 and that was better than in 1982...
Karl Denson is a better sax player by far than Bobby ever was and Sasha is better than Lisa was recently. Darryl Jones´ funky bass is solid and excellent, Ronnie´s playing improved considerably, Mick is still the greatest frontman alive, Charlie is still the Wembley Whammer and Keith is marvelous on a good night. Last not least Chuck Leavall is a fine player but he should play a "real piano". Apart from that he is doing a great job for more than 20 years now. Listen to him on Fancy Man Blues for example. The Stones are still a great unit - well, on a gigantic stage with computerized light show and video images is not much place for spontaneosity, but let them play to a small audience in a small club and I bet they would kick your ass just like in the Sixties.
These guys are in their seventies and can still put up a great show. Who would have expected this some 20 years ago. They are phenomenal and so are their concerts, m-i-n-d-b-l-o-w-i-n-g.
Btw, Brian Wilson is a boring old man who makes boring music, but that´s just my opinion. I never dug the Beach Boys anyway.
I explained away (to myself) your "analysis" of the current state of the Stones as just blind fandom. But whether or not you like Brian Wilson or the Beach Boys' music, Wilson is hardly a boring old man with boring music. Whatever credibility your opinion of the Stones might carry is gone the minute you dismiss Wilson like that.
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StonesNYc
At this point in their careers (Since 1989) they are a nostalgia band. Like The Eagles, Fleetwood Mac etc. Yes they release an album every so often and play 1 or 2 songs live (that's the crowds bathroom and beer line break). People pay a lot of money to hear their hits.
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24FPS
I hate to see the Allman Brothers included in those boring ass jam bands. Duane's death changed the trajectory of the music. They'd only been in existence a couple years when he died. He took them where they went and most likely would have taken them other places.
I think if you find the current lineup of the Stones to be greater than past editions, more power to your ears. You have been blessed. I still like Brian Wilson and will be there, god willing, on Sunday, July 10th at the Hollywood Bowl, hearing him perform Pet Sounds in its entirety, alongside Al Jardine and Blondie Chaplin. I'm always amazed at how good the professional musicians sound, vocally and instrumentally, that Brian has chosen to enhance his music. It will be so boring to sit there under the stars, a little stoned, 'Sloop John B' echoing out over the hills.
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goldylocks
to all the complainers, the big critic section:
I would be happy if my band would bring on the stage only half of the energy the Stones do
only half swinging in the bass .... (the bass don´t swing)
half power of the horn section .... (the horn section is a hole)
etc. etc.
Post the music you can perform on stage and we will give our comments.
If you can´t, shut up
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crumbling_mice
When they did jam, they were very very good at it, but as many have pointed out, there hasn't been much jam with this band since 81/82. I think you have to look to their roots to understand why. The Stones, like many bands from the 60's were inspired by American blues - usually short songs, they developed and were steered into cranking out 3 minute singles and that continued well into the more recent years. So it's little surprise that when they go on tour the songs are kept near to their original timings, that way you get to do a two hour set and cram in as many hits as you can, thereby keeping the majority of your audience happy.
Jam bands like the Dead, Allmans, Phish etc generally weren't big in the singles hit making market and so their audiences were content to smoke, drink drop their chosen stimulants and sit back to enjoy the trip. Often the bands were on the smae trip and it all melted into one experience....this was never really the Stones' approach, they preferred to sort themselves out and then deliver to the audience and move on to the next town.
My favourite example of the Stones jamming is the 72/73 versions of YCAGWYW with Keith laying down some amazing guitar chops intertwined with Taylor, Keys and Charlie. Superb!
2 things.
1 are you trying to say the stones never performed live while on drugs?
2 while not big in the hit market allman bros and the dead played relatively short songs on their albums and extended them in concert
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Gaetzi
From a 2015 Billboard article. I think this says it all on this topic:
When I ask him if The Grateful Dead’s three farewell shows during July 4 weekend, which grossed an astonishing $55 million, fired up his competitive juices, the answer is apparently yes, though not because of anything to do with money. “The Grateful Dead is where everybody got it wrong,” he scoffs. “Just poodling about for hours and hours. Jerry Garcia, boring shit, man. Sorry, Jerry.”
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The SicilianQuote
Gaetzi
From a 2015 Billboard article. I think this says it all on this topic:
When I ask him if The Grateful Dead’s three farewell shows during July 4 weekend, which grossed an astonishing $55 million, fired up his competitive juices, the answer is apparently yes, though not because of anything to do with money. “The Grateful Dead is where everybody got it wrong,” he scoffs. “Just poodling about for hours and hours. Jerry Garcia, boring shit, man. Sorry, Jerry.”
So this is what Grateful Dead fans do when they are bored?
Well, I would say that crowd looks pretty excited and packed to the roof for a great show with some fantastic jams on July 5, 2015 at Chicago. What it was NOT, was a bunch of stale warhorse hits and a Vegas show.
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The SicilianQuote
keefriffhard4lifeQuote
crumbling_mice
When they did jam, they were very very good at it, but as many have pointed out, there hasn't been much jam with this band since 81/82. I think you have to look to their roots to understand why. The Stones, like many bands from the 60's were inspired by American blues - usually short songs, they developed and were steered into cranking out 3 minute singles and that continued well into the more recent years. So it's little surprise that when they go on tour the songs are kept near to their original timings, that way you get to do a two hour set and cram in as many hits as you can, thereby keeping the majority of your audience happy.
Jam bands like the Dead, Allmans, Phish etc generally weren't big in the singles hit making market and so their audiences were content to smoke, drink drop their chosen stimulants and sit back to enjoy the trip. Often the bands were on the smae trip and it all melted into one experience....this was never really the Stones' approach, they preferred to sort themselves out and then deliver to the audience and move on to the next town.
My favourite example of the Stones jamming is the 72/73 versions of YCAGWYW with Keith laying down some amazing guitar chops intertwined with Taylor, Keys and Charlie. Superb!
2 things.
1 are you trying to say the stones never performed live while on drugs?
2 while not big in the hit market allman bros and the dead played relatively short songs on their albums and extended them in concert
Here a small sample: The Allman Brothers on Johnny Carson in 1991. Check out the second song at about 4:20 on the video. Charlie Watts would really dig this:
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DoomandGloom
The Stones are jamming. More structured than jam bands or previous versions of themselves but jamming nonetheless. From night to night the guitar solos differ, even the mistakes are part of jamming. They are playing for the moment, I have no doubt, still they need structure especially without Bill who went through great lenghts to keep everyone on the same page. When EC, Brad Paisley, Clarke or Mayer join in it always a jam as well. The Who, they no longerer jam but The Stones do.