They had just gotten back from Muscle Shoals studios after recording it and played the demo. Mick and Keith are both pumped up about it as you can see. They know they have a masterpiece on their hands.
@@nanchangerthey are made to hide from . But true Stone fans will know forever It I a masterpiece. When your generation is dead and gone and this ridiculous time in history is looked back on ,frowned upon , laughed at , and hopefully learned from . They will still be remembered for the pure artist they were . You will not be .
@@angelicbean7635 'made"? Ha! You must be joking, the song isn't a criminal offense, Jagger has become a Globalist, he folded like a cheap camera to weak pressure from the PC Stormtroopers, were it left up to Keef we'd still be able to hear that classic party flag riff live in concert, but Brenda gets her way, too bad, so sad...
This is an early mix of Brown Sugar their playing. It had not been released yet. Mick and Keith are playing the new track for the guy sitting on the desk, who's obviously never heard it before. Cool moment as the Stones are playing for one of their associates for the first time what will go on to be one of the best rock tunes ever. You can tell Mick and Keith know how good it is.
@@markymarco2570 They did that for fidelity purposes. It's not the single or Sticky Fingers mix. It's an earlier version, and it's definitely being showcased in this hotel room scene.
The best incidental Stones footage ever, Mick and Keith completely forgot they were exhausted when their music came on. Keith looked ready to party another five or ten hours.
MARCUS - They recorded 'Brown Sugar' in Muscle Shoals, Alabama December 1 - 4 during their 1969 tour. It was released on 'Sticky Fingers' on April 23, 1971. Also released as a US single on May 7, 1971 - Went to #1 in the charts.
@@truthseek3017 Nope, and you’re a dumb@$$ Garcia wasn’t a rock star, Morrison never wrote a rock ‘n roll song, and Hendrix was later spotted in this movie at the Stones MSG shows.
@@truthseek3017 Yes Truth Seek those individuals are cool and talented but to say they are far more so than Jagger and Richards in 69 as depicted here is bullshit
@@nanchangercowardly is not what I would call that band at all . The song is a masterpiece and will be regarded as such fir ages to come . One generation full of lunacy will never change the awesomeness of the Stones legacy. They choose not to play it live for whining goofs such as yourself.
"Hello dahlin, how are you?" ;D And then they start to do the funky chicken! So cool! And later they flew off into the night.... another moonlight mile on the road....
What a great clip! MJ and Keef are both feeling the excitement of their new song. I don’t think they’d be grooving to it like this after they’d played it live 50 times.
I'm reading Keith Richard's biography "Life" - not just his life but an insight into the development of the Stones/musical influences/groupies... great reading
It all could've ended right there... that chopper taking off into the night. It did for so many other great musos. I guess the world got lucky that night, we got to keep the greatest R&R band ever!
Peter Burlin - here the lyrics are shown as "... how come you DANCE so good" when it's actually "... how come you TASTE so good" (even more scandalous) - "Brown Sugar" - sexist, rascist & referring to the drug... wow! But when I listened in my youth (England 1970's) I thought it was like a compliment to this attractive lady that she was so sweet-tasting
@@qsprimalaccuracy9709 crazy how many people would flip out if some wrote the song today..hear him whip the women just around midnight.. Brown sugar..how come you dance so good ?? Huh?..I never knew the original words..old slaver know he's doing alright...holy crap lol.
@@painterken2542- actually it's... "Brown Sugar how come you TASTE (not DANCE) so good?" with reference to the drug as well as the colour of her skin - doubly scandalous!
Brown Sugar had not yet been released when this footage was filmed. They must have just finished this mix and were playing it for some of their crew. You can tell it's the hot new track by how everyone is diggin it. Legend has it that Brown Sugar was recorded a week before the Altamont disaster.
It's about time they make a movie about the Stones, Jimmy Hendrix, and other musicians from the time, the narrative would be about what they lived based on these movies would be spectacular And obviously with their music in the background Doing the casting of actors would be the complicated thing
I believe this is at what is formerly known as the holiday inn @sheffield al. I play music there twice a month and have rehearsed in muscle shoals sound where they recorded
Gimme Shelter? Boring chord progression. Ruby Tuesday? Stones trying to sound like the Beatles. Satisfaction? Up there but still merely an early demonstration of Stones' writing skills. Can You Hear Me Knocking? Really? Wild Horses? Great song but....campfire chords on the guitar. Nothing special. Brown Sugar? "I said yeah! yeah! yeah! WOOO!!"
Love how Mick Taylor is passed out, he's a newbie to the Stones work routine , Charlie is listening, Bill is reading a newspaper next to him, life with the Rolling Stones...love it...
Read the book "Out of our Heads" by Ronnie Schneider. He's the guy sitting on the table with the sideburns. a fascinating book by The Stones manager. He was pretty tight with Keith.
@Mullard 5Y3 He was the tour manager, but the Stones hired Ronnie as his own company over the objections of Alan Klein. His pissed off his uncle, but ran the tour autonomous of Klein. It's in his book and the book I'm reading about Altamont by Joel Selvin confirmed it.
@Mullard 5Y3 Mick was the financial arm of the Stones so maybe Wyman was speculating. Klein had started his own company, so why would he give all his hard earned money to his Uncle? Mick was impressed how Ronnie asked for money up front which was unheard of back then. He helped them out of the financial hole they were in with the British taxes. it wasn't the first time Schneider managed their tours and the specifically requested him. Plus he managed the 70 tour. Sounds amicable to me. Sam Cutler's memoir confirms my story. Believe what you want, I'm sure you will, but enough of the condescension. From wiki. "Schneider assumed the responsibility for managing the tour finances for The Rolling Stones USA tour, establishing a working relationship that resulted in his handling the next tour in 1966, and eventually, in 1969, taking over sole responsibility for the Rolling Stones' 1969 USA Tour after Klein was fired by the Stones organization. Schneider also managed the Stones World Tour in 1970. Klein was, according to Sam Cutler’s 2008 memoir[1] unceremoniously fired by Keith Richards and Road Manager Sam Cutler in 1969 on Mick Jagger's orders, Jagger being occupied with the filming of the Ned Kelly film in Australia at the time."
@Mullard 5Y3 I'm sure you would. Any Stones fan know that the 70 tour was Europe. But you knew that so I figured I didn't have to explain that to such an informed expert. Have a good life.
I was a kid discovering a new and unexplored yet unforbidden by my parents universe of The Rolling Stones, Les Zeppelin, Jimmy Hendrix, LSD, weed, liquor and pills! I remember walking home trying to make it there hoping my little sister would open up a living room window so that I could crawl in and make to my bedroom and crawl under the covers in stealth. Walking home I’d be so stoned that I would walk out in the street close to the cars but not on the sidewalk for fear that someone would drop an anvil on my head from atop a building. Now we know that my brain was getting fried from these drugs in combination with the hallucinogenics and do you not think that you will carry side effects with you that will to some extent manifest in your day to day brain functions that affect your life?? Scripture says, “can a man hold burning coals against his bosom and not be burned??” Needless to says I was affected by this and severe physical and emotional abuse by a deranged and psychopath stepfather. I ended up in prison and suffered for years for some serious crimes including armed robberies which I paid society for and take full responsibility for! But it all started innocently enough and led me down a dark, dark path that you aren’t aware of. I turned my life over to God and to the service of the Lord Jesus Christ. I now live and work at a Shelter for the homeless, that has programs to help the drug addicted and also programs to help those coming out of prison transition back into society. There’s a lot of list people out here and with the way things are going in this society and this world there is a world of hurt out here. Countless men and women who for one reason or another often financially have lost it all and never, ever imagined it could happen to them who get in that line of lost souls who line up at the Shelter door waiting to see if there’s room for them to stay the night? They come in they look shell shocked, stunned, desperate, alone sometimes suicidal.!They are like zombies numb from the combination of depression, fear , confusion and pain! God help us!!!!!!
@Merakio Merakio Congratulations sir, you have proven it can be done! Also true is that many don't make it, they end up in prison or the graveyard early, early. You are an inspiration to all of us. God bless you and your family.
@@Methilde Obviously touched a nerve, I sense anger , with a little bit of self - righteousness, hope you're ok! A life deprived of the fullness of God can be very limiting. And your all by yourself? Sorry to hear that, but you know the anger and all, it must be tough! I'll be praying for you!
@@TheHereigoagain I feel very well in my life, good husband, precious friends. I feel like an intolerance in your comment, for me believe if you want it but tolerate others positions.
They had just recorded this early version of Brown Sugar at Muscle Shoals in November of '69. Playing it back at the hotel room on some form of 60's boombox, you can tell that they knew that they had a monster on their hands.
I was in Cali. when the Stones had the concert at the Speedway, but I couldn't go to the concert , I was in the Marines at Camp Pendelton, California on Duty.