For information about how to use this forum please check out forum help and policies.
Quote
HMS
They indeed release another "nobody-really-needs-this"-package including the same setlist as Hyde Park? Very disappointing... they try to sell us useless stuff and put the Fonda gig on the shelf. It seems they need a better consigliere.
Quote
with sssoul
It said a thousand cities around the world.
Maybe they're waiting to see what cities people sign up from :E
That poster is less than stunning.
[peering hard] What is the b&w thing to the right of the stage
that looks like Elizabeth I with clown make-up on? (Please don't say
"That's Mick Jagger, lead singer for the Rolling Stones" o.0 )
Quote
HMS
What´s so special about playing Cuba?
Quote
HMS
What´s so special about playing Cuba? It´s a venue like any other. It´s music, not politics. They played Russia as well as China but they didnt use it as an excuse for releasing another package with the same well-known content. They always seem to release the concerts with the biggest crowds, hoping everybody who was there is going to buy it, very disappointing. I wonder why there isnt a Glastonbury-release yet. That way of thinking means we never get the Fonda gig.
Quote
with sssoulQuote
HMS
What´s so special about playing Cuba?
... If you can't imagine what's so special about a Rolling Stones show being put on
for people who had been waiting all their lives to experience something like that,
I am sorry for you.
I was at the 1990 Prague show, where Vaclav Havel worked it so that a ticket to the show
functioned as a one-day visa to (then) Czechoslovakia. Even that amount of freedom of movement
was unheard-of in the just-post Communist countries at that time, and the 100 thousand people who attended
were ready to find the show special just for that alone. And then the Rolling Stones lifted us up
with a full-fledged say-hallelujah fireworks-and-all Rolling Stones show and we knew we were free at last.
When Mick Jagger asked this crowd of first-timers from lands whose default mood had always been disappointment
and who had never had free access to a wide range of anything - music included -
when Mick asked us "What's your favourite flavour" and we roared back "cherry red!"
I nearly wept for the surreal joy of it. I'm nearly crying now just remembering it.
And that's what's so special about shows like the one in Cuba
I love the Rolling Stones
Quote
35loveQuote
with sssoulQuote
HMS
What´s so special about playing Cuba?
... If you can't imagine what's so special about a Rolling Stones show being put on
for people who had been waiting all their lives to experience something like that,
I am sorry for you.
I was at the 1990 Prague show, where Vaclav Havel worked it so that a ticket to the show
functioned as a one-day visa to (then) Czechoslovakia. Even that amount of freedom of movement
was unheard-of in the just-post Communist countries at that time, and the 100 thousand people who attended
were ready to find the show special just for that alone. And then the Rolling Stones lifted us up
with a full-fledged say-hallelujah fireworks-and-all Rolling Stones show and we knew we were free at last.
When Mick Jagger asked this crowd of first-timers from lands whose default mood had always been disappointment
and who had never had free access to a wide range of anything - music included -
when Mick asked us "What's your favourite flavour" and we roared back "cherry red!"
I nearly wept for the surreal joy of it. I'm nearly crying now just remembering it.
And that's what's so special about shows like the one in Cuba
I love the Rolling Stones
*Outstanding review
Quote
with sssoul
It said a thousand cities around the world.
Maybe they're waiting to see what cities people sign up from :E
That poster is less than stunning.
[peering hard] What is the b&w thing to the right of the stage
that looks like Elizabeth I with clown make-up on? (Please don't say
"That's Mick Jagger, lead singer for the Rolling Stones" o.0 )
Quote
35loveQuote
with sssoulQuote
HMS
What´s so special about playing Cuba?
... If you can't imagine what's so special about a Rolling Stones show being put on
for people who had been waiting all their lives to experience something like that,
I am sorry for you.
I was at the 1990 Prague show, where Vaclav Havel worked it so that a ticket to the show
functioned as a one-day visa to (then) Czechoslovakia. Even that amount of freedom of movement
was unheard-of in the just-post Communist countries at that time, and the 100 thousand people who attended
were ready to find the show special just for that alone. And then the Rolling Stones lifted us up
with a full-fledged say-hallelujah fireworks-and-all Rolling Stones show and we knew we were free at last.
When Mick Jagger asked this crowd of first-timers from lands whose default mood had always been disappointment
and who had never had free access to a wide range of anything - music included -
when Mick asked us "What's your favourite flavour" and we roared back "cherry red!"
I nearly wept for the surreal joy of it. I'm nearly crying now just remembering it.
And that's what's so special about shows like the one in Cuba
I love the Rolling Stones
*Outstanding review
Quote
with sssoulQuote
HMS
What´s so special about playing Cuba?
... If you can't imagine what's so special about a Rolling Stones show being put on
for people who had been waiting all their lives to experience something like that,
I am sorry for you.
I was at the 1990 Prague show, where Vaclav Havel worked it so that a ticket to the show
functioned as a one-day visa to (then) Czechoslovakia. Even that amount of freedom of movement
was unheard-of in the just-post Communist countries at that time, and the 100 thousand people who attended
were ready to find the show special just for that alone. And then the Rolling Stones lifted us up
with a full-fledged say-hallelujah fireworks-and-all Rolling Stones show and we knew we were free at last.
When Mick Jagger asked this crowd of first-timers from lands whose default mood had always been disappointment
and who had never had free access to a wide range of anything - music included -
when Mick asked us "What's your favourite flavour" and against all odds we knew the answer and roared back "cherry red!"
I nearly wept for the glorious joy of how rock & roll had broken down barriers. I'm nearly weeping now just remembering it.
And that's what's so special about shows like the one in Cuba
I love the Rolling Stones
Quote
24FPS
This should be just an hour documentary, with little of the actual concert, and shown on Netflix. Hyde was lame enough, it's much too early if they're trying to sell this as a DVD release. I just hope it doesn't get it in the way of the Vault Releases.
Quote
Mr.D
This video is being released by the lawyer who put up the money for the show in Cuba
Quote
CloudCat
I don't see any Elizabeth I in clown makeup
which right of the stage are you referring to?