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Virgil

Fifty Year Anniversary of Their First Gig

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Talk about old guys who rock! I guess most people know I’m a big Rolling Stones fan. If you don’t, I am. They really are the greatest rock and roll band ever. Today, July 12th 2012 marks the fiftieth anniversary of their first show. You can read about in The Guardian:

A sober-suited crowd of about 80 men and 30 women were on hand to witness the Rolling Stones' first gig. There was a taste among both sexes for shapeless, utility-style clothes, stout shoes and goofy square glasses. (It's remarkable how many young men seemed to resemble Buddy Holly.) Based on the number of goatees in the photographs, many were also diehard jazz fans; those who were there report that the audience took some time to warm up to the Stones' 50-minute blast of American rhythm and blues.

The band were officially billed as "Mick Jagger and the Rollin' Stones", although the lead vocalist was by no means their most compelling personality. Jagger, his Dartford Grammar school friend Keith Richards, and the self-styled "Cheltenham Shagger" Brian Jones (who had recently come up with the group's name) were the front line. Jagger, who was still a student at the London School of Economics, wore a striped sweater and corduroys; Richards a funereally dark suit; while Jones pogoed up and down, leering at the women. Behind them was the already comically deadpan rhythm section, which for now comprised Richards's art-school friend Dick Taylor on bass and the future Kinks drummer Mick Avory, who sat in for the night. Jagger and Richards were 18 and living at home; Jones was 20; Ian Stewart, a 23-year-old shipping clerk, stood off to the side, eating a pork pie with one hand and playing piano in a loping, barrel-house style with the other.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2012...first-gig-50th

Check out the entire article; they have a video clip that takes you to the past. And forget Dick Taylor and Mick Avory. The Stones lineup was soon after established with Bill Wyman on bass and Charlie Watts on drums to join up with Jagger, Jones, and Richards. And don’t forget Ian “Stu” Stewart as the unofficial sixth Stone who for marketing reasons was never an official member but was with them from that very first day to his death in 1985.

The article mentioned that on the set list of that first day was “Down the Road Apiece,” a jazzy, boogie-woogie style of blues that was representative of the early Stones music. Here.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ba0zs...feature=fvwrel

If I don’t listen to those early Stones records for a while, I tend to forget how good a guitarist Brian Jones was. You can hear it here, and you can also hear that interweaving between the two guitars the Stones would perfect and make a signature mark of their music.

If you want to get the best album from the very early Stones, get this one:



Here’s a classic Stones take of a Chuck Berry song off that album.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=75Trt0klETk

It’s amazing how a bunch of kids from London barely 20 years old could play American rhythm and blues so well. How? The collected and studied from their teen years every American blues record they could get their hands on.

Thanks to those old farts for fifty years of rock and roll.
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Comments

  1. mtpspur's Avatar
    Funny I don't feel like it's been 50 years. Time really DOES fly by as you get older.
  2. Buh4Bee's Avatar
    It's really upsetting to think about how much time has passed. I saw them in concert twenty years ago. That was quite the experience. I wonder what will become of their legacy. Unfortunately, I was never able to appreciate their musical talent, but found their sound rather jarring.
  3. Virgil's Avatar
    @Buhbee
    I saw them in concert in 1981! Thirty-one years ago. They were fantastic! What type of music do you listen to Buhbee?

    Thank you both for commenting.
  4. Buh4Bee's Avatar
    I'll admit I have awful taste in music. However, I like a wide range of music, but I tend to really like big band stuff like Sinatra or even Billy Joel. I can't say that I am exposed to any good recent music, because I just don't know anyone who says to me- "hey, listen to this..." Music has never been a priority for me, but I do like it.
  5. Virgil's Avatar
    @Buhbee
    I'm very eclectic in my music. I bring up rock/pop because that's what I expect people on here to know, but I have a very wide range of likes. Hey, listen to this that I just came across this weekend. I think of it as French African music meets Gregorian chant.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gUbKa...eature=related

    I was just so captivated by this that I had to buy the download. I don't understand any French so I have no idea what they're singing, other than I think most of it is religious. It's performed and sung by these monks at a monastery called Keur Moussa in Senegal. Unfortunately there isn't that much on youtube by these monks to fully appreciate them. Here's the album I downloaded.
    http://www.amazon.com/Keur-Moussa/dp...mm_msc_title_0
    You can click through the thirty second samples to kind of get a feel. There is so much more than pop music, trust me. Pop/rock is basically all the same song with the personality of the band as the distinguishing feature.
  6. maryam12khan's Avatar
    I am never a fan of the Stones, Beatles or any other singers from the British Invasion. I don’t know how they still do this after 50 years.
  7. Buh4Bee's Avatar
    I really enjoyed that. The sound is very calming and relaxing. I can myself falling asleep to it after too much wine or listening on the way home from work after a difficult day. My husband also liked it as he likes chants.

    I really enjoy listening to religious music. There is an amazing cathedral in Montreal that offers such opportunities and I think I should get myself up there to see a show with a good friend of mine or my husband when my mother-in-law comes to visit. Montreal is so close, but I just don't get to go as often, b/c of the little guy- but he is getting bigger now.

    Check out the site:

    http://www.basiliquenddm.org/en/
  8. crusoe's Avatar
    The BBC has a month long Celebration of the
    STONES... First song I ever heard was
    "Under my Thumb". Result: Hooked. And still am.
    LET IT BLEED's still my favourite Album.
    However, cool Blog Virgil.

    Crusoe
  9. Virgil's Avatar
    Thank you crusoe, and thanks for commenting. Thanks to you too Maryam.

    @Buhbee - That is a gorgeous church. I don't think we have anything in the US that is as beautiful. I thought churches like that were only in Europe. I love religious music too. I should do a blog on Gregorian chant.

    Have you heard female voices do Gregorian chant? This is really good:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0qsOm...eature=related
  10. qimissung's Avatar
    Hooray for the old guys. I was never a big fan, but I do like a few of their songs like Moonlight Mile, Paint it Black, and
    You Can't Always Get What You Want..."

    My brother liked them, and I remember a long time ago a friend from work traveling down to hear them in concert in New Orleans.
  11. Virgil's Avatar
    Those are great songs Qimi. Moonlight Mile is truly one of their lesser known classics. It's perfection.

    For those that have never heard it:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ugYzDqQtdHU