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24FPSQuote
Manofwealthandtaste
Is everyone aware of the bonus footage or 'Easter Egg' hidden on the DVD......?!
Please elucidate.
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His Majesty
Brian wanted to leave the band though, but maybe not the perks that came with being in the band. See Bill's Stone Alone where Brian mentions wanting to leave during a session in May 1969.
The split was inevitable and mutual and obvious to all, he just needed a push.
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NashvilleBluesQuote
His Majesty
Brian wanted to leave the band though, but maybe not the perks that came with being in the band. See Bill's Stone Alone where Brian mentions wanting to leave during a session in May 1969.
The split was inevitable and mutual and obvious to all, he just needed a push.
A push, or maybe help?
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DandelionPowderman
I mostly stick to the Got Live-EP, which is far superior, imo, although it's nice to hear some tracks off the LP, too. UMT springs to mind. Incredible energy!
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DoxaQuote
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DoxaQuote
redkev
Would be cool to see the best bits from RnR Circus, One pus One, Stones in the Park and Gimme Shelter all in one neatly edited movie. Of course Gimme shelter is in a league of its own from those 4 but there are some great bits in the other 3. Off the top of my head YCAGWYW and PW from RnR, the woo woo bit from One plus One, Satisfaction (out of tune guitars n all) from Stones in the Park are just a few of the many bits which could be included.
Well, they could continue the story of "Sympathy For The Devil" after telling its creation in ONE PLUS ONE. You know, its story did not end there... The theatretical live introduction in R&R CIRCUS, like the dudes knowing they have a new killer song there. Then the huge Hyde Park final fiesta, hundreds of thousands hippies in half trance. And to end by showing what happened in Altamont...
I guess that very rarely, if ever, is the story of one song documented that well (and having such a story to go with it). A helluva song it is.
- Doxa
where does this fit into your evolution of the song?
or is it just to similar to the circus performance to distinguish it in a relevant way as related to the development of the song?
Oh yeah! I had forgotten this great tv performance. As usual, all but Mick's vocals is playback. Surely it belongs to the story. First visual presentation of the song for an audience. Mick's theatrics are really close to 'Turner stuff' he does in CIRCUS (no idea which one happened first), but it doesn't matter. Besides, it is funny how they act in order to mimic the development the song: Bill and Keith standing up and picking up new instruments while cameras on Mick's face...
- Doxa
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Rockman
Never got a thing from Who performance ... ok its rock
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ManofwealthandtasteQuote
24FPSQuote
Manofwealthandtaste
Is everyone aware of the bonus footage or 'Easter Egg' hidden on the DVD......?!
Please elucidate.
Hey there 24FPS, you need to go to the 'Sideshow' section and then move down to the decorative scroll on the left side below the picture of Keith and hit enter. There is a second one in the 'Set Up' section, arrow right and then got to lower right corner and enter.
Enjoy! - no spoilers here as to what you will find......
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CongratulationsQuote
NashvilleBluesQuote
His Majesty
Brian wanted to leave the band though, but maybe not the perks that came with being in the band. See Bill's Stone Alone where Brian mentions wanting to leave during a session in May 1969.
The split was inevitable and mutual and obvious to all, he just needed a push.
A push, or maybe help?
Bill was threatening to leave for years (at least as early as Emotional Rescue), but the others persuaded him to stay.
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NashvilleBlues
A push, or maybe help?
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Congratulations
Bill was threatening to leave for years (at least as early as Emotional Rescue), but the others persuaded him to stay.
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Doxa
My decision is just to remove the odd tracks, and the result is splendid, The Rolling Stones in their pure 1966 glory:
1.Under My Thumb
2.Get Off of My Cloud
3.Lady Jane
4.Not Fade Away
6.The Last Time
7.19th Nervous Breakdown
8.Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby?
9.Satisfaction
Pure dynamite! Try that, people!
- Doxa
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His MajestyQuote
Doxa
My decision is just to remove the odd tracks, and the result is splendid, The Rolling Stones in their pure 1966 glory:
1.Under My Thumb
2.Get Off of My Cloud
3.Lady Jane
4.Not Fade Away
6.The Last Time
7.19th Nervous Breakdown
8.Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby?
9.Satisfaction
Pure dynamite! Try that, people!
- Doxa
Got Live 1966 If You Want It: [youtube.com]
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His MajestyQuote
Doxa
My decision is just to remove the odd tracks, and the result is splendid, The Rolling Stones in their pure 1966 glory:
1.Under My Thumb
2.Get Off of My Cloud
3.Lady Jane
4.Not Fade Away
6.The Last Time
7.19th Nervous Breakdown
8.Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby?
9.Satisfaction
Pure dynamite! Try that, people!
- Doxa
Got Live 1966 If You Want It: [playlist?list=PLawlYYZB_C4bZ8PtwvgjmM0-fKgq27jY6" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">youtube.com]
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Taylor1Other than vocals there was no doctoring or overdubs on Ya Ya’s of any musical significance.Listen to the bootlegs from NYC concerts the album was mostly drawn from .Other than rhythm guitars on Carol and Little Queenie, which are barely noticeable and are unimportantQuote
SpudQuote
DoxaQuote
SpudQuote
Doxa
But if we think the following American Tour 1969, how much Keith actually did back-up vocals there? In "Honky Tonk Women" surely, but were there any others?
It could be that instead that of being a practical matter (like I suggested earlier) or Keith not feeling like singing (shy, disinterested?) it might have been an artistic choice how the band wanted to present their live sound at the time. That they were a 'serious' modern blues rock act, not a merry 60's vocal group with back-up harmonies. Those were interesting times, and the band was all the time reshaping their act in order to keep relevant.
The famous Mick and Keith sharing a mic and doing the choruses together occurred later, in upcoming tours (so effective in things like "Can't Always Get What You Want", "Dead Flowers", "Happy", etc.)
- Doxa
There were certainly moments in Got Live where they fancied themselves as the bloody Beach Boys
Haha! A VERY rough version of The Beach Boys indeed, but damn I love it (the over-dubbed "Have You Seen Your Mother" with Keith's harmonies, or like dueting with Mick, is simply fabulous)! Yeah, it is incredible to think that there is only three years between GOT LIVE and YA-YA'S. Sounds like a different band and altogether a different era. The things happened so quickly back then. Both albums are doctored (YA-YA'S not that bloody much!), but I think they represent pretty well what the band and times were like and up to. As albums they are both great testimonies of their times.
But I love both incarnations of the band. Damn, there is more wild, joyful energy in GOT LIVE than in all their other major and more 'professional' and 'serious' live albums put together. More fvck ups and mistakes, too, but that belongs to the picture. I have never understood why people are so tough on it... I still recall the first impression I had the album: I didn't know anything about its all fakings, but I felt like being time-travelled to the mythical, chaotic time and place that all happened...
- Doxa
I love Got Live [the LP and the EP ] . I just wish the audience screaming was mixed a little lower !
[It's like the success of any performance in the early sixties was judged by how loud the screaming was .
That said I suppose it's fairly representative of the sound on the night. They could scream a whole lot louder than two AC30s and the typical PAs of the day]
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Spud
If there were any of us there ...they've sure kept it quiet all these years.
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Spud
I've never ben troubled by doctored live albums. They're doctored to make them sound better .
Glitches, bloopers and sonic shortcomings may be lost or overlooked in the experience of a live show ...
...but you don't want to hear them over and over again on the record !
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nickdominguezQuote
Spud
If there were any of us there ...they've sure kept it quiet all these years.
May be the closest option to your question. Spanish Tony Sanchez the Stones photographer (my grandfather) was on set and we have some unbelievable never seen images of most of the performances! Before and during filming!
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NashvilleBluesQuote
nickdominguezQuote
Spud
If there were any of us there ...they've sure kept it quiet all these years.
May be the closest option to your question. Spanish Tony Sanchez the Stones photographer (my grandfather) was on set and we have some unbelievable never seen images of most of the performances! Before and during filming!
Share the love!
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24FPS
It finally hit me that this may have been the straw that broke the camel's back. I think Mick saw how pitiful and superfluous (excepting No Expectations) Brian was. The Stones would need more in order to tour, but Brian would have been a liability, not a positive. The film couldn't hide how lost he was. How could they broadcast such a damning show? They would have been inundated with questions about Brian.
They made ninety percent of Beggar's Banquet without him. No more novelty instrumentation. That period in rock and pop was over. It was all guitars now, the instrument Brian practically abandoned.
Brian played on every track on Beggars except Factory Girl and maybe Salt of the Earth.Ge wasn’t missing from99 percent if the album.Let it Bleed he contributed nothingQuote
treaclefingersQuote
24FPS
It finally hit me that this may have been the straw that broke the camel's back. I think Mick saw how pitiful and superfluous (excepting No Expectations) Brian was. The Stones would need more in order to tour, but Brian would have been a liability, not a positive. The film couldn't hide how lost he was. How could they broadcast such a damning show? They would have been inundated with questions about Brian.
They made ninety percent of Beggar's Banquet without him. No more novelty instrumentation. That period in rock and pop was over. It was all guitars now, the instrument Brian practically abandoned.
Yup, think you nailed it. Must have pissed them off too...all that creative energy going into it only to feel they needed to shelve it.
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Taylor1Brian played on every track on Beggars except Factory Girl and maybe Salt of the Earth.Ge wasn’t missing from99 percent if the album.Let it Bleed he contributed nothingQuote
treaclefingersQuote
24FPS
It finally hit me that this may have been the straw that broke the camel's back. I think Mick saw how pitiful and superfluous (excepting No Expectations) Brian was. The Stones would need more in order to tour, but Brian would have been a liability, not a positive. The film couldn't hide how lost he was. How could they broadcast such a damning show? They would have been inundated with questions about Brian.
They made ninety percent of Beggar's Banquet without him. No more novelty instrumentation. That period in rock and pop was over. It was all guitars now, the instrument Brian practically abandoned.
Yup, think you nailed it. Must have pissed them off too...all that creative energy going into it only to feel they needed to shelve it.