Deconstructing Gimme Shelter (Isolated Tracks)

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  • Опубликовано: 23 авг 2024
  • Let It Bleed 1969
    Drums and Percussion 0:04-4:28
    Bass 4:30-8:42
    Guitars, Harmonica and Piano 8:44-13:14
    Vocals 13:17-16:40
    Personal
    Mick Jagger-Lead and Backing Vocals, Lee Oskar Harmonica
    Merry Clayton-Co-Lead and Backing Vocals
    Keith Richards-1960 Maton SE777 Natural, Backing Vocals
    Bill Wyman-1968 Vox Astro IV Bass or 1964 Framus 51/50 Star De Luxe Bass
    Charlie Watts-1960 Gretsch Round Badge Black Nitron Kit
    Nicky Hopkins-1800 Hamburg Steinway Grand Piano
    Jimmy Miller-Güiro, Maracas
    Patreon- / hjnintendo09

Комментарии • 77

  • @HJsCorn909
    @HJsCorn909  Год назад +19

    Let It Bleed 1969
    Drums and Percussion 0:04-4:28
    Bass 4:30-8:42
    Guitars, Harmonica and Piano 8:44-13:14
    Vocals 13:17-16:40

  • @alexvince461
    @alexvince461 Год назад +31

    You get to hear what a great bass player Bill Wyman is, it's nothing like anyone else would play

    • @bristolfashion4421
      @bristolfashion4421 Год назад +2

      ... to be honest it was probably Richards. In most vid.s of the Stones in the studio around this time you see Jagger & Richards busy working the song out, Charlie waiting for instructions, Jones staring into the distance, off his face and Wyman sitting on a stool looking bored ! Oh and Hopkins adding something cool, at the piano.

    • @aldouscormier1505
      @aldouscormier1505 Год назад +3

      @@bristolfashion4421 it was bill wyman, as per what’s on google.

    • @michaelmcginley7930
      @michaelmcginley7930 Год назад

      Yes I don't always appreciate basë but that was amazing and put the backbone on gimmie shelter

    • @STEVEFINNERTY
      @STEVEFINNERTY Месяц назад

      @@bristolfashion4421 thats not keith, its too flash

    • @STEVEFINNERTY
      @STEVEFINNERTY Месяц назад

      @@bristolfashion4421 that's not Keith, its too flash

  • @Micknkeithable
    @Micknkeithable Год назад +16

    Miller was the GOAT producer

  • @glynjones7158
    @glynjones7158 Год назад +24

    Best Bass work by Bill ever!

  • @camronbay1
    @camronbay1 9 месяцев назад +7

    The music breakdown really shows the effort that went into this song and the creativity of the Stones.

  • @Sincopare
    @Sincopare Год назад +15

    Jimmy Miller was such a fantastic asset to bring out so much Stones flavour.

  • @doubled5383
    @doubled5383 7 месяцев назад +6

    Clayton's vocals (isolated) so haunting. Amazing.

  • @sweetassugar2076
    @sweetassugar2076 7 месяцев назад +8

    Keith Richards is a beast of a guitar player

  • @tomslick2058
    @tomslick2058 Год назад +18

    I must say Bill deviates from his usual style and takes a lead approach. Excellent.

    • @michaelmcginley7930
      @michaelmcginley7930 8 месяцев назад +1

      Great bass

    • @damfino1964
      @damfino1964 29 дней назад

      If Nicky Hopkins played guitar, he would have been a Rolling Stone. He should have been, he was on their best songs.

  • @JasonChannell
    @JasonChannell Год назад +15

    My favorite song of all time, and your best one yet. Thanks for doing these!

  • @chuckbaker8413
    @chuckbaker8413 2 месяца назад +3

    Yes…Absolutely… All the talent involved… Keith and Charlie… Jimmy Miller is such a genius..😊
    Bill shreds… Mick shreds on harp and vocals… But let’s PLEASE say a word about Nicky Hopkins… He is such a great keyboard player… He just jumps in and absolutely Rips..!!! RIP Nicky…Mick and Mary… All Time🎉

  • @camronbay1
    @camronbay1 9 месяцев назад +8

    And a hypnotic sound as well.

  • @ednorko5128
    @ednorko5128 Год назад +13

    Merry offered a thousand percent on this one!

  • @ae3898
    @ae3898 2 месяца назад +2

    Bass line reminds me a little of Motown/Jamerson. Deep groove.

  • @eddie11426
    @eddie11426 Год назад +6

    Jagger on fire here

  • @vinto34
    @vinto34 Год назад +6

    Great reverb on the vocals like they are in a tunnel singing.

  • @deandee8082
    @deandee8082 Год назад +9

    the bass was a big part of the over all power of the stones music..

  • @looseunit9180
    @looseunit9180 5 месяцев назад +3

    This is really useful! Thank you for your time and effort!

  • @alexvince461
    @alexvince461 Год назад +8

    These are absolutely brilliant thanks,

  • @williamf4205
    @williamf4205 7 месяцев назад +2

    O melhor trabalho do Bill Wyman no baixo.

  • @deandee8082
    @deandee8082 Год назад +11

    how could any lead vocalist not just destroy it with background vocals like this, OMG, yea that's enough to carry even the worst of lead vocals.. WoW when she takes off in the chorus that's when the arm hair stands up ... if she didn't lay down an absolute clinic of backup vocals there I dunno if anyone ever did?..

  • @Kirk1914
    @Kirk1914 Год назад +5

    This is really helpful. Thank you.

  • @GIBKEL
    @GIBKEL Год назад +5

    Brilliant bones man….

  • @johngore7744
    @johngore7744 Год назад +17

    No ones ever sung it better than Merry Clayton.

  • @alexvince461
    @alexvince461 Год назад +3

    Brilliant

  • @valdoggold
    @valdoggold 7 месяцев назад +3

    Billy Wyman is arguably the most underrated bass player of anyone ever!

  • @williamf4205
    @williamf4205 7 месяцев назад +1

    A intervenção da Merry Clayton nos vocais foi fundamental para a exitosa complexidade dessa canção - uma das maiores dos Rolling Stones. Para mim, é óbvia a inspiração - beirando o plágio - que o Pink Floyd fez 3 anos depois no Dark Side Of The Moon, utilizando uma cantora convidada - Clare Torry - exatamente para surtir o mesmo efeito em "The Great Gig In The Sky".

  • @amadorsanchez5222
    @amadorsanchez5222 Год назад +5

    deconstruting all famous rolling stones song please.

  • @myrskylintu1
    @myrskylintu1 Год назад +8

    After trying it i am pretty sure Keith used open E tuning on this. That"s why the neck of that cheap semiacoustic he used also broke at the end of the recording, the stress of open E tuning was too much for it. On open E tuning that riff and rhytm part sounds exactly right.

    • @nicstunes
      @nicstunes Год назад +1

      I think that's been confirmed - Open E

    • @meetontheledge1380
      @meetontheledge1380 Год назад +1

      Nice! With open G or D one tunes down (slacks the strings). With open E one would tune up and increase the tension! I'd heard the guitar fell apart just as he finished and harp players are STILL arguing over which key harp Jagger used. Web is FULL of disinfo (''Jagger used a chromatic harp''- wrong!) or (worse!) a C# minor (yeah, those weren't even being made back in '69). Good call.

    • @will2741
      @will2741 10 месяцев назад +1

      Wasn’t it a Maton? Not cheap.

  • @geneobrien8907
    @geneobrien8907 Год назад +3

    In the 2012 NPR radio interview, All Things Considered, Mick said he played harmonica on this song. Was he misremembering?

    • @HJsCorn909
      @HJsCorn909  Год назад +4

      No you can hear the harmonica on the song. Mick played it before Keith's solo and some short phrases at the end of the song

    • @geneobrien8907
      @geneobrien8907 Год назад +2

      @@HJsCorn909 I'm not referring to the fact that there is harmonica on the song but that the list of performers in the video description lists Lee Oskar on the harmonica.

    • @HJsCorn909
      @HJsCorn909  Год назад +4

      That’s the name of the brand of harmonica

    • @geneobrien8907
      @geneobrien8907 Год назад +3

      @@HJsCorn909 I misread it then, I thought the reference was to Lee Oskar, the virtuoso harmonica player. Mick must have gotten a very early preproduction model as Lee Oskar Harmonicas wasn't founded until 1983.

    • @meetontheledge1380
      @meetontheledge1380 Год назад +4

      @@HJsCorn909 They didn't make Lee Oscar harps in '69. It's Jagger on a Marine Band (because, for blues, that's all we had!). I just re (listened) to the 2012 NPR show (All Things Considered) and there is no mention of Lee Oscar in the interview nor in the video description - somebody is having a flashback or still tripping!

  • @chuckbaker8413
    @chuckbaker8413 Месяц назад

    Brian was on the outside to his drug problem… M Taylor had not joined yet… Brian was passed out on the floor when he even made it into the studio☠️

  • @SampsoniteX88
    @SampsoniteX88 10 месяцев назад +3

    What amp did Wyman use?

  • @michaelrochester48
    @michaelrochester48 Год назад +4

    You can hear Keith going woo hoo! During merry Clayton’s rape murder section because he was so impressed

  • @etenyenhuis1
    @etenyenhuis1 Год назад +1

    Where's Mick Taylor ... ?

    • @HJsCorn909
      @HJsCorn909  Год назад +4

      Hadn’t joined yet

    • @Mark27472
      @Mark27472 10 месяцев назад +2

      Joined halfway through the album. That's why he's only on two tracks.

    • @effdonahue6595
      @effdonahue6595 9 месяцев назад +2

      Down at the pub throwing back some cold ones 🤓

    • @petermills542
      @petermills542 6 месяцев назад +2

      Taylor only played an overdubbed rhythm on Live With Me & some acoustic on Country Honk, I think?!
      Got more involved for Honky Tonk Women.

  • @elirosen1391
    @elirosen1391 Год назад +2

    No Mick Taylor on this one?

    • @HJsCorn909
      @HJsCorn909  Год назад +9

      Nope, just Keef

    • @chriscampbell9191
      @chriscampbell9191 Год назад +16

      Mick Taylor was only on Country Honk and Live With Me on this album. All the other guitars were Keith Richards, including the slide parts.

    • @ChrisWrightSydney
      @ChrisWrightSydney Год назад +10

      This track was already in the can before Taylor joined.

    • @michaelrochester48
      @michaelrochester48 Год назад

      @@chriscampbell9191 Ry Cooder on several tracks

    • @chriscampbell9191
      @chriscampbell9191 Год назад +4

      @@michaelrochester48 Cooder played mandolin on Love In Vain, no other appearance on this album I am aware of. No slide, anyway. Cooder played slide on Sister Morphine and the Jamming With Edward sessions.