The Rolling Stones - Brown Sugar (REACTION)
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 9 июл 2023
- @AirplayBeats reacts to The Rolling Stones - Brown Sugar
Like comment and subscribe
patreon.com/user?u=81569817
Airplay Beats
3609 Bradshaw Rd Ste H #337
Sacramento, CA 95827
Www.Airplaybeats.com - Развлечения
I can’t help loving this song! And I have since the 70s!Even though I’m a black woman and I’m supposed to be offended. That riff, that sax solo, just pure rock gold!
There's no denying it's a brilliant song... its problems are definitely problems though. I say that as a middle aged white English man.
@@hackdaniels7253 No, the problems are middle aged white men telling blacks what they should be offended by.
Why would you be offended?
There's nothing whatsoever demeaning in the lyrics.
The song is a social statement about the ills of slavery during that particular time in America.
Period.
@@hackdaniels7253It was really kinda confusing to me when I used to hear it as a kid, but now it seems obvious the Stones were deliberately f-ing with the record company and with the censors on radio, by thumbing their noses at repressed social taboos.
They made this total rock n roll radio hit, filled with flaunting interracial sex, confronting the reality of colonialist slavery, with BDSM overtones.. essentially poking fun at the historic perversions of white slave traders, which takes a blatant jab at the USA as well.
It’s just about the enslaver boinking his black slaves, the rich white woman boinking the black houseboy, and Mick’s present-day attraction to black women. It's quite an interesting chronology.
Fun fact!
The woman that Mick sings about here is the same woman that Bowie sings about in Lady Grinning Soul, an amazing song, very different style.
Ian Stewart was the 6th Rolling Stones from the begininng but music executives said he didnt 'look' like a Rolling Stone so he was kept off album pictures but was a major part of their history.
When Mick Taylor joined the Stones on Let it bleed, it would be 6 years of their best stuff.
But Aftermath, Between the Buttons, and Beggars Banquet are better than Goats Head Soup and It’s Only Rock ‘n Roll. Also, Let It Bleed was practically a finished record when Taylor joined.
YEP! You're so right! After Sticky fingers their music, little by little, got worse and worse! Even Excile on main street isn't as good! People who disagree and keep saying that Excile on main street was their best work just repeat what the mainstream want to hear. As people are sheep and not able to listen with a critical ear. @@fuchsiaswing8545
@@fuchsiaswing8545 why the sour grapes? Are you really defending Keif and his merry band of junkies?
@@joefilter2923 Yes ❤️
the Mick Taylor years were the best!!!
Hearing this song opened my eyes to a whole new dating pool! My Kentucky parents almost shit a brick the first time I brought a black girl home! They got used to it.
Same here, it was 1975 & I was 15! Dated many other ethnicities as I love a good buffet! Just got out of a 15 yr relationship with a nubian queen ✌💖☮
Haha
@@DerekDerekDerekDerekDerekDerek"shit a brick" not heard that in such a long long time lol 👍🇬🇧🤪
😂😂
The Stones' musical contribution to the issue of slavery. They just stated the truth of how it used to be, & rocked out with it. Thanks for your reaction.
Absolutely keep going through the entire "Sticky Fingers" album. The final track, "Moonlight Mile", may be my very favorite Stones song of all.
I agree. Moonlight Mile is simply a Masterpiece 😊
Same. I have been requesting that one with a lot of reactors for a long time now. The guys will love it!
Sister Morphine is my favorite track
@@willblood7082 I love it as well. Just listened to it this morning. I actually love every song on the album.
Don’t forget about Dead Flowers!
This was Micks give to a black lady he dated. He has a black daughter from that relationship. My teenage me would sing it loud and proud being one of the few black kids in my high school! Chiguy
This whole album is incredible! I have an original copy that has an actual zipper on the front!
Peace
I have it as well!🖖🏼
@@ThePittsburghToddy That’s awesome!
One thing I’ve never given up is my record collection! I started buying albums in 1968, when I was 10 yrs old, and had some “working” money, beyond my “allowance”
Peace
I have an original album too 👍🏻
I got it too
me too
I read an interview with Mick recently where he explained this was an anti-slavery song; due to the lyrics, they don't play it in concert anymore. It was a big top 40 radio hit for them but I doubt it would get airplay today. Great song though!
Brown people and sugar have been interwoven since White people brought slaves over from Africa to harvest sugar cane. Repugnant.
It still gets airplay on classic rock stations
@@ALD56 Yes it does. I meant to say if it came out today, I doubt it would get airplay.
Sticky Fingers came out in 71'... so about 8yrs into the Stones legacy... Ian Stewart was an original Stone right from the beginning... but was removed from the lineup because his image wasn't quite the same as the Stones.... he did stay on with the group as a road manager (I believe) and of course piano player right up till around the time of his death in 85'... Stu was heavily regarded as a great among his peers of the honky tonk style piano playing and is credited on many albums throughout the generation...
The first 8 years does count as 'early' for a band that's been going 60 years. Makes you feel old, doesn't it?
@hackdaniels7253 lol sure does...
Great that he refused to play minor chords.....simply lifting his hands from the keys when one came up in the song.
@@john-daviddennison2862 I mean, I'm only 53, but I think of the entire 70s as 'mid-period' Stones... but when you think they've basically been a heritage act since Steel Wheels, perhaps that's right.
This was recorded in Muscle Shoals, Alabama along with "Wild Horses" and "You Gotta Move." It was featured in the documentary on Muscle Shoals which is totally worth checking out.
I haven't seen that documentary. I'm wondering if the footage is the same as the Maysles brothers’ documentary, Gimme Shelter (1970). Does anyone know?
@@fuchsiaswing8545 I've seen both, and yes, there is some overlapping footage. But there is also material that is unique to "Muscle Shoals." Also, there is an early performance of the Stones doing "You Better Move On" which was their cover of Arthur Alexander who was a Muscle Shoals artist.
@@fuchsiaswing8545 almost all of it is in MUSCLE SHOALS with Aretha frank lynn , Steve Winwood and so many more music greats!
Claudia Lennear was the inspiration for this song (as well as "Lady Grinning Soul" by David Bowie). She had a minor west coast hit with the Superbs, became an Ikette behind Tina Turner in the Ike and Tina Turner Review, then went into the backup singer stratosphere with Leon Russell - from whom all her other musical connections proceeded. Mad Dogs and Englishmen, Concert For Bangladesh, etc., etc. The lady is a legend.
I thought it was Marsha Hunt
@@llw1066 Claudia. What a beauty.
Interesting!
So glad somebody mentioned this fact about Claudia Lennear & Bowie's song 'Lady Grinning Soul.' It has always been a fave of mine since it came out back in the 70's. I can keep my fingers crossed that maybe these guys will react to Bowie's song as well since they are Bowie fans too (hint-hint, nudge-nudge). It is a first listen likable song that should have been released as a single at the time, IMHO.
Leon married one of her friends too, Mary McCreary.
Keep going all the way through "Sticky Fingers" - their best album.
I like this album too..
Sway!!!!!! It should have opened the album. 👍
Subjective
@@dreggymon it's their best song.
Certainly a matter of taste. It does have an edge with me cause it was the first Stones album I bought. However, I will always feel like Exile is their best, and perhaps the best ever. "Let it Loose" and "Sweet Virginia" are difficult to top.
There may have been a double entendre meaning to this song also. Brown sugar was a slang term for a type of heroin that some members of the band may have been partaking of at various times during their lives.
The original name was Black Pu**y
My fave Stones song. Try ta sit still when it comes on. (Still with my long-time Brown Sugar. I'm 76 and we still dance to this).
No better horn in the history of rock and roll than Bobby Keys' sax in this song.
Guys, speaking of Ian Stewart, he also plays piano on Zep's "Rock And Roll".
Deep cut request from Exile on Main Street album - “Ventilator Blues.” Rarely heard gem of a song displaying the Stones hard core blues roots!
What a great song. Seconded!
I third that!
They should really just do the whole damn double album track by track.. it’s a pure 🔥 masterpiece, and a perfect follow up to Sticky Fingers.
Can not get enough of the Stones. As always fellas great reaction. Much appreciated 🙏 ❤
Such a simple opening riff, yet so great and iconic.
I'm 64. I must have listened for 50 years! They are in the top 5 of the Classics, for me.
Every garage band loved playing this one when I was growing up in the mid to late seventies! Great song ❤
I remember this song back in the day because they would play it at the beach, when my family was visiting (back in Maryland/Delaware area). I was 8 years old and it just locked in my brain as a Summertime, bikini girls, and sweet waves song! I love this song!
This song has a Little Richard-type feel to it, and that's not easy. Their song "Rip This Joint" also has this vibe. Love it.
No denying it’s an absolute banger of a song, but those lyrics 😮
What are you babbling about. The Stones have had black female singers, black musicians play with them, black people in the audience... for 50 years. And now its a problem. hahaha Dont listen if it bothers you.
@@ridemfast7625 You're the person babbling here. As he said the song bangs... but try and defend the lyrics. Really.. Go on... I dare you!
Yep, I cant stand it personally
@@briangray00 Already did. Read and comprehend next time. And btw - black chicks had no issues "bang"ing Mick. hahaha And yet here you are... wawawa
@@briangray00 It's a fraught thing, man. I dislike Woke scoldings of people fifty years ago, or even today, and am very pro-free speech. I won't say it's "racist." Yet Keith says it's about "the horrors of slavery." Huh?! The upbeat music, the feel-good vibes, bopping our heads right along with "Hear him [a slave-owner] whip [and rape] the [slave] women [and girls]" doesn't sit right. Of course, many rap lyrics glorify violence against Black women, and few seem to care there either. Rock on?
Props to the late great Bobby Keys for blowing the saxophone on some Rolling Stones hits.
If I recall correctly, Ian Stewart was an original founding member of The Stones but got booted offstage by manager Andrew Oldham for looking too old. So he became their road manager instead and still contributed amazing boogie-woogie piano to many of their classic studio tracks.
An excellent taste of Stewart is "Boogie With Stu" by Led Zeppelin. Stewart plays the piano on the song.
Ian Stewart was an original member of the Stones. Some say he even started the band. He played on some albums but mostly served as the Stones Road manager.
'Some say'' That includes Keith Richards, See their induction speech into the RRHOF.
Your right! I think I got it from an interview with Keith. Oh well, the 70s?@@stevesharpe361
The two part harmony between Jagger and Richards is magic. It does more for the song than two voices should. Greater than the sum of its parts.
I’m sure it’s been pointed out numerous times that this is the quintessential Stones lineup. Savor some of these albums, then watch concert footage ‘69 to ‘73 and you’ll agree they were the World’s Greatest Rock ‘n Roll Band.
Recorded at the Famous Muscle Shoals Recording Studio
You heard this song everywhere back in ‘71.The most popular song of that year.
You had to have been living under a rock not to have heard this song but great that your reacting to the stones best 2 albums IMHO. Every song is a banger and kudos to you guys for going for it.
This song could never be made today. That in itself is sad.
There's a great live version of this with Tina Turner in Japan. She and Mick together, amazing, fun!
There is a Stones cover band of all black musicians in Philly called Brown Sugar
Ian Stewart was with the Stones since 1962. He was an original. As a matter of fact, Ian answered the ad placed in a magazine called Jazz News by Rolling Stones founder Brian Jones. However, in 1964, Stones manager (Andrew Oldham) politely asked Ian to step aside. He would still play on the records, but he didn't fit the Stones image. Ian agreed. He continued to play on the records, and became their road manager. He was a great Blues/Boogie Woogie Piano player. He can be heard on any Bluesy, or old school Rock N roll tracks. He refused to play on any tracks that were not rooted in the blues, or Chuck Berry style rock N Roll.
One of their most popular songs.
I think this is the first song that Bobby Keys added his saxophone to this fabulous song...began a long career with the Stones and a lifelong friendship with Keith!!
he had played on Live With Me that's on the Let It Bleed Lp, two years before, that's the first time they worked together
Look up this song on top of the pops 1971, awesome performance by Mick Jagger!
The Stones don't play this song in concert anymore for obvious reasons. Musically it's a stone Cold jam.
There is nothing wrong about this song
@@user-cx3jn7cq8e rape is not entertainment
Bobby Keys... best sax for hire back in the day.
Keith Richards loved Bobby Keys saxophone sound and described it as “greasy.” In fact Keith was the “grease” that helped Bobby get back in the band, (Jagger fired him) after missing a show from an all nighter. One of the greats, shoutout to Bobby and Lubbock, TX.🍺
Bobby keys also filled a bathtub up with champagne so he and a few ladies could get hammered the right way. Bobby put it on the room service bill and Mick got mad so that was the end of Bobby keys for awhile .it took Keith like a decade or more to get him back In the band.
@@edwardcapobianco2975 That is the story, as I heard it too. 👍
Bobby played on a catastrophe of hits of various artists some prior to his late sixties years among them Run Around Sue by Dion and The Belmonts , and alto sax on Elvis Presleys Return To Sender and he was playing with Bobby Vee when he met The Stones on their second US concert at the Teen Fair in San Antonio.
….another fun fact…Keef and Bobby Keys born on exactly the same day. Dec. 18, 1943. Sadly Bobby didn’t get the Keef longevity gene. Apparently nobody did! 😂
Every time I have ever heard this song in a crowd the Yeah Yeah whoooo gets the whole room singing it. So much fun
ZZ Top’s Brown Sugar is a winner. Check that one out too.
Recorded at the famous Muscle Shoals Sound....you need to watch the documentary Muscle Shoals!
I think you have Sway, I Got the Blues, Sister Morphine and Moonlight Mile left to do on Sticky Fingers, and you should do all of them.
Sway is my favorite on the album
I love you guys man you are so into music and you got the whole vibe of every song
Love the song, lyrics and the stones!
I used to play bass and back-up vocals on this in a band in the seventies. OMG so much FUN to play. Once it takes off it gets a life of its own. What a blast to play. Audiences loved it.
Greatest Rock n Roll Band ever 🤘🤘
3rd IMO. 1. Beatles 2. Zeppelin 3. Stones
Subjective
One of my favorites!
You guys pick up on everything!
LOVE the Charlie Parker shirt!!!
Another Keith Richards Open G guitar tuning masterpiece
Mick invented the riff, chords circle, that is odd
The Stones arr the GOAT’s
My fave by the Stones and the first sax solo I learned to play "almost" dead on.
Ian Stewart was an original full member of the Stones but, he wasn’t a pretty boy and their management told them to dump him, however they kept him as an unofficial member playing piano in the studio and on tour. He sadly died in 1985 aged 47. Former Ronnie Wood band mate Ian McLagen keyboardist with the Small faces and the Faces would replace him.
Ian Was an original member of the Stones. '62 -'64. This was from '69.
Take a gander at Mick's girlfriend Claudia Lennear from those days. Unfucking real beauty.
Now this is the way to put it down and really rock. The people upset with the topic are silly, politically correct snowflakes, who are more than willing to let women be called bitches and hoes. Right or wrong, at least this song has historical context. And it is a great jam. Mick Taylor and Keith Richards were in their prime during the Jimmy Miller produced music of this era. The Stones were never better.
I was a teenage black kid growing up on military bases when this song was making the rounds. Our parents heard it. Our friends heard it. And we shared it with our friends. Given the openness of the time we lived back, to explore and at least give something a chance before condemning it, there is something to be said for what we have lost. Why do you think so many RUclips channels are react to this older music with such enthusiasm?
This music is still relevant. Full of life, creativity, soul, funk, and exciting ideas. The world would be a better place if we could express ourselves like this, rather than being afraid of opening our mouths because we fear the repercussions. The computer has limited thought and expression. Too bad. I bet there are so great ideas not being expressed because we fear being canceled, silenced, or ridiculed.
In the meantime, here is a great song from the Rolling Stones catalog. It is called SHATTERED. It's about New York, Mick going through divorce, the trappings of crime, fashion, and a city in turmoil, and being alone. And then there's that driving rhythm. Enjoy
Phew! Thanks for that comment. I only wish Airplay Beats would've commented, too. Even if they felt differently
Those last licks on guitar by Kieth, was his influence by Chuck Berry.
1971….
They were 8 years into their legendary career.
The best era for them
This song and Wild Horses, from Sticky Fingers, were recorded in Muscle Shoals, Alabama.
Putting some Rock and Roll on some Brown Sugar Thats What l am Talking AboutYEAH BABY
I have an original pressing of sticky fingers and the cover is a pair of jeans and they have a real zipper that works and goes up and down . Lol the creativity back then was epic.
"Brown Sugar" was recorded over a three-day period at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio in Sheffield, Alabama, from 2 to 4 December 1969 Keith Richards said he thinks it would have been a completely different song if not for the influence, style they learned in Muscle Shoals. "Sweet Home"
Ian Stewart was with the Stones before they became famous, right up until his death in 1985. both as piano player and for a time early on as road manager. Management didn't think he suited the band's image looks-wise so he took a back seat but still played with them live and on their albums. Keith Richards has said the Stones were really "Stu's" band.
I remember when this came out..I know most people didn't even know what it was about, most songs in those days didn't have lyrics so political or controversial, they just enjoyed the music instead
Shit dirty and funky at the same damn time 😅
It sure is
Mighty song.
Not one of their earlier ones. This was in their prime creative years. Brown Sugar opening Sticky Fingers, my personal favorite, including Mick Taylor on guitar and Bobby Keys on sax to complement Jagger and Richard. The world's greatest rock and roll band. At their peak.
Love this
They wrote this song and recorded it in an hour. This was take 2. Live in studio
Stones giving out free history lessons in the key of C
Favorite ❤
A floor filler if ever there was one and that riff kills me, what a groove💎🕺🎸🎶🎵🎸💎👌🔥
Keith's guitar, churning hot, is the backbone of the Stones' sound.
another Stones mastercut......Just keep going with this album its hard to beat
❤❤❤
Paying attention department . I see the Bird t shirt !!
Great tune for filling the dancefloor along with Paranoid from Black Sabbath, Kashmir from Led Zeppelin, Hi ho silver lining from Jeff Beck and Can't get no satisfaction from the Stones
High school all over. :)
Freedom against a background of slavery. …that is what I think it was about. Mick’s first child was with a black female model. Keith dated Ronnie Spector…George Harrison dated her sister…
The Stones were brilliant in their use of controversy to keep rolling. This song always seemed a bit odd when it came to the words but it rocked in the melody.
Brown Sugar 1971
For classic early Stones, try Paint It Black.
I commented on this classic track previously on another site and was taken to task by another fan. But shortly after that the Stones announced that they will no longer play this song, due to sensitivity over the lyrics. I love the Stones, but this is a don’t-go-there zone.
It seems the meaning of the lyrics went right over your head
Yes they did. Everyone in the comments has brought us up to speed though
You'd be surprised by how many "classic" rock songs are, or have been, a part so many different things over the past 50 or 60 years.
You may not know the title but you've heard it at one point.
😎👍
Came from the same album as “Bitch”
"SISTER MORPHINE"
Song done in the early seventies
This is one of their best songs and they lost their balls and dropped it from the set list.
Tales of Brave Ulysses next.
Ian Stewart was an original Rolling Stone.
The Stone’s do not play this song live anymore because of the controversy about the opening lyrics …..even thou he had a black girlfriend at the time when he wrote the lyrics. Mick said he had no intention of the song be racism oriented.
RIP Charlie, quiet achiever.