WTF Moments in Music

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This interview is hilarious. Bee Gees walk out in the end. Clive Anderson is obviously a fan of their early work and he's making jokes about the 70's era at the band's expense and they're pretty good natured about it, even joking back, but eventually it crosses the line for Barry Gibb, starting with the "one letter short" comment. Maybe it was the mix of semi-serious questions and irreverent comments and the constant changing of tone and topic. I can see why it could grate and I notice there's a bit where Maurice is answering a question about the early days where Barry seems to signal with his fingers to Robin that they should leave.


 
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The Stones have gone country in Texas before, notably on this song off Sticky Fingers.





Mick Jagger is a big cricket fan, I'm more surprised he wasn't singing Bob Willis is Still The King.
 
The Stones have gone country in Texas before, notably on this song off Sticky Fingers.
They do "Sweet Virginia" on the same show too. The Stones did a bunch of great country songs in the late '60's and early ''70's.

Pretty funny that an English rock band can sound better playing country than most (if not all) genuine country acts.
 
They do "Sweet Virginia" on the same show too. The Stones did a bunch of great country songs in the late '60's and early ''70's.

Pretty funny that an English rock band can sound better playing country than most (if not all) genuine country acts.
Richards is a huge old country fan. There are outtakes of him by himself doing Hank Williams etc. He was best mates with Gram Parsons in the 60s until he died. Gram hung out in France with them a while during Exile period. Wild Horses has some juicy KR country licks in the solo.
Country Honk has a great fiddle part throughout by some country guy. Story is he recorded it outside the actual studio building on street. lol
I think that is a big part of why I love the Stones sound, particularly during that period BB to EOMS. Chuck Berry mixed with acoustics, and some blues and country solos.
 
I don't think you need to love Discharge to enjoy the bollocking this band took when they toured Grave New World. For those who haven't heard of them - Discharge were a pioneering band as punk turned into hardcore, fast, hard and abrasive. Their first releases are extremely well respected in their scene.

Then they released Grave New World. Suddenly the singer is trying to be Robert Plant. Nobody wants this.

Hear the sound of a crowd chanting louder than the band playing through a PA system to let them know what they really think. This one's enjoyable from beginning to end, hearing the band attempt to try again only to give up.
 
I think that is a big part of why I love the Stones sound, particularly during that period BB to EOMS. Chuck Berry mixed with acoustics, and some blues and country solos.
They hit a level during that period that seldom few - if any - have matched. I certainly don't think any other rock act made 4 consecutive albums of such quality, with the glorious Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out right in the middle of it. Don't get me wrong, I adore the earlier Brian Jones era Stones just as much, but they hit an incredible run of form with the addition of Mick Taylor.

And have not gotten close to it since he left. Have you read Stanley Booth's True Adventures Of The Rolling Stones ?
 
They hit a level during that period that seldom few - if any - have matched. I certainly don't think any other rock act made 4 consecutive albums of such quality, with the glorious Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out right in the middle of it. Don't get me wrong, I adore the earlier Brian Jones era Stones just as much, but they hit an incredible run of form with the addition of Mick Taylor.

And have not gotten close to it since he left. Have you read Stanley Booth's True Adventures Of The Rolling Stones ?
I don't think I have. I was most deeply into them in late 70s and 80s, read the 72 tour book. I have always loved the music and playing open G on my guitar. :thumbsu:
I still occasionally hit iorr.org for info on a song or an instrument. :winkv1: The flipside on YT has done some deep dive docus on their recording some albums, they were great.
 
Booth's book came out in 1984. It was partly a first hand chronicle on the Stones 1969 U.S tour (Booth travelled with them for the entire tour, including Altamont), and partly a bio of their career up to that point. The book pretty much ends when the tour does, apart from a brief, almost throwaway summation of everything they did after that.

It's an incredible book. Best I've read on the Stones and probably the best music bio I've read.
 
Booth's book came out in 1984. It was partly a first hand chronicle on the Stones 1969 U.S tour (Booth travelled with them for the entire tour, including Altamont), and partly a bio of their career up to that point. The book pretty much ends when the tour does, apart from a brief, almost throwaway summation of everything they did after that.

It's an incredible book. Best I've read on the Stones and probably the best music bio I've read.
Must have missed it, I'll have to search around for it. I watched Gimme Shelter and One Plus One back around 80. A theater had a movie and a band thing on Saturday nights for a while. It was the only way to see those old rock movies that we had only heard rumors of. I've heard some the bootlegs of that tour, really good.
Slightly tangential, but it haunts me :winkv1: Back in 80 I also had a chance to buy one of those plexi Dan Armstrong guitars. All I had to do was wait another two weeks til next payday. But the money I had was burning a hole in my pocket and I got a different one. Still a good guitar, only recently sold it actually, but ...... :smilev1:
 

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