I've been studying and reading about and listening to the Stones since the late 70's. They're my favorite band. This documentary is pretty damned good. Stop critiquing, and just listen for a minute. The film teaches us a great deal, and has good insights. Thanks for sharing it! We!want!the Stones!
If you want some truly great docs on the Stones check out this guy's stones documentaries playlist. Just scroll down to your right. Unbelievable. ua-cam.com/video/sWFsputO3Hg/v-deo.html
Had this vid in my library for years .Brought out this A.M. to watch the guys I grew up with and fortunately still breathing the same air with. They’ll always be an ONLY. Rocky
@@experience5988 blind , deaf , , and D U M B continue to critic great art. The more you review his life the more you see the Apex of what a civilized man can be. Btw- speaking of the blind, the deaf and the dumbass. Anyone who poo poos ivermectin is an enemy of God and humanity and should be shunned and avoided until such time as they can be arrested and prosecuted for murder or murder by subrosa. Copy , paste and spread the word , we're taking back our planet from the evil fox's. A shin kicking good time is guaranteed for all. Do it for Charlie!
@@aaronsmith5433 Great art? Oh, God, really? I was raised on Mahler, Wagner and Beethoven, and you want to teach me what great art is. And, secondly. Learn how to properly write and how to use commas.
Mick Taylor and Nicky Hopkins. Throw in Jones and you can define this group by who it left out! Still, they did have more staying power than any of us could have imagined.
Swagger. Thats the word. They have amazing endless Swagger. RIP Charlie. Wow love you Stones, so glad that I got to see you live. The show was amazing. Even my father was prattling on about these old boys should give it up when they were just early 40's lol. Amazing, wonderful..
3 great pieces of music shaped the late 60's for me and others... "Light My Fire" the Doors. "Like a Rolling Stone" Bob Dylan. "I Can't Get No Satisfaction" the Rolling Stones.
Plus so many others !!😂 Can you pretend to sum the 60's with those 3 ?? be serious!! and by the way "like a rolling stone is from 65 , the very half of 60's.. Sorry I don't want to make fun about your ranking but it's just impossible to take only those 3 , although I like madly 2 of them ..
I was there , 3 rd row WOW . First concert, then I went to Central Park to see The Jefferson Airplane ,front row, went back stage and interviewed Grace Slick. Those were the days my friend, we thought they would never end.
I was afraid of the Stones when they came out,and Mom would call the parents of friends and tell them I wouldn't come over if they were played. I was 7 years old. The Beatles were a mania and I really believe they did everything to please my age group. Nice music for an innocent boy ,but not for a boy in adolescence and who was first inspired by James Brown. The brothers of friends weren't happy about me stopping them playing the Stones,but did their best to change my interests in music . The breaker was when a friend gave me an LP by the Stones. It was the Hex LP . I liked many of the songs other than ": Let's spend the night together" I was young and thought why do a song about staying up all night and eating popcorn and watching movies ❓ I was at about 14 when my mom opened the door of my room while I was playing "'Lets spent the night together" and said " I don't see ever want to ever hear that song when company is over" ❗ I said " Why "❓She said " It's a song about staying up all night and having sex with a girl " ❗ Thanks mom ,and now it immediately became my favorite song and most of my Beatles LPs moved to the bottom shelf .🤪😜❗
Thank you for focusing on those two years. I was born too late to be part of that. The thing for me is they came out of that. With the most important rock‘n‘roll record ever. EXILE ON MAIN STREAT.
They were Brian's blues band. He added an ethereal quality to them later that kept them up with the sound of the time. He was a brilliant musician that got sucked into the vortex of drugs fame, and darkness, with a questionable death. Mick Taylor made them rock your socks off. I read an interview in a guitar magazine recently where Keith Richards said " ...I miss his tone..," So do we. I love Ronnie Wood. He IS a Stone. But " Let it Bleed " through " Exile " was their zenith. There were some great tunes and hits afterward. But " Sticky Fingers " grabs your head by the ears, and makes you listen, and want to listen again. I still am.
Well said but respectfully I have to say there’s a huge amount of lack of respect for Mick and Keith’s work on Let it Bleed which is arguably the greatest Stones if not rock record of all time and no Jones or Taylor. Many people say Brian Jones was the Stones or that Mick Taylor was responsible for their peak period. (They may not have been given enough credit by Mick and Keith but you really have to question how much they deserved considering what Mick and Keith could deliver! Let It Bleed was during the transitional period without either Jones or Taylor which produced Gimme Shelter, Midnight Rambler, Monkey Man, You can’t always get what you want, etc... all guitars were by Keith and Jagger did some of the greatest harp ever played on a rock record. Hats off to producer Jimmy Miller, pianist Nicky Hopkins and saxophone by Bobby Keys. Yet there’s no doubt the prior Beggars Banquet again Jagger/Richards were just starting to peak while Brian faded and Mick Taylor wasn’t yet there. Then of course Sticky Fingers is as good as it gets, while Exile was a great record they retreated creatively. Great songs but no 2000 light years, Sympathy for the devil, Jumping Jack Flash, Street Fighting Man, Monkey Man, Gimme Shelter. However the early 70’s were going retro with laid back country, blues, straight forward rock n roll.
I disagree with nothing you stated. Brian was sadly toast by late '68' and Jagger/Richards picked up the flag in ' 65 ' for songwriting ( which was where the money wss (( and still is )) and continue to carry it, even if they hobble around while doing so. We all have our favorites. Mine are Beggars-Exile era. My comment failed to clarify that it was Mick Taylor's tone that Keef missed. But Sticky Fingers was, and still is an incredible album. Brian helped keep them musically relevant through ' 69 ' with his musicianship on various instruments. Some people like to argue what was " their best album. " I just say " favorites ". Their best album may be their next one.
@@drvee1983 Exactly how any discussion about something subjective like music should go. Yet we both know the basic facts. I’d say that it is the opinion of most rock n roll especially Stones fans to say the Beggars through Exile period was the best and it was again mostly driven by Jagger/Richards through the transitional period which would have broken most bands if it wasn’t for the super team who had been leading all along. Jones has his place as does Taylor but it’s the best band mostly thanks to Mick and Keith. It wouldn’t have been the same class act without Charlie’s drumming style nor Bill. They were not only musically important but their down to earth personalities probably were a big help in keeping Mick and Keith grounded as well.
@@DAVEBROWNE2004 I'm just curious as to WHY The Grateful Dead recommended the Hell's Angels to Mick Jagger in the first place. Surely they must have known how violent and murderous they were, at least that's what I would think.
We loved the fact that the Stones sounded raw. We didn't want things to be too polished. We didn't have fancy foot pedals and distortion makers, we just cranked the amps and guitars up the best we could to get good tones. We loved the blues, too, at least where I was in Ohio. IMO, the best albums were, "Beggars Banquet," "Let It Bleed," and the one with "Brown Sugar" and "Gimme Shelter" on it. I saw them back in the day and they packed the entire "Rubber Bowl" in Akron, Ohio. Keith Richards says, "I never had a problem with drugs, I had a lot of problems with police." My personal all-time Stones song is, "Street Fighting Man," because at the time the record was released, we really were fighting and marching in the streets, so it became sort of the national anthem of the protesters.
John, you are speaking of the album’s produced by Jimmy Miller. He even played drums and percussion on some tracks. Mick Taylor played on releases Let it Bleed through It’s only R&R
Brian Jones epitomizes that dark mysterious energy I associate with the late 60s which as a very small child just becoming conscious I felt and remember more than what was happening on the surface. The post-Jones Stones always seemed like a business, the beginning of that cold distant detached corporate mentality to rock that took hold in the 70s and despite punk pricking it's pretentious bubble reinforced itself in the 80s to the point where creativity was killed at birth in any act and anyone unfortunate enough to have it like Kurt Cobain was crushed in the corporate beast's machinery and spat out.
Maybe, with Mick Taylor, The Stones had a suberb fine guitarist. Ok. Maybe . Sticky Fingers, is - no doubt about it- a great record. Surely "Exile" is a great "american" album. Without hesitation, The Ron Wood Years, were/are, more or less, a good joke. But, clearly, The Jones Years, were magic. This magic, was lost without him.
In the beginning was Brian Jones, the genesis of the Rollingstones, who was a trained musician from his formative years, his parents - Lewis & Louisa Jones were musicians as well.. Louisa was a piano teacher, taught Brian to play at a very young age.. Brian, was plagued with asthma, his parents purchased a wind instrument, clarinette to aid with his lung capacity.. Then a little later on Brian received a guitar as a gift from his parents.. Hence Jones had an edge on his other bandmates.. Brian was preforming in little jazz bands predating the Stones.. Then in 1962 , Keith & Mick happened upon the Ealing Jazz club where Alexis Korner and blues Inc. were the in house band, Brian Jones was preforming dust my broom on slide guitar which was an amazing feat.. Brian Jones was sensational and Mick & Keith were mesmerized.. Jones wanted his own band of blues cats..
Brian did write, (Ruby Tuesday, etc..(many riffs were his but stolen/credited to Jagger/Richards...it was Brian who taught Keef the open G tuning that became trademark...easy for the public to believe all the fabrications spoon fed tot hem by a less than truthful Keef/Richards , easy to rob a dead man and rewrite the truth...but many of us know Brian was the magick and always will be.
+Jorge simoes Nuno WRONG! Many songwriters (Brian Jones, Mick Taylor and Billy Preston beetween them) wrote songs for the Rolling stones, in exchange for a very pretty big payment they don´t figure in the credits. Just take a look how many albums the Rolling stones did with Brian and how many they did in the same amount of years after Brian´s death. They did so many albums with Brian because he wrote the songs for them. When Mick did things alone he made pure shit!
There is the music for a movie, written by Brian Jones, he also recorded some songs with Jimi Hendrix (until today this records are lost). But ok, I´ll stop here. Don´t make my life depend on it.
Fools that gave Thumbs down are extremely ignorant. Don't focus on the visual glitch yet the beauty of the heart of just touches of stories of clips of the Rolling Stones. RIP Charlie and Brain. Thankful Rolling Stones keep pushing on... Rock N'Roll, Rhythm Blues and often a touch of jazz too.
I see "Between the Buttons" as a transitional album. It was very striking when it came out, and it was clear that they were moving in another direction (along with many other bands at the time).
the British Version is a Phenomenal Album, ït is very transitional and give s us a glimmer of how Mick and Keefe could hold up a tune, Connection is my Ãll time favorite Stones song, jùs såyîn ¡😎🥚😎¡
When I was about 14, I was on a bus singing "Satisfaction" out loud, but not too loud. I remember catching a glimpse of this older guy looking at me. I wanna thank that guy for not yelling at me to "Shut The Fuck Up!!" I would have been crushed. 🙃
Hey people nobody has that raw rock and roll sound like the stones do. I ve seen them live many times. Man they are the ultimate high brothers and sisters.
i love them all and every iteration of the band. RIP Charlie. The heart and soul of the band. Keef's other drummer from the Wino's is doing quite nicely but he lacks being Charlie. RIP Brian and thank you Mick Taylor.
There's a whole lot of stuff that marks the end of 60s. The biggest in music was the last Beatles album and them breaking up .world is still talking about it 50years later,I DON'T hear anything about stones at all in that context,yeah they marked the end of an Era by some getting killed at a concert.If you know history of music Tyey didn't hire stones for Woodstock because of Street fighting man being released, they didn't want a riot that did happen at that concert Atlanta I guess.someone was killed going to a rock concert..First stones record was Lennon McCartney written. They also learned to write through Lennon McCartney.,Jagger has said so himself.Jagger and Richard's are no Lennon And M cCartney.But then nobody is ,they are hands down the most successful musicians of all time,especially in song writing department.i think yesterday and Something are now out doing White Chrismas S, most recorded song
It's probably well known by now that, early on in the Stones' career, Brian considered replacing Mick with Paul Pond, who adopted Brian's surname and became Manfred Mann's lead singer as Paul Jones. Although technically a better singer, he didn't have Mick's charisma and wouldn't have written the songs Mick and Keith wrote. Still, the Stones definitely lost something when they lost Brian. Consider, for instance, Brian's moody, atmospheric arrangement of "Play With Fire," the tape of which he handed Chrissie Shrimpton for submission when she'd been told by Mick and Keith to submit the more typically rock 'n' roll version "Mess With FIre." Rest in peace, Brian.
In over 40 years as a Stones fan, I’ve never heard that Brian handed Play with Fire to Jagger’s girlfriend Chrissie Shrimpton to submit it AND that they had called it “Mess with Fire”? Who says that?! The cliche phrase has always been “Don’t play with Fire” long before the Stones were born. What a load of nonsense. Where did you pull that from? Keith had dabbled with Spanish and Baroque classical style finger picking long before he met Brian Jones. I’m not anti-Brian Jone but you Jones fans come up with a lot of shite. Give him credit for what he did do and get over trying to give him all the credit which he doesn’t deserve. Sure he may have been treated somewhat unfairly but he dished it out too.
The atmosphere of the arrangement had more to do with the production by Phil Spector and Jack Nitzsche than anything to do with Brian Jones since Brian isn't even on the recording. Here is the documentation of the recording session at RCA in Hollywood. "The song was recorded late one night in January 1965 while the Stones were in Los Angeles recording with Phil Spector at the RCA Studios. Richards performed the song's acoustic guitar opening while Jagger handled vocals and tambourine (enhanced using an echo chamber). Spector played bass, and Jack Nitzsche provided the song's distinctive harpsichord arrangement and tamtams."
Greg Gomberg Thank you for the refresher, I do remember reading that at some point. Either way without diminishing Brian’s actual contributions he didn’t do as much as much as so many falsely claim. What’s so strange about it is that the song doesn’t sound like it could have been recorded in Hollywood, not even in January. It’s such a drizzly English rainy day sounding song.
Brian was great no doubt. Mick Taylor was incredible and gave them their greatest rock n roll band in the world belt. After Taylor they became a greatest hits review. nuff said.
Not even close. Vibe worse tracks on the Taylor years albums are significantly better than the songs you mention. Beggars is the best of non mick but it's a much more simplistic style with less need for Taylor like riffs but you still have some terrific jones slide guitar parts that he put together when he was semi aware and capable.
" LONG LIVE THE BEATLES, STONES AND ALL THE GREAT BANDS FROM ENGLAND AND THE U.S.A...............MOTOWN.............. AND ALL THE OTHER BANDS, BIG OR SMALL THAT GAVE OUR GENERATION ONE HECK OF A RIDE WITH THEIR MUSIC."............... WE NEEDED IT, IT WAS LIKE WAKING UP THE DEATH AND MAKING US COME TOGETHER AND START DANCING IN THE STREET............... IT WAS A VERY, VERY CREATIVE TIME FOR TAKING " ROCK & ROLL " TO A NEW AND HIGHER LEVEL................................. IT WAS A TIME FOR THE ARTIST TO BE FREE TO EXPERIMENT, AND CREATE NEW SOUNDS AND TRENDS WITHOUT RESTRICTIONS OR RULES.
@@rj-ps8hy Agree. Cameramen fixated only on Jagger. Very little live footage of other band members. Ladies & Gentlemen... (Film of the Exile tour) was even worse 🤬
@@michaeloleary5208 I saw them in Brussel and it was really over Get Yer Yas Yas, Taylor was since 3 years with the Stones and much more musicaly involved on live concerts.
@@matthewcrich5951 I hear there is hundreds of hrs of reel left over from gimme shelter doc from the maysle brothers,I would love too see more of their 69 live shows besides MSG and altamont,although I think it be great too watch brown sugar played 1st time that nite,2 yrs before the record release
Satanic Majesties is a vastly underrated album. Yeah, I could do without all the free-form jamming that takes up too much space; but this alum also had "Citadel," "2000 Light Years From Home," and many more that were absolutely perfect. "Performance" was a fantastic film, I never tire of seeing it again. It (and the song "Memo From Turner") were the best things Jagger ever did, IMHO. When he first saw the script, he's reportedly said to Anita "I can't do this, it's not me," to which she replied: "Of course it isn't, it's Brian." "Rock n Roll Circus" also had Jethro Tull -- who also wiped out the Stones. And it's not that the Stones' performance was bad, it wasn't; but there were others there that were just ... more impressive, and that's precisely why Jagger sat on it. Brian was murdered, as we all know. Don't believe a word Keylock says; he was persoally involved. See "Case Closed: The Murder of Brian Jones," a transcript of a psychic communication. If you sneer at such things, well then of course, don't bother. Otherwise, check it out.
Tbh I hated the Jethro Tull performance it just made sick. The Who appearance though was great and actually more impressive. Where can I watch the movie "Performance" safely? Also can you send me a link about the Jone's murder documentary
7:42 - the Stones were actually writing clever songs about English society like Play With Fire in '65 before the Kinks started doing it with Well-Respected Man, Dedicated Follower of Fashion, etc.
Rolling Ormond Yeah I was thinking the same thing. There's a shit load of great mid 60's Stones English pop songs starting with The Last time, Satisfaction isn't blues at all. Mother's little helper, Play with fire, paint it Black, Have you seen your mother baby, 19th nervous breakdown, Get off my cloud, ruby Tuesday, lady jane and those are just the hits during those "phase 2 years".
***** Of course everyone has to disregard this era and scream "Mick Taylor the best years' over and over, but the mid-sixties had some very sharp, durable songs, better than the Taylor years to be honest, no matter how complex the guitar solos.
Rolling Ormond I'm a fan of all the eras really, (yes even Emotional Rescue, fun album, Tatoo You and Undercover as well. As a kid looking at the pictures in the books as well as listening to the change in their sound, it always amazed me how quickly and radically those times changed for everyone by the end of the 60's and as great as they were from the start by the end of that era they really did break in to a whole another sound starting with Jumping jack Flash. What set them apart from great bands like Cream and later Zeppelin was their groove, it was heavy but always something to move to, of course they had to keep Mick shaking and a moving.
2,000 Light Years From Home beats anything on Sgt. Pepper for me by a mile, it's stood the test of time and was one of the first futuristic records, Brian Jones creativity at its' genius best. If Jones had sorted himself out and lived, he didn't need the Stones, in a sense he'd outgrown them and I think he would have done interesting relevant stuff in the 1970s probably in collaboration with others and been a thorn in Jagger/Richards side.
Funny that at 55:40 Keith gives that heroine addict evasive, empty eyed look when he says that there is that person who everyone just knows is not going to live a long life. Everyone has been thinking that for the past 50 years about Keith, but he's still here. Keith is amazing.
@@lyricberlin I doubt he is now anyway. No reason for it. Also no idea what you're talking about but I'm sure it was over a decade ago, and the human body sheds it's skin completely every 7 years (not to mention the blood transfusions)
Fucking old commies talking about "racisism". First thing the blacks did after we were given The Civil Rights Act was burn down Detroit. The hippies couldn't have been happier.
Lots of opinions from old men who lived vicariously through these great bands and most of us probably disagree with a lot being said but we can agree The Stones were number 2 in impact and influence behind The Beatles in the 60s.
I don’t know... they’re definitely up there, but I’ve always thought The Velvet Underground was the 2nd most influential group of the 60s. It’s close, maybe too close to call. Plus, you can’t really quantify something like that, being honest. They’re all way up there, but I definitely agree the Beatles were #1, definitely THE most influential.
@@nikolademitri731 Velvet Underground helped by Warhol were the 3rd branch to the rock tree. From the US east coast there we got The Stooges and Iggy Pop,Lou Reed ,the reinvented Bowie and the glam movement all the way to the shoe gazers.
I love you guys - The Beatles, The Stones - there's no basis for comparison and is just something that someone started, probably Andrew Loog Oldham, to generate ink and album sales. The Stones are a blues-based rock and roll band that grew out of the London blues scene led by guys like Cyril Davies and Alexis Korner. The Stones are deeply steeped in the blues and in a country-western blues tradition (read Nankering With The Stones by James Phelge) - The Beatles are a Liverpool rock and roll covers-band with country-western, blues, rock n' roll, movie and show tunes, English music hall, and English folk influences - which included the collaborative talents of all four members, especially the internal songwriting axis of Lennon and McCartney. The Beatles always wrote a fair share of their own recorded material and, with the soundtrack of A Hard Day's Night (UK version), were one of the first, if not the first, British bands to release an album consisting entirely of their own written material. Loog had to lock Jagger and Richards in a kitchen to get them to start writing their own material and it took them a while to come up with something suitable for The Stones to record - - though some of their early efforts -- That Girl Belongs To Yesterday, It Should Be You - - were recorded by other artists. The Beatles career really started in '59 when George Harrison joined McCartney and Lennon. While The Stones really gelled in the winter of 1963, by which time the Beatles were well on their way to international prominence. The one area where they do share commonalities is the three-way tension of of their frontline - Jagger, Richards, Jones - McCartney, Harrison, Lennon and their "drummer" issues - Ringo joined The Beatles just before their first official recording date - which resulted in the single "Love Me Do". Charlie was in a few other bands besides the Stones before committing to his rhythmic role in The Stones. If we are going to be making these silly comparisons at least some basis in reality would help. The Beatles are in the same musical boat as Gerry & The Pacemakers, The Searchers, Billy J Kramer and the Dakotas - - other Liverpool bands. The Stones, in contrast, are part of a London legacy of blues and rock and roll that put the boot in the "trad-jazz" scene of the London nightlife at the time and includes Korner, Davies, The Yardbirds, The Kinks, The Who for a start. The Beatles from the beginning of their official recording career to the end (with a few bumps toward the end of the road) kept the same core musical personnel and producer. The Stones, not so much - with various producers and band members coming and going. The only real point of comparison between The Beatles and The Rolling Stones is their vast success outside of England - - and there are those who question whether Liverpool is really part of England. Love all the people.
Elegantly put, Mabusha Masekela. The only thing I would add is that The Beatles are, truly, a pop band. The Stones were never really out to make friends and considered the 'pop' bit of it as a lark.
I loved the stones ♥️ 🎉, and I'm always going to be a stones fan till the day I die🎉🎉.I'm strictly a stone's fan they are and always be 2nd to none 62yrs is freaking proof of that 🎉🎉
😂 Keith didn’t even attend his Mum and Dads funerals he don’t believe in them. He don’t believe in that way of saying goodbye so why the hell would he go to Brian’s funeral when he wasn’t even that close to him and didn’t even like him that much and neither did Mick. And Mick couldn’t go coz he was busy and it would of been a media circus, but really they had no need to go as they weren’t that good friends with him . Would you go to funerals of ex workmates when they weren’t a nice person? No one liked Brian not even his own family liked him. He had no one at the end , he was a bad person and got killed for it. You should never hit women and he got what he deserved and good riddance to rubbish! The world is a better place without some people in it dragging it down.
Would have liked to hear a version with Jones as a major player.It's similar to Keith Levene getting bumped out of the early Clash, or losing Barrett in Pink Floyd; they were the ones with the groundbreaking ideas.To my mind, the loss of Barrett was deadly to PF, though I'm well aware many would argue that.
After Brian. The band lost it's shine & that off key sensitivity which was their trade mark. Not taking away anything from Mick Taylor, the band took on a hard raunchy biker image for the longest time. No comment regarding Ronnie Wood, except he brought them back to their original roots for a spell. Still it was Brian who was the special one who tagged the band.
Scott Pepper As long as Jagger is alive they've not lost their shine. Not the best singer, not the best dancer but the greatest frontman of any rock band.
Scott Pepper I'm a huge Brian Jones fan & totally agree with you. Have you checked the music he made in Morroco? Awesome stuff. His innovation is sorely missed by the stones. He played so many instruments it's no joke. He was a true multi-instrumentalist
+dimethaltryptamine1 A "deathbed confession" to murder or any confession to murder in the US at least is not taken as guilt. A trial will still be held and evidence must exist other than just a confession. Unless you were joking about the gardener then Jones' death would stand as before which I believe was ruled "death by misadventure". Murder would only be a layman's opinion and have no weight at all outside of gossip magazine readership. One's death in a bed seems to have a commonality that is uncommon, that is the imagery of it anyway. Reality has another surprise for those who have never witnessed death.
I became a Stones fan with Jumping Jack Flash and Beggar' s Banquet. Their popsong era never left a big impression on me. From 68 to 73 they were on their top level. Songs for centuries.
musically, I always liked best the stones period between let it bleed and exile on main street. the addition of bobby keys on sax and nicky Hopkins on piano really added flavor to the stones" sound. after this period stones kinda went downhill which can be said of any band that's been around as long as them. but that period was, I think, their best!
Did this video stop twice while the audio played for anyone else? I have Premium, cleared my memory, etc - still about 5m wasted in the middle and at the very end. Baby Brian... many ppl still say the Glimmer Twins killed him by stealing from him and using him/ making fun of him. I think that's evident here as well. So sad. Pissed me off for years but I still love the guys. Dichotomy?
James Boyales, read Brian Jones The making of the RollingStones, all the research in this Brian Jones bio is based on people who knew the Stones on a personal level, Marianne Faithful stated in her own bio that Ruby Tuesday belonged to Brian, she was there in the studio. Remember Marianne Faithful was Mick Jagger's girlfriend from 1966 - '69. You heard them commenting about Bill Wyman being responsible for writting Jumping Jack Flash. Mick and Keith were known to steal other people's work. Did you watch this Documentary?? Ruby Tuesday was a ballad based on an Elizabethan story and a blues # by Skip Johnson. Etheleal , very British, an 18th century story of royalty with a counter culture vibe of the mid 1960's..
Though the book may say one thing we need Brian Jones here to speak up for himself. Unfortunately, he can't make an appearance to defend himself. Perhaps Bill Wyman and Maryanne Faithful would be wise to come forward on their own and produce a Documentary special. RIP Brian Jones. You are missed but never forgotten.
There is a rumor that when the RS recorded at Muscle Shoals that Ry Cooder taught them guitar tunings and Honky Tonk Woman was ripped off. I don’t know if this is true but I wouldn’t doubt it. Anybody know about this?
Not only Ruby Tuesday but it was Brian that came up with the riff for satisfaction. Not keith's fake story of waking up and forgetting he recorded it. Or whatever his story is these days.
Loved this movie.... and it made it clear. You can argue all you want, and wonder what they said to Jimi...or who made the band, critique, others, compain about the video quality.the hypocrisy, but remember, "after all it was you and me". Brian, Jimi, Janis are not victims of rock, or fame, or the drug culture. It is beyond me to speculate the reasons for their early demise, or attribute it to any social or psychological cause.
I see quite a few comments here saying Brian Jones couldnt/ didn't write songs. So here is an excerpt from Paul Trynkas book" Sympathy for the Devil, from Stan Blackbourne,the Stones accountant from 1965,regarding Ruby Tuesday,Paint It,Black & Under my Thumb. " I used to say to Brian "What on earth are you doing? You write some of these songs and you give the name over as if Mick Jagger has done it. Do you understand,you're giving 'em thousands of pounds!" All the time I used to tell him" You're writing a blank cheque!" In my opinion,Stan Blackbourne really sums the whole thing up,they stole everything from him. No Jones,no Stones.
exactly...the glimmer twins are vile people to me.... thiefs liars and bullies the way they treated Brian and Taylor as well ...have lost all respect for the pair
Ry Cooder has also accused Keith of plagiarism, having been invited to contribute to some Sticky Fingers "rehearsals," then excused and told he'd be called for the recording sessions. Returning to the studio later that evening, he reports finding the Stones recording with Keith copying all of his "rehearsal" guitar work. Having some experience in the lower end of the entertainment media, I've encountered too many examples of such petty "backstabbing" behavior on the part of "successful" artists, not to mention the companies. It's demoralizing to find out that people I've admired for their creative abilities are frequently lacking in basic moral character.
But they sure as shit took it all from Richard Ashcroft, and for what, using a reverse of a sample from a symphonic remix or alt-mix of one of their songs for “Bittersweet Symphony”, and that was a massive hit for The Verve, their first truly big break, and they took every penny for that sample, and now have FULL credit for the entire song, so The Verve never had a single penny on it since then. I absolutely love their music, I think they’re geniuses in various ways, but you’re correct, they are very greedy.
@G*man Well if you look closely you can see their 'knack' seems to have ran out decades ago. Some of those great songs were stolen from various members- Brian, Mick Taylor or whoever else they collaborated with...
It's one of many. Personally I rate "I Wanna Be Your Dog" considerably higher than Flash, and, frankly, the older I get the more laughable Mick's cod-American accent becomes.
Wow a lot of really old men who’s talking about how much better Stones were when they were young!! I think it’s hard to listen to them before 68 cause they could hardly play!
First Rolling Stones album and decembers children has Brian on the cover giving the lion's paw which is a Masonic hand signal, he wasn't as innocent as his fans seem to think.
Rolling Stones & the Beatles,once said you can like both but only truly love one. I really like & respect the Beatles, but the Stones are my passion! The Zones have that angst & raw sexuality that the Beatles never had.
The Stones never asked Angel's security they were not involved in Altamont organisation, Grace Slick said that they used to have them in San Fransico concert without troubles. And Stones have already composed Gimmie Shelter where you can hear the end of the flower power, they were just ahead.
Oakland Chapter. Drug fiends and ex-cons, not like the SF angels the Dead experienced, who generally liked freaks. Not the fascist boys in Oakland, who turned up at Altamont. The Dead abandoned the gig and left the Stones high and dry.
I love Brain Jones, but I’m sorry, “Let It Bleed”, is their best. It’s a perfect album. Edit: I should also add, “Beggars Banquet”, is also a perfect album imo. If someone said rate them 1-10, I’d give them both a solid 10. I just think, “Let It Bleed”, juuuusssttt slightly edges it out for my #1, but Beggars is a close #2... either way, I believe Brian, unfortunately, had very little input on these albums, no? I think what he does contribute is great, it’s just a shame he couldn’t hold it together and contribute more.
Celtic Jay I’m a monkey man! I thought I replied to you with this already, but after I edited my initial comment, it’s not showing me ever replying to you. Idk, maybe you can see my acknowledgment of your comment, maybe not. UA-cam is dumb like that.
Celtic Jay I though Sympathy For The Devil was the opener, and No Expectations was the second track, no? Or do you have a UK or some other versions that are different? I know they did that with their early albums, idk but I’ve been on a big Stones kick lately, so I literally just listened to that album in full like 2-3 days ago, and on mine No Expectations is track #2. Anyway, yeah, I know Brain plays on that one, and a couple others on Beggars and Let it Bleed. I actually edited my original comment so I wouldn’t confuse people. I just left that comment bc so many ppl in the comments were saying that Brain was the most creative, and their music wasn’t as good after he died, and I was just sharing my opinion, bc I think that’s wrong. Brian’s greatest achievement (imo) was making their album “Aftermath” their first true masterpiece, and he’s definitely responsible for the most interesting parts of Between the Buttons, and Satanic Majesties, so I highly value his contributions and the fact that he basically started the band, and highly influence their direction, but unfortunately I think he didn’t contribute as much as he could/should have to their two best albums, the last two that he was there for... Still, No Expectations is brilliant, and I love his guitar so much on that track. Actually, that’s one of my favorite Stones songs. It reminds me of being in college, just getting over a lot of death and my first true love breaking up with me. That’s when I first fell in love with Beggars and Bleed, and really that’s when I went from just listening to 40 Licks and the other compilation albums of theirs, and started actually exploring their studio albums, and those two albums specifically were like therapy to me, and now when I listen to No Expectations it’s pretty fucking heavy, brings me back to a very beautiful, but bittersweet time in my 20s that I’ll never forget. Anyway, I’m getting way too personal and rambling way too much. I don’t blame you if you don’t read all this crap, but thanks for the conversation. We Stones fans got to stick together, yeah, and we all should be sticking together period! Much love, dude. 🙏✌️
Brian was everything creative, beautiful, and the soul of the stones. After him they were just a rock and roll band. Nothing innovative, nothing ethereal. They lost their beauty.
Brussel Affairs 1973 Best live ever - Besides "Get your yaya's out" and there's one of the earliest bootleg recording from Perth in 1965 Australia -the greatness in the documentary of the super speed in the concerts from those days- It sounded more like "hit and run" performance a shock wave effect.
I love 2 guitarist Jimmy page and Keith Richards and I will tell you, that life can't b easy, I am just glad to b able to sit and listen to them both speak as older gentlemen as they fought the battle and won the war , excellent documentary.
+peter mills Thanks. Hey you ought to watch (if you haven't already) the Ginger Baker documentary , "Beware of Mr. Baker." It's from 2012 and I gave it a ten star rating on IMDB.
In my opinion not enough people 'GET' the Stones. They are the greatest authentic interpretation of the American Blues Rock sound. There's nothing nice about the blues, or Rock n Roll it's a vibe and an energy, that doesn't go into the studio to please people. To get on the radio. That isn't them. Like Dylan, and many of the greats, they do what their souls tell them too. If it sells it sells. They aren't here to win friends. They are here to do what they do. They took the American sound, and mixed it up with a classic education, a diet of good books, and also class A and sour mash bourbon. This really happened, in '68 with Beggars Banquet... Before that, they were chasing the Beatles... and The Kinks with Between The Buttons.
I've been studying and reading about and listening to the Stones since the late 70's. They're my favorite band. This documentary is pretty damned good. Stop critiquing, and just listen for a minute. The film teaches us a great deal, and has good insights. Thanks for sharing it! We!want!the Stones!
agree, what the f did these idiots ever write or record lol
If you want some truly great docs on the Stones check out this guy's stones documentaries playlist. Just scroll down to your right. Unbelievable.
ua-cam.com/video/sWFsputO3Hg/v-deo.html
Had this vid in my library for years .Brought out this A.M. to watch the guys I grew up with and fortunately still breathing the same air with. They’ll always be an ONLY. Rocky
RIP
CHARLIE WATTS
AUGUSTS 24 2021
THANK YOU FOR 58 YEARS OF GREAT MUSIC!
🎶🥁🎶
Overrated drumer.
@@experience5988 blind , deaf , , and D U M B continue to critic great art.
The more you review his life the more you see the Apex of what a civilized man can be.
Btw- speaking of the blind, the deaf and the dumbass.
Anyone who poo poos ivermectin is an enemy of God and humanity and should be shunned and avoided until such time as they can be arrested and prosecuted for murder or murder by subrosa.
Copy , paste and spread the word , we're taking back our planet from the evil fox's.
A shin kicking good time is guaranteed for all.
Do it for Charlie!
@@aaronsmith5433 Great art? Oh, God, really? I was raised on Mahler, Wagner and Beethoven, and you want to teach me what great art is. And, secondly. Learn how to properly write and how to use commas.
@@experience5988 Bull sh*t bud! Fick das! Go away u ain’t no fan 🤬🤮👎😜
RIP BRIAN JONES
Back when the Stones were cool and sounded it. I liked Mick Taylor but it’s the songs from Brian’s time that I’ll always remember most fondly.
I agree
Absolutely!
Me too, jus sàyin ¡😎¡
Mick Taylor and Nicky Hopkins.
Throw in Jones and you can define this group by who it left out! Still, they did have more staying power than any of us could have imagined.
With Brian it was musicality & creativity
With Taylor it was power & finesse
With Woods it was money &
more money ...lol.
Swagger. Thats the word. They have amazing endless Swagger. RIP Charlie. Wow love you Stones, so glad that I got to see you live. The show was amazing. Even my father was prattling on about these old boys should give it up when they were just early 40's lol. Amazing, wonderful..
3 great pieces of music shaped the late 60's for me and others...
"Light My Fire" the Doors.
"Like a Rolling Stone" Bob Dylan.
"I Can't Get No Satisfaction" the Rolling Stones.
light my fire did it for me as well
All these talents has you gave mentioned, are my backbone to life.
Purple Haze...
Plus so many others !!😂
Can you pretend to sum the 60's with those 3 ?? be serious!! and by the way "like a rolling stone is from 65 , the very half of 60's..
Sorry I don't want to make fun about your ranking but it's just impossible to take only those 3 , although I like madly 2 of them ..
@@aryalogo6624 Light My Fire trigger the transition from AM to FM because AM played only the short version
I was there , 3 rd row WOW . First concert, then I went to Central Park to see The Jefferson Airplane ,front row, went back stage and interviewed Grace Slick. Those were the days my friend, we thought they would never end.
We were at that age... The age where you see a film over and over again... To this day, "Performance" holds up...
I was afraid of the Stones when they came out,and Mom would call the parents of friends and tell them I wouldn't come over if they were played. I was 7 years old. The Beatles were a mania and I really believe they did everything to please my age group. Nice music for an innocent boy ,but not for a boy in adolescence and who was first inspired by James Brown. The brothers of friends weren't happy about me stopping them playing the Stones,but did their best to change my interests in music . The breaker was when a friend gave me an LP by the Stones. It was the Hex LP . I liked many of the songs other than ": Let's spend the night together" I was young and thought why do a song about staying up all night and eating popcorn and watching movies ❓ I was at about 14 when my mom opened the door of my room while I was playing "'Lets spent the night together" and said " I don't see ever want to ever hear that song when company is over" ❗ I said " Why "❓She said " It's a song about staying up all night and having sex with a girl " ❗ Thanks mom ,and now it immediately became my favorite song and most of my Beatles LPs moved to the bottom shelf .🤪😜❗
Very interesting. How to make a child like something.
🤣🤣
Thank you for focusing on those two years. I was born too late to be part of that. The thing for me is they came out of that. With the most important rock‘n‘roll record ever. EXILE ON MAIN STREAT.
They were Brian's blues band. He added an ethereal quality to them later that kept them up with the sound of the time.
He was a brilliant musician that got sucked into the vortex of drugs fame, and darkness, with a questionable death.
Mick Taylor made them rock your socks off.
I read an interview in a guitar magazine recently where Keith Richards said " ...I miss his tone..,"
So do we.
I love Ronnie Wood. He IS a Stone.
But " Let it Bleed " through " Exile " was their zenith. There were some great tunes and hits afterward. But
" Sticky Fingers " grabs your head by the ears, and makes you listen, and want to listen again.
I still am.
Well said but respectfully I have to say there’s a huge amount of lack of respect for Mick and Keith’s work on Let it Bleed which is arguably the greatest Stones if not rock record of all time and no Jones or Taylor. Many people say Brian Jones was the Stones or that Mick Taylor was responsible for their peak period. (They may not have been given enough credit by Mick and Keith but you really have to question how much they deserved considering what Mick and Keith could deliver! Let It Bleed was during the transitional period without either Jones or Taylor which produced Gimme Shelter, Midnight Rambler, Monkey Man, You can’t always get what you want, etc... all guitars were by Keith and Jagger did some of the greatest harp ever played on a rock record. Hats off to producer Jimmy Miller, pianist Nicky Hopkins and saxophone by Bobby Keys. Yet there’s no doubt the prior Beggars Banquet again Jagger/Richards were just starting to peak while Brian faded and Mick Taylor wasn’t yet there. Then of course Sticky Fingers is as good as it gets, while Exile was a great record they retreated creatively. Great songs but no 2000 light years, Sympathy for the devil, Jumping Jack Flash, Street Fighting Man, Monkey Man, Gimme Shelter. However the early 70’s were going retro with laid back country, blues, straight forward rock n roll.
I disagree with nothing you stated.
Brian was sadly toast by late '68' and Jagger/Richards picked up the flag in ' 65 ' for songwriting ( which was where the money wss (( and still is )) and continue to carry it, even if they hobble around while doing so.
We all have our favorites.
Mine are Beggars-Exile era.
My comment failed to clarify that it was Mick Taylor's tone that Keef missed.
But Sticky Fingers was, and still is an incredible album. Brian helped keep them musically relevant through ' 69 ' with his musicianship on various instruments.
Some people like to argue what was " their best album. " I just say " favorites ".
Their best album may be their next one.
Agreed. No problem.
@@drvee1983 Exactly how any discussion about something subjective like music should go. Yet we both know the basic facts. I’d say that it is the opinion of most rock n roll especially Stones fans to say the Beggars through Exile period was the best and it was again mostly driven by Jagger/Richards through the transitional period which would have broken most bands if it wasn’t for the super team who had been leading all along. Jones has his place as does Taylor but it’s the best band mostly thanks to Mick and Keith. It wouldn’t have been the same class act without Charlie’s drumming style nor Bill. They were not only musically important but their down to earth personalities probably were a big help in keeping Mick and Keith grounded as well.
@Jimmy Hardhat That’s what I’m saying.
The Stones are the essence of rock and roll. The embodiment of the craft at its biggest, loudest, sleaziest, regal and elegantly wasted best.
And the hell's angels were good at bashing heads.
@@DAVEBROWNE2004 I'm just curious as to WHY The Grateful Dead recommended the Hell's Angels to Mick Jagger in the first place. Surely they must have known how violent and murderous they were, at least that's what I would think.
Idk, I did hear that Mick was interested in saving money for the event. I watched a good documentary about it a few years ago.
I read the San Francisco angles were very diff to the chapter of angles they ended up with...
We loved the fact that the Stones sounded raw. We didn't want things to be too polished. We didn't have fancy foot pedals and distortion makers, we just cranked the amps and guitars up the best we could to get good tones. We loved the blues, too, at least where I was in Ohio. IMO, the best albums were, "Beggars Banquet," "Let It Bleed," and the one with "Brown Sugar" and "Gimme Shelter" on it. I saw them back in the day and they packed the entire "Rubber Bowl" in Akron, Ohio. Keith Richards says, "I never had a problem with drugs, I had a lot of problems with police." My personal all-time Stones song is, "Street Fighting Man," because at the time the record was released, we really were fighting and marching in the streets, so it became sort of the national anthem of the protesters.
Brown Sugar and Gimme Shelter are on different albums.
John, you are speaking of the album’s produced by Jimmy Miller. He even played drums and percussion on some tracks. Mick Taylor played on releases Let it Bleed through It’s only R&R
You mean Fingers Bleed? Or was it Let It Sticky?
Um, jumping from Satisfaction to Ruby Tuesday leaves out a huge swathe of brilliant Jones-era Stones singles.
Brian Jones epitomizes that dark mysterious energy I associate with the late 60s which as a very small child just becoming conscious I felt and remember more than what was happening on the surface. The post-Jones Stones always seemed like a business, the beginning of that cold distant detached corporate mentality to rock that took hold in the 70s and despite punk pricking it's pretentious bubble reinforced itself in the 80s to the point where creativity was killed at birth in any act and anyone unfortunate enough to have it like Kurt Cobain was crushed in the corporate beast's machinery and spat out.
You put that very well. Agree.
Maybe, with Mick Taylor, The Stones had a suberb fine guitarist. Ok. Maybe . Sticky Fingers, is - no doubt about it- a great record. Surely "Exile" is a great "american" album. Without hesitation, The Ron Wood Years, were/are, more or less, a good joke. But, clearly, The Jones Years, were magic. This magic, was lost without him.
Poor baby. You gonna be ok?
@@fernandopaucebey6525 agree
Brian was the heart and soul and everything creative. Once he was gone, the stones never innovated, never were brilliant again.
In the beginning was Brian Jones, the genesis of the Rollingstones, who was a trained musician from his formative years, his parents - Lewis & Louisa Jones were musicians as well.. Louisa was a piano teacher, taught Brian to play at a very young age.. Brian, was plagued with asthma, his parents purchased a wind instrument, clarinette to aid with his lung capacity.. Then a little later on Brian received a guitar as a gift from his parents.. Hence Jones had an edge on his other bandmates.. Brian was preforming in little jazz bands predating the Stones.. Then in 1962 , Keith & Mick happened upon the Ealing Jazz club where Alexis Korner and blues Inc. were the in house band, Brian Jones was preforming dust my broom on slide guitar which was an amazing feat.. Brian Jones was sensational and Mick & Keith were mesmerized.. Jones wanted his own band of blues cats..
no matter how great musician Brian can be, the reality is the soul of the Stones is their songwriters, Jagger & Richards , and this is what counts.
Brian did write, (Ruby Tuesday, etc..(many riffs were his but stolen/credited to Jagger/Richards...it was Brian who taught Keef the open G tuning that became trademark...easy for the public to believe all the fabrications spoon fed tot hem by a less than truthful Keef/Richards , easy to rob a dead man and rewrite the truth...but many of us know Brian was the magick and always will be.
and that's magick with a K ;-)
+Jorge simoes Nuno WRONG! Many songwriters (Brian Jones, Mick Taylor and Billy Preston beetween them) wrote songs for the Rolling stones, in exchange for a very pretty big payment they don´t figure in the credits. Just take a look how many albums the Rolling stones did with Brian and how many they did in the same amount of years after Brian´s death. They did so many albums with Brian because he wrote the songs for them. When Mick did things alone he made pure shit!
There is the music for a movie, written by Brian Jones, he also recorded some songs with Jimi Hendrix (until today this records are lost). But ok, I´ll stop here. Don´t make my life depend on it.
Gimmie shelter gives me goosebumps every time I hear it
Fools that gave Thumbs down are extremely ignorant. Don't focus on the visual glitch yet the beauty of the heart of just touches of stories of clips of the Rolling Stones.
RIP Charlie and Brain. Thankful Rolling Stones keep pushing on... Rock N'Roll, Rhythm Blues and often a touch of jazz too.
Interviewees should start their own band and then have the Stones analyze their performance.
I see "Between the Buttons" as a transitional album. It was very striking when it came out, and it was clear that they were moving in another direction (along with many other bands at the time).
Such an interesting listen.
The production lacks a bit, but the material and approach are very good.
Def prefer the English version.
the British Version is a Phenomenal Album, ït is very transitional and give s us a glimmer of how Mick and Keefe could hold up a tune, Connection is my Ãll time favorite Stones song, jùs såyîn ¡😎🥚😎¡
I agree. Also, Beggars Banquet was a hard act to follow.
When I was about 14, I was on a bus singing "Satisfaction" out loud, but not too loud. I remember catching a glimpse of this older guy looking at me. I wanna thank that guy for not yelling at me to "Shut The Fuck Up!!" I would have been crushed. 🙃
It a critical account of the stones history thru the 60's. I love this documentary.
GIMMIE SHELTER IS A MASTERPIECE!
Aretha Franklin didn't put her voice on shit recordings.
@@williamblair9597 Merry Clayton did though.....
from beggars banquet
maybe their best album
they were competting then with led zepplin
Hey people nobody has that raw rock and roll sound like the stones do. I ve seen them live many times. Man they are the ultimate high brothers and sisters.
It was a very sad day when they found Brian that day. Lots of media coverage . I was 14 at the time
It was bloody abysmal
Yes, the foundations of the cosmos was rocked... (rolling eyes...)...
He’s in the 27 club poor Brian
Murdered
Jeffrey Lorien was he? I’ve heard this before, is there good evidence?
THE STONES SAVED MY LIFE IN SO MANY WAYS, THANK U GUYS.. 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏❤❤😂❤😂
i love them all and every iteration of the band. RIP Charlie. The heart and soul of the band. Keef's other drummer from the Wino's is doing quite nicely but he lacks being Charlie. RIP Brian and thank you Mick Taylor.
Very well said
Gimme shelter marks the end of the 60s. Add that haunting bass and micks harp... just wow
My favorite song by The Rolling Stones.
There's a whole lot of stuff that marks the end of 60s. The biggest in music was the last Beatles album and them breaking up .world is still talking about it 50years later,I DON'T hear anything about stones at all in that context,yeah they marked the end of an Era by some getting killed at a concert.If you know history of music Tyey didn't hire stones for Woodstock because of Street fighting man being released, they didn't want a riot that did happen at that concert Atlanta I guess.someone was killed going to a rock concert..First stones record was Lennon McCartney written. They also learned to write through Lennon McCartney.,Jagger has said so himself.Jagger and Richard's are no Lennon And M
cCartney.But then nobody is ,they are hands down the most successful musicians of all time,especially in song writing department.i think yesterday and Something are now out doing White Chrismas S, most recorded song
Sympathy for the devil marks end of sweet 60's
That is your opinion... Both bands are Iconic and remembered that way!
The best music of The Rolling Stones is when they played/ wrote music true to their early influences
Surprisingly, my 92 year old grandmother loved Rolling Scones……..
Amazing how Rolling Stone Magazine just loves the Stones. They weren't too happy with many of their albums if you go back and read the reviews.
Rolling Stone writers radiate a extreme leftist snobbishness when in reality they are establishment sell-outs.
God bless Merry Clayton. She is so amazing.
Right-did you see “20 Feet From Stardom?” Merry is featured quite prominently-and well she should be.
Let it bleed, Beggarts Banquet and Sticky Fingers are the best
Christien Gagnier exile and goats head soup
I agree, those are the three.
Exile on Main Street
@@gregoryswift9573 weren't them 5 all #1?
Tattoo You 🤟
The 80's😎
the irony of Keith saying that there are people you know that will never be 70 years old.he will turn 77 this month.
He wasn't talking about himself!
It's probably well known by now that, early on in the Stones' career, Brian considered replacing Mick with Paul Pond, who adopted Brian's surname and became Manfred Mann's lead singer as Paul Jones. Although technically a better singer, he didn't have Mick's charisma and wouldn't have written the songs Mick and Keith wrote. Still, the Stones definitely lost something when they lost Brian. Consider, for instance, Brian's moody, atmospheric arrangement of "Play With Fire," the tape of which he handed Chrissie Shrimpton for submission when she'd been told by Mick and Keith to submit the more typically rock 'n' roll version "Mess With FIre." Rest in peace, Brian.
In over 40 years as a Stones fan, I’ve never heard that Brian handed Play with Fire to Jagger’s girlfriend Chrissie Shrimpton to submit it AND that they had called it “Mess with Fire”? Who says that?! The cliche phrase has always been “Don’t play with Fire” long before the Stones were born. What a load of nonsense. Where did you pull that from?
Keith had dabbled with Spanish and Baroque classical style finger picking long before he met Brian Jones. I’m not anti-Brian Jone but you Jones fans come up with a lot of shite. Give him credit for what he did do and get over trying to give him all the credit which he doesn’t deserve. Sure he may have been treated somewhat unfairly but he dished it out too.
The atmosphere of the arrangement had more to do with the production by Phil Spector and Jack Nitzsche than anything to do with Brian Jones since Brian isn't even on the recording. Here is the documentation of the recording session at RCA in Hollywood. "The song was recorded late one night in January 1965 while the Stones were in Los Angeles recording with Phil Spector at the RCA Studios. Richards performed the song's acoustic guitar opening while Jagger handled vocals and tambourine (enhanced using an echo chamber). Spector played bass, and Jack Nitzsche provided the song's distinctive harpsichord arrangement and tamtams."
Greg Gomberg Thank you for the refresher, I do remember reading that at some point. Either way without diminishing Brian’s actual contributions he didn’t do as much as much as so many falsely claim.
What’s so strange about it is that the song doesn’t sound like it could have been recorded in Hollywood, not even in January. It’s such a drizzly English rainy day sounding song.
harry Johnson What? You can’t read?
harry Johnson Why? Are you charismatic? F’N moron.
Brian was great no doubt. Mick Taylor was incredible and gave them their greatest rock n roll band in the world belt. After Taylor they became a greatest hits review. nuff said.
+Greg Jay Hardly. Miss You, Beast of Burden, Shattered, Emotional Rescue, Start Me Up, all sleek and modern songs worthy of any during the Taylor era.
Not even close. Vibe worse tracks on the Taylor years albums are significantly better than the songs you mention. Beggars is the best of non mick but it's a much more simplistic style with less need for Taylor like riffs but you still have some terrific jones slide guitar parts that he put together when he was semi aware and capable.
Well said as " nuff said ".
I wish I said it!
@@steveconn I never, ever play these songs.
naw. Ater Brian they never changed, innovated. They lost their soul, beauty, and originality
" LONG LIVE THE BEATLES, STONES AND ALL THE GREAT BANDS FROM ENGLAND AND THE U.S.A...............MOTOWN.............. AND ALL THE OTHER BANDS, BIG OR SMALL THAT GAVE OUR GENERATION ONE HECK OF A RIDE WITH THEIR MUSIC."...............
WE NEEDED IT, IT WAS LIKE WAKING UP THE DEATH AND MAKING US COME TOGETHER AND START DANCING IN THE STREET...............
IT WAS A VERY, VERY CREATIVE TIME FOR TAKING " ROCK & ROLL " TO A NEW AND HIGHER LEVEL.................................
IT WAS A TIME FOR THE ARTIST TO BE FREE TO EXPERIMENT, AND CREATE NEW SOUNDS AND TRENDS WITHOUT RESTRICTIONS OR RULES.
RIP Brian Jones !
my very favourite
Sadly RIP Charlie Watts now too. The 60s were so great except for the Viet Nam war.
best live album, get yer ya ya's out.
Yes, best live LP and worst live video.
@@rj-ps8hy Agree. Cameramen fixated only on Jagger. Very little live footage of other band members. Ladies & Gentlemen... (Film of the Exile tour) was even worse 🤬
Many say Live in Brussels is up there.
@@michaeloleary5208 I saw them in Brussel and it was really over Get Yer Yas Yas, Taylor was since 3 years with the Stones and much more musicaly involved on live concerts.
@@matthewcrich5951 I hear there is hundreds of hrs of reel left over from gimme shelter doc from the maysle brothers,I would love too see more of their 69 live shows besides MSG and altamont,although I think it be great too watch brown sugar played 1st time that nite,2 yrs before the record release
once said, always true ... LONG LIVE TO THE STONES
Satanic Majesties is a vastly underrated album. Yeah, I could do without all the free-form jamming that takes up too much space; but this alum also had "Citadel," "2000 Light Years From Home," and many more that were absolutely perfect. "Performance" was a fantastic film, I never tire of seeing it again. It (and the song "Memo From Turner") were the best things Jagger ever did, IMHO. When he first saw the script, he's reportedly said to Anita "I can't do this, it's not me," to which she replied: "Of course it isn't, it's Brian." "Rock n Roll Circus" also had Jethro Tull -- who also wiped out the Stones. And it's not that the Stones' performance was bad, it wasn't; but there were others there that were just ... more impressive, and that's precisely why Jagger sat on it. Brian was murdered, as we all know. Don't believe a word Keylock says; he was persoally involved. See "Case Closed: The Murder of Brian Jones," a transcript of a psychic communication. If you sneer at such things, well then of course, don't bother. Otherwise, check it out.
@harry Johnson At physics? Gee, that's gonna give ya some problems ...
Tbh I hated the Jethro Tull performance it just made sick. The Who appearance though was great and actually more impressive. Where can I watch the movie "Performance" safely? Also can you send me a link about the Jone's murder documentary
7:42 - the Stones were actually writing clever songs about English society like Play With Fire in '65 before the Kinks started doing it with Well-Respected Man, Dedicated Follower of Fashion, etc.
Rolling Ormond Yeah I was thinking the same thing. There's a shit load of great mid 60's Stones English pop songs starting with The Last time, Satisfaction isn't blues at all. Mother's little helper, Play with fire, paint it Black, Have you seen your mother baby, 19th nervous breakdown, Get off my cloud, ruby Tuesday, lady jane and those are just the hits during those "phase 2 years".
***** Of course everyone has to disregard this era and scream "Mick Taylor the best years' over and over, but the mid-sixties had some very sharp, durable songs, better than the Taylor years to be honest, no matter how complex the guitar solos.
Rolling Ormond
I'm a fan of all the eras really, (yes even Emotional Rescue, fun album, Tatoo You and Undercover as well. As a kid looking at the pictures in the books as well as listening to the change in their sound, it always amazed me how quickly and radically those times changed for everyone by the end of the 60's and as great as they were from the start by the end of that era they really did break in to a whole another sound starting with Jumping jack Flash. What set them apart from great bands like Cream and later Zeppelin was their groove, it was heavy but always something to move to, of course they had to keep Mick shaking and a moving.
***** Zep just sort of loud and empty; Stones music has so much more intelligence and soul.
There is just one Stones era with differents periods and influences but always Stones creativity and sound.
Pissed off to see the same old beards blabbin' away...Buck 'em all
I wanna see the Stones
2,000 Light Years From Home beats anything on Sgt. Pepper for me by a mile, it's stood the test of time and was one of the first futuristic records, Brian Jones creativity at its' genius best. If Jones had sorted himself out and lived, he didn't need the Stones, in a sense he'd outgrown them and I think he would have done interesting relevant stuff in the 1970s probably in collaboration with others and been a thorn in Jagger/Richards side.
The only problem with your statement on peppers is the whole statement.
Ken Mills No it does not beat 'Within You Without You' or 'A Day In The Life' on Sgt Peppers at all! imo
Don't allow journalists to dictate your musical choices ..why pit those albums against each other .They are both great fuckin albums .
I have always thought 2000 Light Years From Home was 2000 light years ahead of the Beatles
@@jonesy2111 love Brian Jones he was a prodigy
Brian Jones had a huge amount of influence on the early Stones. That’s why EVERYTHING sounded different after he died.
Funny that at 55:40 Keith gives that heroine addict evasive, empty eyed look when he says that there is that person who everyone just knows is not going to live a long life. Everyone has been thinking that for the past 50 years about Keith, but he's still here. Keith is amazing.
he is a horrible backstabbing person
@@lyricberlin like most people from before 1995?
@@lyricberlin I doubt he is now anyway. No reason for it. Also no idea what you're talking about but I'm sure it was over a decade ago, and the human body sheds it's skin completely every 7 years (not to mention the blood transfusions)
I like these docu's , but too much talking heads imo. More photos & footage would be better with the narration..
Sicko romance with the 60's... sick of it. The 60's was a cesspool.
Fucking old commies talking about "racisism". First thing the blacks did after we were given The Civil Rights Act was burn down Detroit. The hippies couldn't have been happier.
@@johnentwhistlesurelysamsun1840 A guy who never finish to compose a song ???
@@Ewok009 go tell the blackses and the brownsnesses how virtuous you are. I'm not buying it.
Lots of opinions from old men who lived vicariously through these great bands and most of us probably disagree with a lot being said but we can agree The Stones were number 2 in impact and influence behind The Beatles in the 60s.
I don’t know... they’re definitely up there, but I’ve always thought The Velvet Underground was the 2nd most influential group of the 60s. It’s close, maybe too close to call. Plus, you can’t really quantify something like that, being honest. They’re all way up there, but I definitely agree the Beatles were #1, definitely THE most influential.
@@nikolademitri731 Velvet Underground helped by Warhol were the 3rd branch to the rock tree. From the US east coast there we got The Stooges and Iggy Pop,Lou Reed ,the reinvented Bowie and the glam movement all the way to the shoe gazers.
That the beautiful thing. We don't have to. Some do and some don't.
I see them all equal in their contribution and Bloom of creativity.
I love VU, but how many albums? You don't hear kids in the Balkans piping out Venus in Furs, but Satisfaction?
Iggy Pop was from Detroit. Michigan. Midwest.
This is most excellent .. so glad to find it. Wild how the Stones survived … but not only that … thrived … all the way to today.
We love you, Dandelion,Lady Jane all great songs...would loved to have spent some time with Marianne...thanks Treble
Awesome doc, thanks for posting
Love Merry Clayton and saw her perform that live (sans Stones)
That would have been fantastic!! Do you remember the year?? I knew she did a cover of it as a solo and it was in the charts.✌
I love you guys - The Beatles, The Stones - there's no basis for comparison and is just something that someone started, probably Andrew Loog Oldham, to generate ink and album sales. The Stones are a blues-based rock and roll band that grew out of the London blues scene led by guys like Cyril Davies and Alexis Korner. The Stones are deeply steeped in the blues and in a country-western blues tradition (read Nankering With The Stones by James Phelge) - The Beatles are a Liverpool rock and roll covers-band with country-western, blues, rock n' roll, movie and show tunes, English music hall, and English folk influences - which included the collaborative talents of all four members, especially the internal songwriting axis of Lennon and McCartney. The Beatles always wrote a fair share of their own recorded material and, with the soundtrack of A Hard Day's Night (UK version), were one of the first, if not the first, British bands to release an album consisting entirely of their own written material. Loog had to lock Jagger and Richards in a kitchen to get them to start writing their own material and it took them a while to come up with something suitable for The Stones to record - - though some of their early efforts -- That Girl Belongs To Yesterday, It Should Be You - - were recorded by other artists. The Beatles career really started in '59 when George Harrison joined McCartney and Lennon. While The Stones really gelled in the winter of 1963, by which time the Beatles were well on their way to international prominence. The one area where they do share commonalities is the three-way tension of of their frontline - Jagger, Richards, Jones - McCartney, Harrison, Lennon and their "drummer" issues - Ringo joined The Beatles just before their first official recording date - which resulted in the single "Love Me Do". Charlie was in a few other bands besides the Stones before committing to his rhythmic role in The Stones. If we are going to be making these silly comparisons at least some basis in reality would help. The Beatles are in the same musical boat as Gerry & The Pacemakers, The Searchers, Billy J Kramer and the Dakotas - - other Liverpool bands. The Stones, in contrast, are part of a London legacy of blues and rock and roll that put the boot in the "trad-jazz" scene of the London nightlife at the time and includes Korner, Davies, The Yardbirds, The Kinks, The Who for a start. The Beatles from the beginning of their official recording career to the end (with a few bumps toward the end of the road) kept the same core musical personnel and producer. The Stones, not so much - with various producers and band members coming and going. The only real point of comparison between The Beatles and The Rolling Stones is their vast success outside of England - - and there are those who question whether Liverpool is really part of England. Love all the people.
Elegantly put, Mabusha Masekela. The only thing I would add is that The Beatles are, truly, a pop band. The Stones were never really out to make friends and considered the 'pop' bit of it as a lark.
+Vice Grip - I agree...
Vice Grip ......and everyone who refers to The Beatles as “pop” hasn’t studied their catalogue.
@@lindadote thank you
Growing up I luved the Stones WAY more than the Beatles.
Part of the way through this, the audio continued but the film stopped.
Same here.
Brian made world music, out of time, after is all history bye bye Stones top band of the 60
I really like this documentary, especially when the video track didn't lock up for several minutes at a time. But it was still very informative.
Stewart and Jones, FOREVER
I loved the stones ♥️ 🎉, and I'm always going to be a stones fan till the day I die🎉🎉.I'm strictly a stone's fan they are and always be 2nd to none 62yrs is freaking proof of that 🎉🎉
I had a lot of admiration for Jagger and Richards, until I realized they didn't attend Brian's funeral, a disgraceful, low and disrespectful act
😂 Keith didn’t even attend his Mum and Dads funerals he don’t believe in them. He don’t believe in that way of saying goodbye so why the hell would he go to Brian’s funeral when he wasn’t even that close to him and didn’t even like him that much and neither did Mick. And Mick couldn’t go coz he was busy and it would of been a media circus, but really they had no need to go as they weren’t that good friends with him . Would you go to funerals of ex workmates when they weren’t a nice person? No one liked Brian not even his own family liked him. He had no one at the end , he was a bad person and got killed for it. You should never hit women and he got what he deserved and good riddance to rubbish! The world is a better place without some people in it dragging it down.
@@MrThedonhead you are very unhappy with your life
@@MrThedonhead Without Jones there would not have been a band named The Rolling Stones, he was the founder. It would have been the right thing to do.
@@MrThedonhead Sour grapes or jealous of his genius?? That's an arsehole thing to write and WRONG! Keith DID go to several funerals.
@@MrThedonhead didn't even attend his sons funeral either in 77
Film jams in several places, but soundtrack continues, makes a like a radio programme.
Would have liked to hear a version with Jones as a major player.It's similar to Keith Levene getting bumped out of the early Clash, or losing Barrett in Pink Floyd; they were the ones with the groundbreaking ideas.To my mind, the loss of Barrett was deadly to PF, though I'm well aware many would argue that.
Pink Floyd didn't start getting good until Barrett left. Took them a couple albums, but they figured it out.
I’m in the minority, but I prefer 60s Floyd (specifically the 1st album) as well. More imaginative & exciting than their later output!
I loved all the music of the mid 60s-early 70s. I even had a Frank Zappa album, LOL.
After Brian. The band lost it's shine & that off key sensitivity which was their trade mark. Not taking away anything from Mick Taylor, the band took on a hard raunchy biker image for the longest time. No comment regarding Ronnie Wood, except he brought them back to their original roots for a spell. Still it was Brian who was the special one who tagged the band.
Scott Pepper As long as Jagger is alive they've not lost their shine. Not the best singer, not the best dancer but the greatest frontman of any rock band.
Scott Pepper Got to agree there & Brian was murdered by the gardener it turns out,he confessed on his death bed to it :)
Scott Pepper I'm a huge Brian Jones fan & totally agree with you. Have you checked the music he made in Morroco? Awesome stuff. His innovation is sorely missed by the stones. He played so many instruments it's no joke. He was a true multi-instrumentalist
+dimethaltryptamine1 A "deathbed confession" to murder or any confession to murder in the US at least is not taken as guilt. A trial will still be held and evidence must exist other than just a confession. Unless you were joking about the gardener then Jones' death would stand as before which I believe was ruled "death by misadventure". Murder would only be a layman's opinion and have no weight at all outside of gossip magazine readership. One's death in a bed seems to have a commonality that is uncommon, that is the imagery of it anyway. Reality has another surprise for those who have never witnessed death.
The whole band should shine, not just the front man. Without Brian, the band actually lost some of its essence.
My guys helped me survive my life.. 🙏🙏🙏
I became a Stones fan with Jumping Jack Flash and Beggar' s Banquet.
Their popsong era never left a big impression on me.
From 68 to 73 they were on their top level.
Songs for centuries.
They're selling Whirlpool refrigerators on your video! You Tube has become '50's television!!
Here's some more ideas:
Dog Food
Auto Parts
Orange Juice
musically, I always liked best the stones period between let it bleed and exile on main street. the addition of bobby keys on sax and nicky Hopkins on piano really added flavor to the stones" sound. after this period stones kinda went downhill which can be said of any band that's been around as long as them. but that period was, I think, their best!
A Day in the Life is really two songs spliced together!
Satisfaction became “kind of an anthem “?????? Get real! It was THE ANTHEM !!!
It was supposed to have a horn section believe it or not Keith's famous riff was originally a scratch track.
top band from uk. what a decade to live in london.......GET YA YA'S OUT.
Stones FOREVER
Did this video stop twice while the audio played for anyone else? I have Premium, cleared my memory, etc - still about 5m wasted in the middle and at the very end. Baby Brian... many ppl still say the Glimmer Twins killed him by stealing from him and using him/ making fun of him. I think that's evident here as well. So sad. Pissed me off for years but I still love the guys. Dichotomy?
i dont like glimmer twins atall...I love Brian though and Taylor
James Boyales, read Brian Jones The making of the RollingStones, all the research in this Brian Jones bio is based on people who knew the Stones on a personal level, Marianne Faithful stated in her own bio that Ruby Tuesday belonged to Brian, she was there in the studio. Remember Marianne Faithful was Mick Jagger's girlfriend from 1966 - '69. You heard them commenting about Bill Wyman being responsible for writting Jumping Jack Flash. Mick and Keith were known to steal other people's work. Did you watch this Documentary?? Ruby Tuesday was a ballad based on an Elizabethan story and a blues # by Skip Johnson. Etheleal , very British, an 18th century story of royalty with a counter culture vibe of the mid 1960's..
Though the book may say one thing we need Brian Jones here to speak up for himself. Unfortunately, he can't make an appearance to defend himself. Perhaps Bill Wyman and Maryanne Faithful would be wise to come forward on their own and produce a Documentary special. RIP Brian Jones. You are missed but never forgotten.
There is a rumor that when the RS recorded at Muscle Shoals that Ry Cooder taught them guitar tunings and Honky Tonk Woman was ripped off. I don’t know if this is true but I wouldn’t doubt it. Anybody know about this?
Not only Ruby Tuesday but it was Brian that came up with the riff for satisfaction. Not keith's fake story of waking up and forgetting he recorded it. Or whatever his story is these days.
Andrew Oldham said that he wouldn’t believe anything Marianne Faithful said.
You do not know what happened. I for one believe Keith. Jones was not a song writer by his own admission
Loved this movie.... and it made it clear. You can argue all you want, and wonder what they said to Jimi...or who made the band, critique, others, compain about the video quality.the hypocrisy, but remember, "after all it was you and me". Brian, Jimi, Janis are not victims of rock, or fame, or the drug culture. It is beyond me to speculate the reasons for their early demise, or attribute it to any social or psychological cause.
I see quite a few comments here saying Brian Jones couldnt/ didn't write songs. So here is an excerpt from Paul Trynkas book" Sympathy for the Devil, from Stan Blackbourne,the Stones accountant from 1965,regarding Ruby Tuesday,Paint It,Black & Under my Thumb. " I used to say to Brian "What on earth are you doing? You write some of these songs and you give the name over as if Mick Jagger has done it. Do you understand,you're giving 'em thousands of pounds!" All the time I used to tell him" You're writing a blank cheque!" In my opinion,Stan Blackbourne really sums the whole thing up,they stole everything from him. No Jones,no Stones.
exactly...the glimmer twins are vile people to me.... thiefs liars and bullies the way they treated Brian and Taylor as well ...have lost all respect for the pair
@@aryalogo6624 egomaniacal nonsense
As tears go by.. GREAT SONG
Ry Cooder has also accused Keith of plagiarism, having been invited to contribute to some Sticky Fingers "rehearsals," then excused and told he'd be called for the recording sessions. Returning to the studio later that evening, he reports finding the Stones recording with Keith copying all of his "rehearsal" guitar work. Having some experience in the lower end of the entertainment media, I've encountered too many examples of such petty "backstabbing" behavior on the part of "successful" artists, not to mention the companies. It's demoralizing to find out that people I've admired for their creative abilities are frequently lacking in basic moral character.
I could not agree more and yes as far as people go Mick, Keith and too many are greedy self serving bastards
But they sure as shit took it all from Richard Ashcroft, and for what, using a reverse of a sample from a symphonic remix or alt-mix of one of their songs for “Bittersweet Symphony”, and that was a massive hit for The Verve, their first truly big break, and they took every penny for that sample, and now have FULL credit for the entire song, so The Verve never had a single penny on it since then. I absolutely love their music, I think they’re geniuses in various ways, but you’re correct, they are very greedy.
At the end of the day those musicians who worked with the Stones and bitch about it would do it all over again.
@G*man Well if you look closely you can see their 'knack' seems to have ran out decades ago. Some of those great songs were stolen from various members- Brian, Mick Taylor or whoever else they collaborated with...
stop slandering Keith and Mick, is all your envy
this video is great if you like music critics droning on and on about what they think the Stones are about
Jumping Jack Flash -greatest rock song ...ever
It's one of many. Personally I rate "I Wanna Be Your Dog" considerably higher than Flash, and, frankly, the older I get the more laughable Mick's cod-American accent becomes.
Adolescent lyrics, hasty drum fills, sloppy arrangement, pure audio pornography, ...and yet it sells millions. It’s entertainment not music.
Try “Black Girl” by The Paybacks
Agree
Wow a lot of really old men who’s talking about how much better Stones were when they were young!! I think it’s hard to listen to them before 68 cause they could hardly play!
It would have been a good doc, but the Performance poster on for 15 minutes and the black picture less 10 minutes at the end really sucked.
Laury James Ward I agree
Kind of surrealistic observing the anticipated reactions of the finished TV Product Generation.
ya keith gets the girls who screwed around on him with Jagger and others, a practising witch, casting spells and curses, read up and down with the RS.
First Rolling Stones album and decembers children has Brian on the cover giving the lion's paw which is a Masonic hand signal, he wasn't as innocent as his fans seem to think.
Diabolical and Brian could have been a sacrifice and Mick and Keith were dabbling in satanism and the Laurel canyon scene
Rolling Stones & the Beatles,once said you can like both but only truly love one. I really like & respect the Beatles, but the Stones are my passion! The Zones have that angst & raw sexuality that the Beatles never had.
Their Satanic Majesties Request... is my favourite Stones album. :0)
The Stones never asked Angel's security they were not involved in Altamont organisation, Grace Slick said that they used to have them in San Fransico concert without troubles. And Stones have already composed Gimmie Shelter where you can hear the end of the flower power, they were just ahead.
Oakland Chapter. Drug fiends and ex-cons, not like the SF angels the Dead experienced, who generally liked freaks. Not the fascist boys in Oakland, who turned up at Altamont. The Dead abandoned the gig and left the Stones high and dry.
I love Brain Jones, but I’m sorry, “Let It Bleed”, is their best. It’s a perfect album.
Edit: I should also add, “Beggars Banquet”, is also a perfect album imo. If someone said rate them 1-10, I’d give them both a solid 10. I just think, “Let It Bleed”, juuuusssttt slightly edges it out for my #1, but Beggars is a close #2... either way, I believe Brian, unfortunately, had very little input on these albums, no? I think what he does contribute is great, it’s just a shame he couldn’t hold it together and contribute more.
Celtic Jay I’m a monkey man!
I thought I replied to you with this already, but after I edited my initial comment, it’s not showing me ever replying to you. Idk, maybe you can see my acknowledgment of your comment, maybe not. UA-cam is dumb like that.
Celtic Jay I though Sympathy For The Devil was the opener, and No Expectations was the second track, no? Or do you have a UK or some other versions that are different? I know they did that with their early albums, idk but I’ve been on a big Stones kick lately, so I literally just listened to that album in full like 2-3 days ago, and on mine No Expectations is track #2.
Anyway, yeah, I know Brain plays on that one, and a couple others on Beggars and Let it Bleed. I actually edited my original comment so I wouldn’t confuse people. I just left that comment bc so many ppl in the comments were saying that Brain was the most creative, and their music wasn’t as good after he died, and I was just sharing my opinion, bc I think that’s wrong. Brian’s greatest achievement (imo) was making their album “Aftermath” their first true masterpiece, and he’s definitely responsible for the most interesting parts of Between the Buttons, and Satanic Majesties, so I highly value his contributions and the fact that he basically started the band, and highly influence their direction, but unfortunately I think he didn’t contribute as much as he could/should have to their two best albums, the last two that he was there for...
Still, No Expectations is brilliant, and I love his guitar so much on that track. Actually, that’s one of my favorite Stones songs. It reminds me of being in college, just getting over a lot of death and my first true love breaking up with me. That’s when I first fell in love with Beggars and Bleed, and really that’s when I went from just listening to 40 Licks and the other compilation albums of theirs, and started actually exploring their studio albums, and those two albums specifically were like therapy to me, and now when I listen to No Expectations it’s pretty fucking heavy, brings me back to a very beautiful, but bittersweet time in my 20s that I’ll never forget.
Anyway, I’m getting way too personal and rambling way too much. I don’t blame you if you don’t read all this crap, but thanks for the conversation. We Stones fans got to stick together, yeah, and we all should be sticking together period! Much love, dude. 🙏✌️
Brian was everything creative, beautiful, and the soul of the stones. After him they were just a rock and roll band. Nothing innovative, nothing ethereal. They lost their beauty.
The judge with yesterday’s papers as a wig . Keef you make me laugh haha
Brian was great but to me Mick Taylor was the best era of the Stones without question
Beggars banquet is my favorite Stone's lp
Mick Taylor was a damn good lead guitarist.
But Brian Jones was a better musician.
Nope Brian & Ronnie Wood!....💯
@@jayalan2223 💯right bro! Amen❤️👍
Mick Taylor and/with Nicky Hopkins on piano.
amazing theyre alive and playing a tour in buffalo ny this summer wow..
Beggars Banquet
Aftermath
Between the Buttons
Let it Bleed
Satanics Majesties Request
Sticky Fingers
All great albums
Brussel Affairs 1973 Best live ever - Besides "Get your yaya's out" and there's one of the earliest bootleg recording from Perth in 1965 Australia -the greatness in the documentary of the super speed in the concerts from those days- It sounded more like "hit and run" performance a shock wave effect.
THE WORLD'S GREATEST ROCK AND ROLL BAND 😎✌🙋♂️🙏🌠
would have been better if they had played more of their toons.
Car ... toons?
It’s a hell of a comment, but yes, you’ve hit the nail on the head! More tunes.
Cartunes
I love 2 guitarist Jimmy page and Keith Richards and I will tell you, that life can't b easy, I am just glad to b able to sit and listen to them both speak as older gentlemen as they fought the battle and won the war , excellent documentary.
Angelique Martinez rubbish mick taylor was their best guitarist
Satanic Majesties and Between the Buttons are my 2 favorite Stones albums. They get somewhat disparaged here.
+peter mills Thanks. Hey you ought to watch (if you haven't already) the Ginger Baker documentary , "Beware of Mr. Baker." It's from 2012 and I gave it a ten star rating on IMDB.
In my opinion not enough people 'GET' the Stones. They are the greatest authentic interpretation of the American Blues Rock sound. There's nothing nice about the blues, or Rock n Roll it's a vibe and an energy, that doesn't go into the studio to please people. To get on the radio. That isn't them. Like Dylan, and many of the greats, they do what their souls tell them too. If it sells it sells. They aren't here to win friends. They are here to do what they do. They took the American sound, and mixed it up with a classic education, a diet of good books, and also class A and sour mash bourbon. This really happened, in '68 with Beggars Banquet... Before that, they were chasing the Beatles... and The Kinks with Between The Buttons.
Tragic ending for Brian Jones - far too young
Im an american no band will ever equal the stones ever they are number 1 allways
"The greatest rock n roll band in the world?" I thought this was a movie about the Rolling Stones...
They are the Greatest Rock and Roll band in the world.
Kudos, Jimmy. I’ll drink to that comment. Cheers!