Dylan, Richards and Wood talking about Mick Taylor before Live Aid

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  • Опубликовано: 17 май 2023
  • Bob Dylan, Ronnie Wood and Keith Richards discuss Mark Knopfler and Mick Taylor whilst rehearsing for Live Aid, 12th July 1985.
    Dylan had previously worked with Knopfler on Slow Train Coming and Infidels, and with Taylor on Infidels and the 1984 "Real Live" tour.
    There were a couple of tricky bits to transcribe, including one interesting bit that Ron Wood says about the song Leather Jacket which was started by the Stones in 1970 and finished by Mick Taylor on his solo album.
    I've not transcribed all the classic Keef™ noises.
    If you want to hear the whole rehearsal, you can find it here: • LIVE AID REHEARSALS (B... - this excerpt is from about 20 minutes in.
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 452

  • @radarrob1443
    @radarrob1443 6 месяцев назад +7

    I love how Ron Woods says Taylor did not like to play live. Are you f’ing kidding me?? Ronny on his worst day he absolutely blew you away.

  • @duece5976
    @duece5976 5 месяцев назад +8

    For someone who's mumbled his lyrics live for the past 40 years Dylan shouldn't talk about someone having an off night. All I know is Infidels and Real Live have some great guitar work as did The Stones in the Mick Taylor era.

  • @satireofcircumstance6458
    @satireofcircumstance6458 Год назад +181

    The Stones were not the same either before or after the Mick Taylor era. For one guy to make that much difference is testament to how good Taylor was.

    • @maxmaxx21
      @maxmaxx21 Год назад +15

      I couldn't agree more. Those stonesalbums with him are insane, incredibly good music.

    • @xwhite2020
      @xwhite2020 Год назад +28

      Those albums would have been great with any number of guitarists. It was the Mick and Keith show and the idea that Taylor made the albums great is fanciful.

    • @tattoofthesun
      @tattoofthesun Год назад +6

      @@xwhite2020 you should read some of the autobiographies and biographies before you say that.

    • @xwhite2020
      @xwhite2020 Год назад +7

      @@tattoofthesun It always amazes me how these comments so often assume they know more about a person than they possibly could.

    • @bikkk57
      @bikkk57 Год назад +18

      @@xwhite2020 You're nuts man. If anyone could just fill in, Black and Blue would be as great an album as Exile or Sticky Fingers, but you know it's not. The last great Stones album musically was Goats Head Soup and the missing element on all albums after (exception of It's Only Rock and Roll) is Mick Taylor. His contributions during the golden era of their music are what transcends those songs to the heights those songs still have today. It's not even really subjective at this point. You either understand musical theory and complexity or you don't. You clearly don't.

  • @VideoAmericanStyle
    @VideoAmericanStyle Год назад +37

    It’s so rare to hear these guys talk in normal conversation, like regular people (especially Dylan) - it’s absolutely fascinating. Kind of like the Get Back documentary, once the band got used to the cameras being around. Would love to hear more of this kind of stuff.

  • @johnmaritato3587
    @johnmaritato3587 Год назад +48

    Keith loves to be in a band, loves the comraderie and loves to hang out with musicians. Mick Taylor was a bit introverted, but the unspoken chemistry between him and Keith produced their best music and spectacular live performances the Stones have never been able to repeat. I love Mick Taylor to death. He's my favorite guitar player. You usually do your best work with a co-worker as oppossed to a buddy like Ron Wood.

    • @teleguy5699
      @teleguy5699 Год назад +2

      Good point.

    • @Jimbo199
      @Jimbo199 Год назад

      Really good take

    • @hondahaney6404
      @hondahaney6404 11 месяцев назад +1

      spot on John, Stone best music came out of the Mick Taylor years..

    • @michaelheller8841
      @michaelheller8841 9 месяцев назад

      Mick Taylor was the reason why I picked up the guitar as a kid and he was my favorite guitarist
      The Stones ever had. If this clip was accurate at that time Mick Taylor for a short while was
      Bob Dylan's guitarist and he was fantastic with him. Mick Taylor is playing live in 1978 with Little
      Feat "A Political Blues" you can see it on RUclips.

    • @garybalranald6323
      @garybalranald6323 2 месяца назад

      Ditto, he's my favourite. So much class.

  • @blipco5
    @blipco5 Год назад +79

    In the mid eighties in Boston I saw Mick Taylor perform in a small club. I sat fifteen feet from him. I wasn’t expecting much but he blew the room away! He even joked about his bad decision to leave the Stones. When the performance ended I walked away thinking.. So that’s what it takes to be in a top band. The guy was amazing.

    • @adrienneahern181
      @adrienneahern181 Год назад +6

      The stones were never as great as when Taylor was with rhem

    • @charlieknoch5502
      @charlieknoch5502 Год назад +10

      Mick Taylor every bit as good as Eric Clapton he really could play an amazing blues rock lead guitar

    • @blipco5
      @blipco5 Год назад +5

      @@charlieknoch5502 He made a big sound come from that guitar. I never saw Clapton in concert (only on TV) but sure, I’d stick Mick up against him any day.

    • @caveman3096
      @caveman3096 Год назад +2

      That is a FACT!

    • @jgwire
      @jgwire Год назад +3

      @@blipco5 yeah, but I've always thought Eric was a bit Lazy and didn't push himself -- others pushed him. Look at the footage of him at The Last Waltz, he's walking through it, and his guitar strap comes off, and Robbie covers for him -- and then Eric comes back with some of the juiced stuff I've ever heard......
      He is great work with other musicians -- Bonnie and Delany, "My guitar gently weeps....I don't care for his songs or even his guitar playing -- no offense intended -- , unless someone else pushes him to excellence.
      Then he blows the place apart.
      When he was drunk and on auto -pilot in the late 70s, he was dreadful. IMO.
      I even left a show early because it just sounded like the same old thing. he was just punching the clock... .......
      But I know he got sober, and I'm happy for him, and he's one of the greats -- just not one of my favorite greats --- but God Bless Him for opening people's eyes to addiction in the music biz -- boy he learned the hard way. but at least he's alive.
      Wait .....
      Weren't we talking about Mick Taylor? Oh yes, he was the best for his time, and yes, Ronnie is the best for his time -- there -- everybody's happy? Did't think so. lol. JMHO. No harm intended. Thanks!

  • @fuchsiaswing8545
    @fuchsiaswing8545 Год назад +100

    The way Keef says “Taylor...” seems to encompass many thoughts he has on his old bandmate, flaws and all. It's almost a somber reflection on someone he doesn't understand but knows represented the apex of his band.

    • @conphuze
      @conphuze Год назад +5

      What an awkward moment. Guarantee Dylan's thinking about Mick's solo on "Sweetheart Like You" at some point before he says "I'm gonna split."

    • @eqx7168
      @eqx7168 Год назад

      I felt that

    • @russellszabadosaka5-pindin849
      @russellszabadosaka5-pindin849 Год назад +7

      Yeah, that "Taylor..." followed by silence was heavy. Such a universal reaction to that kind of situation where someone you might not get on with, or understand, still has an uncanny, inexplicable way of making everything you do better in any field. I still think about a guy who auditioned & rehearsed to replace the original drummer for my band in 1994. He was awkward, weird, didn't connect with any of us personally, but when the music started he was PERFECT. We were really psyched but he decided not to join the band because he'd rather sell insurance with his dad. What a wasted opportunity for everyone. That guy was an enigma. I imagine just like Mick Taylor.

    • @pavelczyzynski7683
      @pavelczyzynski7683 Год назад +1

      What Keef said about Mick Taylor is also true about ..Keef

    • @sgmarshall3
      @sgmarshall3 Год назад

      @@conphuze Wow! You summed up that perfectly. Isn’t it strange how one word really seems to tell a whole story? I have to think that Keith realizes that there really is some magic to those albums with Taylor that just haven’t been attainable before or after.

  • @jwardbass4452
    @jwardbass4452 Год назад +26

    What Keith said at the end was some real shit. I kinda related to that thing he said about Mick where he had ideas, but it takes a lot of energy and time for him to get an album together of original material, with his strength being an accompanist.

    • @765claire
      @765claire 11 месяцев назад +1

      Being a drug addict didn't help either

  • @SuburbanGurban
    @SuburbanGurban Год назад +56

    This is a real gem. Rock history. And as for Mick Taylor, they might be right, he never flew as high on his own as he flew with the Stones. Still an absolute genius.

    • @PotrzebieConolly
      @PotrzebieConolly Год назад +7

      Although you could say the same about Mick and Keith's solo records.

    • @SuburbanGurban
      @SuburbanGurban Год назад +2

      @@PotrzebieConolly Talk is Cheap sounded better to me than Steel Wheels. Possibly because Mick Taylor plays on it 😀

    • @xdef1ne
      @xdef1ne Год назад +1

      Drugs will do that

    • @petermills542
      @petermills542 Год назад

      ​​​​​​@@SuburbanGurban
      Only on one track!!
      'Could have Stood You Up' when Keith gave him the chance to play with legend Jonny Johnson!! 😄

  • @apollos_revival
    @apollos_revival Год назад +28

    Bob Dylan said Mick Taylor wrote some "great songs". What a compliment!

  • @albertorodriguezfernandez5956
    @albertorodriguezfernandez5956 Год назад +29

    You can hear in Keith’s voice how much of love he had for Taylor’s talent. Yes, I’m sure there were jealousy and obviously there must be issues about writing credits, but the music they created it was peak Stones, and he knows that.
    Also he does not allow Dylan , in a gentle way, to go on about his inconsistency.

    • @jaw444
      @jaw444 Год назад +2

      Keith saying Mick must have experienced some problems, coming in right after Brian, whoever talks about that? nobody, the guy who originated the stones dies, life goes on, gotta get another good guitarist, Mick Taylor. all the stones had "problems" after losing their friend, so young and riding the initial wave to the peak of their early fame in 1964, i saw them at Long Beach Auditorium, or whatever it was called back then, on November 1, 1964, their second US tour that year, my rich friend's dad got us first row center tickets, Brian eventually sitting down on the stage playing the dulcimer, somebody like that dies and nobody talks about their feelings because how do you do that? it's not normal to talk about those kinds of feelings. i read a quote by bob dylan in a Rolling Stone article around 1999 i think, he said Brian Jones and Michael Bloomfield were the best guitar players he ever knew, and he described what Brian could do, learned all the early roots stuff from the early 20c South, the finger style playing that was intricate and wild with a lot of feel, and everyone played different, individually, and brian learned to play guitar from listening to records by those guys. Mick Taylor, i don't know how he came up but he was more than worthy to be in the stones.

    • @765claire
      @765claire 11 месяцев назад +2

      I think Keith also feels guilty as he was part of the reason why MT left

  • @roscoegarbonzo9966
    @roscoegarbonzo9966 Год назад +16

    Mick Taylor was only 20 yrs old when he joined up w/ the Stones, He was shy, naive & considerably younger than the other fella's, Make no mistake about it, Those 6 yrs, He undeniably was the best Musician the Stones ever had,

    • @eg4449
      @eg4449 Год назад +1

      Certainly the best guiarist... but the Stones had othersp in their orbit. Bobby Keys, Ian Stewart, Nicky Hopkins, Gram Parsons. All of which had great impact in recording or inspiring them to create their music.
      But yes, Mick was the best Stones guitarist, that doesn't mean the same thing to me as the best Rolling Stone. That argument may never be unequivocally answered.

    • @theseeker4642
      @theseeker4642 10 месяцев назад +1

      The most multi talented musician was Brian Jones & he was an excellent guitar player, Mick Taylor followed on guitar. Bill Wyman has his own group, The Rhythm Kings now & even Ronnie Wood had spread his wings before joining the Stones. These guys weren't stuck playing Stones stuff and infinitum.

    • @garybalranald6323
      @garybalranald6323 2 месяца назад

      He's underrated as a guitar player IMO.
      He's behind Keith on the best guitarist of all time list simply because Keith wrote all this riffs, licks, and melodies. But hes always too far back. He's underrated.

  • @matthewlacey5307
    @matthewlacey5307 9 месяцев назад +3

    No disparaging remarks about mick. Just a respect and an acknowledgement about his different ways. Lovely recording.

  • @SteveWattse
    @SteveWattse Год назад +6

    I saw Mick Taylor with his three piece band at The Beaverwood Club, Chislehurst must be getting on 10 years ago now. He was phenomenal, great touch and feel. And a lovely guy that didn't mind chatting to you after the show. Great memories. The Stones sounded great when he was in the band.

  • @cheneyrobert
    @cheneyrobert Год назад +11

    17 October 1973 I saw the Stones live at Vorst National in Brussels (Brussels Affair) Billy Preston on keyboards, Steve Madaio on trumpet, Trevor Lawrence on saxophone and of course Mick Taylor on lead and slide…..the Stones at their finest! Mick took the Stones to another level…..that was really the best lineup ever and KR has stated in his Google Play interview that this was one of their best concerts ever 🥂

    • @sherlockbones18
      @sherlockbones18 7 месяцев назад +1

      Brussels Affair. One of my first bootlegs on compact disc. Highly regarded as a superb soundboard and top live performances bar none - and mostly attributed to MT

  • @tattoofthesun
    @tattoofthesun Год назад +16

    I don’t like Ronny saying that sometimes he doesn’t know when to stop playing: hey, on Winter does Taylor overplay? On Time Waits for No One? Bitch, Knockin’ -SWAY?!?!? Live is another thing. But real heads know- Brussels Affair, SURE - Taylor plays every chance he gets and I love that because I’ve already heard more sparse Stones live shows I love. Taylor added that UNNHHHH, that rocking back and forth kinda, fists clenched, makes me wanna get a Stones tattoo and shout to the world “greatest Rock n Roll band EVR”. Then there’s other Stones shows where it breathes, more space. Hey I wanted all I could get of Mick Taylor in them years, every note he played was tasteful and colorful. He didn’t Jack off up there. And I love Woody- great live shows with Woody too!! El Mocambo, love the Black and Blue tour, the Some girls tour, Tattoo You, Emotional Rescue, come on man. Just an observation. As you can see, I’m emotionally tied to Taylor ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ come at me. You heads feel me.

    • @tallmn1957
      @tallmn1957 Год назад

      Must've been some good blow you're doing there.

    • @paullevine1813
      @paullevine1813 Год назад +4

      He's just like Keith , Jealous they are not the players Mick Taylor is.

    • @ianstu1940
      @ianstu1940 Год назад +2

      @@paullevine1813 Mick Taylor went to do nothing after the stones lol, while the stones recorded their best selling album Some Girls.

    • @PotrzebieConolly
      @PotrzebieConolly Год назад +2

      I also loved Mick Taylor's playing on the John Mayall albums, which I haven't seen anyone mention here.

    • @tobmello1
      @tobmello1 Год назад +3

      @@ianstu1940 Stones with Taylor were way better than Stones without Taylor.
      Mick Jagger himself has hinted at their apex with Taylor and never being able to reach that again.
      Why do you think they don't play songs like Time Waits for No One live?? Because they cannot.
      Even Dead Flowers -- no one plays those riffs/fills, solo like Mick T.
      Also during that time, Taylor was the main guy in the studio putting together tracks while Keef was out getting doped up, Taylor and the other session players like Hopkins were putting in the work to keep the band going.
      Similar to what Bob Welch did for F Mac as the bridge between when Peter Green, Jeremy Spencer etc were having their issues and before Stevie/Lindsay came on.
      Mick Taylor's dedication to the music is what breathed new life when the Stones needed it.

  • @thewoodys_surf_instrumental
    @thewoodys_surf_instrumental Год назад +42

    Every time I hear Keith talk, I just love him even more.

    • @mikeodonnell6799
      @mikeodonnell6799 Год назад +3

      Tina is gone but Keith keeps on ticking

    • @KittyGrizGriz
      @KittyGrizGriz Год назад +5

      Love his accent~voice, very smart articulate man.

    • @aftonsky
      @aftonsky Год назад +10

      He sees the world as it is, without illusions or ill feelings. That what makes his music great, the ability not to fool himself even when he is on the top.

    • @slimturnpike
      @slimturnpike Год назад +4

      ​@@aftonsky Well said.

  • @marklawrence8518
    @marklawrence8518 Год назад +62

    Keith nailed it about being a sideman who shines versus fronting a group. I think Taylor had people talking in his ear about doing his own thing, go for it, blah, blah. When he got his record deal, reality came crashing in....his music was all fusion material and they made him add more Stones-type songs, which was expected to sell. If I recall correctly, he didn't want to do those songs and wanted a path more like Jeff Beck's Blow By Blow. The album tanked and he was dropped. He really is a great sideman, take his work with Carla Olsen, but Keith and Ronnie said it that the guy didn't have the drive or focus, i.e., what it takes, to be a leader of a group. I'm in total agreement that his tenure with the Stones was their prime era.

    • @fuchsiaswing8545
      @fuchsiaswing8545 Год назад +10

      I don't believe Taylor intended to "do his own thing," as he left to join his good-friend Jack Bruce in a more creative, progressive band that musically stirred him more than the Stones. Once the Jack Bruce project folded as quickly as it started, he was left reeling a bit, working with Pierre Moerlen's Gong (an off-shoot of the original progressive band, Gong) until recording his solo debut. It's fascinating that Taylor found some creative solace in working on more jazz-fusion projects than doing straight-ahead blues-infused rock.

    • @andrewthegraciouslordrober327
      @andrewthegraciouslordrober327 Год назад +6

      Plus err..... Mick Taylor then realised that he had to sing the songs, and only then did the reality of him not having a strong singing voice, come crashing in. Imagine what "Broken Hands", or even "Leather Jacket", on his solo album would have been like had a certain Michael Philip Jagger been singing it. Just hear Taylor sing even a heritage number, like "You Got To Move" at a live show and it's bloody dire. But, yes, without him, would that golden era of such wonderful albums one after the other have ever happened, or "Brussels Affair" ?

    • @jessewolf7649
      @jessewolf7649 Год назад +6

      ⁠All of their amazing singles snd albums through Banquet snd arguably Bleed included jones, not taylor. And THAT is their best material. Which is the best RnR music ever recorded.

    • @squadgeman3247
      @squadgeman3247 Год назад +1

      The reason he left the Stones was because he had his woman in his ear telling him that he should be doing his own thing. He had his own personal Yoko Ono.... Or at least what Yoko Ono is believed to be like.
      He couldn't handle it, because his mind was divided.

    • @apollos_revival
      @apollos_revival Год назад +1

      @@andrewthegraciouslordrober327 Bloody dire? Totally disagree. He might be a guitarist that sings, but he's far from terrible.

  • @stubvidmedia8903
    @stubvidmedia8903 Год назад +9

    “I'm gonna split” - Bob Dylan

  • @WillieWeed
    @WillieWeed Год назад +4

    What a great moment in time. I'd just grad HS a month before so this was a very important time for me.
    Amazing discussion.

    • @robertfoshizzle
      @robertfoshizzle 10 месяцев назад +1

      It was the year I was born. But, for whatever reason, music from about 1965-1977 really resonates with me in a way that nothing else really does, although some of my favorite bands did their best work in the '90s (and were heavily influenced by music of the '60s and '70s). I enjoy watching the Live Aid videos, although I think some rather unfortunate artifacts of 1980s instrumentation and music production had negative effects on live music. Live Aid is really interesting to me because a lot of the older musicians who played it were still young enough to play and sing at the top of their game, yet it was also one of the first moments in time where you really notice those legends are starting to get older -- some of them are going gray, balding, maybe 15 lbs. overweight compared to their heyday, or no longer in tune with/caring about the popular fashions of the day. There's something almost wrong to me about seeing these guys perform in the peak of the 1980s, a time period where so much had changed compared to the cultural revolution of the 1960s and the decade of music it ushered in. Not to say that I hate the 80's by any means -- there's plenty of music from the decade that I do like. I guess it's just especially fascinating to me as a 37-year-old who didn't get to experience music and culture of the 1960s - 1980s as it happened.

    • @WillieWeed
      @WillieWeed 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@robertfoshizzle me too. I was born in the spring before the summer of love in 67. Because by the next summer greed had come to San Francisco and swamped the love. And with a doubling of population every few decades, that group doubles also. I just try to live with hate for nobody in my heart. Which sounds easy at first. But becomes tough when you see these cult leaders around the world causing damage to so many. Most in God's name too, but not exclusively. You have extremes in the Amish, Mormon's, hasidic Jews and Christian's. As well as Scientology who has no religion but uses the name for the financial benefits and protection from prosecution it seems to stop of this sexual abuse of kid's. While they abuse adults too, it's the kid's who can't fight back I worry about. Then you have maga. Another cult causing support for the rich in a different way. It's a mess right now.

  • @igordewit7357
    @igordewit7357 Год назад +27

    Yep...if it was good,it was G😮😮D!!! Stones with Mick Taylor:best stuff they ever recorded ,in my opinion. Classic!

    • @arturoreyblanco-hortiguera9338
      @arturoreyblanco-hortiguera9338 Год назад +3

      I think the same

    • @bobblaszczak7972
      @bobblaszczak7972 Год назад +2

      Yep.

    • @389383
      @389383 Год назад +2

      The most creative was with Jones. They always knew Brian could add a "flavor" to their songs. Taylor was a great player on guitar but that was it.

    • @jeffwatts1126
      @jeffwatts1126 Год назад +1

      Well, he Didnt play on Beggars Banquet, and did very little on Let it Bleed.....for me thats the best of the Stones

    • @teleguy5699
      @teleguy5699 Год назад +2

      @@389383 They were a Blues/Pop band then. When Taylor arrived they morphed into a rock and roll band. Especially live.

  • @laurenceshaw8060
    @laurenceshaw8060 Год назад +6

    Wow, so great to get to be a "fly on the wall" and here these guys interact.

  • @deanrane1961
    @deanrane1961 Год назад +1

    What a cool fly on the wall moment! I have a picture of this night with Keith, Woody, Dylan & Jack Nicholson that Keith signed for me on the Main Offender tour. Much thanx for sharing this.

  • @user-qp4sy2dp5b
    @user-qp4sy2dp5b Год назад +7

    Class to the max...just a great respect to the English players no bad backstabbing just the little quirks but no bashing behind the back....maybe all could learn and be this way?

  • @grizzghost2085
    @grizzghost2085 Год назад +23

    Taylor is in a league of his known.

    • @389383
      @389383 Год назад +2

      Yes, the Minor Leagues.

    • @JohnTroiani
      @JohnTroiani Год назад

      ​@@389383 you must like shitty guitar playing, Talyor has played with Alvin lee ,Allan Holdsworth ,Eric Clapton ,Albert King ,GEORGE Lowell , Buddy Guy ,Mark Knopfler, Gerry Garcia ,Carlos Santana ,Keith and Ronnie couldnt play a decent solo if their lives depended on it ,check youtube ,minor leagues my ----

    • @Methilde
      @Methilde Год назад +1

      They look quite envious and little men here.

    • @123456stronzo
      @123456stronzo 11 месяцев назад

      no that would be woody ,he belongs in double A ,

  • @tattoofthesun
    @tattoofthesun Год назад +2

    Hey thanks for posting!!

  • @tyg715
    @tyg715 Год назад +10

    Bob Dylan voice is so attractive to the mind.

  • @100hooker
    @100hooker 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you for the subtitles!

  • @euromayan
    @euromayan 6 месяцев назад +3

    Mick Taylor added a smooth layer to Keith's rhythmic Raunch, the best stones era after the founder Brian jones

  • @cambium0
    @cambium0 Год назад +13

    having *both* knopfler and Taylor on Infidels was a great idea. Very different styles and so complimentary. I think they are on the same track a few times and it's so cool.

  • @haysfordays
    @haysfordays Год назад +3

    Wow. Keith!! Dude is sharp. Love this convo.

  • @DesertScorpionKSA
    @DesertScorpionKSA Год назад +23

    For me, the Stones' golden years were with Mick Taylor. He is a virtuoso lead guitar player and that went well with Keith's virtuoso rhythm guitar playing. Ron Wood is too much like Keith Richards.

    • @rwh2559
      @rwh2559 Год назад +2

      Pretty much everything he played on in the stones is fantastic.

  • @lpowers
    @lpowers Год назад +7

    Great self-awareness with Keith admitting that he's "like that"--needing other people to make his music (unlike Bob?).

  • @Dan-zq5wt
    @Dan-zq5wt Год назад +3

    Fascinating!

  • @JBags72
    @JBags72 8 месяцев назад +2

    The Mick Taylor years are by far the Stones’ best! They made one great album after another. Something they were never able to repeat after his departure. Dylan complimented and criticized Taylor in the same breath. Maybe he should listen to how horrendous his own vocals are.
    “I think he had a big contribution. He made it very musical. He was a very fluent, melodic player, which we never had, and we don't have now.”……”Mick Taylor would play very fluid lines against my vocals. He was exciting, and he was very pretty, and it gave me something to follow, to bang off. Some people think that's the best version of the band that existed". - Mick Jagger

    • @Kleermaker1000
      @Kleermaker1000 8 месяцев назад +1

      " Some people think that's the best version of the band that existed". - Mick Jagger. Jagger actually means: it was the best version of the band that existed. And he's spot on.

  • @zenncatt
    @zenncatt Год назад

    Priceless. Thanks!

  • @jesseregenauer630
    @jesseregenauer630 10 месяцев назад

    This was very cool to hear..... My personal philosophy as a musician aligns. I love creating music where there is a fellowship in creating it. Mick Taylor did this VERY WELL and is a brilliant guitarist. While I really dig a lot of material from the Jones/Woody eras, the era of Taylor/Richards is BY FAR my favorite . Both guys are great by themselves but together they were seriously a powerhouse. Taylor's career high point will ALWAYS be from the Rolling Stones....

  • @gloriahoulihan8717
    @gloriahoulihan8717 Год назад +2

    I loved the music of The Rolling Stones when Mick Taylor was in the group.I agree with what Keith says.

  • @steveconn
    @steveconn Год назад +13

    Money For Nothing is a great song. It and Dire Straits owned '85 (Taylor not getting any credits while covering for smacked out Keith also hastened his exit).

    • @mikethebike7372
      @mikethebike7372 10 месяцев назад

      I thought the harmony of Mark with Gordon Sumner were great.

  • @plectroman
    @plectroman Год назад +3

    Billy Preston was a hell of a front man and made some great records as leader!

  • @a.c.4732
    @a.c.4732 Год назад +7

    wow ! thats a bit of gold-dust right there

  • @tmmyjay
    @tmmyjay 11 месяцев назад +2

    The Mick Taylor era is my favorite. Especially Sticky

  • @johndaugherty4127
    @johndaugherty4127 Год назад +27

    Fascinating. Keith always tells it like it is.

    • @765claire
      @765claire 11 месяцев назад +1

      Lol, no he doesn't

  • @mr.d.4175
    @mr.d.4175 7 месяцев назад +2

    Hearing Richard's talk about someone else having a lack of energy...

  • @tootsieshmutsie6428
    @tootsieshmutsie6428 Год назад

    ultra cool, thanku

  • @ToddRock16
    @ToddRock16 Год назад

    Wow. That was cool.
    Thanks 🙏

  • @damiensuil2183
    @damiensuil2183 Год назад +5

    fascinating insights especially from ronnie and keeef

  • @joedaw3003
    @joedaw3003 Год назад +19

    The little Dylan says makes you yearn for so much more. Good control over his opinions it is infuriating

    • @dixonpinfold2582
      @dixonpinfold2582 Год назад +8

      Yeah, but he might not quite feel entitled to any opinions in that particular company, just out of good manners, and quite rightly so. Dylan has a reputation as a man who conducts himself well, and it's for good reason.
      Perhaps I'm telling you what you're telling me.

    • @russellszabadosaka5-pindin849
      @russellszabadosaka5-pindin849 Год назад +1

      Well, since I haven't met the man, that's the most I've heard Dylan say and the most normal I've heard him act ever. I only know him from interviews after 1980 or so, which is nothing like the Dylan of 1962. Always the jaded, wary, cautious interviewee. It was cool to hear how he acts with friends in private.

    • @Da_Publick
      @Da_Publick 10 месяцев назад

      He knows Wood and Richards know Taylor personally and professionally a lot better than he does.

  • @pablohabibefigueiredo7142
    @pablohabibefigueiredo7142 Год назад +8

    Taylor's solos are still the best solos on Rolling Stones history...

    • @bjones8470
      @bjones8470 Год назад +1

      In history period

    • @angus7278
      @angus7278 Год назад

      In the studio, absolutely.
      Live? Hit or miss….

    • @bjones8470
      @bjones8470 Год назад

      @@angus7278 really I haven’t heard Mick Taylor have a bad night with the Stones. I’ve heard dozens of shows from 69-73 and he’s always smooth as silk

    • @davidmclachlan6592
      @davidmclachlan6592 11 месяцев назад

      Stop Breaking Down on Exile on Mainstream......mind blowing!

    • @jeffbrumby3442
      @jeffbrumby3442 10 месяцев назад +1

      For me he had a great rapport musically with Jagger, some of the subtle stuff he played while Mick was singing really brought out the beauty of the sings

  • @hankwedelmusic9965
    @hankwedelmusic9965 Год назад +1

    Like A Rolling Stone…
    Indeed…

  • @Tcoldsteel
    @Tcoldsteel 11 месяцев назад +1

    ‘He didn’t know when to stop.
    Or start’
    - sounds like a line from Spinal Tap 😂

  • @green323turbo
    @green323turbo Год назад +2

    That is Cool ! Nice to see they don't bad mouth Mick Taylor behind his back , but Ronnie always has that story of how Mick was shy and Ronnie went on for him in his teen band the Gods ... thats a bit of a diss by Ronnie . Bob Dylan has so much class

    • @765claire
      @765claire 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yes and it's not true. Mick has said "Yeah, I'd smoked too many joints and I passed out and Ronnie stood in for me with the Gods." Idk if Ronnie was trying to cover up Mick's drug use or something but he always says that stage fright story which isn't true.

  • @michaelheller8841
    @michaelheller8841 9 месяцев назад

    It was really RW's idea to bring Mick Taylor back to tour live with The Stones in 2013 and I'm happy that Ron
    did that. I think it was in 1984 that Bob Dylan toured live with Mick Taylor as his lead guitarist. Some of Mick Taylors' solos with Bob Dylan were incredible.

  • @AlejandroJonahRamirez
    @AlejandroJonahRamirez Год назад +8

    Bob is like, “this is getting awks”

  • @franktaconelli9095
    @franktaconelli9095 Год назад

    that was very cool

  • @mikakoskinen1684
    @mikakoskinen1684 Год назад +1

    Imagine, all these guys are still alive.

  • @sundrenched6248
    @sundrenched6248 Год назад +3

    What Keith says at the end is SOOOO true though, and nothing wrong with that. We have this imagine of him as being some out of control junkie, but he's much more cultured and psychologically insightful than that. Perhaps one thing that should change is how the money is allocated and where the prestige goes. A great arrangement can turn an OK song into something memorable and great, but it's the songwriter who ultimately gets the credit. An extreme example of this is Vini Reilly getting a measly .5% of the royalties on Viva Hate, even though his guitar playing is what lifts the record from good to great. Viva Hate in my opinion is the only Morrissey record that's fully equivalent to a Smiths record. He had some good songs afterwards, but never reached those heights again. And paid the guy a miserly .5% for that, like he was some session musician who happened to be in the building.

  • @mOYNTdnbzso
    @mOYNTdnbzso Год назад +10

    Taylor was the best "accompanist" the Stones ever had.

    • @389383
      @389383 Год назад +3

      Nicky Hopkins.

    • @mOYNTdnbzso
      @mOYNTdnbzso Год назад +1

      @@389383 beautiful ivory tickling... And yes perhaps the best true accompanist to the stones. Taylor was not an accompanist, but a true stone.

  • @Bushface13
    @Bushface13 Год назад +24

    Speaking highly of Taylor . Take a bow Mick.

    • @692MOM
      @692MOM Год назад +4

      Very few comments speak highly of Taylor...most of it is critical!!!

    • @Bushface13
      @Bushface13 Год назад +3

      @@692MOM Definitely not true. And here we are speaking of comments from musicians.

    • @offrande1148
      @offrande1148 Год назад +2

      Love MT..!

    • @JG-wr5he
      @JG-wr5he Год назад

      KR said mick never had two good nights in a row and the other two start to agree and tell stories of him not going on.

    • @slimturnpike
      @slimturnpike Год назад

      Not a group man, they seemed to agree.

  • @markymark21c
    @markymark21c Год назад +12

    a bit of genuine chat from real musicians...

    • @389383
      @389383 Год назад +1

      Love to hear more.

    • @765claire
      @765claire 11 месяцев назад

      Ronnie saying shit about MT again 🙄

  • @andydixon2980
    @andydixon2980 Год назад +13

    Not much rehearsal going on. Kinda explains the messy Live Aid set....

  • @rddavies
    @rddavies Год назад +12

    Pretty sure this predates Dylan using both Taylor and Knopfler on "Foot of Pride" which has got some amazing guitar bits from those two. I think they were on the entire album. Probably Bob was taking notes here lol.

    • @encoreunefois1X
      @encoreunefois1X Год назад +2

      Thanks to this I've now discovered Foot of Pride. Looking further I see Money For Nothing came out in 1985 while Foot was 83. Not being an aficionado I may be missing something.

    • @tonypeterson5156
      @tonypeterson5156 Год назад +1

      @@encoreunefois1X Lou Reed kills Foot of Pride

    • @johndaugherty4127
      @johndaugherty4127 Год назад +5

      No. Knofler played on Dylan's 1979 Slow Train a 'Comin album.

    • @robertway5756
      @robertway5756 Год назад +1

      There's a video of Knopfler and Taylor playing with BD.
      Can't recall the song.

    • @frankpike3684
      @frankpike3684 Год назад

      @@robertway5756 License to Kill! ruclips.net/video/HRrlFYg2QkI/видео.html

  • @lipiarskisteve
    @lipiarskisteve Год назад

    saw it in Marseille in a small hall ...The beast part was can't ou hear me knocking ...the solo ....So he just played the solo ..SAd.

  • @AladdinAudible
    @AladdinAudible Год назад +1

    Anybody notice at 0:28 and 0:31 what appears to be the sound of someone snorting a bit of the old you know what? Considering Ronnie Woods and Keith Richard are both talking at the time, and it's not til the 0:44 mark that we hear Dylan join the conversation with "Yeah, he's usually alright" followed by a seconds pause and then laughter from the other two, I'd say it was Dylan 👃🗞💭

  • @paulmunt6258
    @paulmunt6258 4 месяца назад +1

    I think a lot of it comes from the old adage 'not everyone can hack it, being in the Stones'.
    Look at Brian, he was a great talent, and enhanced so much of the early stuff with his talent, and beautiful playing of so many different instruments. Unfortunately, he had trouble dealing with the enormous fame that came to them, and of course, couldn't handle his
    addictions. Mick Taylor was younger than the rest of the band, and was never the best
    fit as a member of the Stones, whereas Ronnie was an ideal fit, even though he may not
    be as good a guitarist as Mick. I think you just need to appreciate the varied line-ups
    that this band have had over 60 years.

    • @TheaterPup
      @TheaterPup 3 месяца назад

      Brian lived the life the other Stones only wrote about.

  • @DODO-vy6sf
    @DODO-vy6sf Год назад +3

    Neither of these two could sit on the fingertips of Mick Taylor, that's why they are talking; what else Ron Wood could do but use his mouth given the superiority of Mick Taylor's guitar.

  • @scsmith621
    @scsmith621 4 месяца назад

    Mick was a Great Player !

  • @slimturnpike
    @slimturnpike Год назад +3

    That was enlightening

  • @alexgarza4513
    @alexgarza4513 Год назад +22

    Keith always has the most based takes lol

  • @willbuckley54
    @willbuckley54 Год назад +5

    f'ner f'ner f'ner goes Keefy. Far out man - sez Dylan. Shit - sez Ron Wood. It's top level banter!!! F'ner f'ner f'ner. Say man - can yer pass me that joint? F'ner f'ner f'ner.

  • @MaySecond07
    @MaySecond07 Год назад

    Wow!

  • @ClassicRockFilms
    @ClassicRockFilms Год назад +1

    AAAH This like discovering gold

  • @noahschmartz2354
    @noahschmartz2354 Год назад +4

    actually Taylor thought the stones werent even a good garage band when they first asked him to join and its pretty obvious how much better than them he really was upon watching one of the live versions of 'Dead flowers' . Furthermore , when asked about 'love and theft' , Dylan said he did it " because I can and the only reason people like Mick Jagger dont do it is because they cant".

    • @zanichbug
      @zanichbug 9 месяцев назад

      Dead Flowers from the Marquee Club is killer Taylor!!

  • @kencabeen7786
    @kencabeen7786 10 месяцев назад +1

    The Stones were great before, during, and after Mick Taylor. Simple as that.

  • @nanakmccann
    @nanakmccann Год назад +5

    I think Keith felt a bit threatened by Mick in the band and it played a part in his leaving. Taylor and Jagger wrote some stuff together and Taylor was such a good player, while Kieth was heavy into addiction. Kieth maybe felt he'd get pushed out as head guitar and writer. Where Ronnie there isn't that. Kieth is my favorite guitar player all time though and those albums they did together with Taylor are the greatest.

    • @ianstu1940
      @ianstu1940 Год назад +5

      I’ve seen this mentioned by Mick Taylor fans constantly but there is just no proof of that. Look at magazine polls from the time and Keith is by far the most popular/ influential guitarist and it’s not even close. In terms of writing if they gave credit to every song Taylor supposedly wrote it would still be less than 10. Keith was by far the stronger writer especially during the exile sessions, having a hand in more than half of the songs.

    • @nanakmccann
      @nanakmccann Год назад

      @@ianstu1940 Keith is my favorite all time guitar player. I think he’s the best songwriter with guitar, plus all the grit and the riffs. Let it bleed album he was basically the only guitar player. it’s one of my favorite. However, my feelings that he was threatened by Taylor and Jaggers relationship comes from reading Keith’s autobiography. Not saying my feeling is correct. It was just my take from things Keith wrote. I don’t think those insecurities were valid though. Kieth is incredible.

    • @Rockpig1969
      @Rockpig1969 Год назад +2

      Taylor had his own heroin problem while in The Stones. He cites it as his main reason for leaving.

    • @765claire
      @765claire 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@ianstu1940 People who were there at the time have mentioned it including MJ, Charlie, Andy Johns, Marshall Chess, Rose Millar, and Anita Pallenberg. You think they are all wrong? Just because Keith was more popular doesn't mean he didn't feel jealous or threatened by MJ working on songs with something else instead of him.

    • @zanichbug
      @zanichbug 9 месяцев назад

      Keith was the greatest riff writer in the world for years; that's not to be compared to Taylor. Nothing wrong with being a tremendous soloist in someone else's band.@@ianstu1940

  • @coltruiz7126
    @coltruiz7126 Год назад +1

    I'm like that!!!

  • @juliusevola8806
    @juliusevola8806 Год назад +3

    1:15 - I wonder what Keith was thinking when he said, "Taylor...."

  • @lfader
    @lfader Год назад

    This is fascinating s*** ...DUDE!!!
    MT chatup from these heavyweights 😳
    🌟🌟 Mick Taylor 🌟🌟

  • @jimkavanagh4646
    @jimkavanagh4646 Год назад +1

    I have listened to many of Dylan's '84 shows when Taylor was in the band and Mick was consistently great. I don't know what Dylan is talking about...

    • @VideoAmericanStyle
      @VideoAmericanStyle Год назад

      Just Dylan being Dylan. He always seemed a bit afraid of being upstaged by anyone, hence his rotating of bands over the years.

  • @jgwire
    @jgwire Год назад +1

    wow -- what a wild conversation.....they sucked imo at Live Aid tho -- actually, they looked and acted drunk -- but if this is the Live Aid day, they sound pretty together.....Thanks for posting.

  • @mikeodonnell6799
    @mikeodonnell6799 Год назад +19

    Taylor was the man who saved the stones

    • @tenbroeck1958
      @tenbroeck1958 Год назад +3

      For multiple reasons. To me their best stuff was 69-75, then again for Tattoo You, which incidentally, was mostly old recording with Mick Taylor that were never finished, so they got thrown together and everyone was thinking "The Stones are back!!!" But it was kind of an illusion, fueled by Mick Taylor recordings from 10 years prior.

    • @mikeodonnell6799
      @mikeodonnell6799 Год назад +1

      @@tenbroeck1958 oh exactly

    • @fuchsiaswing8545
      @fuchsiaswing8545 Год назад +4

      ​@@tenbroeck1958I would argue that Goats Head Soup (1973) and It's Only Rock 'n Roll (1974) are comparably weaker efforts than Aftermath (UK and US, 1966) and Between the Buttons (UK and US, 1967). Musically, both records have some brilliant moments, but they represent a downward trend in the band's creative oeuvre. Additionally, Tattoo You (1981) mainly consisted of Ron Wood-era tracks from the Some Girls and Emotional Rescue sessions outside of "Tops" and "Waiting on a Friend" (from Goats Head Soup/Taylor-era), and "Slave" and "Worried About You" (Black and Blue/Post-Taylor-era). The rest are from Some Girls and Emotional Rescue.

    • @tenbroeck1958
      @tenbroeck1958 Год назад +6

      @@fuchsiaswing8545 I'm happily indecisive with the Stones. I love and miss Brian Jones and his awesome Welshness. He played like 15 instruments and was the reason that, unlike the Beatles, they could play their psychedelic tunes live: Paint it Black, 19TH Nervous Breakdown, Ruby Tuesday, etc. However, the return to the hard Blues with Mick Taylor is what most think of as the Stones, which I absolutely love. One thing is for sure: Dirty Work onward is a perpetual turd!

    • @slimturnpike
      @slimturnpike Год назад +2

      ​​​@@fuchsiaswing8545 I agree with your sentiments. I never liked most of GHS but they did come up with quite a few great tunes after that album.
      Taylor was a great guitarist but not a great fit for the Stones imo. Yet I wholeheartedly agree that the Stones hit a peak during Taylor's tenure. I don't think that's entirely because of Taylor but for sure he was part of it, just as Brian and Ronnie have left their fingerprints on the band's development.
      But Goat's Head was overproduced and not a good representation of what the heart of the group was about imo. That's not Taylor's fault either but maybe his polished playing unintentionally drove them and/or producer Jimmy Miller in that direction.

  • @blue-fj9ky
    @blue-fj9ky Год назад +2

    Fascinating comment comparing Mick Taylor to Billy Preston! And Keith saying he was like that, too.

  • @marketingTUNEUP
    @marketingTUNEUP 2 месяца назад

    He left his mark. Diamonds - Ya Ya, Sticky, Exile. Retire. Play with who you want. He may have had regrets on occasion, but we all make decisions based on what the soul needs at any given time.

  • @NB.77
    @NB.77 Год назад

  • @jacintocastaneda6496
    @jacintocastaneda6496 Год назад +3

    Keith was right mick Taylor is the kind of artist/guitar player who always wanted to be a solo artist but never delivered ir developed his desires it’s not the same accompaniment to be the front man it’s the same that happened to George Harrison at least George was a great composer/ guitarist and a singer delivered amazing albums.

    • @fuchsiaswing8545
      @fuchsiaswing8545 Год назад

      I think Taylor was interested in making more of a fusion album in the vein of Jeff Beck, but his record label put pressure on him to make something semi-Stonesy and commercial. On his solo debut, there's a great track called “Spanish / A Minor” that gives an inkling into his more progressive/jazzy tendencies.

    • @765claire
      @765claire 11 месяцев назад

      Didn't help that he was a drug addict either

  • @hikedayley9309
    @hikedayley9309 4 месяца назад +2

    sounds like they are all High as a Kite

  • @JMoisica
    @JMoisica Год назад +3

    What’s the source for this tape? Never heard it before

    • @kenkeppol9175
      @kenkeppol9175 Год назад +1

      My guess it was recorded when they got together in NYC for Live Aide Rehearsals. There is a 3(?) song bootleg of that, the Basement Tape or something like that. They drove to Philly day of show in a van.

  • @marlonamos2759
    @marlonamos2759 11 месяцев назад

    The Mick Taylor years were the best years the rolling stones ever had,besides I read when Ronnie an Keith played with Dylan at live aid,everybody had a little too much to drink at the time

  • @JamesWilliams-js4fo
    @JamesWilliams-js4fo Год назад +9

    They were talking about a song called broken hands, which I heard years ago on some weird Rolling stones bootleg my friend had. I loved the song so much because Keith was the one singing it and I love all of the stones songs he sings. The bootleg was very cool and I never forgot that song. I can't even remember the name of the bootleg & I've even tried to find this song on you tube and couldn't. Does anybody know it or what bootleg it was on?

    • @johngraves8142
      @johngraves8142 Год назад +11

      'Broken Hands' can be found on Mick Taylor's first solo album.

    • @JamesWilliams-js4fo
      @JamesWilliams-js4fo Год назад +3

      @@johngraves8142 I just listened and it's the same song for sure but it ain't Keith Richards singing it. I may have thought it was Keith at the time as I was really young. Great song & thanks for the info.👍

    • @johngraves8142
      @johngraves8142 Год назад +5

      @@JamesWilliams-js4fo Mick Taylor wrote the song which is probably why he sings it but, on hearing it again, I think you can easily be excused for believing it was Keith. What impresses me the most though is how much the song resembles 'Hand Of Fate'.

    • @JamesWilliams-js4fo
      @JamesWilliams-js4fo Год назад

      @@johngraves8142 Yeah it does. I'm thinking I can hear him playing a F# chord with the b & e strings ringing out which is really a cool. Mick Taylor is a great guitar player him and Keith.

    • @johngraves8142
      @johngraves8142 Год назад +8

      @@JamesWilliams-js4fo The Stones' greatest albums were all made when he was in the band. I get the impression that Keith was genuinely sorry that he left.

  • @shamsam4
    @shamsam4 Год назад

    Wow.

  • @jonathanmills5747
    @jonathanmills5747 11 месяцев назад +2

    Mick Taylor grew up in the same street as me in Hatfield. He is one of our town's favourite sons.
    We also claim Paul Kossoff from Free. It can't be in the water or I could play the guitar.
    I love seeing the love in these comments for him, we also claim, Donovan (mellow yellow) and the Zombies (she's not there).

    • @robbiemontgomery581
      @robbiemontgomery581 5 месяцев назад +1

      Donovan's from Maryhill in Scotland 😂

    • @jonathanmills5747
      @jonathanmills5747 5 месяцев назад

      @@robbiemontgomery581 I have just learned something I never knew. I will have to Wikipedia him now to brush up on the Man. It's news to me, so we merely adopted him in Hatfield. Cheers for the heads up 👍

    • @jonathanmills5747
      @jonathanmills5747 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@robbiemontgomery581 yep just checked him out, indeed a son of Glasgow.
      I will be careful in the future so I don't incorrectly make any claims to his true beginnings.

    • @robbiemontgomery581
      @robbiemontgomery581 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@jonathanmills5747 Don't worry about it we're used to the English trying to take credit for our achievements. It's a form of flattery ;)

    • @jonathanmills5747
      @jonathanmills5747 5 месяцев назад

      @@robbiemontgomery581 I guess I played the typical sassanac, yep we steal all the good stuff from you guys, tax you, tell you what to do and lie like bastards making false promises when you finally get a referendum.
      I have been North of the Border twice, once to Inverness and once to Glasgow. Without a doubt the most beautiful part of the UK. Not only does London politics screw you but the religious C of E keeps you all divided up there, rendering the chance of a french style revolution almost impossible.
      I wish Scotland to be independent as my pal is dating a Glasgow lassie, he is up and down all the time from Hatfield and I could get him to grab me duty free tobacco.
      I am actually a bitsa with 50% of my roots Polish, so I'm not the Gammon sort 😊

  • @mchabert7087
    @mchabert7087 Год назад +2

    Interesting or just a joke that "Leather Jacket" is about Keif. Some say was about Mick. Some say it was autobiographical..

  • @greyjay9202
    @greyjay9202 Год назад +2

    Sounds like what they'd say behind Mick's back, when they thought the conversation was private. Bunch of old gossipers.

    • @TheaterPup
      @TheaterPup 11 месяцев назад

      It's gossip, but not especially mean spirited. More like observing behavior.

  • @cyclesgoff9768
    @cyclesgoff9768 11 месяцев назад

    Fk man , wonderful 😍❤️

  • @joeferguson2606
    @joeferguson2606 Год назад

    the day before live aid

  • @beaterossi2748
    @beaterossi2748 10 месяцев назад

    Ich habe mich oft gefragt, ob er es bereut hat, die Stones verlassen zu haben, es wäre doch auch für beide Platz genug in der Band, für Ronnie u Mick, so wie bei der E Street Band Little Steven und Peter Frampton, die ergänzen sich doch wunderbar

  • @karlmehltretter2677
    @karlmehltretter2677 28 дней назад

    Even without the sound issues, I can't imagine three accoustic guitars really doing well. Maybe this would have done better:
    a) Dylan only singing and harmonica
    b) Ron Wood on accoustic guitar
    c) Keith Richards on electic guitar, doing some fills.

  • @ronedee
    @ronedee 13 дней назад

    A lot of Truth here, if not opinion. The fact about some artists are just better at accompaniment, over their own writing & perfomance attempts. That can be said about many, many musicians.

  • @drewventura6609
    @drewventura6609 Год назад +4

    What's fascinating to me is the relationship between Keith Richards, Bob Dylan and Mick Jagger. I'm a fan of the three of them and I think someone should make an album or a movie with them. I would love to...

  • @RealmoftheBlackShadow
    @RealmoftheBlackShadow Год назад +1

    Why no video?