Posts Tagged ‘Main Offender’

Keith Richards Kevin Mazur Crop

To celebrate the birthday of legendary Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards and the late renowned rock saxophonist Bobby Keys. The melding of these two musical minds seemed to be ordained by the gods as they were born on the exact same day December 18th, 1943 — worlds away from each other in the UK and Texas.

Bobby Keys came into the world on that day near Lubbock, Texas and began his musical career at 15 playing with another famed son of Lubbock, Buddy Holly. Bobby first met The Rolling Stones in 1964 at the San Antonio Teen Fair as a member of Bobby Vee’s band. Keys would later rekindle his relationship with the legendary rockers and go on to lay down sax work on the Stones’ stellar records of the late 1960s and ’70s, most notably the iconic sax solo on “Brown Sugar” and the extended run on “Can’t You Hear Me Knocking” as well as on a number of songs from the Stones’ landmark 1972 double LP, Exile On Main St.

Keith and Bobby Keys would become fast friends and Richards relates a number of musical, and extra-musical, adventures they had in his candid 2010 autobiography, “Life”. So it was only natural when Keith Richards formed his solo project the X-Pensive Winos in the late 1980s, Bobby was at his side on sax.

On February 13th, 1993, Richards, Keys and the X-Pensive Winos — also consisting of vocalists Sarah Dash and Babi (Bobby) Floyd, drummer Steve Jordan, bassist Jerome Smith, keyboardist Ivan Neville and guitarist Waddy Wachtel — performed the first of two shows at the Orpheum Theatre in Boston to support their 1992 album, Main Offender. The set, which opened with Eddie Cochran’s “Somethin’ Else,” included songs from Main Offender like “Wicked As It Seems” and “999” as well as tracks off their 1988 debut album, Talk Is Cheap, including “Whip It Up” and “I Could Have Stood You Up.” The concert also saw Keith doing Rolling Stones classics like “Time Is On My Side” and a grungy slowed down version of “Gimme Shelter.” Richards would deliver his signature Stones song, “Happy,” as the penultimate number of the evening ahead of closer “Take It So Hard” from Talk Is Cheap.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fx5z9LBjmls&t=350s

Setlist: Something Else, Wicked As It Seems, Gimme Shelter, 999, Running Too Deep, Locked Away, Time Is On My Side, Will But You Won’t, Words Of Wonder, Hate It When You Leave, Before They Make Me Run, Eileen, Bodytalks, Whip It Up, I Could Have Stood You Up, Happy, Take It So Hard#

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In celebration of Record Store Day , Keith Richards has released a new video for “Hate It When You Leave,” a track on his second solo album “Main Offender” which was first released in 1992. 

“The video portrays that the simplicity of life is what is most beautiful about the world and pays homage to people and places one loves, particularly at a time when family, friends and lovers have been kept apart,“ stated a press release. Directed by Jacques Naudé, the video begins with an empty road which leads into a collection of different moments of people working, at play, and interacting with one another. 

On Record Store Day, June 12th, 2021, Keith Richards will release a limited edition (3500 units) red vinyl 7″ single ‘Wicked As It Seems‘, including two previously unreleased live tracks from Keith Richards & The X-Pensive Winos

Recorded in December 1995 at the Town & Country Club, Kentish Town, London, as part of the Main Offender Tour, are a live version of ‘Wicked As It Seems‘, plus a live version of the Rolling Stones classic ‘Gimme Shelter‘. This specially curated single also includes newly created sleeve artwork based on the Main Offender album art.

Richards is also releasing a limited quantity vinyl on Record Store Day which according to a press release includes “track ‘Key To The Highway’ which only ever saw release on the Japanese version of the album Main Offender, along with ‘Hate It When You Leave.’”

Get ‘Hate It When You Leave’ and the rare Keith Richards track “Key To The Highway” (which only ever saw release on the Japanese version of the album Main Offender) on a red vinyl 7” single on Record Store Day.