This piece made me appreciate Jagger even more. Much respect for his privacy and I love how he thinks (if this segment is accurate on his viewpoint) bandon my bucket list-New Orleans mid July 2019. I hope I can make it happen. I've wanted to see R.S. for a very loooong time.
Bill Wyman wrote in his biography that he refused the offer to visit his idol Elvis in the dressing room (together with Led Zeppelin) with the reason ... "one should not get too close to his idol ...". (Sry. for google transl.)
@@dmckenzie9811 I apologize for not reading your mind and custom-tailoring my post according to your random whim, as that was clearly my intent, as should be and invariably is everyone else's in the world. You, sir, are priority No. 1 and worth hearing, as you just proved. Thank you for rewarding my time so fully.
Same riff? You mean like, say, "Angie" and "Sympathy for the Devil"? Yeah, hard to tell those apart isn't it? As for being too loud, isn't that in the hands of the listener? I use this thing called a Volume Control, and works quite nicely.
I kinda dug it, man. It's still going round in my head now... "Bwow, bwow-bwoooooooooooooow - b'nenaaaaa! Bwow, bwow-bwoooooooooooooow - b'nenaaaaa!" That mofo's gonna be stuck in there for a looooooooong time
The Stones DID record as tears go by. My brother had the album it was on. It was a chronological album. It appeared they recorded it around the same time Satisfaction came out.
In about 73 I moved into a new apartment across the street from the college we were going to. I had a big stereo and four big speakers My room mate and I were listening to some music pretty loud and some other students had just moved in next door a day or two before. We heard some knocking on the door and I told my room mate that we were playing the stereo too loud. He turned it down and went to answer the door. A brother and sister who had just moved there said, " Man, that is some good music, could you guys turn it up some more:" We did. My room mate ended up sleeping with the girl.
I saw them at The Swamp in Gainesville FL sometime early 90s. I made the mistake of sitting next to a group, of young and probably students. Heck, I was young, early 30s. The place was packed and loud before the event started. Lights down and my neighbors started lighting up. The last guy in their group just passed it on to me. So, I couldn't be rude, took a hit, and passed it to my best friend and her husband.😅 Damn! I never smoked much weed cause it got to be so unpredictable. All I remember is it kept getting passed to me. My friends were declining now but I just couldn't remember to do that! My friend and I got up to go to the bathroom and...whoa, we had to hold each other up. I think it was a great concert judging by the crowd response. I was in lala land. Too bad I was there in body only. My brain and spirit were somewhere else!😂 You just have to love Mick, though.
Jagger has an innate wisdom about life, which is apparent in his emotional vocals in his songs. He's a superb writer and brilliant showman. There are very few that can come close to him, although many have tried. That's what makes him and the Rolling Stones great. They just are, that's all.
ann landers .......they’ve done nothing of interest to me in over 4+ decades. I really don’t believe the Stones will be remembered in the way The Beatles are despite almost 50 years of trying their damndest to somehow match (or catch) The Beatles’ incredible enduring popularity and sales. The Stones have made a career of touring and putting out lazy, same-sounding albums every few years to appease fans.
@@chocomanger6873 But there have been about a dozen spectacular tours reprising their portfolio of classic hits. Each tour more spectacular than the last. Mick has been the guiding hand of each tour whilst performing at a very high level in each. Greatest showman since Shakespeare in my opinion.
I just saw him perform at the hard Rock stadium in Miami.... What a freaking performance It was surreal The last song was SATISFACTION he performed in the pouring rain! My God his energy at 76 is insane! He can't possibly be human!
As opposed to England's racial issue. I think Jagger was position ing himself as being a sorta progressive. Remember Jesse Jsckson protested the Stone's " Some Girls" because of the lyric " Black girls like to fuck all night" Jagger said he wrote it as a joke .
@@jimlamanna9712 Yep, Pete is right. Moving won't change y'alls one iota. I've been here all my life and can still never get used to the brain drain. How's all that fluoride, football and barley pop workin' for ya?
Mick Jagger and Keith Richards are total class. They supported Toronto when the Sars epidemic took place in 2003 attracting 450,000 people at the Sars concert in the 6ix. They also played a free concert for the blind in the '70s in return for a light sentence for Kieth Richards heroin bust at Toronto international airport. They always showed love for Toronto and believe they were given the key to our great city. Thank you, The rolling Stone's, for being the classiest band ever. :)
Jagger was quite right about most of the US in 1964. New York and Los Angeles were trend-setting cities, not at all typical of the rest of the country. Having lived in suburban Chicago, IL at that time, I can vouch for the Chicago area having been ridiculously backward compared to NYC and LA. I can just imagine how "out of time" the rest of the country was. Initially the Stones didn't intend to record As Tears Go By, but they eventually did and performed the song on the Ed Sullivan Show. And their version was most effective, I might add.
Just read this in an article by Giles Coren in The Times - "I imagined him with his trousers round his ankles, bony greyhound legs, sparsely haired, trembling as he mounted another poor young thing like an urban fox climbing into a dustbin."
Those guys are not only incredibly talented but incredibly lucky to do drugs that long and live through it all these years is truly amazing thanks guys for all that great music
How about that guy from One Direction who was in that war movie playing young Jagger and then William Defoe playing the old one.. and make it like that Brian Wilson movie.. or something like that..
Okay kids, it's like this. The Stones and I mean the original Stones, were on tour in 65 and I went to see them in a huge jam packed stadium in Detroit, Michigan when I was 14. That's hubris, Mr. Jagger, if you weren't "impressed" with many of your experiences on that initial tour. And the dancing and jumping and stuff: You know you never used to do that until you got a load of the fact that we were all most interested in seeing Brian Jones, who would command an audience with a flick of his hair or a glance. Yeah. So you had to do something to distract the little girls. Okay, not a problem. The past fifty years prove your talent and your ruthlessness too.
Mick Jagger and Keith Richards both wrote the song Satisfaction in Clearwater, Florida at the Jack Tar Harrison hotel on Fort Harrison Street! This was before their fame and I saw them play at the Clearwater Auditorium during their stay at the time!
Keith Richards wrote Satisfaction, he said that in his book. He also wrote about how everyone thinks Mick Jagger writes the songs for The Rolling Stones alone.
@@billhenjum7566 True & how they never would have became as famous as they did without Brian playing all those other different instruments on their later hits. Jagger would have went back to school, Richards would have ended up in some other band, Charlie already had steady night gigs in jazz bands plus a job at an agency & Bill would be playing in another band.
I am going to see the Rolling Stones in Phiily the end of July. I am bringing my 30 year old daughter with me -if you had told me this would be happening when I was 13-14 years old I would have laughed in your face. Rock on Mick!!!!!
I got it on an old cassette from an interview...…..I thought he said he went to bed.....got up in the night and did some recording on a cassette recorder on an acoustic guitar (w his modified invention on it to give the sound heard in songs like JJF). The next stay he listened to what he recorded in the night...….he heard that riff followed by 20-45 minutes of snoring). But yeah I think he said he dreamed the riff.....then tried to record it. Thank you for mentioning that......however to me...….the person who invents the riffs and chords "writes" the song. A singer just adds lyrics and vocals. Also so many distortions of facts about musicians on youtube I've noticed.
cool to know. I used to tape interviews on cassette as a sort of hobby and I still have that cassette I think. Interviews of musicians are the most fascinating. @@phil2bfree
Yeah, shame they didnt mention the biggest secret......MJs mum is an Aussie, born in Melbourne, she went to England during the Second WW to help our boys out...ended up staying....So Yes, Mickie boy is Half Australian. Not to mention that hair....his old man was as bald as a badger at 40....;)
For some millenial to suggest they could tell us the whole untold truth of a rock star who is nearly 80 in just 10 minutes is a farce. They also claim to tell the "Tragic Real-Life Stories of Motown's biggest stars" in 5 minutes. Like most kids who think they know it all, they are only wasting our time by proving they don't really know jack shit, but I'm sure it seems valuable to other millenials on the same level as grade schoolers sharing what they "think" they know about how to "do it".
Jagger's observations of the US in '64 are spot-on. New York and LA were the beacons of light in social attitudes and popular culture, and all the states between were a decade or two behind the times. When I left Chicago, IL in '68, social conditions and prevalent attitudes were still totally backward. I can just imagine what things were like in Pennsylvania or Utah or the "Deep South!" Now in the new century, we've come full circle, back to backward. We could sure use the Beatles and Stones again!
I've hated Rolling Stone magazine for a long time, but stopped even acknowledging it when they glamorized the Boston Bomber on the cover. That should make anyone livid.
Please God tell me that you're joking. Tell me that you understand. Tell me that you understand that The Rolling Stones is the band and Rolling Stone Magazine is NOT The Rolling Stones. Both the Mag and the band are a shout out of the old Muddy Water botnd the bboth that and the band are shout out the old Muddy Waters blues song. Gee Whiz - Close call....
@@GuitarUniverse2013 Rolling Stone magazine is mentioned in this video, that's why I commented. Did you not watch the video??? It said the band placed a cease and desist order, they had a five decade feud, they promised an interview with Mick and negged on it. Pace Palm!
'Satisfaction' was written at the Gulf Hotel in Clearwater, Florida, following the Stones riot-shortened (fans rushed the stage after four songs and concert was ended with The Stones escaping the surging crowd) at Clearwater's Jack Russell Stadium, which hosted the Philidelphia Philles single A minor league team, and where the major league club played it's spring training games.
Having both parents as teachers in the UK then was a pretty good start. Many wives didn't work in the professions and teaching is paid pretty well in Britain. At that time most married women were expected to remain as housewives, though many had to work part time to make ends meet. I remember London in 1963 when very few women had a driving licence, "Look out -- a lady driver!" and many households didn't have a car.
Yes, that's what I thought. Having both parent's as teachers isn't very "humble" as the narrator says. Even then, it would've put them firmly in the middle-class.
I'm halfway the video and I found two lies already. Mick Jagger wrote neither "I can get no satisfaction" nor "brown sugar". They're both Keith Richards compositions.
Here in Clearwater Florida , local legend has it that Keef was staying in one of our 2 star motels ,when he woke up from a dead sleep , recorded the greatest opening riff in rock history on small tape deck ...and then went back to sleep
Rolling Stone magazine actually took its name from Like a Rolling Stone by Bob Dylan. The Rolling Stones took their name from Rolling Stone Blues by Muddy Waters.
Muddy Waters would have had to sue since the group took the name from his song, "Rollin' Stone." The cover shown was hardly the first time Jagger and Co. have been on it. They were on countless covers over the years.
I have been reviewing more videos and information on the Altamont concert recently and my whole opinion has changed of that dreadful day. After watching several videos over and over, you can clearly see the Hells Angels were over stepping their authority as security. They show no respect for the fans and used their fists and pool cues to let everyone know they were in control. I have also found more information concerning the death of Meredith Hunter which has also changed my views allot. The promoter or who ever hired the Angels for 500 bucks and all the beer they could drink should still be in prison.
As a life-long Rolling Stones fan, I had my doubts that you could do a good job of hitting so many important points in only 10 minutes.....but I was wrong. Good show, Mate!
@Paul O'Hara It would take an idiot like him, with his economic degree and all, to achieve all that you know him for, wouldn't it? Are you dumb enough yourself to match his successes? I'll bet you think your opinion makes you sound smart and makes you feel like somebody, yourself. Who would you be without your opinions, Paul, and how much smarter would the people in your life think YOU are without them?
That's right.In a documentary on Keith,he said he wrote it in the middle of the night,and proceeded to play it on a guitar,in it's original slow blues format.He says that when Mick got hold of it,it became the opposite of his version.
Thanks for sharing this information to the public. Could help some of us when we are trying not to take some ordeal we are going through too personally. Hard to do most when a person is young while realizing that they have ended up being in the wrong crowd then being called a street gang. Not a good idea to make a public announcement about what that organization is before a person manages somehow to get away. Imagine how hard it must be for some people after being born into one.
The problem is....in my opinion only....is that there is most definitely a dark side / dark force in this Earthly sphere, as well as the opposite. Mick has been proud to state that he "is working for the other firm" in this life....and he wasn't talking about the good side. To me, and I don't know him, but just taking what I've seen him say...he's the poster boy for the guy who gave up his soul willingly to "inherit the earth". "To those that are given much....much is expected". And Mick has made his choice. To me, that's beyond sad.
Hell's Angels tried to assassinate Jaeger ...failed due to a storm that dumped them into Long Island Sound near the Hamptons....ahhhh... doubt that version.
Mick Jagger is the very best rocker and he deserves his privacy.....people have no business wanting to crash all personalities.and yes he IS spot on about America and not much has changed,maybe this year.yeah right....so slow....this is the 21st century....let us hope."Time is on my side" all old blues they did
Altmont had nothing to do with the Rolling Stones, several other bands played that day and there was violance all day because everyone was boozed and drugged up, I think it was Marty Balin from the Jefferson Airplane who was punched in the face another local band who played at the gig, the guitarist had a bottle thrown at him that knocked him out. The Hells Angels took a lot of stick for what happened but instead of 30,000 people showing up 300,000 turned up and there was violence all day. Merideth did pull a gun and the Angels put him down and saved other peoples lives and probably Jaggers life, 3 other people died on that day it was a badly organised concert the stage was only 36 inches high, the organisers should have faced charges for negligence for what happened on that day.
The whole problem was that it was supposed to be free. Money is the measure and guarantee of the required commitment from all involved, especially the audience.
a) only in the gringoland Biker Clubs are considerated naturally violent, in the civilized world Biker Clubs are socially and even family oriented organizations, B) The Hell Angels name come from a WWII aviator Squad and was used on several organizations before the gringo bike group, one of them was an England Bike Group who usually helped with security on big events, so when the stones heard about the gringo group they assumed it was a local chapter and hired them, but as you can see in the video, The Stones only knew the gringo publicity and where shoked by the ugly truth. C) yeah i understand that your comment meant to be a joke, but it's a way too touchy subject and way to much of a hateful cliche for many to find it funny, if you want to do a joke, go for the full joke, not a half assed wanna be funny line.
@@EloyCanto A) The Hells Angels are a 1% biker club meaning they aren't family oriented and just social riding clubs. B) There are quite a few Biker clubs that allow multi ethnic membership. Mongols and Bandidos allow hispanic members. Easy Bay Dragons are all black and other clubs such as the Chosen Few and Wheels of Soul allow any race or ethnicity in. It isn't all "Gringo Land". C) It's a joke lighten up man.