This is good, despite the poor sound. Some of the songs i think have a backing track, but that was acceptable at the time. Still a gem and of historical value. So pleased to hear this.
Thanks Andrew, glad you enjoyed. All songs have backing tracks but the vocals are live. It’s All Over Now has a unique arrangement that was only played once.
Ever since I saw the show on 22 Jan 67 I've been telling people about this cool version of It's All Over Now but no-one believed me. Never performed like that again.
I've only heard It's All Over Now being from this show, but I've heard that it's been circulating on bootlegs for quite a while. Loved the Ruby's Tuesday even though its a playback with live vocals. Great of you to preserve it on RUclips 👍.
This is amazing less screaming girls Jagger is in key and good form the band's energy is in full effect the reworked It's all over now is raw and brilliant it stands along side the original arrangement its not an either or choice its a masterful live recreation of one of their best soulful R&B achievements
Famulus - Thanks for sharing this important Stones historical recording , it appears sadly that the only Sunday Night Palladium footage that survived comprises of M.O.R. Singers / Bands, rubbish comedians and 🎪 acts.
The TAMI show version will always be my favorite because it shows that brief moment in time before Andrew Loog Oldham had managed to push Brian into the background.
In a very Motown style... it sounds like a version of a song by Otis Redding, Wilson Picket or James Brown... Interestingly, the chorus part reminds me of Hot Legs by Rod Stewart.
I recorded this too (audio) but 56 years on the tape hasn't survived. I'm so delighted - I've been searching for a copy of this for decades! I knew someone else MUST have recorded it! (Didn't everyone have a tape recorder back then.) Shame it's cut off sharply at the end. (The Palladium orchestra picked it up and kept the rhythm going for a few more seconds, maybe less than half a minute. "Ladies and Gentlemen, the Rolling Stones" - wonder who the compere was. Dave Allen? . . . Reading the comments, people have suggested Ted Rogers and Max Bygraves. Could be either. Not Jimmy Tarbuck?) I wonder if anyone recorded the Stones a year later on Radio 1 discussing their new L.P. ("Their Satanic Majesties Request") ?
Big thanks for this. Don't really care for this version of It's All Over Now. Give me the TAMI version any old day. It really whips it on down, kills, and really nails the male thrust of the lyrics. Brian is wicked on that version and it shows how a bunch of white boys can improve on a soul original, which is rarely done.
The Stones were not taken seriously in many quarters (although the Beatles were.....finally). This was why there is much less live footage of them in the 60's. A loss to us all.
Perhaps not taken seriously by much of the public. But they were critical darlings certainly by ‘66 and perhaps by Satisfaction in ‘65. Favorable comments re the Stones from Leonard Bernstein in ‘66, favorable commentary in Crawdaddy magazine in ‘67, and drooling by Rolling Stone magazine in ‘68 & ‘69. And on Ed Sullivan in October ‘64!
IIRC The very next Sunday at the Palladium, a comedian came on squirting air freshener, the audience erupting in raucous laughter; it may have been Ted Rogers who later became the host. Typical of how the Establishment tried to put the Stones down.
It's All Over Now is obviously a live version ---- yes the others are live vocal over prerecorded track --- video of LSTNT from this show exists --- what a shame BBC wiped the rest of the tape
The programme was made by ATV. This I think was the performance where they refused to go on the the revolving stage which all the guests did at the end of each show. The Stones were furious with the host of the show Max Bygraves a bigoted comedian who came on stage after their performance and was squirting a container of what was supposed to be DDT. If he had done that to The Who I think the reaction from them would have been interesting, most likely violent!
Much of ITV'S Thank Your Lucky Stars have been lost. It is likely though many of the episodes were broadcast live and were not even recorded on what is called tele-cine.
On "It's all over now" it sounds like Mick sings "When I get high she can ease my aching head" - "high" replacing "worried". They couldn't match the sound they got on the single version at Chess.
I saw this broadcast in 1967 and I'm sure It's All Over Now wasn't performed. The show was recorded mid week and shown Sunday night so maybe it was cut from the final edit.Also the programme was made by ITV so they would have wiped the tape not BBC although BBC wiped a lot of Top of The Pops.
The recording you can hear, here proves 'It's All Over Now' was the third song. (Sadly I.T.V. probably didn't record live programmes - and neither did the B.B.C. usually because videotape was expensive and the snobs didn't see any point in saving any pop music.)
@@Famulus9 this is the show where the Stones refused to go on the revolving stage for the programme finale- thereby guaranteeing headlines in the Monday papers.
I don’t think there’s a better source out there unfortunately. There’s a vinyl rip that might sound better to you but it’s missing some of Jaggers banter.
This is good, despite the poor sound. Some of the songs i think have a backing track, but that was acceptable at the time. Still a gem and of historical value. So pleased to hear this.
Thanks Andrew, glad you enjoyed. All songs have backing tracks but the vocals are live. It’s All Over Now has a unique arrangement that was only played once.
Ever since I saw the show on 22 Jan 67 I've been telling people about this cool version of It's All Over Now but no-one believed me. Never performed like that again.
To me it sounds sort of like their version of "Talkin 'Bout You".
Vindicated !👍🏼💥 They could have developed the idea of funky grooving more.
That's an awesome version of It's All Over Now.
Yeah, sad loss, no video. And yes, audo could've been better. BUT....look at what we do have!?! I'll take it, gladly, and say Thank You man!!!
love hearing "Connection" live
I've only heard It's All Over Now being from this show, but I've heard that it's been circulating on bootlegs for quite a while. Loved the Ruby's Tuesday even though its a playback with live vocals.
Great of you to preserve it on RUclips 👍.
This is amazing less screaming girls Jagger is in key and good form the band's energy is in full effect the reworked It's all over now is raw and brilliant it stands along side the original arrangement its not an either or choice its a masterful live recreation of one of their best soulful R&B achievements
Famulus - Thanks for sharing this important Stones historical recording , it appears sadly that the only Sunday Night Palladium footage that survived comprises of M.O.R. Singers / Bands, rubbish comedians and 🎪 acts.
I really like this version of It's All Over Now. A real shame we don't have this show on video or in higher quality audio.
Walking The Dog
Interesting…I prefer the 73 live version from Hawaii
The TAMI show version will always be my favorite because it shows that brief moment in time before Andrew Loog Oldham had managed to push Brian into the background.
In a very Motown style... it sounds like a version of a song by Otis Redding, Wilson Picket or James Brown... Interestingly, the chorus part reminds me of Hot Legs by Rod Stewart.
@@trabongo definitely that stax/motown sound going on,
Так удзячны аўтару канала! Я Беларусі і я пранікся раннімі стокнз і брайанам асабліва. Яшчэ раз дзякуй! З цікавасцю гляджу) Працягвай!
Bin fasziniert....echte Raritäten....wunderschön......🔝💯🎶🎼
what a great version of It's All Over Now.
What a time. What a band.
Videotape was very expensive in the early days. It was wiped and reused many times. Same thing happened in Australia
Maybe it wasn't recorded. Live programmes usually were not. (Nothing to do with the B.B.C. though.)
Espectacular Concierto!!!
Fabulous Famulus/ A True Gem Here 💎/Thank-you 🎸
A pretty rare show all things considered! I could only find It’s All Over Now on RUclips 😅
@@Famulus9 A Most Welcome Addition to my Archives/So glad to have found you 🤩
I recorded this too (audio) but 56 years on the tape hasn't survived. I'm so delighted - I've been searching for a copy of this for decades! I knew someone else MUST have recorded it! (Didn't everyone have a tape recorder back then.) Shame it's cut off sharply at the end. (The Palladium orchestra picked it up and kept the rhythm going for a few more seconds, maybe less than half a minute. "Ladies and Gentlemen, the Rolling Stones" - wonder who the compere was. Dave Allen? . . . Reading the comments, people have suggested Ted Rogers and Max Bygraves. Could be either. Not Jimmy Tarbuck?)
I wonder if anyone recorded the Stones a year later on Radio 1 discussing their new L.P. ("Their Satanic Majesties Request") ?
Compere was Jimmy Tarbuck.
@@littleglimmer2325 Brilliant - many thanks! (His voice was in my recording, very briefly, but it's a pity to have cut him off here.)
Wow, what an uber-funky "It's All Over Now"!! This is way better than the original single version.
It was ITV not bbc.... i think its ‘all over now’ is fascinating here, a totally unique version to that moment in time
Big thanks for this. Don't really care for this version of It's All Over Now. Give me the TAMI version any old day. It really whips it on down, kills, and really nails the male thrust of the lyrics. Brian is wicked on that version and it shows how a bunch of white boys can improve on a soul original, which is rarely done.
The Stones were not taken seriously in many quarters (although the Beatles were.....finally). This was why there is much less live footage of them in the 60's. A loss to us all.
Perhaps not taken seriously by much of the public. But they were critical darlings certainly by ‘66 and perhaps by Satisfaction in ‘65. Favorable comments re the Stones from Leonard Bernstein in ‘66, favorable commentary in Crawdaddy magazine in ‘67, and drooling by Rolling Stone magazine in ‘68 & ‘69. And on Ed Sullivan in October ‘64!
IIRC The very next Sunday at the Palladium, a comedian came on squirting air freshener, the audience erupting in raucous laughter; it may have been Ted Rogers who later became the host. Typical of how the Establishment tried to put the Stones down.
The same year the establishment try to put Mick and Keith in jail, happily they had to let them free after three days.
thaaaannkksssssssssssssss.
It's All Over Now is obviously a live version ---- yes the others are live vocal over prerecorded track --- video of LSTNT from this show exists --- what a shame BBC wiped the rest of the tape
Both of the Beatles’ appearances on this show are gone, too.
Fantásticos!
The programme was made by ATV. This I think was the performance where they refused to go on the the revolving stage which all the guests did at the end of each show. The Stones were furious with the host of the show Max Bygraves a bigoted comedian who came on stage after their performance and was squirting a container of what was supposed to be DDT. If he had done that to The Who I think the reaction from them would have been interesting, most likely violent!
Pete would have gone Abby Hoffman-at-Woodstock on that comedy clown for a prank like that,
Much of ITV'S Thank Your Lucky Stars have been lost. It is likely though many of the episodes were broadcast live and were not even recorded on what is called tele-cine.
I guess it was Ian Stewart on piano
The single of It's All Over Now is what turned me on to the Stones 6 decades ago. This version would have steered me towards the Beatles instead
Don't worry about it 😊
Tony Sanchez book brought me here
Up and Down with the Rolling Stones! Loved that book when I was 16!
On "It's all over now" it sounds like Mick sings "When I get high she can ease my aching head" - "high" replacing "worried". They couldn't match the sound they got on the single version at Chess.
Tj aimé les Stones
I saw this broadcast in 1967 and I'm sure It's All Over Now wasn't performed. The show was recorded mid week and shown Sunday night so maybe it was cut from the final edit.Also the programme was made by ITV so they would have wiped the tape not BBC although BBC wiped a lot of Top of The Pops.
The recording you can hear, here proves 'It's All Over Now' was the third song. (Sadly I.T.V. probably didn't record live programmes - and neither did the B.B.C. usually because videotape was expensive and the snobs didn't see any point in saving any pop music.)
It was on ITV not BBC
I put ATV (the production company) instead of ITV (the network) in the description. Thanks for the correction!
L.S.T.N.T. sounds like Jagger live over the studio backing track. The Stones could be as tacky as the establishment when they wanted
According to the description, it is.
@@yragj6556 sorry,your right.My oversight
On Ruby Tuesday it seems to be the same
@@GrandeCapo_PallaPesante All music was prerecorded. Only the vocals are live.
@@Famulus9 well, now i have read the description.
One more thing the reworked Its all over now sounds Dylanesque
Stinks there is no footage
is there footage of them playing connection live 1967?
Ruby Tuesday and lets spend the night are clearly playbacks at least musically their voices sound live
All music was prerecorded, only the vocals are live.
Does jagger say ‘dirty one now’ as introduction to Let’s Spend the Night Together?
It certainly sounds like it!
@@Famulus9 this is the show where the Stones refused to go on the revolving stage for the programme finale- thereby guaranteeing headlines in the Monday papers.
@@martshankleman I recall reading that they were criticized for their attire as well. Me personally I don’t see a problem!
Sounds like Jagger is imitating some American singer ....All Over Now
Audio blows
I don’t think there’s a better source out there unfortunately. There’s a vinyl rip that might sound better to you but it’s missing some of Jaggers banter.