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Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 10, 2016 00:17



CLASSIC ROCK -- January 2017



ROCKMAN



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2016-12-10 00:25 by Rockman.

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 11, 2016 01:40





ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 11, 2016 03:53



Tom Ford's latest ...One of the best for the 2016 year ....
..... Dark tones but Stylish in a David Lynch kinda way


...dire consequences of following a domineering mother ...
The inability to recognise true-love and how REVENGE can corrupt
the soul and turn it back on one's self ...............Don't miss it....... POWERFUL STUFF ....



ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 12, 2016 07:12



Mick Jagger - Morgan Plus 8 roadster - St Tropez 1971 ----- Reg Lancaster



ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 12, 2016 21:55



THE AGE --- 13 December 2016



ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 13, 2016 12:08





ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: CaptainCorella ()
Date: December 13, 2016 12:40

Quote
Rockman
[photos.smugmug.com]

THE AGE --- 13 December 2016

I'm pretty sure he didn't want to be singing Satisfaction when he was 30, not 45.

--
Captain Corella
60 Years a Fan

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 15, 2016 08:01



HELLO 1461 -- December 2016



ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 15, 2016 20:11



...Drive Me Too Hard
.....Get Out Of My Way




ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 15, 2016 23:05





ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 17, 2016 04:20

Billboard reports that the biggest-selling CD release of the year is a box set called Mozart 225:
The New Complete Edition, which sold 1.25 million copies in its first five weeks.

What is Mozart 225: The New Complete Edition? It’s a collection
featuring every piece of music Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart ever wrote,
released in October by UMG to commemorate the 225th anniversary of Mozart’s death. And apparently it’s very popular.

There’s a bit of a catch though: the Mozart box set is massive — we’re talking 200 CDs massive — and Billboard counts each CD as a separate sale.
So, in real terms, around 6,250 box sets of Mozart 225 were sold. For comparison, Spotify’s most-streamed artist of the year clocked in at 4.7 billion streams.

THE VERGE




Hey it's so good I picked up two sets ...



ROCKMAN



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2016-12-17 04:22 by Rockman.

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 17, 2016 04:26



JB - Hi-Fi



ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 17, 2016 05:50




VINTAGE ROCK #27 ---- 2016

** Many many thanks once again to Voja Stones for this article ....



ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Cristiano Radtke ()
Date: December 17, 2016 06:33

Quote
Rockman
Billboard reports that the biggest-selling CD release of the year is a box set called Mozart 225:
The New Complete Edition, which sold 1.25 million copies in its first five weeks.

What is Mozart 225: The New Complete Edition? It’s a collection
featuring every piece of music Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart ever wrote,
released in October by UMG to commemorate the 225th anniversary of Mozart’s death. And apparently it’s very popular.

There’s a bit of a catch though: the Mozart box set is massive — we’re talking 200 CDs massive — and Billboard counts each CD as a separate sale.
So, in real terms, around 6,250 box sets of Mozart 225 were sold. For comparison, Spotify’s most-streamed artist of the year clocked in at 4.7 billion streams.

THE VERGE

Hey it's so good I picked up two sets ...

This is great. smileys with beer

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Green Lady ()
Date: December 17, 2016 06:39

Vintage Rock write a nice article, but they need to update their picture library. When was the last time Keith dyed his hair or wore that knotty T shirt?

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Socrates1 ()
Date: December 17, 2016 07:20

One of the best-ever threads on IORR! smileys with beer

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: mighty stork ()
Date: December 17, 2016 09:06

Quote
Socrates1
One of the best-ever threads on IORR! smileys with beer

Yes, Rockman is the king always keeping us up to date. smileys with beer

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 17, 2016 14:21





ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 17, 2016 22:18



Herald Sun -- 18 December 2016



ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: jp.M ()
Date: December 17, 2016 23:26

..in french "Deveraux" means nothing at all...it only "sounds" french....

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 17, 2016 23:28








ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 18, 2016 23:14




....................... It's really an incredibly elastic arrangement ................. Keith Richards

Guitar Tricks Insider - December 2016



ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 19, 2016 08:30



Q Magazine - February 2017



ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: JJHMick ()
Date: December 19, 2016 19:26

If you want to be a successful composer you MUST have a Beatles songbook, you CAN have an Abba songbook but you SHOULD have a Stones songbook.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2016-12-19 22:32 by JJHMick.

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: latebloomer ()
Date: December 21, 2016 21:50

Hear Slim Jim Phantom, Chris Shiflett Talk Stray Cats, Jagger's Coke
Rockabilly drummer recalls a wild meeting with the Rolling Stones singer on the latest edition of the 'Walking the Floor' podcast

As the longtime drummer of Stray Cats, Slim Jim Phantom helped return rockabilly music to the mainstream during the early Eighties, when he bashed out the swinging backbeat to songs like "Rock This Town" and "Stray Cat Strut." The Cats' string of Top 40 hits dried up after their first breakup in 1984, but the work didn't. Phantom remained behind the kit, playing train beats, shuffles and punky percussion for everyone from Jerry Lee Lewis to Motörhead's Lemmy along the way.

"I got to totally fan-boy out on him," Chris Shiflett admits during his introduction to Walking the Floor's longest podcast to date, which focuses on Slim Jim Phantom's lengthy career. Over the course of 100 minutes, the two talk about the Stray Cats' earliest fans (including Joe Strummer and Robert Plant), the time Mick Jagger tried to sign the teenaged bandmates to the Rolling Stones' record label ("It wasn't much of a business conversation," says Phantom, who remembers consuming most of Jagger's cocaine supply during the meeting) and the amount of determination it took to kickstart a rockabilly revival during the heyday of disco, punk and classic rock.

Here are five things we learned from the episode, the last Walking the Floor of 2016. (Listen to the full podcast below.)

The Stray Cats discovered rockabilly music "through the backdoor."
"The Buddy Holly movie came out in '78 or '79," remembers Phantom, who discovered additional rock & roll icons – including Carl Perkins and Chuck Berry – from the liner notes of records by the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. Meanwhile, his father's record collection exposed him to the honky-tonk of Hank Williams, and the jukebox at Max's Kansas City introduced him to Eddie Cochran. Later, after rockabilly music had firmly captured the minds of Phantom, frontman Brian Setzer and bassist Lee Rocker, the guys began shopping for clothes at a local store "that sold square-dancing equipment and gear," where they'd stock up on boot-lace and collar-point ties. "The road map [to rockabilly] was there if you decided to get past flares or long hair, or whatever the obvious thing was," he says.

Long Island's bar circuit may have been hospitable to glammed-up, gender-bending bands like Twisted Sister, but that didn't mean locals were ready for a group of Sun Records disciples with greaser haircuts.
"It was just us," Phantom says, speaking of his hometown's lack of a rockabilly scene. "There was no one else." Looking for places to play, the guys canvassed the local pub circuit, only to be turned down by every venue owner. "It was too weird," he says, referencing the band's retro look and throwback music. "Like, it was ok if you wore a feather boa and lipstick, but. . ." Instead, the Stray Cats wound up booking shows at a string of bars that didn't normally host performances. They brought their own PA and played five shows a week, eventually attracting an audience of "tough guys" who "followed us everywhere." Then, eager to expand the circle, the band headed overseas.

While living in London, the Stray Cats began making fans out of rock & roll legends.
"Ronnie Lane from the Faces met us in a pub and let us stay with him for a couple of days," says Phantom, whose band's gigs became a popular destination for the living kings of old-school rock & roll. Robert Plant, Jeff Beck, Joe Strummer and Keith Richards all showed up to the Stray Cats' early performances in London, which helped the band attract the attention of major press outlets. Phantom remembers one British newspaper running the paraphrased headline of "All Five of the Rolling Stones Were at the Pub to See These Kids from New York."

Before they signed with Arista Records, the Stray Cats were officially courted by the Rolling Stones, who wanted to sign the group to the Stones' own record label.
"Peter Tosh was on there," he says of the roster at Rolling Stones Records. "They had some cool stuff, and they were allowed to sign whoever they wanted. They wanted to sign us, and they wanted to produce it – Mick and Keith." The Stray Cats agreed to meet with Mick Jagger, who invited the band to his office in Chelsea. There, decked out in a custom-made velvet robe, Jagger extended his best hospitality to the American teens. "He had some coke on an antique mirror with a carved straw," Phantom remembers. The bandmates were shy about indulging, so they waited until Jagger left the room before snorting their way through most of the stash, leaving only a small remainder for their host. Upon returning to the room, Jagger apparently took it all in stride. "He came back in five minutes, and to his credit, he was really cool," Phantom says. "He just looked at it. It was really obvious, but he wasn't like, 'Hey, so you guys liked it?'" The Cats left the office shortly thereafter, and, as Phantom remembers, "we weren't so hungry for awhile."

Decades into his career, Slim Jim Phantom is still one of rockabilly's proudest ambassadors.
"Rockabilly is the original cool," he tells Shiflett. "It's the first thing. It's before the Beatles. The Beatles were influenced by Gene Vincent, the Stones were influenced by Buddy Holly, Lemmy was influenced by Buddy Holly, Ozzy was influenced by the Beatles. . . It goes down the chain, and when you take the rope and go all the way to the bottom of the well, the bucket is rockabilly."

Link for podcast:
[www.rollingstone.com]

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 22, 2016 02:13



SHINDIG! -- No60 -- October 2016



ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Honestman ()
Date: December 22, 2016 19:35





Credits Getty

Any idea when as it wasn't mentioned.

HMN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: jp.M ()
Date: December 22, 2016 23:57

Quote
Rockman



VINTAGE ROCK #27 ---- 2016

** Many many thanks once again to Voja Stones for this article ....
..."not having made a decent record in living memory"...!!!...poor journalist...!

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 24, 2016 05:10



THE AUSTRALIAN -- 24 December 2016



ROCKMAN

Re: Some Kinda Stones Connections
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 24, 2016 05:27



Ronnie and Sally Wood -- Mary McCartney -- London December 2016



ROCKMAN

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