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Naturalust
Leon Russell took Satisfaction to a place the Stones probably never will when he threw Youngblood in the middle. Damn that boy has it goin' on.
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loog droog
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Naturalust
Leon Russell took Satisfaction to a place the Stones probably never will when he threw Youngblood in the middle. Damn that boy has it goin' on.
Well, that place that you say Leon took "Satisfaction" to is actually called "Jumpin' Jack Flash..."
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StonesTod
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loog droog
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Naturalust
Leon Russell took Satisfaction to a place the Stones probably never will when he threw Youngblood in the middle. Damn that boy has it goin' on.
Well, that place that you say Leon took "Satisfaction" to is actually called "Jumpin' Jack Flash..."
don't be so picky...he identified a stones warhorse...close enough...let's move on...

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Naturalust
May the Stones get young before they get old one more time. Maybe Youngblood can help.peace
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stonesnow
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Naturalust
May the Stones get young before they get old one more time. Maybe Youngblood can help.peace
Seems to help Mick and Woodie.
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Naturalust
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stonesnow
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Naturalust
May the Stones get young before they get old one more time. Maybe Youngblood can help.peace
Seems to help Mick and Woodie.
lol, indeed.
I wonder what exactly Leon Russel and his old lady's idea of The Good Thing back then was? Stones music?, Keith's gardener? Maybe a jack of heroin....I mean wtf was the JJF reference to, that he could pull it off like that as a conclusion to the Youngblood story? This could be deeper than I imagined.
George sure had everyone's telephone number.
Much praise to Jim Keltner for his friggin amazing drumming throughout this film.
With all those guitars and musicians on stage I wonder how many separate tracks they recorded? Seems to me from what I'm watching and hearing, they could get alot of different mixes from those tracks. In addition it was probably put out very quickly to get income for the project. Just thinkin... peace
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EddieByword
I heard this because of my elder sister too....'76 or '77 - fantastic stuff.........she always loved that line "She said this right here".......7.45
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stonesnow
GH was also doing this in 1971.
That's Harrison playing the slide solo on the track, in addition to being the producer. That's also Leon Russell on piano. Harrison had to leave before it was finished to go produce, that's right, the Concert for Bangladesh, so Todd Rundgren finished the final mix, and also took over as producer for the rest of the album the song was included on (Straight Up).
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stonesnow
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Naturalust
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stonesnow
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Naturalust
May the Stones get young before they get old one more time. Maybe Youngblood can help.peace
Seems to help Mick and Woodie.
lol, indeed.
I wonder what exactly Leon Russel and his old lady's idea of The Good Thing back then was? Stones music?, Keith's gardener? Maybe a jack of heroin....I mean wtf was the JJF reference to, that he could pull it off like that as a conclusion to the Youngblood story? This could be deeper than I imagined.
George sure had everyone's telephone number.
Much praise to Jim Keltner for his friggin amazing drumming throughout this film.
With all those guitars and musicians on stage I wonder how many separate tracks they recorded? Seems to me from what I'm watching and hearing, they could get alot of different mixes from those tracks. In addition it was probably put out very quickly to get income for the project. Just thinkin... peace
It was actually Ravi Shankar's idea to do the benefit, and he went to George about it. And being a devotee of RS, GH thought he had the pull to draw more people to the cause, and that's what inspired him to put it together.
Regarding all the musicians onstage, there has been talk on this board of too many notes, but in such a celerated clusterf*uck of guitars on one stage, there are times when there gets to be, well, too many strings. I mean, even if they recorded it in 24-track, as they probably did by that time, where do you begin to contemplate the separation of alternate mixes? You'd pull so much hair out, that, in the end, you would look like a friggin' Hare Krishna!
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tatters
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stonesnow
GH was also doing this in 1971.
That's Harrison playing the slide solo on the track, in addition to being the producer. That's also Leon Russell on piano. Harrison had to leave before it was finished to go produce, that's right, the Concert for Bangladesh, so Todd Rundgren finished the final mix, and also took over as producer for the rest of the album the song was included on (Straight Up).
The solo is actually Pete Ham and George Harrison, playing twin lead guitars in unison .... or so I have heard. Badfinger's best track. Probably a better "Beatles" single than anything the Beatles themselves could have come up with at that point.
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Naturalust
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stonesnow
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Naturalust
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stonesnow
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Naturalust
May the Stones get young before they get old one more time. Maybe Youngblood can help.peace
Seems to help Mick and Woodie.
lol, indeed.
I wonder what exactly Leon Russel and his old lady's idea of The Good Thing back then was? Stones music?, Keith's gardener? Maybe a jack of heroin....I mean wtf was the JJF reference to, that he could pull it off like that as a conclusion to the Youngblood story? This could be deeper than I imagined.
George sure had everyone's telephone number.
Much praise to Jim Keltner for his friggin amazing drumming throughout this film.
With all those guitars and musicians on stage I wonder how many separate tracks they recorded? Seems to me from what I'm watching and hearing, they could get alot of different mixes from those tracks. In addition it was probably put out very quickly to get income for the project. Just thinkin... peace
It was actually Ravi Shankar's idea to do the benefit, and he went to George about it. And being a devotee of RS, GH thought he had the pull to draw more people to the cause, and that's what inspired him to put it together.
Regarding all the musicians onstage, there has been talk on this board of too many notes, but in such a celerated clusterf*uck of guitars on one stage, there are times when there gets to be, well, too many strings. I mean, even if they recorded it in 24-track, as they probably did by that time, where do you begin to contemplate the separation of alternate mixes? You'd pull so much hair out, that, in the end, you would look like a friggin' Hare Krishna!
My thoughts exactly. I guess you just find a guitar that was in tune with George and go from there. I curious who mixed and produced the record, George?
I am still thinking about the wonderful "Just like a Woman" that Dylan pulled off that night. After Blowin in the Wind anything would have been good but that was GREAT. NOW I understand the Dylan attraction, he was a wordsmith beyond compare.
Here is a sweet and soulful version of Come into My Kitchen by Leon. No problem mixing this one, the sound is quite good. Stuff like this makes me feel and that is not an easy thing for me today. It don't get much better, I always thought the Stones would benefit from this guys talents.
This one's for Furry....
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whitem8
Great find Naturalist! Wonderful and I really enjoyed watching it. What a sad story. So sad and such a waste. And what a great and underrated group.