I think the Stones were so multifacetted, so original, so powerful you can't really say what period was the best. God doesn't make musicians that talented very often. As a group they were extraordinary and mind blowing from the very start.
Hi @Soul Train Bro, I like the most of your vids but The Stones are one of my favorite bands ever and I got about 50 Vinyls of them. But today I will thank you for bringing the original "you gotta move" / Mississipi Fred McDowell to me -> what a great song ! Thanks for sharing it and many greetings from hamburg (germany).
I love and admire how you do it Soul Train Bro, and the music you choose to do it with is almost always so much in the highest tier of what I appreciate the most to the point of being a metaphysical coincidence. Puts heebie jeebies on me because I want you to appreciate it as powerfully as I do. As for this selection ---- nothing less than my personal favorite side of vinyl of all I've accumulated since the late 1960's. That means its also my personal number one favorite side of all the classic rock I know. "Can't You Hear Me Knocking" is the best of the best - nothing I've ever heard knocks me down harder than that 2 pronged attack. Hate to close with something less enthusiastic, but Side 2 of the album, though filled with great songs through and through, is an anticlimax to the knockout punch of every song on Side 1. I'm not trying to influence you seeing that this video crept into my feed 3 years after the fact.
Definitely one of the best along with Let It Bleed, Beggars and Exile. I love that idiosyncraic Charlie Watts drumming and is jazzy. - behind the beat with odd fills that work
Mick Jagger's said recently that they were no longer going to do Brown Sugar Live due to its content especially in today's Politically Incorrect world. Back in the 70s you could get away with the lyrics
In the song, 'Wild Horses', the line, "Let's do some living after we die" needs proper punctuation in order to understand it, correctly. The proper punctuation for the correct interpretation of the line is, "Let's do some living, after, we die." The "after" is in reference to "we die", not a reference to "Let's do some living". Another way to write the line would be, "Let's do some living. After, we die."
If correct, your point is quite a revelation for me. But unless you are lyricist Mick's good buddy, I'm not sure how you would know how to chop down the confusion around the potential for vastly different interpretations. Even if the official published lyric's punctuation follows with what you're perspective, it still doesn't clear all the fog that classic rock creatives were happy to generate. That fog may just make this more fun and interesting than I already thought it was.
Another Stones masterpiece ❤
Awesome reaction from a man clearly serious and focused on every note of the music.
I knew Fred McDowell, he was a true gentleman and he taught me this song in 1971.
The greatest jam session ever layed down
This is no dummy chanel ! Kudos for your work !
I think the Stones were so multifacetted, so original, so powerful you can't really say what period was the best. God doesn't make musicians that talented very often. As a group they were extraordinary and mind blowing from the very start.
Thanks.
45 views, 8 likes, and only my comment for the World's Greatest Rock & Roll band and one of the greatest Rock & Roll albums ever produced?
It's so nice to hear a whole album. Thanks
Gold ❤
Hi @Soul Train Bro, I like the most of your vids but The Stones are one of my favorite bands ever and I got about 50 Vinyls of them. But today I will thank you for bringing the original "you gotta move" / Mississipi Fred McDowell to me -> what a great song ! Thanks for sharing it and many greetings from hamburg (germany).
an all time classic, great great album
Mick Taylor's lead guitar playing sure added alot to the Stones.
I love and admire how you do it Soul Train Bro, and the music you choose to do it with is almost always so much in the highest tier of what I appreciate the most to the point of being a metaphysical coincidence. Puts heebie jeebies on me because I want you to appreciate it as powerfully as I do. As for this selection ---- nothing less than my personal favorite side of vinyl of all I've accumulated since the late 1960's. That means its also my personal number one favorite side of all the classic rock I know. "Can't You Hear Me Knocking" is the best of the best - nothing I've ever heard knocks me down harder than that 2 pronged attack.
Hate to close with something less enthusiastic, but Side 2 of the album, though filled with great songs through and through, is an anticlimax to the knockout punch of every song on Side 1. I'm not trying to influence you seeing that this video crept into my feed 3 years after the fact.
Definitely one of the best along with Let It Bleed, Beggars and Exile. I love that idiosyncraic Charlie Watts drumming and is jazzy. - behind the beat with odd fills that work
"Sticky Fingers" is the "Nevermind" of the 70's.
Mick Jagger's said recently that they were no longer going to do Brown Sugar Live due to its content especially in today's Politically Incorrect world. Back in the 70s you could get away with the lyrics
Maybe many like me, then were not sure WHAT the lyrics meant..some said girls some said drugs, some said both...
Open G is a helluva tuning.
I've been a Dan since "Satisfaction"
Lol
Stick Fingers is my only Stone album I enjoy.
Sorry to hear of your failings.
@@rhymeswithteeth I feel sorry for you too.
@@samc269 Is that the best you can do as a comeback? Pretty weak.
In the song, 'Wild Horses', the line, "Let's do some living after we die" needs proper punctuation in order to understand it, correctly. The proper punctuation for the correct interpretation of the line is, "Let's do some living, after, we die." The "after" is in reference to "we die", not a reference to "Let's do some living". Another way to write the line would be, "Let's do some living. After, we die."
If correct, your point is quite a revelation for me. But unless you are lyricist Mick's good buddy, I'm not sure how you would know how to chop down the confusion around the potential for vastly different interpretations. Even if the official published lyric's punctuation follows with what you're perspective, it still doesn't clear all the fog that classic rock creatives were happy to generate. That fog may just make this more fun and interesting than I already thought it was.
@@kikovazquez7277 How do I "chop down the confusion"? I use common sense.