First time listening to THE ROLLING STONES - "STICKY FINGERS" (Side 1)

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  • Опубликовано: 11 июл 2024
  • This is VERDY CHANNEL. Today I react to the rolling stones - sticky fingers album - for the first time.
    If you want early access and to support me
    PATREON (link) : / verdy_channel
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    Like, comment and subscribe
    VERDY channel.
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Комментарии • 324

  • @Hartlor_Tayley
    @Hartlor_Tayley Год назад +59

    One of the best albums of the era. In 1971 everyone was cooking, a peak year in rock. Great reaction

    • @bumperu
      @bumperu Год назад +2

      The garage bands of the 60s were maturing musically and the singer songwriter was just arriving on the scene and the year I graduated from High School. The perfect storm.

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley Год назад +2

      @@bumperu it was a perfect storm

    • @t.j.payeur5331
      @t.j.payeur5331 Год назад +1

      Man..we were Spoiled Rotten!

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley Год назад

      @@t.j.payeur5331 yes we were. I kind of had a sense that it was just a temporary phase but mostly I thought it would just keep expanding and growing forever.

  • @rickfortier8664
    @rickfortier8664 Год назад +16

    When I bought the vinyl of this album, there was an actual zipper for the jeans on the cover!

  • @GhoulishGrinMedia
    @GhoulishGrinMedia Год назад +54

    I’ve listened to these songs on classic rock radio for DECADES and this wonderful young lady seems to catch details in the songs that I was barely aware of. What ears! She has great attention to detail…

    • @joescott8877
      @joescott8877 Год назад +3

      I know, right, lol! There are definitely some reactors who have put me to shame with what they notice after just one hearing! Crystal Shannon is one, tho she seems to have sort of dropped out, but her Beatles reviews especially are, frankly, brilliant. Amber at Rob Squad has the same knack. Soul Train Brother excels with Zeppelin.

    • @kikovazquez7277
      @kikovazquez7277 Год назад +2

      @@joescott8877 Yeah, she certainly caught on instantly to some of the subtleties and nuances -- so much so that I wouldn't be surprised if she had done a little research before she listened, and btw, I think that's the best way to do these reactions. Personally, I don't enjoy hearing some reactors stumble through cluelessly having no idea of what they're listening to. You're really right on it shouting out Amber at Rob Squad. She's got an amazing ear and music processor in her brain. As for her other half.........uh, better to say nothing as he comes across as a very good dude. What's amazing (if true), I believe he started the channel intending to do it by himself - Amber came on as a guest and everybody knew she needed to be there. They should definitely change the name of the channel to honor her.

  • @taztaztaz
    @taztaztaz Год назад +41

    RIP the great Bobby Keys on saxophone.. wonderful documentary on him on netflix or youtube.. man the stories he had of his days touring with the Stones..

    • @vicprovost2561
      @vicprovost2561 Год назад +2

      Bobby Keys was dope and always a highlight when he appeared on a Stones record.

    • @jimwiese3814
      @jimwiese3814 Год назад +1

      Had the pleasure of parting with him in Austin after he'd returned from a Stones' tour of Europe in the good year 1986! Verdy... UR reactions are great! merci from Wsconsin1

  • @davidboivin7996
    @davidboivin7996 Год назад +11

    Can't You Hear Me Knocking is my fav Stones song.

    • @artistnyc123
      @artistnyc123 3 месяца назад +1

      Probably the best riffs of any rock 'n' roll song ever and certainly the opening.

  • @jasonremy1627
    @jasonremy1627 Год назад +34

    My favorite album of all time. Every song a banger. I swear, I listen to this once a week!

    • @andrewbrennan7291
      @andrewbrennan7291 Год назад +2

      Same here. It's probably the best Stones experience - apart from a live show.

    • @babel232
      @babel232 Год назад +1

      It's a tie with Beggars Banquet for My Favorite Stones, And They're 3rd fave for me behind Doors L.A Woman and Zeppelin IV.

  • @davidgilbert9335
    @davidgilbert9335 7 месяцев назад +2

    I was 15 when this album came out. Living in Nairobi, Kenya. Bought the album at East African Music Store. Back then we’d carry the albums to each others houses, get stoned and rock out. What great memories! Thanks to the Glimmer Twins!

  • @tonybaker55
    @tonybaker55 Год назад +40

    Can you imagine what this was like for a 16 year old hearing this when it first came out? Sensational!

    • @mjeffn2
      @mjeffn2 Год назад +3

      Does 17 count? 😅

    • @pkunberger9287
      @pkunberger9287 Год назад +1

      @@mjeffn2 Live. I was 17.

    • @stratcat3216
      @stratcat3216 Год назад +1

      As a matter of fact... I can :)

    • @RITH5150
      @RITH5150 11 месяцев назад

      I was 13 I loved it

    • @alanFconrad
      @alanFconrad 7 месяцев назад

      I DID imagine it lol

  • @woojoke
    @woojoke Год назад +13

    The zipper still works on my album's cover of this masterpiece ~

    • @stevenmotchan2048
      @stevenmotchan2048 Год назад +2

      Mine too but the disk looks like it was sandpapered.

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley Год назад +2

      @@stevenmotchan2048 I thought it was cool when I bought it then over time I began to hate the zipper. Had to keep the album in its own slot.

    • @markreynolds3462
      @markreynolds3462 Год назад

      I don’t know how many times I tried to stick a finger in that zipper and it never got sticky.

  • @markeast9221
    @markeast9221 Год назад +5

    In Brown Sugar ,the horn was a Saxophone and the shaker sound were Mic Jagger playing Maracas !

  • @davidenders9282
    @davidenders9282 Год назад +4

    The saxophone on Brown Sugar & the solo on Knocking was played by Bobby Keys. Who started being a regular member of the Stones records & their touring band from this album on to his passing in 2014. He mostly played the Tenor & Baritone sax.

  • @artsilva
    @artsilva Год назад +69

    The second half of Can't You Hear Me Knocking was an unplanned piece. Supposedly after the first part of the song was done some of the musicians kept on going in an impromptu jam session, something the Stones did a lot in the studio sessions. The Recording Engineer didn't stop the tape and let it continue to record. The musicians who stepped away all eventually came back in the studio and re-joined in the jam. History was then made and the brilliance of Mick Taylor and his guitar was showcased for the world to enjoy.
    You Got To Move is basically the style and sound of old old school Mississippi Blues with acoustic dobro slide guitars and kick drum and cymbal, very reminiscent of late 1800 to early 1900 blues before the electric guitar age

    • @UnderDriven17
      @UnderDriven17 Год назад +14

      Mick Taylor was the one who kept playing. They later filled in the time before the other guys returned to their instruments with the sax solo and the percussion. My favorite part is Charlie giving the guys multiple cues to to wrap it up, because if it went too long it would just be a jam and wouldn't make it onto the album. He knew it was something special and didn't want it to go to waste. Yeah, great solo by Mick!

    • @fredtheted2259
      @fredtheted2259 Год назад

      That’s wrong keef was the one that carried on playing and the rest continued, I honestly don’t know why the ending gets so much love it’s a poor man’s Santana jam, the glory is the song, keefs peak open tuning playing

    • @artsilva
      @artsilva Год назад +4

      @@fredtheted2259 okay Felicia

    • @ChrisBlair-ev3mp
      @ChrisBlair-ev3mp Год назад +1

      @@fredtheted2259 You say; "That's wrong", but what you mean is; "That's not the story I'm familiar with", since you, yourself, actually have no way of knowing what's right or wrong.

    • @landonspearman
      @landonspearman Год назад +1

      @@fredtheted2259 It was Mick.

  • @jgaff66
    @jgaff66 Год назад +10

    The opening riff of " Can't you hear me knocking" still makes my toes curl after a thousand listens.

  • @Micknkeithable
    @Micknkeithable Год назад +4

    Bobby Keys…he hooked up with them in the late 60’s. True Texan that became Keith Richards best friend on the road.
    Sax legend

  • @custardflan
    @custardflan Год назад +41

    This is the golden age of the Rolling Stones, the Mick Taylor on guitar years, which along with this album includes Beggar's Banquet, Let it Bleed, Exile on Main Street and Get Yer Ya Yas Out. I bought this album when it came out. The album cover had a working zipper.

    • @saulturner3567
      @saulturner3567 Год назад +4

      This is partly true but can be misleading. Mick Taylor didn't play on Beggar's Banquet and his participation to Let It Bleed was minimal. I would add "Goat's Head Soup" to this selection as it's one of my favorite Stones records. He also plays on "It's Only Rock'n'Roll" but it is a much weaker records except maybe "Dance little sister" and "Fingerprint file".

    • @jasonremy1627
      @jasonremy1627 Год назад +4

      Jimmy Miller, the producer, was the secret sauce on all of those albums. His production really elevated their music.

    • @custardflan
      @custardflan Год назад +1

      @@saulturner3567 Yes, I was going to add the Brian Jones-Mick Taylor transition years/albums.

    • @ronaldelliott4373
      @ronaldelliott4373 Год назад +4

      Still have the original first press and zipper cover. A novelty in its day, to be sure.

    • @joescott8877
      @joescott8877 Год назад +2

      So much quality, so few years.

  • @MrThumbs63
    @MrThumbs63 Год назад +11

    Sway, Bitch, and Moonlight Mile are fantastic songs.

  • @davescurry69
    @davescurry69 Год назад +12

    That guitar playing you liked so much in the left channel was played by the great Mick Taylor. Taylor was in the Stones from 1969 to 1974. He replaced Stones founder Brian Jones. The Stones were never as good again after Taylor quit in 1974.

    • @ARD-lk5pr
      @ARD-lk5pr Год назад +1

      I thought she was referring to the rhythm from Keith rather than the solo.

    • @davescurry69
      @davescurry69 Год назад +2

      @ARD In "Sway" she was talking about Taylor's lead in the left channel. Keith doesn't even play on that one. The rhythm guitar on "Sway" is Mick J.

    • @denroy3
      @denroy3 Год назад

      @@ARD-lk5pr no she's not talking about the rhythm, she's talking about Taylor's lead, in the left channel.

    • @ARD-lk5pr
      @ARD-lk5pr Год назад +1

      @@davescurry69 Yeah that makes more sense!

  • @michaeldavid6284
    @michaeldavid6284 Год назад +9

    The horn you hear on the instrumental break in 'Brown Sugar" is a saxophone, played by Bobby Keys, who was an "unofficial" member or the band in the late 60s and 70s. Even years after first hearing it, I still think "Brown Sugar" is one of the top ten rock and roll songs of all time, and that sax solo is one reason. It is perfect for this song, and no sax solo was ever better.

  • @sarahzentexas
    @sarahzentexas Год назад +20

    Mick Taylor and Keith Richards together was always ALWAYS FIRE 🔥 GUITAR! These two albums - this and the next, Exile On Main St., are such classics because of the alchemy between them. I mean…everybody else in the band is perfection too. Just a peak time in the life of a band with more than a few peaks!

    • @phonebone81
      @phonebone81 Год назад

      You made my day ;-)) Greets from hamburg (germany)

    • @DARKSIDEOFURANUS
      @DARKSIDEOFURANUS 8 месяцев назад

      The alchemy disappeared by Goats Head Soup and never came back.

  • @Micknkeithable
    @Micknkeithable Год назад +25

    Brown Sugar was a worldwide #1 hit in 1971 and so was this legendary album

    • @luvlgs1
      @luvlgs1 Год назад +1

      and it had that wicked cover!

    • @Geezer-yf8hv
      @Geezer-yf8hv Год назад +1

      They stopped playing it, since a few thought it was “offensive”! Gawd, I hate weak minded cancel culture!

    • @ricktaylor5397
      @ricktaylor5397 Год назад +1

      There’s an alternate version of “Brown Sugar” released with Eric Clapton on lead guitar instead of Richards. Amazing! 🎸

    • @Geezer-yf8hv
      @Geezer-yf8hv Год назад

      @@ricktaylor5397 It was deemed racist for the lyrics, not the music!

  • @gypsylights9518
    @gypsylights9518 Год назад +4

    As always I love to watch you listen , Bobby Keys played tenor sax on "Can't You Hear Me Knocking" and Billy Preston was playing the organ.

  • @johnyarusso4953
    @johnyarusso4953 Год назад +6

    Probably the very best Stones album. I love your spirit and beauty.

    • @docbearmb
      @docbearmb Год назад

      Not probably; definitely.

  • @williamburkholder769
    @williamburkholder769 Год назад +2

    Like Bill Bruford of YES, Charlie Watts was a jazz drummer who played rock for a living... The horn you heard is a saxophone played by Bobby Keys. Some of the tracks on this - "You Gotta Move," "Brown Sugar" and "Wild Horses."- were recorded in the Muscle Shoals Sound studio, in Sheffield, Alabama in 1969. The session players there are legendary in their influence on rock, much the same as the guys at Sun Studios in Memphis. It's worth finding the film, Gimme Shelter and watching it. There are some scenes filmed at Muscle Shoals during the tracking of Sticky Fingers. The Stones were in fine form back then!

  • @dennisfitzgerald8486
    @dennisfitzgerald8486 Год назад +12

    a combination of rock, blues, jazz and gospel, great album, by the way love your reactions.

  • @docbearmb
    @docbearmb Год назад +16

    A. That instrument in Brown Sugar and heard at other times throughout the album is a tenor saxophone, played by the late, great Bobby Keys.
    The sax is one of the hottest and sexiest instruments in rock and blues.
    B. This was made during the Stones best era. That era covers the period when guitarist Mick Taylor was part of the band.
    C. The most unique album cover in history. It was designed by Andy Warhol and the zipper actually operated.

  • @fuchsiaswing8545
    @fuchsiaswing8545 Год назад +16

    “Sway” is without a doubt one of Mick Taylor’s finest moments with the Stones. Plays the bottleneck solo during the bridge and an amazing virtuosic solo in the outro. I also love Jagger’s rough-hewn style of rhythm guitar-he has such a distinct sound when he plays rhythm. No Keith, either - only on backing vocals.

    • @stephensuddick1896
      @stephensuddick1896 9 месяцев назад +1

      Possibly the greatest guitar solo of all time.

    • @asshat23871
      @asshat23871 6 месяцев назад +1

      his solo on Winter is great also

  • @scotttrainer9704
    @scotttrainer9704 Год назад +4

    I've been to two Stones concerts, 30 years apart. They are master class.

    • @nealamesbury7953
      @nealamesbury7953 2 месяца назад

      Yes- best show. Outdoors, a carnival atmosphere, that was my experience. Best.

  • @johncarter665
    @johncarter665 Год назад +1

    Love your channel Verdy.
    Bobby Keys (on sax) and Keith Richard were brothers from separate mothers. Both were born on the same day - December 18,1943 - Keith in London and Bobby Keys in Slaton, Texas. They met at a gig in San Antonio in 1964, and soon became best friends.

  • @Avalanche1368
    @Avalanche1368 Год назад +4

    That's Robert "Bobby" Keys on SAX. He played with the Stones forever .(RIP) That rip on Bown Sugar is one of the all time great rock sax solos! Not a bad song on the album. I first saw the Stones in 1972 when I was but a kid (13 yo) I've seen them at least a dozen tines since!

  • @andrewbrennan7291
    @andrewbrennan7291 Год назад +2

    The whole album is pure diamond. Sway is my favourite tune of all time.

  • @RogerDidierM.
    @RogerDidierM. Год назад +2

    "Can't You Hear Me Knocking" (one of my all-time favs with Gimme Shelter) was on the soundtrack of cult movie "Blow" with Johnny Depp and Penelope Cruz.

  • @ChicagoBeaver
    @ChicagoBeaver Год назад +14

    "Can't you Hear Me Knocking," was my first song that I learned the lead guitar too. As a teen, around 14 I think. I love that song!

  • @MuckoMan
    @MuckoMan Год назад +14

    Moonlight Mile is my favorite off this album. I could swear it could be a Van Morrison song.

  • @robertmaez6706
    @robertmaez6706 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you sooooo much! My favorite Stones' LP.

  • @johnathanstruble1064
    @johnathanstruble1064 Год назад +2

    Your face during Can ya hear me knocking ! Yes! Enjoy your reactions!

  • @LanternOneStudios
    @LanternOneStudios Год назад +8

    The Stones' best LP and Verdy's reaction made my day 😁 You're hearing the late, great Bobby Keys on all things saxophone ;-)

  • @Micknkeithable
    @Micknkeithable Год назад +5

    They were a hit machine and
    in-concert legends for a reason

  • @ScottT248
    @ScottT248 Год назад +3

    You are correct. Can't You Hear Me Knocking was a complete jam session for the second half of the song and they were just having fun during a recording session. They decided to keep it on the track as it was so darn good. :)

  • @MySundin13
    @MySundin13 Год назад +2

    Bout time! Stones have kicked ass for 60 years.

  • @ericmichalowski9582
    @ericmichalowski9582 Год назад +1

    So glad someone as young as yourself is hip enough to be open to all music 1 of the alltime great classic albums. Great observations.

  • @polkhigh2317
    @polkhigh2317 Год назад +2

    I missed the 30k celebration
    Congrats Verdy
    I really enjoy a younger impression of songs we have heard a million times 🤩🤩

  • @nomchompsky2883
    @nomchompsky2883 Год назад +12

    I think a lot of us would LOVE to hear your reaction to the album Beggar's Banquet or Let It Bleed.... can't go wrong with either but I particularly love Beggar's Banquet. you'll see both why they are as big as they are and also how while they're very rooted in the blues they were different than anything going on when the Beatles were doing the Beatles thing.

  • @Blue-qr7qe
    @Blue-qr7qe Год назад +2

    Brown Sugar - No trumpet. Tenor saxophone, Bobby Keys - RIP. Also on Can't You Hear Me Knockin'.
    You Gotta Move. Such a New Orleans style dirge -
    I couldn't be happier, Verdi, than to have you diving into the Rolling Stones.

    • @Blue-qr7qe
      @Blue-qr7qe 8 месяцев назад

      @Blue-qr7qe
      Orchestral instruments saxophone and trumpet have been with us since the 1800's in orchestral music and have been used in R&R since its inception. It wouldn't hurt to know the difference between them.
      The trumpet is a member of the BRASS FAMILY (trumpet, trombone, french horn, tuba). The sound is produced from a vibration between the lips while blowing into a mouthpiece.
      Two well-known trumpet players are Miles Davis and Louie Armstrong.
      The saxophone is a member of the WOODWIND FAMILY (flutes, saxophones, clarinets). The sound is produced by a bamboo reed held between the lips. Saxophones are named by their pitch,the same as vocalists are: Soprano, alto, tenor, baritone.
      I would highly recommend that you listen to the entire KIND OF BLUE jazz album by Miles Davis. Miles plays the trumpet, and two sax players, alto saxophonist, Cannonball Adderley, and tenor saxophonist John Coltrane, are featured as soloists and in accompaniment.
      If you listen to KIND OF BLUE, you'll be able to know these instruments upon hearing them, and won't sound like an idiot for not knowing which is which.You'll also have expanded your appreciation of music 100%.
      Yours in constructive criticism, BLUE - 💙 💙 💙

  • @denroy3
    @denroy3 Год назад +2

    This album was mostly recorded in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, because Mick and Keith wanted that funky sound the studio there was famous for producing. ..

  • @jeffridgeway7474
    @jeffridgeway7474 Год назад +29

    Please do the “Let it Bleed” album by the same band. That and this one are my two favorites.

    • @nomchompsky2883
      @nomchompsky2883 Год назад +3

      I'd LOVE to hear her do Let It Bleed.... or Beggar's Banquet... I might lean toward Beggar's Banquet... something about the rawness i love.

    • @Geezer-yf8hv
      @Geezer-yf8hv Год назад +2

      Let it Bleed was a great album that really pulled them through the void when Brian Jones had really stopped contributing. One of the few albums Keith played nearly all the guitar parts himself!

  • @futuregenerationz
    @futuregenerationz Год назад +3

    It was a saxophone(tenor) that instrument in 'Can't you hear me knocking' and the first song off this side, and the player's name was Bobby Keyes. You gotta move is an old song cover where Keith really has really picked up the style and feel of Mississippi Fred McDowell. As with the Beatles, not only standalone talents each one, but such a wonderful collection of them.

  • @ARD-lk5pr
    @ARD-lk5pr Год назад +12

    I'm loving your reaction. This is my second favourite album of all time. Looking forward to side 2!
    Even though 'Exile on Main Street' is my favourite Stones album, I recommend that you listen to 'Let it Bleed' next. It's shorter and has more commercial hits on it.

  • @HillbillyWerewolf
    @HillbillyWerewolf 10 месяцев назад +1

    You commented about both the horns (saxophone) and piano. The Stones had some great side men who contributed on many albums and tours. Piano is usually Nicky Hopkins or Ian Stewart (an original Stones member and later their tour manager/piano player).
    Bobby Keys is the saxophone player.
    You picked a great album! On certain days, "Sticky Fingers" is my favorite album.

  • @slimh2080
    @slimh2080 Год назад +7

    sax player Bobby Keys.. RIP

  • @tomas347
    @tomas347 3 месяца назад +1

    Mick Taylor brought magic to the Stones. His time with them, in my opinion, tracked the band at its best.

  • @UnderDriven17
    @UnderDriven17 Год назад +10

    Props to Ry Cooder on slide guitar. Keith's 5-string open G tuning came from exposure to Ry's 6-string open G tuning--Keith didn't like the low D and removed the string.

    • @Geezer-yf8hv
      @Geezer-yf8hv Год назад +2

      And that became his signature tuning. 5 string open G!

  • @UnderDriven17
    @UnderDriven17 Год назад +16

    I've been listening to Sticky Fingers since the mid-70's, when my one of my friends used to play it in his basement. I liked it, but I it wasn't anything special to me at the time. In 2007 another friend who was in the basement back then and I really got into this album (he became a huge Stones fan in the intervening years). It so happened that I was planning to take a 6-week photography trip that summer, driving across the country visiting national parks. I was so into Sticky Fingers that I decided to listen to that album only for the entire trip. It was something of an experiment--could I listen to the same album for 6 weeks straight? Would it still sound good after hearing it over and over? I don't know how many times I heard it, but I never got sick of it and it still sounded great when I pulled into my driveway six weeks later.

  • @deanroddey2881
    @deanroddey2881 Год назад +15

    Mick and Keith both liked country music a lot, and you hear that coming through in something like "Wild Horses". They often mix country and blues influences in their songs, and it's a mixture that really speaks to the soul when done right.

    • @alphajava761
      @alphajava761 Год назад +2

      I love the Country Blues sound of this record

    • @phonebone81
      @phonebone81 Год назад +1

      Yes, you're right @Dean Roddey - but for me, stylistically, "dead flowers" is the best number that shows that they have a country affinity. Greets from hamburg (germany)

    • @27bayoubengals
      @27bayoubengals Год назад +3

      I forgot how much that influenced their music. It sounds so good, that mixture of rock, country, and blues. Three American genres played by an iconic British rock band.

    • @deanroddey2881
      @deanroddey2881 Год назад

      @@27bayoubengals Sometimes it happens that way, for whatever reasons of nature and nurture. Look at The Band, a 4/5ths Canadian band that recorded some of the most iconic American heartland rock of all time.
      Of course another thing about albums like this is that they were made almost the opposite of how music is made today. They could care less if there were mistakes, as long as the atmosphere and vibe was outstanding. These days, all of these human flaws would be removed by some guy sitting at the computer for days, editing like crazy.

    • @phonebone81
      @phonebone81 Год назад

      @@deanroddey2881 I agree and still by your side !

  • @michaelmeagher8225
    @michaelmeagher8225 Год назад +5

    What a fantastic album! Very much looking forward to side 2.😎

  • @danielmcguinness4036
    @danielmcguinness4036 Год назад +6

    Sticky Fingers !!!! Yeah. Let's Go !!!! 😂

  • @mikefetterman6782
    @mikefetterman6782 Год назад +3

    That is Chuck Levell on Keys, Keith Richards is rocking the 5 string Telecaster iin open G, Bobby Keys on saxophone (tenor sax not a "surf trumpet?" ) . Mick Taylor on lead guitar, Mick, of course was in the middle of his "wild phase".

    • @CaryOn11
      @CaryOn11 Год назад +1

      To my knowledge Chuck Leavell did not play on Sticky Fingers. He is not credited. Not sure which track you are referencing but there are few musicians contributing various keyboards. Jim Dickinson, Nicky Hopkins, Ian Stewart, Billy Preston and Jack Nietzsche.

    • @ronschafer8194
      @ronschafer8194 Год назад

      @@CaryOn11 It was the great Nicky Hopkins. Chuck did not join the band until the early eighties.

  • @dragon-ed1hz
    @dragon-ed1hz Год назад +2

    I saw them in Charlotte in 1972. They opened with Brown Sugar and played everything on this album plus much more. Incredible concert. Stevie Wonder was the warm-up act!

    • @ronschafer8194
      @ronschafer8194 Год назад

      From what I remember they only played three tunes from Sticky Fingers on the 72 tour. They were Brown Sugar, Bitch and Dead Flowers. At least that’s what they played at all three shows In Philadelphia.

  • @donaldbutcher1260
    @donaldbutcher1260 Год назад +3

    The instrument you were looking to identify in " Brown Sugar " is the tenor saxophone being played by the late great Bobby Keys. RIP Bobby!

  • @demonsbutterfly
    @demonsbutterfly 11 месяцев назад

    I wish I could listen to this classic masterpiece for the first time again on Headphones
    I remember doing it!!!
    Still Rocks

  • @jeffridgeway7474
    @jeffridgeway7474 Год назад +6

    Great album! And a perfect reaction! Great job!

  • @jimwiese3814
    @jimwiese3814 Год назад

    authentic primative comes to mind to fill out your wonderful, spot-on narrative of some of these songs. Thanx genuine thank U's for Your heartfelt reactions. hello from Wisconsin😎

  • @cs-7
    @cs-7 Год назад +2

    You should listen to the live album Get Yer Ya Ya's Out by The Rolling Stones. May be one of the greatest live albums ever done, it is fantastic.

  • @58andyr
    @58andyr Год назад +4

    Love your reactions to my fave album of all time!

  • @donnabruhn6907
    @donnabruhn6907 Год назад +2

    My favorite Stones album sooo good 😊✌️❤️‍🔥😎

  • @58andyr
    @58andyr Год назад +1

    My all time favourite Stones song!

  • @robertmarriott6767
    @robertmarriott6767 Год назад +1

    Your English and understanding of the songs is impressive 👏 👌 🙏❤

  • @fkessler53
    @fkessler53 Год назад +2

    I enjoyed the heck out of you enjoying Wild Horses! It transcends time…

  • @maxmartino8979
    @maxmartino8979 Год назад +3

    This album is fookin great!!! ❤❤
    You have to listen to other Stones masterpieces like "Beggars Banquet", "Let it Bleed" and "Exile on Main Street"...and many other great Stones songs like "We Love You", Honky Tonk Woman", "Jumping Jack Flash" ....

  • @triscat
    @triscat Год назад

    Peak Stones! The pinnacle of the Mick Taylor era. The swirling, churning rhythm guitars on "Sway" are a force of nature.

  • @tomas347
    @tomas347 Год назад +3

    My favorite Stones' jam. Stones at their best during the Mick Taylor era. And the boys still have it. Saw them in Paris last July. A blast

    • @tomas347
      @tomas347 3 месяца назад

      Me, too. The concert was a surprise bday present from my two boys and their wives. We all went. Lots of fun and good music

  • @axman5296
    @axman5296 Год назад +1

    Top five rock albums of all time. Definitely one I would carry to a desert isle.

  • @pkunberger9287
    @pkunberger9287 Год назад

    Saw them do this live in ‘72. My first concert.

  • @cletushouse906
    @cletushouse906 Год назад +5

    We know exactly what you mean. The Stones have always been able to put out something and make you think WHERE THE HELL DID THAT COME FROM?

  • @OzarkTroutBum
    @OzarkTroutBum Год назад +2

    I remember getting this when it came out. There was a real zipper in the cover.

  • @philipsmith5088
    @philipsmith5088 Год назад +4

    That's a saxophone on Brown Sugar, not a trumpet. Played by the late Bobby Keys, one of Keith Richards' closest friends.

    • @brianherrington7226
      @brianherrington7226 Год назад

      Bobby Keys a young prodigy who as a young teen lived around the corner from Buddy Holly and would go on to play on a catastrophe of tunes from various artist from the early 1960s till his passing in 2014. Bobby played on Run Around Sue by Dion and also baritone sax on Elvis Return To Sender. Check out his biography film Every Night Is A Saturday Night.

  • @ptrlxc
    @ptrlxc Год назад +8

    They’ve had some amazing albums over the years and this album is one of my favourite. This was beginning of their time when they were smoking hot

    • @SenatorBluto
      @SenatorBluto Год назад

      They began in 1968.
      1968-1972 they had it dialed in!

  • @chrisbree3467
    @chrisbree3467 Год назад +3

    Nice reaction VERDY, you’re hearing what I heard 50 years ago. Great music doesn’t grow old xx

  • @kirkruter8310
    @kirkruter8310 Год назад +2

    I was actually hoping that you would do a reaction to the stones. And this is a great one to start with. This is perfection!!!

  • @Gordy63
    @Gordy63 Год назад +2

    The Stones era with Mick Taylor on lead guitar is 💯 pure rock and roll at its best! IMO their releases of Beggar’s Banquet (which was pre-Mick Taylor), Sticky Fingers, Let it Bleed, and Exile on Main Street, are arguably the greatest consecutive four albums by any band in rock and roll history 👍

  • @fredtheted2259
    @fredtheted2259 Год назад +1

    Lady Jane,ruby Tuesday you’ve got the silver, wild horses,I got the blues,angie,memory motel,beast of burden, slipping away and a load more amazing ballads all thanks to mr Richards,despite his image keef is an old romantic at heart,and a absolute wonderful acoustic player

  • @fredrokky5877
    @fredrokky5877 5 месяцев назад

    it's amazing to see you discovered the biggest rock band of all the times :):) you can listen to all of their albums they are all top good :):)

  • @CDHord
    @CDHord Год назад +2

    I was just listening to your 30,000 subscribers live stream and thinking you needed some Stones!

  • @hollywoodpotato5289
    @hollywoodpotato5289 Год назад +1

    Bless you. Down and dirty Stones in all their unrepentant glory

  • @tracyhauck1940
    @tracyhauck1940 Год назад

    Nicky Hopkins on Piano and Keys. One of the best. Bobby Keys on Sax... phenomenal.

  • @plantfeeder6677
    @plantfeeder6677 8 месяцев назад

    Imo their finest album. Had everything and Can't You Hear Me Knockin'

  • @tjhunger8644
    @tjhunger8644 Год назад +1

    The horn-like sound that appears in "Brown Sugar" is played on a saxophone. The saxophone solo is performed by Bobby Keys, who was a regular collaborator with The Rolling Stones and contributed to many of their releases.
    Keys' saxophone solo gives the song an extra level of energy and excitement, unmistakably enhancing its unique sound. His saxophone solo has become a memorable and iconic element of the song and is one of the reasons why "Brown Sugar" remains a classic rock staple to this day.

  • @Rhythmic1
    @Rhythmic1 Год назад +1

    The solo on Brown Sugar was a tenor saxophone played by Bobby Keys. The pianist on that song was Ian Stewart. An important and early figure in the London blues/rock scene. Bobby Keys was a highly regarded American session musician with a long list of musical accomplishments whose main gig was the Stones. Both have since past. Despite popular belief ian Stewart along with Brian Jones were the original co-founders of the band. Not Keith and Mick who they asked to join them. Ian Stewart was fired from the band in 1963 by their then manager Andrew Loog Oldham because he didn't fit in with the look of the band, i.e., not a skinny, cool looking rock & roller. He was also almost 10 years older than the other band members. But he was asked by that same manager to remain on as tour manager which to everyone's surprise he accepted with grace and dignity. Keith, Mick, Charlie and Bill had such high regard for him they let him pick and choose which songs he played on both live and in the studio until he passed in 1985. By all accounts he was a lovely and quite contented man despite not being in the limelight and receiving the accolades and wealth of the other members of the band he co-founded.

  • @stephenedgecock
    @stephenedgecock Год назад +1

    After this LP came Exile On Main St. The greatest Stones album of them all!

  • @gregorydeckelman4262
    @gregorydeckelman4262 Год назад +1

    In the 1st song, the solo instrument is a tenor saxophone.

  • @bossfan49
    @bossfan49 Год назад

    When I watch your reaction to the decades videos (70s, 80, 90s 00s) and I see the heavy infuence disco/RnB/Dance has had on you, it makes me appreciate your Rock reactions that much more (Boston, Supertramp, Yes, Stones etc) keep up the good work.

  • @cjmacq-vg8um
    @cjmacq-vg8um Год назад

    that's a saxophone. it was a staple of 50s r&r music, its being played by bobby keys. this is the middle album in the stone's best 3 album period beginng with "let it bleed" (1969) and ending with "exile on main street" (1972). the addition of keys on sax and nicky hopkins on piano to the band really made the band kick!

  • @Micknkeithable
    @Micknkeithable Год назад +1

    Love that saxophone solo in Brown Sugar

  • @dickwilliam3793
    @dickwilliam3793 Год назад +2

    Mick Taylor is so underrated.. when he left the stones to pursue other things, he came up with this gem...Spanish / A Minor ruclips.net/video/4YJB6UKZaFg/видео.html

  • @chrisgott3456
    @chrisgott3456 Год назад +1

    Every song is killer!

  • @billn7183
    @billn7183 Год назад

    Wild Horses is one of my favorites, has been for 50+ years

  • @johnworthington8360
    @johnworthington8360 Год назад

    I was 11 when I reacted like her, cannot help but move and groove. Now im 62 and groove

  • @davidmeir9348
    @davidmeir9348 Год назад +5

    Great choice for a first Stones listen.
    For one, it might be their more consistently strong album. Many people are on the fence about 'You gotta move' but if you take it as it's intended (to be funny) then it's a nice little coda to Can't you hear me knocking.
    Speaking of, the extended jam at the end of the song gives serious Santana vibes.
    The first song, Brown Sugar is one of their biggest hit and signature song and at the time it gathered quite the controversy for the subject matter of slave owners having midnight sex with their female slaves. Jagger wanted to name the song 'Black Pussy' but the record company stepped in 🤪
    The second one, Sway, might be my favorite on the album. The end solo by the always talented Mick Taylor as well as the violins joining in, just rock heaven.
    Wild horses, one of their best known ballad.
    The second side has some killer songs as well and sticky fingers is the first album on their new label with the now famous lips logo.
    Sticky Fingers is definitely the best album to introduce someone to the Stones because it is the quintessential Stones album and has everything, visually and sonically that makes the Rolling Stones what they are.

  • @radiokorps
    @radiokorps 11 месяцев назад

    Jimmy Page played a 1965 Fender XII twelve string, and a 1959 Fender Telecaster that was given to him by Jeff Beck ( the infamous Dragon Tele ) for the lead guitar part.

  • @MrTexxan8
    @MrTexxan8 Год назад +4

    Exile on main street is best album

  • @johnworthington8360
    @johnworthington8360 Год назад

    I'm 63 still grooving Charlie and Kieth like this lovely girl. So cool