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Marhsall
I'm gonna drop this here for those who haven't had the pleasure of hearing this by itself.
From the Bootleg 'Training Wheels'
[youtu.be]
Quote
Marhsall
I'm gonna drop this here for those who haven't had the pleasure of hearing this by itself.
From the Bootleg 'Training Wheels'
[youtu.be]
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lem motlow
i just don't know what the hell happens with these latter day stones albums.
you listen to the bootlegs and they are jamming their asses off ,it's the old stones.it could be from any year,them playing in rehearsals from the steel wheels and voodoo lounge era is as good as any other time,they are kicking it-then we get the album.
somewhere in there the "rolling stones sound" is completly being lost.i would have thought they were washed up if i didn't go see them live.listen to "hold on to your hat" it sounds dirty,gritty clasic stones.then you listen to steel wheels and it on just doesn't have it.
you can't blame 80's production because it happened through the 90's and on bigger bang too,you can't blame don was because he works for the stones not the other way around.
training wheels is a great bootleg but listening to it just frustrates me.
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HMS
Continental Drift was excellent as an intro in 1989/90, maybe the best intro they ever had - but as a song it is absolutely horrible. I dont know how this could end on a Rolling Stones record, its completely weird and the Stones do hardly participate in that... whatever. It´s an intro, just an intro, no song at all. Weakest spot on Steel Wheels. Even Thief In The Night shines compared to that... whatever it is.
Quote
lem motlow
i just don't know what the hell happens with these latter day stones albums.
you listen to the bootlegs and they are jamming their asses off ,it's the old stones.it could be from any year,them playing in rehearsals from the steel wheels and voodoo lounge era is as good as any other time,they are kicking it-then we get the album.
somewhere in there the "rolling stones sound" is completly being lost.i would have thought they were washed up if i didn't go see them live.listen to "hold on to your hat" it sounds dirty,gritty clasic stones.then you listen to steel wheels and it on just doesn't have it.
you can't blame 80's production because it happened through the 90's and on bigger bang too,you can't blame don was because he works for the stones not the other way around.
training wheels is a great bootleg but listening to it just frustrates me.
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RoughJusticeOnYa
I wanna add some kind of 'Facebook'-styled "LIKE"-thumb here...
BV, how do I do that?
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DelticsQuote
RoughJusticeOnYa
I wanna add some kind of 'Facebook'-styled "LIKE"-thumb here...
BV, how do I do that?
(It's one of the emoticons you can add to your posts)
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Koen
Interesting to listen to, thanks for sharing. What fascinates me is if they already knew at this time that they wanted to add the Joujouka instruments to it or were they still just mucking around?
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runawayQuote
Koen
Interesting to listen to, thanks for sharing. What fascinates me is if they already knew at this time that they wanted to add the Joujouka instruments to it or were they still just mucking around?
At one stage Mick felt that the Burundi drummers should be approached to ad percussion cause of the North African or Eastern feel in the song, but a sequence of events where history was about to repeat itself dedicated otherwise. Brian Jones had recorded the G'naoua and the Maalimin of Jajouka in 1968. Bachir Attar, the son of the then chief, had written to the Stones inviting them over to Morocco to record.
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Deltics
The Stones in Morocco. BBC documentary.
Part 1
[www.youtube.com]
Part 2
[www.youtube.com]
Part 3
[www.youtube.com]