Posts Tagged ‘The Rolling Stones’

The tracks on “Some Trax 1 and 2″ were all recorded in Paris at a time when the group’s future was in question, due to Keith Richards’ upcoming Canadian drug possession trial, which could have possibly yielded a life sentence, so the group recorded nearly 60 songs (in various stages of completion). These songs would fill the “Some Girls” and “Emotional Rescue” albums, and some of the songs on “Tattoo You”, and there are still more unreleased songs

00:00 Miss You (Extended Version)
08:33 When The Whip Comes Down
14:50 Just My Imagination (Running Away With Me)
21:25 Some Girls
27:50 Everything Is Turning To Gold
31:55 Lies
35:36 Far Away Eyes
40:38 Before They Make Me Run (Bob Clearmountain Mix)
43:53 Respectable
47:43 Beast Of Burden (8 Track Version)
52:58 Shattered (8 Track Version)
55:41 Miss You
1:01:07 Shattered
1:04:51 Everything Is Turning To Gold
1:13:19 Beast Of Burden

As far as the studio work that produced this classic LP… There was a prolific amount of output at Pathe Marconi recording studios in France from the later part of 1977 through the winter of 1982. There were also several departures to Compass Point Studios in Nassau, Bahamas in the time in between.

00:00 Fiji Jim
03:17 Claudine
06:57 Do You Think I Really Care
11:19 I Need You
14:53 The Way She Held Me Tight
19:17 I Love You Too Much
22:27 Buried Alive (Ron Wood with Mick, Keith, & Charlie)
26:01 When You’re Gone
29:56 So Young
33:15 We Had It All
36:08 No Spare Parts
40:36 It’s All Wrong
44:09 Never Make You Cry
47:53 Tallahassee Lassie
50:28 You Win Again
53:25 Never Let Her Go
57:42 Do You Get Enough
1:02:24 A Different Kind
1:08:24 Some People Tell Me
1:13:13 Slow Blues

There are so many great “Some Girls” era songs still in the “can”, so why put this one out again? How about the coolest Wood-Richards guitar-weave ever recorded and never released: Fiji Jim? That was a good one. Or The Way She Held Me Tight? Or I Need You? Really, there is still so much, and to put this out again? I don’t get it. It’s filler on a bonus disc. Well, none the less, still a great “Some Girls” song

Another new song has been released from “Blue And Lonesome”, the upcoming album by The Rolling Stones. It’s another fantastically performed blues number, this time a Little Walter cover blues song ‘Hate To See You Go’, which takes you back to their pre-Mick Taylor period of rhythm and blues playing. Take a listen and watch the official video featuring studio footage:

It’s a perfectly executed blues number with Mick Jagger in particular on fine form behind the mic and on harmonica. With just under a month to go until the album is released on the 2nd December, the release of this song has made me even more excited than I already was.

The track is lifted from their upcoming album of blues covers, ‘Blue & Lonesome’‘Hate To See You Go’ is one of two songs written by legendary blues musician Little Walter to feature on the band’s first studio album in over a decade. ‘Blue & Lonesome’ was recorded in just three days at British Grove Studios in west London and sees the band return to “their roots and the passion for blues music”.

The 12-track album features covers of songs by Jimmy Reed, Willie Dixon, Eddie Taylor and Howlin’ Wolf. It sees the band joined on record by touring members Darryl Jones (bass), Chuck Leavell (keyboards) and Matt Clifford (keyboards). Eric Clapton also features on two tracks.

Co-producer Don Was says of the record: “This album is manifest testament to the purity of their love for making music, and the blues is, for the Stones, the fountainhead of everything they do.”
Watch the video below. It combines studio footage with shots of Chicago, New York and other cities.

11 years after the release of their last studio album A Bigger Bang in 2005, The Rolling Stones have returned with new album Blue and Lonesome and the first taste we got is the song Just Your Fool. Take a listen: Originally written by American jazz and blues pianist Buddy Johnson, the song is the first of twelve blues numbers that the Stones have covered for their new album. It’s a great rendition and the thought of the band releasing a full album of blues songs is fantastic.

“Just Your Fool” from the new studio album “BLUE & LONESOME” out December 2nd.

The 12-track album was recorded at British Grove Studios in West London. The announcement comes just a few weeks after The Rollings Stones performed during the first weekend of Desert Trip music festival in Indio, Calif.
The track list includes:
1. “Just Your Fool” (Originally written and recorded in 1960 by Little Walter)
2. “Commit a Crime” (Originally written and recorded in 1966 by Howlin’ Wolf – Chester Burnett)
3. “Blue and Lonesome” (Originally written and recorded in 1959 by Little Walter)
4. “All of Your Love” (Originally written and recorded in 1967 by Magic Sam – Samuel Maghett)
5. “I Gotta Go” (Originally written and recorded in 1955 by Little Walter)
6. “Everybody Knows About My Good Thing” (Originally recorded in 1971 by Little Johnny Taylor, composed by Miles Grayson & Lermon Horton)
7. “Ride ‘Em on Down” (Originally written and recorded in 1955 by Eddie Taylor)
8. “Hate to See You Go” (Originally written and recorded in 1955 by Little Walter)
9. “Hoo Doo Blues” (Originally recorded in 1958 by Lightnin’ Slim, composed by Otis Hicks & Jerry West)
10. “Little Rain” (Originally recorded in 1957 by Jimmy Reed, composed by Ewart.G.Abner Jr. and Jimmy Reed)
11. “Just Like I Treat You” (Originally written by Willie Dixon and recorded by Howlin’ Wolf in December 1961)
12. “I Can’t Quit You Baby” (Originally written by Willie Dixon and recorded by Otis Rush in 1956)
“Blue & Lonesome” will be released on Dec. 2.

rollingstones

gimmeshelter

Written by Keef as he brooded over Anita’s dalliance with Mick, “Gimme Shelter” represented something darker and more universal: rape, murder and the death of the 1960s spirit.
“You get lucky sometimes,” Keith Richards says of “Gimme Shelter”, the greatest song he ever wrote. “It was a shitty day. I had nothing better to do.”

The tone is lightweight, almost laughable. Yet the song was wrought from the heaviest of materials. The Rolling Stones were still trying to climb out of the career-grave that their critically derided 1967 album Their Satanic Majesties Request had left them in, their plans persistently thwarted by the rapidly disintegrating physical and emotional state of their other founder-member guitarist, Brian Jones.

Their 1968 follow-up, Beggars Banquet, recorded largely with just Keith on guitar, had been a classic, but their final hit with Jones, Jumpin’ Jack Flash, had been their only chart single in the UK for 18 months. Now with Keith’s old lady – Anita Pallenberg, stolen from Jones the year before – filming sex scenes with Mick Jagger for his movie debut in Performance, Keith’s mind was all doom and gloom as he sat snorting coke and heroin at gallery owner Robert Fraser’s Mayfair apartment one stormy day that autumn.

Lounging with his guitar in a room decorated with Tibetan skulls, tantric art and Moroccan tapestries, chain-smoking and depressed at the thought of Anita being with Mick, Keith began to strum as lightning flashed across the London sky.

“It was just a terrible fucking day,” he recalls in his memoir, Life, “this incredible storm over London. So I got into that mode – looking at all these people… running like hell.”

Leaning on the same open chords that had become his signature, he crooned, ‘Oh, a storm is threatening, my very life today.’ Sounded good. He continued to strum, added another line: ‘If I don’t get some shelter, oh yeah, I’m gonna fade away…’

Six months later, when the Stones reconvened to begin work on their next album, Let It Bleed, the song of ultimate doom Keith had begun that stormy day, now titled Gimme Shelter, was among the first he and Jagger began working on with producer Jimmy Miller.

There were other monumental moments on the album to come, not least Jagger’s You Can’t Always Get What You Want. But everything the Stones would become, everything they would be glorified as – the greatest, most legendary, most daring and sophisticated and dark and evil and sexy and cool rock’n’roll band in the world – would be summed up by the apocalyptic Gimme Shelter, the album’s opening track.

It would be another six months, though, before they’d finished with it. In the meantime the Rolling Stones went through the most turbulent period – artistically, personally, commercially – of their career.

After Jones, who had officially been ousted from the group in June ’69, was found dead in his swimming pool just three weeks later, the Stones went ahead with their planned free concert in Hyde Park, with new guitarist Mick Taylor.

https://vimeo.com/33886638

They also announced their first US tour for three years, due to start in November. First though, they had to complete the album. Miller argued there was something missing from Gimme Shelter, something that would turn good into great. They found what they were looking for in 20-year-old Merry Clayton. Suggested by producer and long-time Stones acolyte Jack Nitzsche, Clayton had made her name through duets and backing vocals for Ray Charles, Burt Bacharach and Elvis Presley, among many others.

She laughingly recalls how she was about to go to bed when she got Nitzsche’s call: “It was almost midnight. I was pregnant at the time and I thought, there’s no way in the world I’m getting out of bed to go down to some studio in the middle of the night.”

But her husband, jazz saxophonist Curtis Amy, talked her into it.

“I’m wearing these beautiful pink pyjamas, my hair was up in rollers. But I took this Chanel scarf, wrapped it round the rollers so it looked really cute, went to the bathroom and put on a little lip blush – ’cos there’s no way I’m going to the studio other than beautiful!” Throwing a fur coat around her shoulders, she turned up at the studio “ready to work”. She admits to being somewhat nonplussed when she read the lyrics Jagger handed to her.

“I’m like, ‘Rape, murder…’? You sure that’s what you want me to sing, honey? He’s just laughing. Him and Keith.”

They began the session, and the effect was instant. “You listen to the original tape you can hear Mick whooping and hollering in the background,” Merry says.

Of course, there would be a grim postscript to the story of Gimme Shelter. While it became the most praised album-only track in the Stones canon – “The cleverest amalgam of powerful sounds the Stones have yet created,” reckoned International Times; “Ecstatic, ironic, all-powerful, an erotic exorcism for a doomed decade,” claimed Newsweek – it also became the emblem of the moment when the 60s dream flared into the 70s nightmare.

Released on the same day in December 1969 as the Stones’ ill-starred, bad-acid-and-cheap-wine appearance at Altamont Speedway in northern California, at which teenager Meredith Hunter was stabbed to death by Hells Angels, Gimme Shelter would also become the all-too appropriate title of the Maysles brothers’ documentary film of that debacle: the moment when the Stones’ music seemed to become a mythic force unto itself. Or as Albert Goldman put it: “An obsessively lovely specimen of tribal rock… rainmaking music [repeating] over an endless drone until it has soaked its way through your soul.”

“They hand me the lyrics, and I’m looking, thinking, ‘Rape? Murder? I’m working with a bunch of fools!’”

Less a backing singer on Gimme Shelter, she was virtually a co-singer with Jagger.

“I remember saying to the boys [Jagger and Richards]: ‘I hope this don’t take all night, ’cos I gotta get my beauty sleep,’” she chuckles now. “But that song became the start of a whole new thing for me.”

Indeed, the 70s found Merry supplying vocals for Lynyrd Skynyrd (Sweet Home Alabama), The Who (as the Acid Queen in the original 1972 stage production of Tommy), Neil Young and countless others. But Gimme Shelter became Merry’s signature tune and the title of her 1970 debut solo album.

Currently, Merry Clayton can be seen telling – and singing – her story in the documentary movie 20 Feet From Stardom, in which she and several other noted backing singers reveal the stories behind a lifetime of classic songs. “Honey, we saw it all,” she purrs. “Only we were never supposed to tell about it – until now!”

Release Date,December 6th, 1969, on the album Let It Bleed

PERSONNEL

Mick Jagger Vocals, harmonica

Keith Richards Guitars, backing vocals

Bill Wyman Bass

Charlie Watts Drums

Nicky Hopkins Piano

Jimmy Miller Percussion

Merry Clayton Vocals

WRITTEN BY

Mick Jagger/Keith Richards

PRODUCER

Jimmy Miller

 

The Rolling Stones will release ‘Blue & Lonesome’, their first studio album in over a decade. Recorded in just three days in London, England, this is an album full of their passion for the music that has always been at the heart and soul of the band – Blues.
Recorded in three days in December last year at British Grove Studios in West London, just a stone’s throw from Richmond and Eel Pie Island where the Stones started out as a young blues band playing pubs and clubs.

The credits say it all, in the way this project was approached to play live in the studio without overdubs. Mick Jagger (vocals & harp), Keith Richards (guitar), Charlie Watts (drums), and Ronnie Wood (guitar), plus their long time touring sidemen Darryl Jones (bass), Chuck Leavell (keyboards) and Matt Clifford (keyboards). For two of the twelve tracks the Rolling Stones were also joined by old friend Eric Clapton, who happened to be in the next studio making his own album.

‘Blue & Lonesome’ sees the Rolling Stones tipping their hats to the blues roots with tracks of intense spontaneity. It’s hard to believe that this is a record made by musicians in their sixth decade of recording. In their very early days the Stones played the music of Jimmy Reed, Willie Dixon, Eddie Taylor, Little Walter and Howlin’ Wolf – artists whose songs are featured on this album.

Producer Don Was commented “This album is manifest testament to the purity of their love for making music, and the blues is, for the Stones, the fountainhead of everything they do.”

1.Just Your Fool
2.Commit A Crime
3.Blue And Lonesome
4.All Of Your Love
5.I Gotta Go
6.Everybody Knows About My Good Thing
7.Ride ‘Em On Down
8.Hate To See You Go
9.Hoo Doo Blues
10.Little Rain
11.Just Like I Treat You
12.I Can’t Quit You Baby

Out in the Californian desert, six legendary bands have gathered to perform music that has wowed the world for five decades, in a concert dubbed “Oldchella”.

“Tonight we’re not going to do any age jokes,” said 73-year-old Sir Mick Jagger, taking to the stage with his fellow Rolling Stones. “But welcome to the Palm Springs retirement home for ageing English gentlemen.”

The 75,000-strong crowd erupted, whooping in delight. With an average age of 51 themselves, they were in on the joke, and simply thrilled to see the greats: Bob Dylan, who opened for The Stones on Friday, and Neil Young and Paul McCartney due to perform on Saturday. On Sunday, the festival closes with Roger Waters and The Who – meaning that of the six acts, only Minnesota-born Dylan and Young, a Canadian, were not British.  It is the first time they have all performed at the same event.

More than 50 years after “I Wanna Be Your Man,” the Rolling Stones are once again singing Beatles songs. Last night at the Desert Trip Festival in Indio, Calif., by covering “Come Together,” .
Admitting it was “strange,” Mick Jagger said, “We’re gonna do a cover song of some sort of unknown beat group. [I] think you might remember. We’re gonna try a cover of one of their tunes.” Then he asked, “Are you ready?” three times and launched into the Abbey Road chestnut, which also featured a harmonica solo from the singer in the outro. the band’s nightly variations on its songs, with an endless cat’s-cradle of exchanges between Keith Richards and Ron Wood on guitars over Charlie Watts’s impeccable drums and Darryl Jones’s bass. Richards usually has the gut-level rhythm parts while Ronnie Wood takes the smoother high filigrees and slide-guitar wails. But there’s plenty of overlapping territory where anything can happen.
Paul McCartney, who is alos performing at the same festival, according to Yahoo! Music, witnessed the Stones’ set from a VIP box and pumped his fist during “Come Together,” plays Desert Trip tonight. Let’s see if he repays the favour. Desert Trip, produced by the company behind the Coachella Festival and held in the same place — but with a much less strenuous schedule and setup, including reserved seats with padded chairs

The Stones’ 20-song set also included “Ride ‘Em on Down,” a 1955 single by Eddie Taylor, which was played at their first-ever performance, at London’s Marquee Club in July 1962. “Ride ‘Em on Down,” will appear on their upcoming collection of blues songs, Blue & Lonesome. The album, which was recorded live in the studio with no overdubs over three days and features Eric Clapton on two songs, will be released December 2nd.

Bob Dylan served as the opening act, delivering 16 songs that saw him perform seven songs from his post-Time Out of Mind comeback, although nothing from his two recent collections of standards. He closed with “Ballad of a Thin Man” from Highway 61 Revisited and encored with “Masters of War,” from The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan.

The Rolling Stones, Desert Trip, Oct. 7th, 2016

Setlist
1. “Start Me Up:
2. “You Got Me Rocking”
3. “Out of Control”
4. “Ride ‘Em on Down”
5. “Mixed Emotions”
6. “Wild Horses”
7. “It’s Only Rock ‘n’ Roll (But I Like It)”
8. “Come Together”
9. “Tumbling Dice”
10. “Honky Tonk Women”
11. “Slipping Away”
12. “Little T&A”
13. “Midnight Rambler”
14. “Miss You”
15. “Gimme Shelter”
16. “Sympathy for the Devil”
17. “Brown Sugar”
18. “Jumpin’ Jack Flash”
Encore
19. “You Can’t Always Get What You Want”
20. “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction”

The Rolling Stones Will Release Live Album, Concert Footage from Their Historic Cuba Performance

Havana Moon – The Rolling Stones Live In Cuba

On 11th November 2016 ‘’Havana Moon’’ by The Rolling Stones on DVD, Blu-ray, DVD+2CD, DVD+3LP, Digital Video, Digital Audio plus a special Deluxe Edition

Good Friday – 25th March 2016 – is a date that will go down in both Cuban and Rock ‘n’ Roll history. The Rolling Stones became the first rock band to play a massive free outdoor concert to hundreds of thousands in Havana. This historic concert was captured by award winning film director Paul Dugdale.

Filmed at the end of the América Latina Olé Tour, Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts and Ronnie Wood performed a truly spectacular set to an estimated 1.2 million adoring fans

Political and economic relations between Cuba and the U.S. are in the process of being restored—but don’t forget about musical relations. The Rolling Stones made history by performing an epic, free concert in Havana to 1.2 million people, the biggest show in Cuba on record.

Now The Stones have announced that they’ll release a live album and concert film of the performance, to be titled Havana Moon, It will be available on DVD+2CD, Blu-ray+2CD, and DVD+3LP, as well as a special deluxe edition.

Rock music was blocked from Cuban radio in the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s. Many commentators viewed The Stones’ concert as an indication of the country’s opening up more, culturally as well as economically. The show was well-timed, occurring just days after President Obama completed his trip as the first American president to visit Cuba in 88 years.

Check out the trailer for Havana Moon and beneath that, find the live album’s tracklist.

Havana Moon Tracklist:
1) Jumpin’ Jack Flash
2) It’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll (But I Like It)
3) Out of Control
4) Angie
5) Paint It Black
6) Honky Tonk Women
7) You Got the Silver
8) Midnight Rambler
9) Gimme Shelter
10) Sympathy For The Devil
11) Brown Sugar
12) You Can’t Always Get What You Want
13) (I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction

Eagle Rock

The Rolling Stones‘ historic concert in Cuba on March 25th, 2016, has been commemorated in the new film Havana Moon, heading to theaters for a special one-night engagement later this year.
Directed by Paul Dugdale, whose previous credits include the concert film of the Stones’ 2013 show in Hyde Park, the film is scheduled to arrive in theaters Sept. 23rd. Promising exclusive content that won’t be made available on the home version, Havana Moon‘s theatrical screening is hosted by Musicscreen, who’ve pledged to put the movie in more than a thousand theaters worldwide. “The Havana Moon cinema experience immerses the audience in fantastic surround sound with super high definition visuals,” said CEO David Pope in a press release. “It’s the closest you’ll get to being there .

Fans can find screenings and purchase tickets starting in early August through the film’s official site, where a theatrical trailer is set to debut soon. Details of the film’s contents haven’t been made available, but in addition to the band’s hits-laden set, filmgoers can presumably expect to see some of the excitement surrounding the show, which marked the first time a rock act had booked a free show of this size and stature.
“The Cuba show was simply amazing,” Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger recalled in a statement. “It was an incredible moment; a huge sea of people for as far as the eye could see. You could feel the buzz of the enthusiasm from the crowd and that was for me the stand-out moment.”
“There’s the sun, the moon, the stars and the Rolling Stones,” added guitarist Keith Richards. “Seeing Cuba finally get the chance to rock out was special — a night to remember in Havana.”

The Rolling Stone: From the Vault - Live in Leeds 1982 [DVD +3 LP]

The Rolling Stones “From the Vault”  Live at Leeds 1982: “Roundhay Park”.

Continuing the very successful series “From The Vault” of classic, previously unreleased Rolling Stones live shows this release is taken from their performance at Roundhay Park in Leeds, England on 25th July 1982. This show was the last concert on their 1982 European Tour in support of 1981 s acclaimed Tattoo You album which would be their last live tour for seven years. About half of the Tattoo You album is included in the set including the hit single “Start Me Up” . This would be the last Rolling Stones show to feature Ian Stewart on piano. The footage has now been carefully restored and the sound has been newly mixed by Bob Clearmountain for this first official release of the show.

3LP+DVD

Side A): 1) Intro: Take The A-Train 2) Under My Thumb 3) When The Whip Comes Down 4) Let s Spend The Night Together 5) Shattered 6) Neighbours

Side B): 7) Black Limousine 8) Just My Imagination 9) Twenty Flight Rock 10) Going To A Go Go 11) Let Me Go

Side C): 12) Time Is On My Side 13) Beast Of Burden 14) You Can t Always Get What You Want

Side D): 15) Little T & A 16) Angie 17) Tumbling Dice 18) She s So Cold 19) Hang Fire

Side E): 20) Miss You 21) Honky Tonk Women 22) Brown Sugar 23) Start Me Up

Side F): 24) Jumpin Jack Flash 25) (I Can t Get No) Satisfaction

On the 29th May 1971, The Rolling Stones started a two week run at No.1 on the singles chart with ‘Brown Sugar’, from the album Sticky Fingers. It was also the first single released on Rolling Stones Records, it was the bands sixth US No.1, and a No.2 hit in the UK. The songs lyrics, which are essentially a pastiche of a number of taboo subjects, include: interracial sex, cunnilingus, slave rape, and less distinctly, sadomasochism, lost virginity, and heroin.

Though credited, like most of their compositions, to the singer/guitarist pair of Jagger/Richards, the song was primarily the work of Jagger, who wrote it sometime during the filming of the movie Ned Kelly in 1969. Originally recorded over a three-day period at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio in  Muscle Shoals Alabama from 2nd–4th December 1969, the song was not released until over a year later due to legal wranglings with the band’s former label, though at the request of guitarist Mick Taylor , they debuted the number live during the infamous concert at  Altamont on 6th December.

The song was written by Jagger with Marsha Hunt in mind; Hunt was Jagger’s secret girlfriend and mother of his first child Karis. It is also claimed it was written with Claudia Lennear in mind. Lennear saying that it was written with her in mind because at the time when it was written, Mick Jagger used to hang around with her. The Rolling Stones performing “Brown Sugar” live in Texas, 1972.

Totally Stripped is a newly-revised version of the documentary that was originally made to coincide with the release of The Rolling Stones Stripped album released in November 1995. It tells the story of the two studio sessions and three live shows that made up the Stripped project. This followed the conclusion of the mammoth Voodoo Lounge tour and found The Stones reimagining tracks from their back catalog in pared back versions alongside a couple of carefully chosen covers in the studio and doing smaller scale club gigs to showcase these versions, which was a marked contrast to the huge arenas and stadiums that had hosted the Voodoo Lounge tour. This new version of the documentary includes previously unseen footage and lays bare the inner workings of both The Rolling Stones and of some of their best loved tracks. Revealing, intimate and moving, Totally Stripped is unmissable.

The Rolling Stones‘ 1995 acoustic live album Stripped will see the deluxe reissue treatment with a multi-disc overhaul due in stores later this year.

Titled Totally Stripped and due June 3rd, the expanded set collects the three complete shows from the spring of 1995 — the Paradiso in Amsterdam, L’Olympia in Paris and Brixton Academy in London — that the band later combed through to create the original LP’s live track listing. The new edition also includes an overhauled version of the Totally Stripped documentary, which offers a peek behind the scenes as the band assembled the album. “Taken together,” promises a press release, “the three concerts present the Stones at their raw, invigorated best.”

Totally Stripped will be available in a variety of formats, including DVD or Blu-ray documentary-only editions, as well as DVD/CD and DVD/LP adding a single disc of highlights to the film. The deluxe five-disc edition adds a 60-page book in addition to the three previously unreleased shows. Take a look at the complete track listing for the set below.

This Deluxe 4DVD+CD set is packaged in a 60 page 12 x 12 hardback photobook and contains the newly revised documentary, the single CD of highlights from the live shows and individual DVDs of the three full length live concerts.
——————————————
CD
1) Not Fade Away Amsterdam 5/26/95 2) Honky Tonk Women Paris 7/3/95 3) Dead Flowers Amsterdam 4) Faraway Eyes London 7/19/95 5) Shine A Light Amsterdam 6) I Go Wild Paris 7) Miss You London 8) Like A Rolling Stone Amsterdam 9) Brown Sugar Paris 10) Midnight Rambler London 11) Jumpin Jack Flash Paris 12) Gimme Shelter Amsterdam 13) Rip This Joint Amsterdam 14) Street Fighting Man – Amsterdam

DVD 1
Totally Stripped Documentary

DVD 2 Paradiso, Amsterdam, May 26th 1995
1) Not Fade Away 2) It s All Over Now 3) Live With Me 4) Let It Bleed 5) The Spider And The Fly 6) Beast Of Burden 7) Angie 8) Wild Horses 9) Sweet Virginia 10) Dead Flowers 11) Shine A Light 12) Like A Rolling Stone 13) Connection 14) Slipping Away 15) The Worst 16) Gimme Shelter 17) All Down The Line 18) Respectable 19) Rip This Joint 20) Street Fighting Man

DVD 3 L Olympia, Paris, July 3rd 1995
1) Honky Tonk Women 2) Tumbling Dice 3) You Got Me Rockin 4) All Down The Line 5) Shattered 6) Beast Of Burden 7) Let It Bleed 8) Angie 9) Wild Horses 10) Down In The Bottom 11) Shine A Light 12) Like A Rolling Stone 13) I Go Wild 14) Miss you 15) Connection 16) Slipping Away 17) Midnight Rambler 18) Rip This Joint 19) Start Me Up 20) It s Only Rock n Roll 21) Brown Sugar 22) Jumpin Jack Flash

DVD 4 Brixton Academy, London, July 19th 1995
1) Honky Tonk Women 2) Tumbling Dice 3) You Got Me Rockin 4) Live With Me 5) Black Limousine 6) Dead Flowers 7) Sweet Virginia 8) Faraway Eyes 9) Love In Vain 10) Down In The Bottom 11) Shine A Light 12) Like A Rolling Stone 13) Monkey Man 14) I Go Wild 15) Miss You 16) Connection 17) Slipping Away 18) Midnight Rambler 19) Rip This Joint 20) Start Me Up 21) Brown Sugar 22) Jumpin Jack Flash