Posts Tagged ‘The Rolling Stones’

A Big Thank you to everyone who came to The Rolling Stones on the Australia and New Zealand leg of the 2014 “ON FIRE” tour!.
As anyone who did back of the envelope calculations would know, with some ticket prices heading past $1200 and sold out shows being common, Australia is proving a financially fertile ground for the Rolling Stones.

Figures published show that the Australian leg of the On Fire world tour have put the Rolling Stones at the top of the highest grossing current tours worldwide, with gross returns of more than $26 million, so far. And that’s from only the first three cities of the tour.

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According to Billboard, the Adelaide Oval show which opened the Australian tour grossed more than $10 million alone, while the two nights at the Perth Arena earned the band in excess of $11 million. That made the Stones the highest grossing artists at the Perth venue this year, ahead of Bruce Springsteen, Katy Perry, Robbie Williams, Michael Buble and Justin Timberlake.
Even though there was only one night in Melbourne, receipts from that show were above $5.5 million dollars and that was the highest return for a single show at the Rod Laver Arena this year. Figures for Sydney’s larger show at Allphones Arena are not yet available but presumably would exceed that Melbourne figure, healthily compensating for the loss of income due to Jagger’s throat problems forcing the cancellation of the outdoor show at Hanging Rock in country Victoria.

Also not yet calculated are the receipts for the Hunter Valley winery show on Saturday and this week’s Brisbane and Auckland performances. Not to mention the revenue from the merchandise stands which were heavily patronised at all shows.

Acknowledged as perhaps the greatest rhythm guitarist in rock & roll,  Keith Richards is even more legendary for his near-miraculous ability to survive the most debauched excesses of the rock & roll lifestyle. His prodigious consumption of drugs and alcohol has been well documented, and would likely have destroyed anyone with a less amazing endurance level.

Keith Richards born 18 December 1943 is an English musician, songwriter and founding member of the English rock band The Rolling Stones. Richards had created “rock’s greatest single body of riffs,” ranking him 4th on its list of 100 best guitarists. Fourteen songs that Richards wrote with the Rolling Stones’ lead vocalist Mick Jagger are listed among “500 Greatest Songs of All Time.” Keith Richards’s notoriety for illicit drug use stems in part from several drug busts during the late 1960s and 1970s and his candor regarding his addiction to, and eventual abstinence from, heroin.

 

 

With the Rolling Stones Live CD/DVD sets now both released,“From The Vault” is a new series of live concerts from The Rolling Stones archive which are getting their first official release on DVD: here is a clip from the L.A Forum show and underneath is the brilliant video The Rolling Stones’ official promo for ‘It’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll (But I Like It)’. The track is the title single from the album It’s Only Rock and Roll (1974). Written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, and produced by the Glimmer Twins, the song went straight to number one in the US charts when it was released.

The video features Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts, Bill Wyman and Mick Taylor dressed in sailor suits performing in a circus tent that fills with bubbles. The video was directed by filmmaker Michael Lindsay-Hogg, who also directed the promo videos “Neighbours”, “Jumping Jack Flash” and “Child Of The Moon”. Lindsay-Hogg also directed promos for the Beatles and the Whom show in 1975,

rollingstones wild horses

The song was recorded in 1969 but wasn’t released until 1971 due to the band’s legal tussle with their manager. The band’s normal piano player bowed out of the session because he didn’t like playing minor chords. And the track was originally intended by the guitarist to be a song about missing his newborn son, only to be hijacked by the lead singer, who turned it into a depiction of a burned-out relationship.

For The Rolling Stones, such drama has always been par for the course. That they overcame all of that and turned out a gem like “Wild Horses,” the song saddled with all of the aforementioned obstacles, is a testament to their talent, chemistry, and unfailing ability to rise above all the chaos, self-induced and otherwise.

For three days in December 1969, the Stones stopped into Muscle Shoals studios in Alabama and managed to lay down three songs, one of which was “Wild Horses.” (“Brown Sugar” was one of the other two, ) The composition of this plaintive ballad was begun by Keith Richards, whose first child was born in August 1969, causing Keith regret about going out on the road and leaving the boy behind.

“It was one of those magical moments when things come together,” Richards wrote in his 2010 autobiography Lifeabout the song’s genesis. “It’s like ‘Satisfaction.’ You just dream it, and suddenly it’s all in your hands. Once you’ve got the vision in your mind of wild horses, I mean, what’s the next phrase you’re going to use? It’s got to be couldn’t drag me away.”
So Richards wrote the music, using a 12-string acoustic guitar to really draw out the melancholy in those chords, and the chorus. He then handed the song off to his songwriting partner-in-crime Mick Jagger to complete the verses. And that’s when the track took a turn away from Marlon, the name of Richards’ little boy, and perhaps veered toward Marianne, as in Faithfull, Jagger’s on-again, off-again lover of that era.

Jagger recalled his contributions to “Wild Horses” in the liner notes to the 1993 Stones’ anthology Jump Back: The Best Of The Rolling Stones. “I remember we sat around doing this with Gram Parsons, and I think his version came out slightly before ours,” Mick said. “Everyone always says it was written about Marianne, but I don’t think it was; that was all well over by then. But I was definitely very inside this piece emotionally. This is very personal, evocative, and sad.
That heaviness hangs in the air throughout the song. You can hear it in the lazily-strummed guitars of Richards and Mick Taylor, in Richards’ just-right electric solo, in Charlie Watts thudding fills. Jim Dickinson filled in on the tack piano when Ian Stewart famously begged off playing the sad chords. As for Jagger, he holds back the histrionics and plays it straight,
The opening lines hint at a simpler time in the couple’s life together: “Childhood living is easy to do/ The things you wanted I bought them for you.” As time passes, however, they become inseparable in anguish as well: “I watched you suffer a dull aching pain/ Now you’ve decided to show me the same.”As bad as things get though, the narrator’s loyalty never wavers. “You know I can’t let you slide through my hands,” Jagger sings at the end of the first verse. Perhaps alluding to the drama in her life, he uses the metaphor of the stage to describe his steadfastness: “No sweeping exits or offstage lines/ Could make me feel bitter or treat you unkind.” And there’s that chorus, Richards joining in for high and lonesome harmonies with Jagger.

Gram Parsons’ version with the Flying Burrito Brothers does indeed predate the Stones’ release of the song on Sticky Fingers by a year, giving rise to unsubstantiated rumors that he deserved some songwriting credit. Among the many cover versions of the song that have been done through the years, The Sundays of “Here’s Where The Story Ends” fame checked in with a particularly memorable take, thanks to the ethereal vocals of Harriet Wheeler.

The final chorus of the song ends with Jagger changing the kicker line. Instead of the horses dragging him away, he sings, “We’ll ride them someday.” Some might say it’s a hopeful ending, but it also sounds like the kind of thing someone would say as parting words to a loved one they won’t be seeing again. This kind of poignancy isn’t what we often consider when we think of The Rolling Stones.

Look at this clip from the Rolling Stones opening up in Adelaide in Australia just last night, whatever their ages the sound of the guitars and even Jagger’s vocals are still pretty spectacular,

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From the new Rolling Stones concert Archive series “From The Vault” of Live DVD’s this is from the L.A Forum Show in 1975, the Tour of America’s was the first time with Ronnie Wood joining the band, The band performed a five night run at the L.A Forum from July 9th- 13th with remixed sound and restored footage the DVD is out at the end of this month. Also out this month is the Hampton Coliseum show from 1981,

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The-Rolling-Stones-Ladies-Gentlemen

The Rolling Stones Video “Ladies and Gentlemen” a full concert movie first released in 1974 filmed in 16mm by Butterfly Films( A company owned by John lennon) recorded at concerts in Fort Worth and Houston Texas in 1972 during the north American leg of the tour to promote “Exile On Main Street” Released on Blu Ray in 2010,Now with some extras an interview with Jagger at the Dorchester, some clips of the tour rehearsal at the Montreaux Festival

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Following on from the other posting re Live at the LA FORUM 1975 now the second release of “the FROM THE VAULTS” new series of Rolling Stone live releases from the Stones own archives the show from Hampton Coliseum in 1981, due to be released November 3rd with a new mix from Bob Clearmountain and restored footage from the concerts it will be released in a host of formats Bluray, 2CD, DVD, 3LP DVD, the full length running at .1/2 hours was filmed on Keith Richard’s birthday on December 18th and the last night of the Tattoo You American tour

 

 

rollingstonesgetyour ya yas

On September 4th The Rolling Stones released the live album “Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out” said to be one of the greatest live albums, The album was recorded in Baltimore Maryland on 26th November 1969 and 27th-28th November 1969 at Madison Square Gardens in New York City,support for the gigs was BB King and English rocker Terry Reid, Just before the release of the “Let It Bleed” studio album and the first live album to become a Number 1 selling album in the UK. With the last Stones Tour in 1967, The band felt ready and eager to be on the road again,1969 was the first tour for new guitar player Mick Taylor having replaced Brian Jones after his death. Famous Rolling Stone critic Lester Bangs was quoted as saying “there is little doubt this is the best Rock Concert ever put on record” released 44 years ago today it still stands as an awesome live album it was just pure rock and roll with no theatrics including outstanding versions of “Midnight Rambler” and “Sympathy For The Devil” and the song “Live With Me”

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The legendary LA Forum Friday Tapes recorded in 1975 finally gets its official release on DVD due to be made available on 17th November, The bands first tour with new guitarist Ronnie Wood, with a huge promotion for the Tour Of America’s the band played “Brown Sugar”  on a flatbed truck in New York City the band performed 44 dates between 3rd June to the 8th August, moving to the LA Forum for a five night slot July 9th-13th the sound has been newly remixed by Bob Clearmountain