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NeverMakeASaintOfMe
This one from London 1 2012. Wish Keith still played it like this [youtu.be]
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Midnight Toker
Mick Taylor had the best solo on Ya Ya's
Naturally...
Semi-OT but the 1975 versions are quite interesting : the NYC ones all suck. But by the time the band hits L.A. they've managed to turn the song into an exciting show closer. Exciting enough to warrant an inclusion on LYL.
I love this band!!!!
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Rip This
as epic as this solo is....is it better than his guitar work on Bitch?...I don't think so....I think that's better.
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SomeGuy
The Get Yer Ya Ya's Out version is by far my favourite. The contrast with Mick Taylor's solo (also brilliant) is, I think, particularly appealing. The studio version however, is somehow the measure by which to judge the other versions, perhaps because it is -in my opinion- the best version of the song anyway.
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flairville
Steel Wheels Tokyo 1990 From The Vault.
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GivenToFly15
Dallas 1989 is first. So fierce. I don't know how many times I've listened to it, I'm stunned everytime.
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flairville
Steel Wheels Tokyo 1990 From The Vault.
I agree. This (I think) was edited for Flashpoint, right?
T@3
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dcba
Atlantic City'89. It goes on and on but it never bores!
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DandelionPowdermanQuote
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SomeGuy
I wouldn't call Keith a beginner, in 1969. There is such a thing as style. Steve Vai puts Mick Taylor to shame. But not everyone likes to listen to Steve Vai as if thats the only way a guitarist should play (personally I consider Steve Vai the least musically gifted player I know, yet he plays lots of notes).
Say, Robert Johnson was beginner too?
I prefer Satriani, and Jeff Beck, to Steve Vai. Plus John McLaughlin.
Satriani was Vai's guitar teacher.
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dcba
Atlantic City'89. It goes on and on but it never bores!
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schillid
Beggars Banquet
unmatched.
agreed; that slashing guitar work is profound and thuddingly spectacular, as far as emotion and 'mean it!" goes, imo too.
also, for me anyway, the "Liver Than You'll Ever Be" performance (of both Keith and Mick Taylor) was profound to me. This was prior to GYYYO live (studio - 'fixeed,' in post-production).
K starts out engagingly slow-grind with hanging whole notes, approaching it
simple and emotional, then extending it in a manner that engaged me with it's
flow and tumble-weed-type extentions; he playing much more melodically then
the lethally slashing studio performance on Banquet...
...cool thread, I'm going to follow some of those suggestions and hopefully find some really cool goes at it.
Mick Taylor circa 1973 would have blown Steve Vai off the stage.And I like Ron Woods guitar playing on the1975 tour a lot more than Joe Satriani’s playing on the Jagger down under tour.For a virtuoso he didn’t seem so great on Jagger’stourQuote
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SomeGuy
I wouldn't call Keith a beginner, in 1969. There is such a thing as style. Steve Vai puts Mick Taylor to shame. But not everyone likes to listen to Steve Vai as if thats the only way a guitarist should play (personally I consider Steve Vai the least musically gifted player I know, yet he plays lots of notes).
Say, Robert Johnson was beginner too?
I prefer Satriani, and Jeff Beck, to Steve Vai. Plus John McLaughlin.
Satriani was Vai's guitar teacher.
There are guys who own their own planet in the guitar playing universe.
Satriani and Vai own small pieces of real estate in a world created by Eddie Van Halen.
You can’t buy a piece of planet Keith, you can put on a bandanna and maybe a skull ring and bang out a reasonable facsimile but you’ll always just be a tourist.
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OpenG
Besides the studio version and ya ya's
[www.youtube.com]
Atlantic City - 1989.
[www.youtube.com]
Rolling Stones Live LA 1975 Sympathy For The Devil. BEST SOUND
EVER
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schillid
Beggars Banquet
unmatched.