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Taylor1
So what happened to the Ladies and Gentlemen 3 other concerts
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According to a 9 May 1974 Rolling Stone article, Gebhardt and Freeze set a budget of $30,000 which was financed by Rolling Stones Records and shot 60,000 feet of 16mm film at four concerts in Texas, including two in the Fort Worth/Dallas area and two in Houston. Along with four additional cameramen, Gebhardt and Freeze filmed the concerts “mostly from the back of the halls” with a 600mm zoom lens to capture close-ups.
No,I believe Welcome to NY was the last show of the tour,which was Mick’s birthday.Robert Frank must have filmed more concert performances than what is in CS Blues.But who knows if they exist.Quote
jbwelda
>filmed professionally in it's entirety except Rip This Joint and Bye Bye Johnny.
Figures. Best two songs of the set and those are the ones missing. Why does it always work out like this?
(These are the versions heard on the boot Welcome To New York, correct?)
jb
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Taylor1
Nico also says the Madison Square Garden July 25 1972 second show was filmed professionally in it's entirety except Rip This Joint and Bye Bye Johnny. It doesnt sound like it's the japanese video which is on you tube which is crappy . That was maybe the best show of the tour. But it was silent. Maybe it still exists and the sound could be dubbed. Plus maybe there is additional footage of concerts that Robert Frank filmed that the Stones have in their vaults
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Father TedQuote
Taylor1
Nico also says the Madison Square Garden July 25 1972 second show was filmed professionally in it's entirety except Rip This Joint and Bye Bye Johnny. It doesnt sound like it's the japanese video which is on you tube which is crappy . That was maybe the best show of the tour. But it was silent. Maybe it still exists and the sound could be dubbed. Plus maybe there is additional footage of concerts that Robert Frank filmed that the Stones have in their vaults
I think I'd have died and gone to heaven if the MSG 25/07/72 show surfaced!!
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Taylor1No,I believe Welcome to NY was the last show of the tour,which was Mick’s birthday.Robert Frank must have filmed more concert performances than what is in CS Blues.But who knows if they exist.Quote
jbwelda
>filmed professionally in it's entirety except Rip This Joint and Bye Bye Johnny.
Figures. Best two songs of the set and those are the ones missing. Why does it always work out like this?
(These are the versions heard on the boot Welcome To New York, correct?)
jb
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HouseBoyKnowsQuote
Father TedQuote
Taylor1
Nico also says the Madison Square Garden July 25 1972 second show was filmed professionally in it's entirety except Rip This Joint and Bye Bye Johnny. It doesnt sound like it's the japanese video which is on you tube which is crappy . That was maybe the best show of the tour. But it was silent. Maybe it still exists and the sound could be dubbed. Plus maybe there is additional footage of concerts that Robert Frank filmed that the Stones have in their vaults
I think I'd have died and gone to heaven if the MSG 25/07/72 show surfaced!!
Yeah, me too. That was my first Stones show ever. I was 18 and lucky to score 5th row seats via the postcard ticket lottery. I have a set of (bad) photos taken with my Instamatic camera.
HBK
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LieB
That lovely Plundered My Soul video on youtube includes some great CS Blues (Robert Frank) footage that is not in the CS Blues movie, so apparently that was accessible to some extent. But who knows, Robert Frank may have been better than Rolling Stones Records (or whoever) at keeping his film rolls in shape.