I think they thought they had to go psychedelic, even though their hearts weren't in it. When there was a backlash and a resurgence of "rock 'n' roll" the following year they breathed a long sigh of relief and went on to play variations on the same theme for the next fifty-odd years.
@@Lightw81 I doubt the RS ever felt compelled to follow any trend. It was Brian’s last gasp and it was simply magnificent. I’m aware of the ridiculous critic’s narrative about “competing with Sgt. Pepper’s.” Sorry, but things don’t work that way at the dizzying heights of pop occupied by those two groups. To this day, Satanic Majesties Request is home to a number of the Stones’ most iconic recordings and at the time it was breathtaking, needing no critical justification. Further, it should be obvious they were not currying favor with the critics in any way with Majesties, which sailed right over the simpleton heads of the pop press. Creatively, they were firing on all cylinders and the production was just magical. I do remember Let It Bleed was a cohesive masterwork from the first drop of the needle, never forgetting the impact it made on my 14 year old brain. But even then, the far more imaginative Majesties pulled me back over and over.
@Gretchen Aka M it's "their". Referring to the Stones. It's a twist on the blurb that used to be found on the old British blue passports, "Her Brittanic Majesty requests ... ".
I agree.Brian Jones masterpiece.Never understood the Sgt.Pepper comparison.Though Sgt Pepper is a classic, it has very little to do with psychedelic musical composition.Pauls contribution is pop and ballad based. Lennon and Harrison fully understood the psychedelic concept.
Satanic Majesties, ironically, has become one of my favourite albums. Could have been amazing! 2000 man, lightyears, rainbow etc. - I love i! Some of the stones most interesting music x
Sandwiched within a stylish yet pedestrian Between the Buttons and their glorious return to roots rock in Beggars Banquet, this one isn't on most's radar but does have some tunes Stones have built their cred on.
This is an amazing channel. All of the uploads are fantastic, great video, totally first-hand contemporaneous information. No filler. Impressive. Subscribed
Exactly nick rice. It was and still is a brilliant album. I got alone of the album about 35 years ago and it was in bad nick really bad. I asked my friend what happend to this album its in bad nick. Crackling none stop, but i still managed to hear it despite the state of it and after a few times i just thought i need to buy that its a great album. And then when i had the brand knew album it was even better, and 'shes a rainbow' and the way it goes into 'the lantern' is just brilliant. Side 2 really brings it on, side 1 is great too and side 2 just makes it magic. It was there best album up until 1967 imo, its so underated maybe becouse it seems a dark drug induced album and it was 1967, when it brilliantly goes into 'the lantern' after the brilliant 'shes a rainbow' its a stroke of pure genius, its like london in 1905 and its dark and foggy with druncken men sleeping up alleys. With no lantern, i remember in 1987 thincking then saying this albums so good a cant stop playing it, for about 3 month i played it every day. I already liked the stones big time but this album just made me buy alot of there big albums in the 1960s. It was the first stones album i bought, i cant thinck of an album that struck me as fast as this one. Then 6 months later i had about 7 of there albums, i didnt like there music after 1969 after brian jones died i just thought thats not the stones, except for 'exile on main street'. I never bought 1 single stones album from the 70s, 80s 90s and so on. But my favourite stones album is 'Get Yer Ya Yas Out' from 1970 and its a live album and in a class of its own. Its a huge stones album and is brilliant from start to finish and the guitar solo''s in it are sublime.
The Stones just plain rocked the house, I loved the Beatles but always felt the Stones hit it harder and stayed with blues based rock n roll, the greatest band at least out of the UK. my humble nobody opinion.
Unfortunately this particular album was very influenced by Sgt Pepper. This type of music worked for The Beatles better than it did for The Rolling Stones.
@@vincentm4717 Satanic majesties was a rip , but as far as sound, give me a break, the Stones music and sound was nothing like the Beatles vanilla , hippie , psychedelically acid influenced pop. The Stones were whisky and the Beatles were lemonade.
@@georgehorner1578 I think it's fruitless to say who is better or worse. Both groups had their strong points and weaknesses. True The Stones rocked harder but The Beatles were more versatile and sang better.
This was the first album the Stones did without Andrew Loog Oldham producing. There's some under-edited hippy nonsense on it. Too many people hanging out in the studio partying. The gems are listed by Mr David Becky in the comments here: "Citadel", "2,000 Light Years From Home", "She's A Rainbow", "2000 Man". They hold up very well over time. Jimmy Miller produced their next few albums and edited things down to great effect.
I was born in 1960, america and rock would become huge influence on my upbringing, thank you for this great inside look with interesting explanation of inner workings of the stones early days. 🙏
An incredibly underrated album that has finally gotten the recognition it so richly deserves. Probably the last time Brian made a significant contribution. Such an amazing musician, such a great intellects. He took Firsts on 5 A-levels -- a ticket to Oxbridge if he hadn't knocked some girl up already (I think MJ had 3 Firsts). An incredible loss. The Stones occasionally returned to the esoteric experimentalism seen on Majesties in tracks like Exile's "I Just Want to See His Face", Goat's Head's Soup "Can You Hear the Music", and Steel Wheels "Continental Drift" (which I see as a last nod to Brian) There's a misunderstanding that Keef and Mick 'fired' Brian before the 1969 tour. According to Keef what went down is that they went down to visit him, told them that the record label was pressuring them to go on tour, and asked Brian if he felt up to it. Brian said no. They assured him that he was still a member of the band (after all, he founded it), and thus began the search for a replacement guitarist for the tour alone. The first person they asked was Jimmy Page, only Zeppelin was really starting to take off. I believe Page was the one who recommended John Mayall's 19 year-old prodigy Mick Taylor. After Taylor decided to run away to save his life, the Stones again asked Page to fill in for the 1975 tour but he couldn't since Zep was touring all that year. Enter Ronnie Wood. Not a virtuoso like Page or Taylor but he fit. Today Taylor, a childhood friend of Ronnie's, considers leaving the Stones the biggest mistake of his life.
I wish I had a penny for every time someone on youtube made the very unprofound comment that a song/album or film was "underrated' there are literally millions of such comments !
Virtually every sentence of this post is false. Concerning the main point, google: 50 Years Ago: Brian Jones is Fired By the Rolling Stones. All of which was confirmed by KR and MJ decades ago.
I like Satantic Magisties Request as the best Stones album. What’s not to like. The cover art with The Beatles. The unsolvable maze inside. Brian Jones still a full time, contributing member. Bill Wyman’s song. Nicky Hopkins all over it. And lastly…sing this song altogether (see what happens!). Couldn’t do this with Cd or downloading, but back in the day, all our turntables could play 16 rpm’s, 33 & 1/3, 45 rpm’s and 78 rpms. So, the song as it is, is played at 33 &1/3. But played at 45, and especially at 78, what you hear ( aka See What Happens), is the first Rolling Stones Christmas song… an instrumental version of “We wish you a Merry Christmas”! Unless you have a turntable that you can change the speed on, you’re just going to have to take my word on it.
That documentary where they are writing and recording Sympathy for the Devil is amazing. You get to see the evolution of the song, very different from the end product
Yeah, The Thirteen Floor Elevators was the first to experienced psychedelics in rock. The Beatles were the first to truly regine it. As far as i know, no others have found more success in it than these two bands.
Perhaps one of the more magical time spans that was, in the fairy tale year for music of 1967. The same year I discovered vinyl 45 rpm records and began purchasing them. One of my first 45s was the Stones’ single “Dandelion/We Love You,” which almost defines this year for me, with its psychedelia and Middle Eastern influences. This 45 charted well on both sides of the pond, with “Dandelion” in the States and “We Love You” in the UK. The Stones have never performed either number in concert, and I wonder why. Perhaps a future episode of your series could be devoted to this topic.
And Brian Wilson left " Good Vibrations" off PET SOUNDS!. This is why it's not fair to judge ' best albums of the Sixties only by the LP content- you need to consider all the music recorded at the sessions.
There are a bunch of fabulous songs on Satanic Majesties... 'Citadel', '2,000 Light Years From Home', 'She's A Rainbow', Bill Wyman's 'In Another Land'... '2000 Man'. The rest though, not so good. I still prefer it to 'Between the Buttons' though. This is the transition period where the Stones went from becoming a great singles band (Brian Jones era) to a great album band (Mick Taylor era). And then of course, there was that pesky bust at Redlands...
What a sublime plateau to reach. Their social existence, at that time, bled into the creative process. Satanic majesties missed the target, but it is a cool decorative arrow.
I completely disagree. The Stones weren't trying to make pop hits and they veneered away from blues. What they did was remarkable only comparable to St Peppers. The musical IQ is off the charts on this album, nothing like this will EVER be done again. It missed the mark? They did exactly what they intended to do, to make a psychedelic album. Idk if you listened to the album through walmart speakers or what. . .
Imagine being there too see them all collaborate on a album ,,fondly remembering Brian Jones, RIP 🙏 BRIAN N CHARLIE , IAN , ALL TOGETHER AGAIN ,,LOVE SHES A RAINBOW 🌈, AND NOT ON THIS ALBUM BACKSTREET GIRL , BRIAN PLAYING THE HARPSICHORD ,
Tavy@ its a brilliant album. One of my favourite stones albums. Its so underated. A love cycle albums. The way side 2 starts with 'Shes a Rainbow' then the way it goes into 'The 'Lantern' is brilliant and '2000 Light Years From Home' side 1 is good to but side 2 just brings it on. Its a great album its in my top 4 stones studio albums. The first time i heard it i went out the next day and bought it. It just struck me as brilliant becouse i played side 2 first and when i heard shes a rainbow i though i must buy that. Thats different class and maybe there best album up to then. I couldnt thinck of one before that was better. Then 'Beggars Banquet' was maybe even better a year later in 1968 then 'Let It Bleed' was brilliant, but Beggers Banquet has to be there best 1960s album that has at least 6 brilliant songs on it. 'Thier Satanic Majesties Request' has at least 6 brilliant songs on it. A could just imagine how great that album was in 1967 it was perfect for that time, with the brilliant 'Citadel' really starting it off although its the second song on side 1. Tbh the first song has you wondering where the album is going and what will it be like. But 'The Lantern' has that dark foggy aproach to it as if you're back in time 120 years ago, it is a stroke of genius strait after 'Shes A Rainbow' When brian jones died i didnt like there music after that in 1969. Except 'exile on main street' 'Their Satanic Majesties Request' might not be as good as sgt peppers but sgt peppers isnt all great, there are stuff on it that i like, but whats good is brilliant and whats bad is really bad. But am a stones man. My favourite stones album is 'Get Yer Ya Yas Out' wich is a live album from 1970. Its a 12 out of 10. Brilliant from start to finish plus the music is top drawer, thats why its my no.1 and so many others. Get it and listen to it, and you wont look back.
A completely unfairly maligned album! What, "Citadel", "2,000 Light Years From Home", "She's A Rainbow", "2000 Man" aren't good enough for all ye naysayers, nevermind, I cast thee away and banish ye from the psychedelic kingdom! Sincerely, Sir Davy Dandelion
I’ve never gotten it either. More than enough “traditional” Stones records to glut one’s appetite with, so why not allow for the occasional intriguing anomaly?
@@YesterdaysPapers 'White Magic' 1:58 and 'Nursery Rhymes' 5:08 Sing This Song Altogether" to start out the LP. 'Plastic Ukulele 3:35 'Gompers' 5:10-15 'On With The Show,' 'Church & Relgion' 2000 Man, perhaps. My God, give the man a puzzle and he asks you to put the pieces together for him? This video, to me at least, represents the last album Brian Jones had a real interest in the musical content. "Psychedelic era' didn't last long in Great Britain as it was a Laurel Canyon creation. For Grateful Dead fans, it never ended, but did for people with enough sense not to lose their minds on that trash.Spiking the water at Woodstock or what happened to Peter Green in Germany are some unfortunate victims of 'mind control' attempts by the dark side.
I am glad that Glyn Jones spoke out against bullfighting. You don't have to see one to know that it is the ritual torture killing of an innocent animal. Brian Jones comparing it to a Greek tragedy is just arty farty BS. I don't think Marianne Faithful's comment about nature being at the mercy of mankind is any sort of defense. Would they be saying this if human beings were being ritually tortured to death? What if someone had decided to torture them to death in a ring for the entertainment of cheering spectators? Would they use the same defence of bear baiting, bull baiting and dog fighting were legal in this country? One good thing which has come from Covid is that it stopped bullfighting and these bull torture rituals. I hope it ends completely. Remember, those who built the Titanic believed that they were superior to nature and look what happened to them.
I’m no fan of cockfighting or bullfighting but I think it’s a bit hypocritical for people who eat factory farmed animals to claim that they are morally superior to those who watch bullfighting and cockfighting. The animals that participate in those “sports” live better lives than the ones whose flesh we “so fancifully fry.” I’m not saying you fall into that category. You could very well be in my camp. I’m just putting it out there for people who criticize other cultures without self-reflection.
@@CosmicHippopotamus Well, that is to say that because people in this country eat factory farmed meat, we may as well bring back bear baiting, bull baiting, cock fighting and dog fighting. We may as well have no animal protection laws nor an RSPCA and animal rescues. I am a vegan so I am not guilty of eating factory farmed meat. However, I recognize there is a difference between people who are entertained by watching animals suffer and those who buy factory farmed meat at a supermarket because they enjoy eating meat and do not see how the factory farmed animals have suffered. There are different levels of awareness of animal abuse. No doubt people who do consume factory farmed meat have pets they love and would be horrified at the thought of any cruelty towards them. Such people have compassion. The guy who in the video who was speaking out against bullfighting may well have been a meat eater. However, he had compassion. People who actually derive pleasure from inflicting pain on animals are in a different category. They have no compassion. Many murderers began harming animals first such as the James Bulger murderers, Ian Huntley and Ian Brady to name but a few. That being said, I would, of course, love to see factory farmed banned completely.
@@lyricberlin Well, grain from third world countries is taken to feed animals which are killed to produce meat for western society. A plant based diet is a much better use of the earth's resources and will feed far more people. It is better for animals, the planet and human health. Bullfighting makes no money. Eighty three percent of the Spanish people are opposed to it and do not attend bullfights. A female activist attended a bullfight to film the cruelty when she was given a free ticket. It was revealed that only a quarter of the bullring was full, even with free tickets given. This activist ran into the ring at the end to comfort the dying bull. The Spanish government prop up the bullfighting industry with massive subsidies. During the pandemic they wanted subsidies because they were unable to continue with their animal torture activities. This was denied. I once attended a demonstration against bullfighting in Spain. A woman who was on the demonstration told me that she had a disabled son and was unable to get help from the government to care for him, while bullfighting received millions. So as you are so concerned about children I am sure you will agree that the money given to bullfighting would be better spent on children. Also, young children are taken to watch this torture. This is child abuse. Children love animals. This is destroying their innocence and desensitizing them to cruelty and violence. There is evidence that children have suffered permanent mental damage as a result. I find it strange that the same people who take children to watch bullfights will celebrate Christmas. The nativity scene includes an ox and ass - the ox is virtually the same animal as a bull. This creature is included in the scene where Jesus was born, yet these people think it is fine to torture it to death. As far as I am concerned these people cannot be Christians while they do this.
Yes, if you're prepared to smoke, drink, sit around and have long meaningless conversations. Doesn't seem to have been much "work" done during this journo's stay.
Richards has no right ...."Please Please Me" being one of his favourite Beatle tracks. Most of us were guilty of snobbery about pop music......At the time I too was disgusted by The Monkees yet wouldn't mind their brand of pop on the transistor radio. Over time one begins to appreciate the craft involved in creating good pop songs. Even Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich are regulars on my hard drive for years now.
1:57 one more clue in my detective work on the 67 session(s) featuring Faithful, Jagger, McCartney, Jon Mark and Glyn Johns. The Incredible String Band cover is "Painting Box" Some sources say it was a duet with Paul.. She's also reported to have covered With a Little Help. But Marianne didn't publish any album with her 67 sessions (her next album after Love in a Mist was published in 1976). www.tapatalk.com/groups/solobeatlesphotosforum/19-may-1967-uk-decca-studios-london-t7221.html#p35348
While Jagger wrote Sympathy (with help from the amazing Marianne, I suspect), if you can make it through Godard's ponderous 1+1 you'll notice how the song is completely transformed the minute Keef entered the studio. Brian had disintegrated so badly by the summer of '68 that he was no condition to record. The put him aside in a booth and his tracks were not included in the final mix. His major contribution was the slide on No Expectations for which we will always love him!
@@TroglodyteDiner I don't know, with the Stones there was a lot of Jagger and Richard led revisionism to minimise the contribution of Brian Jones, as they wanted to justify their decision to kick him out of the band he had set up in the first place, but his tracks were included, as he contributes to every track on the album except the final two, playing sitar and tanpura on "Street Fighting Man", slide guitar on "No Expectations", acoustic guitar on "Parachute Woman", harmonica on "Parachute Woman", "Dear Doctor" and "Prodigal Son", and Mellotron on "Jigsaw Puzzle" and "Stray Cat Blues". He looked a total mess on Rock n Roll Circus, making a minimal contribution there, but overall he did more in the latter recording he was involved with than he is generally given credit for.
Who ever thinks this album was a flop is a tone deaf ignoramus. There was no George Martin in their corner. It was them solely as a band arranging, writing and producing a LP that many of their peers would have fell flat on their face attempting to do so.
I think it's ridiculous how good 2000 Light Years & She's a Rainbow are compared to the rest of the album. Any moment you think "oh, it might get good now", there it goes again. It just doesn't click.
It is a very good record. I like every song except Sing This Song All Together 1 and 2, both of which are dreadful. Think how good the album would be if Dandelion and We Love You had replaced those 2 songs.
I never really understood the Brian Jones dynamic within The Rolling Stones. I always thought Brian wanted the group as sort of blues purists and not part of the Pop Phenomenon. Yet his musical talents seem to lie with the pop experimentation of the times. It seemed to me the more Brian drifted away from the band, the more the band got serious with blues/rock and away from pop music. Maybe I'm totally wrong.
@@corinnetodd4807 - Like he was being ignored by Keith & Mick and felt like he was becoming irrelevant in the band. Of course he did live the life of the famous pop star with the fashion and drugs all the hedonism that goes with it.
@@PS987654321PS what i meant by that was brian was a bit more than the stones needed and never suited they just needed a fab guitarist and he needed something like the beatles☝🏻
Totally offsubject..but I wish fashions were less fast and made dyes as beautiful as the blue Keef is wearing. Omg it was beautiful. I wish fashions were less staid and cookie cutter today! And those coats!
7:00 Aber im Ernst.... es gibt auch noch andere Einstellungen von dieser Aufnahme, fast identisch, auf denen es aber noch deutlicher so wirkt als wären die vier eine kompakte starke Einheit, und Brian wirkt iwie. da neben bei stehend, oder aussen vor. So wie auch viele damals in den 60er Jahren schon eine Art Omen darin sahen, das auf dem Cover des Albums "Flowers", auf dem alle Stones als eine Blume dargestellt sind, Brian's Blume ohne Blätter dargestellt wurde. Diese Trennlinie, die sich nach und nach im Werdegang der Stones zwischen ihnen und Brian durch unzählige kleine Situationen auftat, führte letztendlich zum Bruch mit den Stones. Was leider zu selten erwähnt wird, Brian hatte von klein auf mit einem chronischem Asthma zu tun. Von jungen Jahren an, musste er ständig einen Asthma Inhalator bei sich haben, wenn er plötzlich Atemnot hatte. Das klingt jetzt erst Mal seltsam wenn man weiß, mit welcher Gedankenlosigkeit Brian alles mögliche immer stärker konsumierte, desto mehr Mick ohne böse Absicht dieses höllische Karrieretempo vorlegte, aber es war mmn. dieses Asthma, das Brian dann bei dieser Art von Drogenmissbrauch ausbremste. Schon bevor er die Stones kannte, berichteten Freunde Brian's aus früheren Jahren Bill Wyman von Vorfällen, wo er bei einem befreundeten Pärchen übernachtet hatte, und sie morgens wach wurden, weil Brian nur noch tiefatmend auf der Couch lag und fast am ersticken war. Der Freund hat sich Brian's Schlüssel gesucht und hat schnell aus Brian's Wohnung den Inhalator geholt. Diesen Zustand trug Brian quasi immer mit sich herum, verschlimmerte ihn noch durch kopflosen Umgang mit allem was ihm in die Hände kam, und entfernte sich mental dadurch immer mehr von den anderen. Deshalb tun mir die Bilder von Brian aus dem "We Love you" Video leid. Aber ich bin den Stones nicht böse, sie waren wie sie waren, und haben Brian auch nie vergessen.
There were like a kind of confusion, to much people around and you can feel it on the record, even if i like their musical research. It seems that they change that after and be more concentrated.
Brian Jones wasn't getting his fair share $$$. Which started the down fall? Anita Pallenberg left him for Keef! She saw who is making the money and the rest is history!
7:00 "das mysteriöse 11 Hände Bild" ^^ Bis heute bleibt es lt. Bill ein Rätsel, woher die 11. Hand ✋? stammte ... ....seltsam, aber so steht es geschrieben....^^
“Charlie remains immortal “ Well said. RIP Charlie
And the Stones will.
Great album.....still have the original first pressing.......great cover.....
How nice to see Paul McCartney on the set. Beatles and Stones had such a cordial relationship.
Her Satanic Majesty’s Request has always been my favorite Rolling Stones album. I have met exactly zero people who agree with me.
I think they thought they had to go psychedelic, even though their hearts weren't in it. When there was a backlash and a resurgence of "rock 'n' roll" the following year they breathed a long sigh of relief and went on to play variations on the same theme for the next fifty-odd years.
@@Lightw81 I doubt the RS ever felt compelled to follow any trend. It was Brian’s last gasp and it was simply magnificent. I’m aware of the ridiculous critic’s narrative about “competing with Sgt. Pepper’s.” Sorry, but things don’t work that way at the dizzying heights of pop occupied by those two groups. To this day, Satanic Majesties Request is home to a number of the Stones’ most iconic recordings and at the time it was breathtaking, needing no critical justification. Further, it should be obvious they were not currying favor with the critics in any way with Majesties, which sailed right over the simpleton heads of the pop press. Creatively, they were firing on all cylinders and the production was just magical. I do remember Let It Bleed was a cohesive masterwork from the first drop of the needle, never forgetting the impact it made on my 14 year old brain. But even then, the far more imaginative Majesties pulled me back over and over.
@Gretchen Aka M it's "their". Referring to the Stones. It's a twist on the blurb that used to be found on the old British blue passports, "Her Brittanic Majesty requests ... ".
@Gretchen Aka M ruclips.net/video/8QmcgU0pk9s/видео.html
I agree.Brian Jones masterpiece.Never understood the Sgt.Pepper comparison.Though Sgt Pepper is a classic, it has very little to do with psychedelic musical composition.Pauls contribution is pop and ballad based. Lennon and Harrison fully understood the psychedelic concept.
Satanic Majesties, ironically, has become one of my favourite albums. Could have been amazing! 2000 man, lightyears, rainbow etc. - I love i! Some of the stones most interesting music x
Great pics. Yes times changed in 1967. They were all tripped out. Me too :)
Absolute underrated gem...
Definitely done by someone with heart for the subject. Can't get enough of this .
Long live Amon Duul!!
Sandwiched within a stylish yet pedestrian Between the Buttons and their glorious return to roots rock in Beggars Banquet, this one isn't on most's radar but does have some tunes Stones have built their cred on.
This is an amazing channel. All of the uploads are fantastic, great video, totally first-hand contemporaneous information. No filler. Impressive. Subscribed
Thank you!
That was always my favorite album they put out. They were never the same after Brians genuis as a musician was gone.
No they got much better and became the greatest band in the world!.
Not the same, but different, which was good and resulted in some of the Stones best with Mick Taylor
Exactly nick rice. It was and still is a brilliant album. I got alone of the album about 35 years ago and it was in bad nick really bad. I asked my friend what happend to this album its in bad nick. Crackling none stop, but i still managed to hear it despite the state of it and after a few times i just thought i need to buy that its a great album. And then when i had the brand knew album it was even better, and 'shes a rainbow' and the way it goes into 'the lantern' is just brilliant. Side 2 really brings it on, side 1 is great too and side 2 just makes it magic. It was there best album up until 1967 imo, its so underated maybe becouse it seems a dark drug induced album and it was 1967, when it brilliantly goes into 'the lantern' after the brilliant 'shes a rainbow' its a stroke of pure genius, its like london in 1905 and its dark and foggy with druncken men sleeping up alleys. With no lantern, i remember in 1987 thincking then saying this albums so good a cant stop playing it, for about 3 month i played it every day. I already liked the stones big time but this album just made me buy alot of there big albums in the 1960s. It was the first stones album i bought, i cant thinck of an album that struck me as fast as this one. Then 6 months later i had about 7 of there albums, i didnt like there music after 1969 after brian jones died i just thought thats not the stones, except for 'exile on main street'. I never bought 1 single stones album from the 70s, 80s 90s and so on. But my favourite stones album is 'Get Yer Ya Yas Out' from 1970 and its a live album and in a class of its own. Its a huge stones album and is brilliant from start to finish and the guitar solo''s in it are sublime.
@@alanmctavish4802 agreed 100%.. We both have great taste.. 👍 😉
Really
The Stones just plain rocked the house, I loved the Beatles but always felt the Stones hit it harder and stayed with blues based rock n roll, the greatest band at least out of the UK. my humble nobody opinion.
Unfortunately this particular album was very influenced by Sgt Pepper. This type of music worked for The Beatles better than it did for The Rolling Stones.
@@vincentm4717 Satanic majesties was a rip , but as far as sound, give me a break, the Stones music and sound was nothing like the Beatles vanilla , hippie , psychedelically acid influenced pop. The Stones were whisky and the Beatles were lemonade.
@@georgehorner1578 I think it's fruitless to say who is better or worse. Both groups had their strong points and weaknesses. True The Stones rocked harder but The Beatles were more versatile and sang better.
@@vincentm4717 I want to rock, if I want Beethoven Ill look him up
@@georgehorner1578 ok then so rock! No one is stopping you! Lol
Cool, enjoyed this historical snippet. Love The Stones
Thank you for sharing 💕 legendary rolling stones ❣️
This was the first album the Stones did without Andrew Loog Oldham producing. There's some under-edited hippy nonsense on it. Too many people hanging out in the studio partying. The gems are listed by Mr David Becky in the comments here: "Citadel", "2,000 Light Years From Home", "She's A Rainbow", "2000 Man". They hold up very well over time. Jimmy Miller produced their next few albums and edited things down to great effect.
If Dandelion and We Love You had been included it would have been a much better album.
Another well-written article. Great video making as well, of course.
Great little piece of journalism and great footage.
I like that Marianne likes Reflections by the Supremes..
Great song.
I was born in 1960, america and rock would become huge influence on my upbringing, thank you for this great inside look with interesting explanation of inner workings of the stones early days. 🙏
An incredibly underrated album that has finally gotten the recognition it so richly deserves. Probably the last time Brian made a significant contribution. Such an amazing musician, such a great intellects. He took Firsts on 5 A-levels -- a ticket to Oxbridge if he hadn't knocked some girl up already (I think MJ had 3 Firsts). An incredible loss.
The Stones occasionally returned to the esoteric experimentalism seen on Majesties in tracks like Exile's "I Just Want to See His Face", Goat's Head's Soup "Can You Hear the Music", and Steel Wheels "Continental Drift" (which I see as a last nod to Brian)
There's a misunderstanding that Keef and Mick 'fired' Brian before the 1969 tour. According to Keef what went down is that they went down to visit him, told them that the record label was pressuring them to go on tour, and asked Brian if he felt up to it. Brian said no. They assured him that he was still a member of the band (after all, he founded it), and thus began the search for a replacement guitarist for the tour alone. The first person they asked was Jimmy Page, only Zeppelin was really starting to take off. I believe Page was the one who recommended John Mayall's 19 year-old prodigy Mick Taylor.
After Taylor decided to run away to save his life, the Stones again asked Page to fill in for the 1975 tour but he couldn't since Zep was touring all that year. Enter Ronnie Wood. Not a virtuoso like Page or Taylor but he fit.
Today Taylor, a childhood friend of Ronnie's, considers leaving the Stones the biggest mistake of his life.
I'm pretty sure it was Jeff Beck who was asked to join in '69 and '75 . I've never heard of Page being asked to join, seems kind of unlikely
I wish I had a penny for every time someone on youtube made the very unprofound comment that a song/album or film was "underrated' there are literally millions of such comments !
bullshit
Virtually every sentence of this post is false. Concerning the main point, google: 50 Years Ago: Brian Jones is Fired By the Rolling Stones. All of which was confirmed by KR and MJ decades ago.
@@w1lf1ewoo thas the frkn truth, must be a new trendy slangy type thing I'm not familiar with
"..their big hearted road manager.." Ian Stewart was a founding member of The Rolling Stones
True but he was working as their road manager at the time, apart from playing piano every once in a while.
Sounds like a pleasant evening with interesting and creative people.
Thank you for another cool segment!
Cheers!
Keith had a really cool jacket on in this video of John Lennon on the back. Cool that even Paul McCartney was in the studio.
Very cool underrated album I love
Great video. Thank you.
I like Satantic Magisties Request as the best Stones album. What’s not to like. The cover art with The Beatles. The unsolvable maze inside. Brian Jones still a full time, contributing member. Bill Wyman’s song. Nicky Hopkins all over it. And lastly…sing this song altogether (see what happens!). Couldn’t do this with Cd or downloading, but back in the day, all our turntables could play 16 rpm’s, 33 & 1/3, 45 rpm’s and 78 rpms. So, the song as it is, is played at 33 &1/3. But played at 45, and especially at 78, what you hear ( aka See What Happens), is the first Rolling Stones Christmas song… an instrumental version of “We wish you a Merry Christmas”! Unless you have a turntable that you can change the speed on, you’re just going to have to take my word on it.
Just download "See What Happens" into some music editing software ,double the speed ....voila ...."We Wish You A Merry Christmas".....
@@PAULLONDEN Works in RUclips too.:)
Soon to be Led Zeppelin’s bass player John Paul Jones , arranging strings for She’s a Rainbow .
That documentary where they are writing and recording Sympathy for the Devil is amazing. You get to see the evolution of the song, very different from the end product
Jean Luc Godard movie "one+one".
Hgggh
A little off topic, but this reaffirms how inspirational Beatles’ Revolver was
....of course.
This channel is amazing! These videos are so well made! Thank You!
Thank you for watching. Cheers!
Very underrated album. Stones dabbled in psychedlia for the first and only time. Their response to Sgt. Pepper's
'response' is putting it generously, Lennon said 'copy'
A couple of good songs, that’s it
@@johnurban7333 So untrue!
l
Yeah, The Thirteen Floor Elevators was the first to experienced psychedelics in rock. The Beatles were the first to truly regine it. As far as i know, no others have found more success in it than these two bands.
Couldn't stand this psychedelia
"Brian's incredible" 😍😍
Could you imagine being able to just walk into one of their studios to watch
I would have loved that! (But I’ve heard these recording sessions are hella boring)
@@rsands9 right..but you never know who you might have run into...
Yes
You don't have to imagine, just watch Godard's 1968 movie Sympathy for the Devil where the whole recording process of the song at Olympic is shown
@@lptomtom oh yes. Thanks for the reminder. I’ve seen some of that! Amazing
So nice to see MaCa Paul sitting in on the sessions. Timeless clip for ions to come....
Paul and John sung background vocals on We Love You, recorded during Their Satanic sessions.
Perhaps one of the more magical time spans that was, in the fairy tale year for music of 1967. The same year I discovered vinyl 45 rpm records and began purchasing them. One of my first 45s was the Stones’ single “Dandelion/We Love You,” which almost defines this year for me, with its psychedelia and Middle Eastern influences. This 45 charted well on both sides of the pond, with “Dandelion” in the States and “We Love You” in the UK. The Stones have never performed either number in concert, and I wonder why. Perhaps a future episode of your series could be devoted to this topic.
I could listen to hours of these recitals of news articles on different bands. Thanks. New sub!
Thanks. Glad you enjoy the videos.
@@YesterdaysPapers would have liked it more if you had not cropped the image....😒
It would be a better album if they included we love you, dandeliom and child of the moon on the album
Brian fué un Genio!! Como me gustaria que aún estubiera vivo.
Two great singles came out or the Majesties sessions: Dandelion and We Love You (in collaboration with Paul and John)
If those tracks were on Satanic Majesties Request plus maybe Child of The Moon (a bit later) it would be a classic album!
@@flyingburritobro68 Right.
Same with STRAWBERRY/ PENNY on " Pepper"..
And don't get me started on the WHO !😅
And Brian Wilson left " Good Vibrations" off PET SOUNDS!.
This is why it's not fair to judge ' best albums of the Sixties only by the LP content- you need to consider all the music recorded at the sessions.
There are a bunch of fabulous songs on Satanic Majesties... 'Citadel', '2,000 Light Years From Home', 'She's A Rainbow', Bill Wyman's 'In Another Land'... '2000 Man'. The rest though, not so good. I still prefer it to 'Between the Buttons' though. This is the transition period where the Stones went from becoming a great singles band (Brian Jones era) to a great album band (Mick Taylor era). And then of course, there was that pesky bust at Redlands...
Great montage, beautifully written article. Too bad you couldn't use actual Stones music but this did a good approximation of 2000 years... Thanks!
"Look at these fantastic Roman Remains"
Look at Mick in the thumbnail, what a great and telling pic
In Another Land still makes me laugh
Well said my favourite stones album too
Great mellotrone music ---
Great coverage of the denigrated soul known as Brian Jones who should have been a Beatle.
Great post.Some REALLY AWESOME PHOTOGRAOHS.Meeting Between 5 Old Friends.EVERYTHING IS LAID BACK, FUN. EXPLORATION. Walter B.Memphis.!!!😛☠🌠🎼💯
Thanks, glad you liked it!
@@YesterdaysPapers Yes.I REALLY DID.Thanks .Walter B.Memphis. 😛❤🌠🎼🎸
What a sublime plateau to reach. Their social existence, at that time, bled into the creative process. Satanic majesties missed the target, but it is a cool decorative arrow.
I completely disagree. The Stones weren't trying to make pop hits and they veneered away from blues. What they did was remarkable only comparable to St Peppers. The musical IQ is off the charts on this album, nothing like this will EVER be done again. It missed the mark? They did exactly what they intended to do, to make a psychedelic album. Idk if you listened to the album through walmart speakers or what. . .
Imagine being there too see them all collaborate on a album ,,fondly remembering Brian Jones, RIP 🙏 BRIAN N CHARLIE , IAN , ALL TOGETHER AGAIN ,,LOVE SHES A RAINBOW 🌈, AND NOT ON THIS ALBUM BACKSTREET GIRL , BRIAN PLAYING THE HARPSICHORD ,
...splendid stuff...once again, a swell idea for content y'all've (ain't th king english crazy?) hit upon...thanks...cheers...
Tavy@ its a brilliant album. One of my favourite stones albums. Its so underated. A love cycle albums. The way side 2 starts with 'Shes a Rainbow' then the way it goes into 'The 'Lantern' is brilliant and '2000 Light Years From Home' side 1 is good to but side 2 just brings it on. Its a great album its in my top 4 stones studio albums. The first time i heard it i went out the next day and bought it. It just struck me as brilliant becouse i played side 2 first and when i heard shes a rainbow i though i must buy that. Thats different class and maybe there best album up to then. I couldnt thinck of one before that was better. Then 'Beggars Banquet' was maybe even better a year later in 1968 then 'Let It Bleed' was brilliant, but Beggers Banquet has to be there best 1960s album that has at least 6 brilliant songs on it. 'Thier Satanic Majesties Request' has at least 6 brilliant songs on it. A could just imagine how great that album was in 1967 it was perfect for that time, with the brilliant 'Citadel' really starting it off although its the second song on side 1. Tbh the first song has you wondering where the album is going and what will it be like. But 'The Lantern' has that dark foggy aproach to it as if you're back in time 120 years ago, it is a stroke of genius strait after 'Shes A Rainbow' When brian jones died i didnt like there music after that in 1969. Except 'exile on main street' 'Their Satanic Majesties Request' might not be as good as sgt peppers but sgt peppers isnt all great, there are stuff on it that i like, but whats good is brilliant and whats bad is really bad. But am a stones man. My favourite stones album is 'Get Yer Ya Yas Out' wich is a live album from 1970. Its a 12 out of 10. Brilliant from start to finish plus the music is top drawer, thats why its my no.1 and so many others. Get it and listen to it, and you wont look back.
Looks like McCartney is a Stones fan.
Why?.
@@alvarosantiago4285 Cause you can see him in the studio.
Him and Keith are very good friends
He was out of weed? Keef told him to stop by for a hit! Lol!
Looks like he brought George Harrison's Sgt Pepper jacket for Keith to wear while recording? 1:25 & 6:22
Well done!
A completely unfairly maligned album! What, "Citadel", "2,000 Light Years From Home", "She's A Rainbow", "2000 Man" aren't good enough for all ye naysayers, nevermind, I cast thee away and banish ye from the psychedelic kingdom! Sincerely, Sir Davy Dandelion
Amen. One of the best albums ever. Uniquely Stones as always. 🐈🌺🌻🌚
I’ve never gotten it either. More than enough “traditional” Stones records to glut one’s appetite with, so why not allow for the occasional intriguing anomaly?
@@thepsychicalliance Great album.
And, DANDELION and WE LOVE YOU were left off it##
Both Mick and Keith hated the album and called it "rubbish".
@@weeooh1 If we use that as a metric we’d also have to discount almost every John song recorded by The Beatles.
I need to get me a bloody time machine........!!!!
And not a word about the actual recording of songs on that album, or god forbid a snippet here and there!!!!
You can't always get what you want.
@@YesterdaysPapers 'White Magic' 1:58 and 'Nursery Rhymes' 5:08 Sing This Song Altogether" to start out the LP. 'Plastic Ukulele 3:35 'Gompers' 5:10-15 'On With The Show,' 'Church & Relgion' 2000 Man, perhaps. My God, give the man a puzzle and he asks you to put the pieces together for him?
This video, to me at least, represents the last album Brian Jones had a real interest in the musical content. "Psychedelic era' didn't last long in Great Britain as it was a Laurel Canyon creation. For Grateful Dead fans, it never ended, but did for people with enough sense not to lose their minds on that trash.Spiking the water at Woodstock or what happened to Peter Green in Germany are some unfortunate victims of 'mind control' attempts by the dark side.
Keith - '𝑆𝑜𝑚𝑒𝑜𝑛𝑒 𝑔𝑖𝑣𝑒 𝑚𝑒 𝑎𝑛 𝐸' - The Stones - ahead of their time 💊
Ian Stuart, road manager? He was the Rolling Stones pianist until he died.
He was both pianist and road manager for the Stones at the time.
A founding member of The Rolling Stones
1:25 Keith with George's Pepper jacket!
I am glad that Glyn Jones spoke out against bullfighting. You don't have to see one to know that it is the ritual torture killing of an innocent animal. Brian Jones comparing it to a Greek tragedy is just arty farty BS. I don't think Marianne Faithful's comment about nature being at the mercy of mankind is any sort of defense. Would they be saying this if human beings were being ritually tortured to death? What if someone had decided to torture them to death in a ring for the entertainment of cheering spectators? Would they use the same defence of bear baiting, bull baiting and dog fighting were legal in this country? One good thing which has come from Covid is that it stopped bullfighting and these bull torture rituals. I hope it ends completely. Remember, those who built the Titanic believed that they were superior to nature and look what happened to them.
I’m no fan of cockfighting or bullfighting but I think it’s a bit hypocritical for people who eat factory farmed animals to claim that they are morally superior to those who watch bullfighting and cockfighting. The animals that participate in those “sports” live better lives than the ones whose flesh we “so fancifully fry.”
I’m not saying you fall into that category. You could very well be in my camp. I’m just putting it out there for people who criticize other cultures without self-reflection.
@@CosmicHippopotamus Well, that is to say that because people in this country eat factory farmed meat, we may as well bring back bear baiting, bull baiting, cock fighting and dog fighting. We may as well have no animal protection laws nor an RSPCA and animal rescues. I am a vegan so I am not guilty of eating factory farmed meat. However, I recognize there is a difference between people who are entertained by watching animals suffer and those who buy factory farmed meat at a supermarket because they enjoy eating meat and do not see how the factory farmed animals have suffered. There are different levels of awareness of animal abuse. No doubt people who do consume factory farmed meat have pets they love and would be horrified at the thought of any cruelty towards them. Such people have compassion. The guy who in the video who was speaking out against bullfighting may well have been a meat eater. However, he had compassion. People who actually derive pleasure from inflicting pain on animals are in a different category. They have no compassion. Many murderers began harming animals first such as the James Bulger murderers, Ian Huntley and Ian Brady to name but a few. That being said, I would, of course, love to see factory farmed banned completely.
@@susangavaghan too bad vegans aren't passionate about children that are hungry getting fed.
@@lyricberlin Well, grain from third world countries is taken to feed animals which are killed to produce meat for western society. A plant based diet is a much better use of the earth's resources and will feed far more people. It is better for animals, the planet and human health. Bullfighting makes no money. Eighty three percent of the Spanish people are opposed to it and do not attend bullfights. A female activist attended a bullfight to film the cruelty when she was given a free ticket. It was revealed that only a quarter of the bullring was full, even with free tickets given. This activist ran into the ring at the end to comfort the dying bull. The Spanish government prop up the bullfighting industry with massive subsidies. During the pandemic they wanted subsidies because they were unable to continue with their animal torture activities. This was denied. I once attended a demonstration against bullfighting in Spain. A woman who was on the demonstration told me that she had a disabled son and was unable to get help from the government to care for him, while bullfighting received millions. So as you are so concerned about children I am sure you will agree that the money given to bullfighting would be better spent on children. Also, young children are taken to watch this torture. This is child abuse. Children love animals. This is destroying their innocence and desensitizing them to cruelty and violence. There is evidence that children have suffered permanent mental damage as a result. I find it strange that the same people who take children to watch bullfights will celebrate Christmas. The nativity scene includes an ox and ass - the ox is virtually the same animal as a bull. This creature is included in the scene where Jesus was born, yet these people think it is fine to torture it to death. As far as I am concerned these people cannot be Christians while they do this.
Imagine stumbling into the recording studio, seeing the Stones & they say you can hang around as long as you’re not annoying
Yes, if you're prepared to smoke, drink, sit around and have long meaningless conversations. Doesn't seem to have been much "work" done during this journo's stay.
Interesting about Keef's reaction to the Monkees. The Beatles welcomed them; Mickey Dolenz went McCartney's birthday party in 1967.
Richards has no right ...."Please Please Me" being one of his favourite Beatle tracks.
Most of us were guilty of snobbery about pop music......At the time I too was disgusted by The Monkees yet wouldn't mind their brand of pop on the transistor radio. Over time one begins to appreciate the craft involved in creating good pop songs.
Even Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich are regulars on my hard drive for years now.
1:57 one more clue in my detective work on the 67 session(s) featuring Faithful, Jagger, McCartney, Jon Mark and Glyn Johns.
The Incredible String Band cover is "Painting Box" Some sources say it was a duet with Paul..
She's also reported to have covered With a Little Help.
But Marianne didn't publish any album with her 67 sessions (her next album after Love in a Mist was published in 1976).
www.tapatalk.com/groups/solobeatlesphotosforum/19-may-1967-uk-decca-studios-london-t7221.html#p35348
Interesting.
"Someone give me an E" Stones decades ahead of their time in terms of drugs
In 1967 Keith says, "someone give me an E". That cat always was ahead of the times.
While Jagger wrote Sympathy (with help from the amazing Marianne, I suspect), if you can make it through Godard's ponderous 1+1 you'll notice how the song is completely transformed the minute Keef entered the studio. Brian had disintegrated so badly by the summer of '68 that he was no condition to record. The put him aside in a booth and his tracks were not included in the final mix. His major contribution was the slide on No Expectations for which we will always love him!
@@TroglodyteDiner I don't know, with the Stones there was a lot of Jagger and Richard led revisionism to minimise the contribution of Brian Jones, as they wanted to justify their decision to kick him out of the band he had set up in the first place, but his tracks were included, as he contributes to every track on the album except the final two, playing sitar and tanpura on "Street Fighting Man", slide guitar on "No Expectations", acoustic guitar on "Parachute Woman", harmonica on "Parachute Woman", "Dear Doctor" and "Prodigal Son", and Mellotron on "Jigsaw Puzzle" and "Stray Cat Blues". He looked a total mess on Rock n Roll Circus, making a minimal contribution there, but overall he did more in the latter recording he was involved with than he is generally given credit for.
Who ever thinks this album was a flop is a tone deaf ignoramus. There was no George Martin in their corner. It was them solely as a band arranging, writing and producing a LP that many of their peers would have fell flat on their face attempting to do so.
watching this I can't understand why they cut Brian loose.
I think it's ridiculous how good 2000 Light Years & She's a Rainbow are compared to the rest of the album. Any moment you think "oh, it might get good now", there it goes again. It just doesn't click.
totally agree with that
Tbh I love Citadel and The Lantern in their own right too, but this is true, those two do stand above the rest of the album
@@milanvaze2594 I have a soft spot for 2000 Men and In Another Land, but that's pretty much it.
fantastic
“Charlie Watts immortal“… I wish
It is a very good record. I like every song except Sing This Song All Together 1 and 2, both of which are dreadful. Think how good the album would be if Dandelion and We Love You had replaced those 2 songs.
Making a playlist doing that right now - excellent!
I have always thought the same thing! Dandelion and We Love You are excellent songs. And STSAT 1&2 are indeed dreadful.
The opposite. Those songs are pretty good, the rest are trash
All of those songs mentioned are timeless masterpieces, I would guess. Never destroy your own potential pleasure by too much comparing.
Amd child of the moon
I never really understood the Brian Jones dynamic within The Rolling Stones. I always thought Brian wanted the group as sort of blues purists and not part of the Pop Phenomenon. Yet his musical talents seem to lie with the pop experimentation of the times. It seemed to me the more Brian drifted away from the band, the more the band got serious with blues/rock and away from pop music. Maybe I'm totally wrong.
I think you're onto something there. Some great points.
Good points!
Astute observation
I believe he was drifting away because he saw what their intentions were going as far as himself
@@corinnetodd4807 - Like he was being ignored by Keith & Mick and felt like he was becoming irrelevant in the band. Of course he did live the life of the famous pop star with the fashion and drugs all the hedonism that goes with it.
"Satanic Majesties Request" is about as underrated (and unloved by many) as Queen's "Hot Space" album.
We don’t read prose like that today
I want Keith's jacket at 2:53 where do I get that ha
What's that cigar box guitar lookin' thing with the dude beside Marianne while sippin' from a cup?
that was cool👌🏼it just confirms brian was a bit more average than the rest of the band,shame he never found a home
you must be joking.
@@PS987654321PS what i meant by that was brian was a bit more than the stones needed and never suited they just needed a fab guitarist and he needed something like the beatles☝🏻
@@poitor5915 Are you out of your mind?
@@PS987654321PS must be😩
Is Keith's comment about 'Lovely Rita' a nod to The Beatles, or just coincidence? :)
Probably a nod.
There you go. Just exactly what the Rolling Stones were all about. Do you know if you can create gods then you can create demons too.
What can you say about an album that has the only bill Wyman vocal ever?
The bass player was the cool one
Totally offsubject..but I wish fashions were less fast and made dyes as beautiful as the blue Keef is wearing. Omg it was beautiful. I wish fashions were less staid and cookie cutter today! And those coats!
The 1960s, downhill eversince
Время начала восхождения Роллингов на Олимп.
What is the music in the background?
It's a psychedelic Stones-sounding song I recorded to go along with the video.
It sounds like a 2000 light years copy
@@calvinguile1315 Well, that was kind of the point. Actually, it was more inspired by "We Love You" than "2000 Light Years from Home".
I think it's good ✌️
And I loved the video...I have an NME reissue with this article in it...
Me ancamta el disco
TRES Cool
Great record psicodélico years 60!.
7:00
Aber im Ernst....
es gibt auch noch andere Einstellungen von dieser Aufnahme, fast identisch, auf denen es aber noch deutlicher so wirkt als wären die vier eine kompakte starke Einheit, und Brian wirkt iwie. da neben bei stehend, oder aussen vor.
So wie auch viele damals in den 60er Jahren schon eine Art Omen darin sahen, das auf dem Cover des Albums "Flowers", auf dem alle Stones als eine Blume dargestellt sind, Brian's Blume ohne Blätter dargestellt wurde.
Diese Trennlinie, die sich nach und nach im Werdegang der Stones zwischen ihnen und Brian durch unzählige kleine Situationen auftat,
führte letztendlich zum Bruch mit den Stones.
Was leider zu selten erwähnt wird,
Brian hatte von klein auf mit einem chronischem Asthma zu tun.
Von jungen Jahren an, musste er ständig einen Asthma Inhalator bei sich haben, wenn er plötzlich Atemnot hatte.
Das klingt jetzt erst Mal seltsam wenn man weiß, mit welcher Gedankenlosigkeit Brian alles mögliche immer stärker konsumierte, desto mehr Mick ohne böse Absicht dieses höllische Karrieretempo vorlegte, aber es war mmn. dieses Asthma, das Brian dann bei dieser Art von Drogenmissbrauch ausbremste.
Schon bevor er die Stones kannte, berichteten Freunde Brian's aus früheren Jahren Bill Wyman von Vorfällen, wo er bei einem befreundeten Pärchen übernachtet hatte, und sie morgens wach wurden, weil Brian nur noch tiefatmend auf der Couch lag und fast am ersticken war.
Der Freund hat sich Brian's Schlüssel gesucht und hat schnell aus Brian's Wohnung den Inhalator geholt.
Diesen Zustand trug Brian quasi immer mit sich herum, verschlimmerte ihn noch durch kopflosen Umgang mit allem was ihm in die Hände kam, und entfernte sich mental dadurch immer mehr von den anderen.
Deshalb tun mir die Bilder von Brian aus dem "We Love you" Video leid.
Aber ich bin den Stones nicht böse, sie waren wie sie waren, und haben Brian auch nie vergessen.
A day in the life.
I'm not a particulary a Beatles fan but i love this song.
Think Keith takeing his bird just broke him
According to several people who knew Brian, what really broke him were the drug busts, especially the second drug bust in 1968.
All they had to do was Included Brian Jones on the production wright's $$$$$$ Everything would of turned out differently?
Excellent Presentation!! But who exactly is Lovely Rita?
A meter maid, I suppose!
she had a sister, or two, didn't she?
@@byebyejohnny785 I sat on the sofa with them.
Maybe it's the same Rita that spent the night with Rod Stewart.
Got the bill. Rita paid it.
There should really be a web sight where story tellers can contribute and not waste the time of people that want to watch videos.
There were like a kind of confusion, to much people around and you can feel it on the record, even if i like their musical research. It seems that they change that after and be more concentrated.
Brian Jones wasn't getting his fair share $$$. Which started the down fall? Anita Pallenberg left him for Keef! She saw who is making the money and the rest is history!
@@playmusicnet7347 History is when you was there or if you work to have the real informations and the rest is privacy.
7:00
"das mysteriöse 11 Hände Bild" ^^
Bis heute bleibt es lt. Bill ein Rätsel, woher die 11. Hand ✋? stammte ...
....seltsam, aber so steht es geschrieben....^^
wow
1:25 and 6:22 Why does Keith have George Harrison's Sgt Pepper jacket draped over his shoulder?
Those coats were in fashion. Jimi Hendrix had a few band coats too
Here is the track Brian played concert harp on. ruclips.net/video/F8Uu0Kl680s/видео.html
Very cool. Thanks for the link.