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Message started by left shoe shuffle on May 15th, 2011 at 7:53am

Title: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on May 15th, 2011 at 7:53am
Cannes 2011: Mick Jagger Plans “Secret” Album for Fall




05/15/11 Roger Friedman

Saturday night May 13th in Cannes: At Charles Finch‘s annual swellegant dinner at the Eden Roc in Cap d’Antibes, Mick Jagger told me — with a Cheshire cat grin– that he will release a new album in the fall. “It’s not the Rolling Stones and it’s not a solo record,” he informed me. “But it’s something special.”

As a fan of Jagger’s solo work, I was thrilled to know that we’ll hear his voice on any record soon. The Rolling Stones are mired in various contractual and personal issues that have prevented them from making new music or touring right now. Of course, it was a little ironic to hear about Jagger’s new album on the same day that Keith Richards made a brief on screen appearance in the new “Pirates” movie. But life is full of coincidences. Jagger of course was accompanied by his beautiful and talented girlfriend L’Wren Scott, who’s now designing her own highly successful fashion line.

And the secret Jagger album? All his business partner Victoria Pearman would tell me on the sly is that “it’s amazing. And that’s all I can tell you for now.” It will be Jagger’s first release for Universal Records.

Showbiz 411

I'd guess it's Super Heavy, the Dave Stewart project that reportedly also includes Joss Stone, Damian Marley and Indian composer AR Rahman.

Title: Re: Mick News (?)
Post by Ginda on May 15th, 2011 at 10:10am
Go for it, Mick.  And the same for Keith, Charlie and Ronnie.  Do something that you find challenging or relaxing or that just makes you happy.  I don't believe any of them will ever find those things in the same room again.

Title: Re: Mick News (?)
Post by Bitch on May 15th, 2011 at 10:12am
Thanks lefty! Looking forward to that new album, whatever it is. If it isnt the RS, and it isnt solo, than maybe its a new band. Wonder what the name is.

Title: Re: Mick News (?)
Post by Gazza on May 15th, 2011 at 11:21am

Bitch wrote on May 15th, 2011 at 10:12am:
Thanks lefty! Looking forward to that new album, whatever it is. If it isnt the RS, and it isnt solo, than maybe its a new band. Wonder what the name is.


As lefty says, its most likely to be Super Heavy...

Title: Re: Mick News
Post by Gazza on May 15th, 2011 at 11:23am

left shoe shuffle wrote on May 15th, 2011 at 7:53am:
05/15/11 Roger Friedman

The Rolling Stones are mired in various contractual and personal issues that have prevented them from making new music or touring right now.


Eh?

Aside from the Cohl/Live Nation thing (which in itself doesnt prevent them from touring at all), what does this mean?

Title: Re: Cannes: Mick Jagger Plans “Secret” Album for F
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on May 15th, 2011 at 11:46am
More pictures from the event in Cannes, pictures © Dave M. Benett with thanks to moy

Here with Oscar-winning British film producer Jeremy Thomas, the party was to honor him


Title: Re: Cannes: Mick Jagger Plans “Secret” Album for F
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on May 15th, 2011 at 11:49am
Here with Diego Della Valle, the President and CEO of the Italian leather goods company Tod's


Title: Re: Cannes: Mick Jagger Plans “Secret” Album for F
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on May 15th, 2011 at 11:52am
Now with art collector Jean Pigozzi


Title: Re: Cannes: Mick Jagger Plans “Secret” Album for F
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on May 15th, 2011 at 11:53am
Some mo'







Title: Re: Mick News
Post by Ian Billen on May 15th, 2011 at 4:55pm

Gazza wrote on May 15th, 2011 at 11:23am:

left shoe shuffle wrote on May 15th, 2011 at 7:53am:
05/15/11 Roger Friedman

The Rolling Stones are mired in various contractual and personal issues that have prevented them from making new music or touring right now.


Eh?

Aside from the Cohl/Live Nation thing (which in itself doesnt prevent them from touring at all), what does this mean?


_______________________________


It is precisely the "Cohl/Live Nation" thing .. .. .. It doesn't "prevent" them entirely from touring but realistically, The major cash to be made is with one of these two entities. Anything other would be too much an experiment, and less of a payday in this fragile economy and touring market.

So while it hasn't made it "impossible" for them to tour ...  ...  ... it's made it difficult to consider the slimer pickens eles where.

*Besides... all they have to do is sit back and lick their chops waiting for which one will win-over and offer them the most cashola for next year. That is all their really doing anyway.. .. .. That's what they are waiting for ... the cash winner to emerge then they will go forth with them.


Ian

Title: Re: dundant
Post by left shoe shuffle on May 15th, 2011 at 5:07pm

No offense, Ian, but it's funny how you beat the same drum over and over, even after it's been pointed out an equal number of times that the Stones are beholden to no one, and there are no guarantees that the Cohl/LiveNation lawsuit will be settled anytime soon.  

Then you vanish into the ether, emerging weeks later to lather, rinse and rebeat.

Speaking of beating drums, there's your oft-stated desire for the Stones to record again.
Well they have. Kinda, sorta. With Bill even!

What's your take on the band's contribution to 'Boogie 4 Stu'?

Title: Re: Mick News
Post by Pdog on May 15th, 2011 at 5:09pm

Gazza wrote on May 15th, 2011 at 11:23am:

left shoe shuffle wrote on May 15th, 2011 at 7:53am:
05/15/11 Roger Friedman

The Rolling Stones are mired in various contractual and personal issues that have prevented them from making new music or touring right now.


Eh?

Aside from the Cohl/Live Nation thing (which in itself doesnt prevent them from touring at all), what does this mean?



the little dick comment...

Title: Re: Mick News
Post by sweetcharmedlife on May 15th, 2011 at 5:21pm

Pdog wrote on May 15th, 2011 at 5:09pm:

Gazza wrote on May 15th, 2011 at 11:23am:

left shoe shuffle wrote on May 15th, 2011 at 7:53am:
05/15/11 Roger Friedman

The Rolling Stones are mired in various contractual and personal issues that have prevented them from making new music or touring right now.


Eh?

Aside from the Cohl/Live Nation thing (which in itself doesnt prevent them from touring at all), what does this mean?



the little dick comment...

Todgergate? :nanker

Title: Re: dundant
Post by Ian Billen on May 15th, 2011 at 8:06pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on May 15th, 2011 at 5:07pm:
No offense, Ian, but it's funny how you beat the same drum over and over, even after it's been pointed out an equal number of times that the Stones are beholden to no one, and there are no guarantees that the Cohl/LiveNation lawsuit will be settled anytime soon.  

Then you vanish into the ether, emerging weeks later to lather, rinse and rebeat.

Speaking of beating drums, there's your oft-stated desire for the Stones to record again.
Well they have. Kinda, sorta. With Bill even!

What's your take on the band's contribution to 'Boogie 4 Stu'?



_____________________

I know The Stones are not obligated to anyone.... but they are gonna wait and see how this plays out before makin a risky change with another organization that simply can't guarantee the kina pay-day they are used to. Realizing that there is no guarantee the lawsuit will be solved... but why not wait to see if it does get solved while keepin the unofficial 50th anniversery thing in mind...

Everything points to next year... As far as the new stuff. I haven't listened to it yet. Soon though.

Cheers.

Ian

Title: Re: Cannes: Mick Jagger Plans “Secret” Album for F
Post by Some Guy on May 15th, 2011 at 10:34pm
well allright, I wonder what this might be.

Title: Re: Mick News
Post by AngieBlue on May 16th, 2011 at 12:20am

Gazza wrote on May 15th, 2011 at 11:23am:

left shoe shuffle wrote on May 15th, 2011 at 7:53am:
05/15/11 Roger Friedman

The Rolling Stones are mired in various contractual and personal issues that have prevented them from making new music or touring right now.


Eh?

Aside from the Cohl/Live Nation thing (which in itself doesnt prevent them from touring at all), what does this mean?


Made me wonder too.  I doubt it's the book.

Mired?  NBC/Universal may be sold.  Wonder if that is part of it?

Title: Re: Mick News
Post by Gazza on May 16th, 2011 at 7:20am

Ian Billen wrote on May 15th, 2011 at 4:55pm:

Gazza wrote on May 15th, 2011 at 11:23am:

left shoe shuffle wrote on May 15th, 2011 at 7:53am:
05/15/11 Roger Friedman

The Rolling Stones are mired in various contractual and personal issues that have prevented them from making new music or touring right now.


Eh?

Aside from the Cohl/Live Nation thing (which in itself doesnt prevent them from touring at all), what does this mean?


_______________________________


It is precisely the "Cohl/Live Nation" thing .. .. .. It doesn't "prevent" them entirely from touring but realistically, The major cash to be made is with one of these two entities. Anything other would be too much an experiment, and less of a payday in this fragile economy and touring market.

So while it hasn't made it "impossible" for them to tour ...  ...  ... it's made it difficult to consider the slimer pickens eles where.



Thats obviously why Michael Jackson (and other major acts since) went with AEG, then.  ::)

A tour in 2011 lessens the impact and demand for a '50th anniversary' tour in 2012. Simple as that.

There's NO 'contractual' issue which prevents them from touring, which makes the report stating that there is to be misleading if not nonsensical.  

Title: Re: Cannes: Mick Jagger Plans “Secret” Album for F
Post by Some Guy on May 16th, 2011 at 8:50am
a country album?

Title: Re: Cannes: Mick Jagger Plans “Secret” Album for F
Post by Pdog on May 16th, 2011 at 2:27pm

Some Guy wrote on May 16th, 2011 at 8:50am:
a country album?



he's going metal!!!

Title: Re: Cannes: Mick Jagger Plans “Secret” Album for F
Post by lavendar on May 16th, 2011 at 3:41pm
He dragged the Cat outta the bag.

The SECRET - no MORE

Did anyone see "Family Guy" last nite?

or "Green Hornet?      :blankfriggingstare1

Title: Re: Cannes: Mick Jagger Plans “Secret” Album for F
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on May 18th, 2011 at 9:38pm
A new "super group" (¿¿¿¿????):
  • Mick Jagger
  • Dave Stewart
  • Joss Stone
  • A. R. Rahman
  • Damian Marley (son of Bob)


:willya :blankfriggingstare1 :forfucksake :areyoufuckingserious :smoking :retarded :nanker :keithpunky :weed :booze :-* :'( :-/ :-[ ::) ;D :D ;) :) :whatapostronnie :interestingstuffronnie :aimama :kissmyass

Title: Re: Cannes: Mick Jagger Plans “Secret” Album for F
Post by riffkeither on May 19th, 2011 at 5:21am
Muzik for airports
2_002.jpg (Attachment deleted)

Title: Super Heavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on May 20th, 2011 at 6:09am

Mick forms secret supergroup



WireImage

May 20, 2011

Stones legend Mick Jagger -- still smarting from a pen-lashing by bandmate Keith Richards -- has set up a new supergroup with Eurythmics star Dave Stewart, Damian Marley, Joss Stone and Indian musician and producer A.R. Rahman.

Jagger, who was sharply and repeatedly needled in Richards' best-selling autobiography, "Life," has been secretly recording with Stewart, Bob Marley's youngest son, jazz-influenced Stone and Grammy-winning Rahman, dubbed "The Mozart of Madras," who won two Oscars for "Slumdog Millionaire."

A source said, "They just finished a record and their first video and are talking to major labels about a deal. The name for the band at the moment is Super Heavy." Another source said, "Each member has a very distinct and different style, but it works. Mick has been recording with Dave for a while, and both worked with Joss in the past."

But a rep for Jagger told us, "They all thought it would be interesting and great fun to go into the studio and play some music. No video has been shot, no label in place. All a bit premature."

But if the band is a hit, it could further divert Jagger's attention from a speculated-about new Stones tour -- especially since there's currently no love lost between him and Richards, whose 2010 book was particularly withering about Jagger's solo career.

Of Jagger's first effort sans the Stones, 1985's "She's the Boss," Richards wrote, "I've never listened to [it] the whole way through. Who has? It's like 'Mein Kampf.' Everybody had a copy, but nobody listened to it."

Jagger's subsequent solo effort " 'Goddess in the Doorway' . . . was irresistible to rechristen 'Dog [Bleep] in the Doorway' . . . [Mick] says I have bad manners on the subject. But this record deal of Mick's was bad manners beyond any verbal jibes." Richards also wrote that Jagger, whom he nicknamed "Your Majesty," is packing "a tiny todger."

"Sometimes I think, 'I miss my friend,' " wrote Richards. "Where did he go?" Into the studio with someone else, it appears.

New York Post

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Some Guy on May 20th, 2011 at 9:12am
it's over.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by steel driving hammer on May 20th, 2011 at 9:12am
Dave Stew again, we know what happened then didn't we?

Why not Keith again...

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gimmekeef on May 20th, 2011 at 9:23am
Dave Stewart and super group don't belong in the same sentence......Mick surrounding himself with ogling wannabees....Fergie too busy?...geeeeeeeeesh

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by sweetcharmedlife on May 20th, 2011 at 10:57am
It's the 80's all over again. :-[

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on May 20th, 2011 at 11:21am
Well, this means variety, check this
  • Mick Jagger (Rock/Blues)
  • Dave Stewart (Pop/Rock)
  • Joss Stone (Soul/Blues)
  • A. R. Rahman (Indian music)
  • Damian Marley (Reggae)


Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Some Guy on May 20th, 2011 at 11:23am
we predicted this

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on May 20th, 2011 at 11:28am

Some Guy wrote on May 20th, 2011 at 11:23am:
we predicted this

Must've been some other guy asking if this was a country album and declaring "it's over"...


Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Mr. Sex Drugs Rock n Roll on May 20th, 2011 at 11:34am
what an awesome project name since we all know Dave Stewart + Mick Jagger = Super Heavy pile of shit

:perverted  :willya

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Some Guy on May 20th, 2011 at 4:06pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on May 20th, 2011 at 11:28am:

Some Guy wrote on May 20th, 2011 at 11:23am:
we predicted this

Must've been some other guy asking if this was a country album and declaring "it's over"...


we were criticised.

Title: Re: Mick's New Album - Super Heavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on May 20th, 2011 at 5:04pm

Mick Jagger Forms Supergroup with Dave Stewart, Joss Stone and Damian Marley

'It's different from anything else I've ever been involved in'


Mick Jagger and Dave Stewart in Beverly Hills,
January 16, 2005.    Vince Bucci/Getty Images


By Andy Greene
May 20, 2011


For the first time since the Rolling Stones formed nearly 50 years ago, Mick Jagger is part of a new band: Super Heavy – featuring Dave Stewart, Joss Stone, Damian Marley and Indian film composer A.R. Rahman. The band has quietly been recording together over the past 18 months, with their debut LP planned for sometime around September. "It's different from anything else I've ever been involved in,"  Jagger tells Rolling Stone. "The music is very wide-ranging – from reggae to ballads to Indian songs in Urdu."

The group got its start two years ago when Dave Stewart called Jagger from his home in Jamaica. "I live in Lime Hall right above St. Ann's Bay," says Stewart. "It's kind of the jungle, and sometimes I'd hear three sound systems all playing different things. I always love that, along with Indian orchestras. I said to Mick, ‘How could we make a fusion?' We were talking about an experiment, and then we started talking about voices. It was all born from that conversation."

Jagger loved the idea, and after lots of brainstorming and phone calls around the world, they settled on Stone, A.R. Rayman and Marley - whose rhythm section helped flesh  out the band. "We wanted a convergence of different musical styles," says Jagger. "We were always overlapping styles, but they were nevertheless separate."

About 18 months ago, the band gathered in a Los Angeles studio. None of them had prepared any music. "We didn't know what the hell we were doing," says Stewart. "We were just jamming and making a noise. It was like when a band first starts up in your garage. Sometimes Damien would kick it off and then Joss would sing something on top of it. We might have a 22 minute jam, and it would become a six minute song."

The loose method was inspiring for Jagger. "One of the beauties is that, just speaking as a vocalist, I did other things," Jagger says. "I played guitar and harmonica, but there's four vocalist on the album. Not everything was reliant on me.” The band’s name came from some improvised vocals by Marley. "He was just singing 'Heavy, heavy, heavy, heavy, super heavy,'" says Stewart. "We thought that sounded good and it sort of stuck with us."

Jagger is confident that Stones fans will embrace the group. "It is a different kind of record that what people would expect," he says. "It's not all weird and strange though. I think Stones fans will think it's a bit odd, but they'll find most of it accessible. They've heard me play harmonica before and a lot of it is pretty high energy."

As of now, there are no plans to bring Super Heavy on the road. "We're experimenting at the moment and just taking it day by day," says Stewart. "I think if we're rehearsing and it sounds great and people love the idea then nobody would rule out the possibility of it."

Might Jagger's other group be hitting the road at some point in the future? In an interview with USA Today, Keith Richards said he was optimistic. "Something's blowing in the wind," he said. "The idea's there. We kind of know we should do it, but nobody's put their finger on the moment yet. This is what we want to ask each other: Do we want to go out in a blaze of glory? We can, if Mick and Charlie feel like I do, that we can still turn people on. We don't have to prove nothing anymore. I just love playing, and I miss the crowd."

When asked if the Stones are going to tour next year, Jagger just chuckles. "I don't have any announcement to make at the moment," he says. "I'm just, uh, ya know...just doing this right now."

Rolling Stone

Secret's out. Details straight from the man hisself...

Title: Re: Mick's New Album - Super Heavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on May 20th, 2011 at 5:06pm

this music will blow your mind : ) it blew mine .....see latest news   www.rollingstone.com


@DaveStewart

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by sweetcharmedlife on May 20th, 2011 at 5:10pm
Interesting to say the least.This thing is growing hair.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Pdog on May 20th, 2011 at 6:20pm

Some Guy wrote on May 20th, 2011 at 11:23am:
we predicted this



Where's Josh Esq.?

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Pdog on May 20th, 2011 at 6:21pm
Some girls Re-issue, Jagger solo, possible Winos and then Stones album and tour...

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Steel Wheels on May 20th, 2011 at 8:01pm
Good for Mick. I'll have to hear it before I pass judgement, but outside of Mick, I don't like the other people in the band.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by LadyJane on May 21st, 2011 at 1:31am
"Tiny todger" vs "Super group"???  :forfucksake
LOL.

Lock em in a room and play U2 concert  revenue/attendance numbers
over and over.
They'll agree to tour.  :Youmakeagrownmancrylikejoey

I have just a little more hope that we aren't done yet, kids.

My Birthday Wish is...............................
We aren't done.  8-)


Title: Re: Super Heavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on May 21st, 2011 at 7:34am

Super Heavy: Dave Stewart talks secret Mick Jagger – Joss Stone collaboration



May 20, 2011  

Dave Stewart is gearing up for the release of his new blues-leaning solo album The Blackbird Diaries next month, but in the mean time news has leaked out about a previously secret supergroup he’s formed called “Super Heavy” with the likes of Mick Jagger and Joss Stone. Speaking with Beatweek today about his solo record just hours after the Super Heavy news happened to have leaked out, Dave peeled back the curtains on the Super Heavy collaboration which also features Damian Marley and AR Rahman.

“It’s unfortunate,” Stewart told Beatweek about the fact that the news of the secret project managed to leak. “We’ve kept this quiet for two years. We have eighteen songs recorded and mixed. We have all the staff and we’re working on cradling this.”

He went on to explain the nature of the music itself. “It’s funny because it’s a world mixture of musicians, England, Jamaica, rock, blues, whatever, but it doesn’t sound anything like world music. When somebody says ‘world music’ I always imagine people knitting yogurt sweaters, if you know what I mean. I love loads of ethnic music, but this sounds kind of tough and sort of edgy and bluesy, with Indian and Jamaican beats. I haven’t heard anything like it so it’s hard to explain it, but I think people from all different walks of life will like it.”

Dave also revealed that the songwriting process included all five participants and that the songs were born out of extended jams which lasted as long as forty minutes apiece, and includes vocal contributions across the board: “It was like a huge long jam session that went on for months that then slowly turned into structure.”

He also shared that he’s expecting the Super Heavy album to come out in “September, most likely.” And on the subject of whether his former Eurythmics collaborator Annie Lennox might be joining the fray at any point, he says that it’s not likely because she’s focused on her AIDS Foundation work and she’s on a “different parallel track, if you know what I mean.”

Dave Stewart fans who don’t want to wait until September to get their hands on the Super Heavy album can partake in his solo record entitled The Blackbird Diaries on June 28th, a blues-fueled record which includes guest spots from the likes of Stevie Nicks, Colbie Caillat, and Martina McBride. For much more on Stewart’s solo record as well as more details on Super Heavy, check out Beatweek Magazine and Beatweek.com in June.

Beatweek

Title: Re: Super Heavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on May 21st, 2011 at 7:37am

Mick Jagger forms new band Super Heavy

Rolling Stones frontman heads up new project with Joss Stone, Dave Stewart and Damian Marley


PA

May 21, 2011


Mick Jagger has confirmed that he's formed a new group called Super Heavy.

Speaking to NME.COM, The Rolling Stones frontman revealed he has been rehearsing in Los Angeles with a star-studded line-up, which includes Eurythmics' Dave Stewart, Joss Stone and Damian Marley.

Discussing the formation of the new band, Jagger said: "The four of us got together and thought we'd go into a studio and throw some things around, see what would happen, if we'd have fun.

"We didn't know what kind of music we'd make. We knew it would be a laugh, because we all got on. But you can have a laugh and nothing comes out, y'know."

Super Heavy also features AR Rahman, the award-winning composer behind films such as 'Slumdog Millionaire' and '127 Hours'. "Dave Stewart and I said to each other, 'Let's phone AR Rahman, he's in town, that'll be different', then we had another continent involved."

Jagger and Stewart have worked together on numerous occasions over the years, as have Jagger and Joss Stone.

Their most notable work together was for the Alfie soundtrack, which included a Jagger/Stewart collaboration 'Old Habits Die Hard' and a Jagger/Joss Stone track 'Lonely Without You (This Christmas)'.

"We've got some more reggae songs, some rock, some ballads, some soul music" Jagger continued.

"We've got one song in Urdu, I managed to do one line in Urdu, only one! It's not world music per se, a Womad festival kind of thing. It's a much more accessible style, a lot of dancey things."

Speaking about the songwriting process, he said "We'd all leap in with our ideas, getting excited about one another. We're four vocalists, we've never worked like that before. It's great because the whole burden's not on you, and that made it fun. There are a lot of different musical styles, maybe even some we've invented."

Referring to his day job, Jagger revealed: "If you're a Rolling Stones fan there's definitely stuff you can relate to. Other stuff that you can't relate to so much, maybe if you listen you'll enjoy it. I don't think it's so far off the beaten track that you can't understand it."

The singer also hinted that fans of The Rolling Stones might have to wait a little longer for another rumoured tour to materialise, as he is considering putting Super Heavy out on the road.

"If people really like it, we will. If they don't like it we won't! We haven't planned to do a tour or anything, but if people really like it maybe we will. We'd love to get together and play some of it live," he concluded.

NME

Dunno about a tour, but maybe they'll do something when the album's released...

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by uncleson on May 21st, 2011 at 4:20pm

Mr. Sex Drugs Rock n Roll wrote on May 20th, 2011 at 11:34am:
what an awesome project name since we all know Dave Stewart + Mick Jagger = Super Heavy pile of shit

:perverted  :willya


well, stewart did some great work with ringo. actually, he did.

but stewarts a lightweight, a very-very lightweight, compared to keith.

what a shame keith and mick cant seem to work together again..

Title: Re: Super Heavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on May 21st, 2011 at 5:57pm

Is it all over now for the Stones? Mick Jagger forms new band as Keith Richards feud continues

By Daily Mail Reporter

21st May 2011


A new supergroup being formed by Mick Jagger is fuelling fears that the rock legend’s feud with bandmate Keith Richards could mark the end of the Rolling Stones.

Talks between the Stones collaborators over plans for a 50th anniversary tour and album next year broke down in acrimony in New York last month.

Jagger is said to be furious over the way he was ridiculed in Richards’ best-selling autobiography, Life.


Split? Mick Jagger and Keith Richards perform on stage together in happier days


Now he is said to be working on a new group with Eurythmics star Dave Stewart, singer Joss Stone, Bob Marley’s son, Damian, and A.R. Rahman, the Indian musician and composer who won two Oscars for 'Slumdog Millionaire'.

Although Jagger, 67, has worked on solo projects in the past, the band is the first he has worked with outside the Rolling Stones.


Dave Stewart and Joss Stone are said to be members of Mick Jagger's new band


A source said yesterday: ‘They just finished a record and their first video and are talking to major labels about a deal. The name for the band at the moment is Super Heavy.’

Jagger’s brother, Chris, added: ‘He’s doing a record in Los Angeles with Dave Stewart.’


Jagger has joined with Damian Marley and A.R. Rahman to form 'Super Heavy'


Daily Mail

Save for the unattributed - and dubious - report of Mick and Keith's recent meeting going south, this "news" is just a lazy cut and paste job.

Extra bogosity points awarded for making Chris Jagger's months old comment appear as if it were made yesterday...

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Ginda on May 21st, 2011 at 7:16pm
High energy Jagger harmonica (mentioned in the piece by Andy Greene) sounds good to me.  I'm curious - might not be too bad.  I can see why all the Stones benefit from playing with different musicians.  It hasn't hurt Charlie or Ronnie.  I can also see why Mick may not want to carry the vocal weight for an entire album and have an opportunity to play guitar.

Bogosity is a perfect description of the Daily Mail rehash.  

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Some Guy on May 21st, 2011 at 8:32pm
I am not behind this... yet.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by steel driving hammer on May 21st, 2011 at 9:17pm
Words of Wonder, Mick will NEVER leave the Stones w/ Keith still playing.

Remember when Hooker, Diddely, BB, Hopkins sat down while played , maybe Keith can on a chaise longue chair and focus more on his playing.

Please let that happen just one more time.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gotdablouse on May 22nd, 2011 at 12:51am
Definitely something to look forward to even though I'm not a huge fan of Dave Stewart...having said that the Alfie stuff was better than ABB and Keith seems to have little to offer in terms of ideas or good guitar licks these days, as evidenced on ABB.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by riffkeither on May 22nd, 2011 at 4:59am
Damned !!   fine idea



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g1wBe4ph6Co


Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gotdablouse on May 22nd, 2011 at 5:52am
Wow that's cool indeed, didn't he played guitar on stage for Fingerprint File, thought that had started on the 1978 tour. What's great is that you can actually hear his guitar, unlike on the >89 tours, except maybe on "Miss You', a bit.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gimmekeef on May 22nd, 2011 at 8:44am
Mick is pulling a Robert Plant..............can't wait to hear his falsetto in Urdu......

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Mr. Sex Drugs Rock n Roll on May 22nd, 2011 at 12:58pm

uncleson wrote on May 21st, 2011 at 4:20pm:

Mr. Sex Drugs Rock n Roll wrote on May 20th, 2011 at 11:34am:
what an awesome project name since we all know Dave Stewart + Mick Jagger = Super Heavy pile of shit

:perverted  :willya


well, stewart did some great work with ringo. actually, he did.

but stewarts a lightweight, a very-very lightweight, compared to keith.

what a shame keith and mick cant seem to work together again..


“Light weight music for light weight music lovers” would be a better title for this project

Title: Re: Super Heavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on May 22nd, 2011 at 1:00pm

..And Superheavy is born



by A.R. Rahman on Sunday, May 22, 2011

18 months ago Dave Stewart,  Mick Jagger, Damien Marley, Joss Stone and me experimented at a studio in Los Angeles, trying to write songs which had meaning...We had a couple of more sessions after that tying to perfect every song that was written and presently we have around 16 to 18 songs and all the songs have a world sound by contributions from all of us

Dave's and Mick's incredible musicality and Joss' soul singing, Damien Marley's Jamaican influence and philosophies and me bringing musicality from my world.


It's all too early to talk about this but I guess you guys should know something at least....


facebook.com

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by sweetcharmedlife on May 22nd, 2011 at 1:19pm
This will be huge..............In Bombay :interestingstuffronnie

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Ginda on May 22nd, 2011 at 2:44pm


Hate to disagree with your geography work there, scl, but Bombay became Mumbai in 1995. [smiley=wink.gif]

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Tumbling Dijs on May 22nd, 2011 at 6:02pm
It's sad, I'm really beginning to believe it's over. Keith has gone too far this time I guess with his stupid book. Attending all these talkshows with those ASS KISSING showmasters to talk about his book, but all he does is being insecure, make stupid remarks and laugh stupid about basicly nothing. He makes no sense at all in all these interviews. Mick on the other hand is always serious and willing to give a serious answer to a question and simply most of the time being honest. Mick is making music and Keith is doing nothing or working for Disney, and he has the GODDAMNED nerves to accuse Mick of selling out. Mick has never talked about Keith wearing a bandana to hide his baldness, never talked about Keith wearing long scarffs to hide his awfull belly, while it would be such an easy shot. Mick just has so much more class. And I think Keith knows this and doesn't know how to handle it. Yes, the more I think about it, the more I think it's over, and I blame Keith for it. Even if they will ever tour again, I won't change my mind about my former hero turning into a spoiled asshole!! Yes, I'm pissed!!

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by lotsajizz on May 22nd, 2011 at 6:28pm
...because Keith is a a dickhead, self-absorbed, coke-addicted, alcoholic, revisionist......whose done nothing meaningful in decades....and this is from a Keith FAN!!  He's coastin'.....

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by sweetcharmedlife on May 22nd, 2011 at 6:28pm

Ginda wrote on May 22nd, 2011 at 2:44pm:


Hate to disagree with your geography work there, scl, but Bombay became Mumbai in 1995. [smiley=wink.gif]

Next thing your gonna tell me is that Constantinople is now Istanbul. :o

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Ginda on May 22nd, 2011 at 8:06pm

Tumbling Dijs wrote on May 22nd, 2011 at 6:02pm:
It's sad, I'm really beginning to believe it's over. Keith has gone too far this time I guess with his stupid book. Attending all these talkshows with those ASS KISSING showmasters to talk about his book, but all he does is being insecure, make stupid remarks and laugh stupid about basicly nothing. He makes no sense at all in all these interviews. Mick on the other hand is always serious and willing to give a serious answer to a question and simply most of the time being honest. Mick is making music and Keith is doing nothing or working for Disney, and he has the GODDAMNED nerves to accuse Mick of selling out. Mick has never talked about Keith wearing a bandana to hide his baldness, never talked about Keith wearing long scarffs to hide his awfull belly, while it would be such an easy shot. Mick just has so much more class. And I think Keith knows this and doesn't know how to handle it. Yes, the more I think about it, the more I think it's over, and I blame Keith for it. Even if they will ever tour again, I won't change my mind about my former hero turning into a spoiled asshole!! Yes, I'm pissed!!


I'm with you, Tumbling Dijs.  


Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by stonedinaustralia on May 22nd, 2011 at 9:51pm

Ginda wrote on May 22nd, 2011 at 8:06pm:

Tumbling Dijs wrote on May 22nd, 2011 at 6:02pm:
It's sad, I'm really beginning to believe it's over.... Yes, I'm pissed!!


I'm with you, Tumbling Dijs.  



me too 'tho i don't blame keith quite so much - it's clear to me the last 22 years have been pretty much all about generating $$ and that M & K had pretty much grown apart persoanlly and musically(see keith's claim in Life he hasn't been to Mick's dressing room in all that time - I wonder has Mick been to Keith's??).

Anyway,-who'd have thought it would come to this/


on a lighter note - how short is Dave Stewart !?!




]

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by andrews27 on May 22nd, 2011 at 11:40pm

Ginda wrote on May 22nd, 2011 at 2:44pm:


Hate to disagree with your geography work there, scl, but Bombay became Mumbai in 1995. [smiley=wink.gif]



If the troubadours were killed before they reached it...then it's still Bombay!

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Honky Tonk Man on May 23rd, 2011 at 12:37am
Damian Marley? Joss Stone? Err... NEXT!   :(

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by luxury on May 23rd, 2011 at 10:22am
well I shall be doing cartwheels in the street upon this release...I want to see Mick live

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Pdog on May 23rd, 2011 at 10:53am
why do you all think it's over? This type of work has preceeded a tour for the last two decades, icluding the rancour that gets hyped in the media... if it was over, do you think the band would've met for the regular band meeting and recorded music for Stu? They all discussed 2012 tour and decided to warm up in 2011. I'd put good money on them begining recording in the next 9 months. The variable would be, if Mick and Keith are inspired enough to tour any new solo music before getting into the studio for a new Stones record... They can build a tour itinerary and make a record in the early months of 2012, and have recorded solo work and toured without any conflicts.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by sweetcharmedlife on May 23rd, 2011 at 11:01am

andrews27 wrote on May 22nd, 2011 at 11:40pm:

Ginda wrote on May 22nd, 2011 at 2:44pm:


Hate to disagree with your geography work there, scl, but Bombay became Mumbai in 1995. [smiley=wink.gif]



If the troubadours were killed before they reached it...then it's still Bombay!

:willya

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Ginda on May 23rd, 2011 at 11:23am

Pdog wrote on May 23rd, 2011 at 10:53am:
why do you all think it's over? This type of work has preceeded a tour for the last two decades, icluding the rancour that gets hyped in the media... if it was over, do you think the band would've met for the regular band meeting and recorded music for Stu? They all discussed 2012 tour and decided to warm up in 2011. I'd put good money on them begining recording in the next 9 months. The variable would be, if Mick and Keith are inspired enough to tour any new solo music before getting into the studio for a new Stones record... They can build a tour itinerary and make a record in the early months of 2012, and have recorded solo work and toured without any conflicts.


IMO, this is entirely different on many levels - health, age and rancor.  I do not believe Keith has another tour in him.  I just don't think he can do it.  Rather than admit to this he will use the excuse that Mick's feelings were hurt and didn't want to tour.  

Corporate meetings will go on.   The tribute to Stu was for Stu - and had it not been for Charlie climbing on board first, I doubt if it would have occurred to the others to participate.

I'll be very happy to be proven wrong.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Ginda on May 23rd, 2011 at 11:25am

sweetcharmedlife wrote on May 23rd, 2011 at 11:01am:

andrews27 wrote on May 22nd, 2011 at 11:40pm:

Ginda wrote on May 22nd, 2011 at 2:44pm:


Hate to disagree with your geography work there, scl, but Bombay became Mumbai in 1995. [smiley=wink.gif]



If the troubadours were killed before they reached it...then it's still Bombay!

:willya


Nice try.  Now don't make Margie put on her uniform again...

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Tumbling Dijs on May 23rd, 2011 at 3:44pm

Ginda wrote on May 23rd, 2011 at 11:23am:

Pdog wrote on May 23rd, 2011 at 10:53am:
why do you all think it's over? This type of work has preceeded a tour for the last two decades, icluding the rancour that gets hyped in the media... if it was over, do you think the band would've met for the regular band meeting and recorded music for Stu? They all discussed 2012 tour and decided to warm up in 2011. I'd put good money on them begining recording in the next 9 months. The variable would be, if Mick and Keith are inspired enough to tour any new solo music before getting into the studio for a new Stones record... They can build a tour itinerary and make a record in the early months of 2012, and have recorded solo work and toured without any conflicts.


IMO, this is entirely different on many levels - health, age and rancor.  I do not believe Keith has another tour in him.  I just don't think he can do it.  Rather than admit to this he will use the excuse that Mick's feelings were hurt and didn't want to tour.  

Corporate meetings will go on.   The tribute to Stu was for Stu - and had it not been for Charlie climbing on board first, I doubt if it would have occurred to the others to participate.

I'll be very happy to be proven wrong.


I agree, beside that, if they would tour next year Mick would need all the time he has preparing and organizing it. We all know he's involved in every little detail of a tour. He won't have time for a new soloproject/group and everything that comes with it. And last but not least, Keith's reaction to this new project of Mick, and he will probably react the way he always does to Mick's soloprojects,  will make thing even worse I'm afraid.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Gazza on May 23rd, 2011 at 5:22pm
From a lengthy feature and interview on Dave Stewart in the new issue of UNCUT which is just out :

"We've recorded 30 songs and filmed it". Stewart shows me a video of this unusual supergroup recording, standing next to me and commenting in my ear throughout like we're at a gig. The music is eclectic, with toasting, electro, rock, and Joss Stone and Jagger belting it out. It's like a giant's idea of Screamadelica. "We're called Super Heavy" says Dave. "This is me on steroids".

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Brainbell Jangler on May 23rd, 2011 at 5:42pm

sweetcharmedlife wrote on May 22nd, 2011 at 1:19pm:
This will be huge..............In Bombay :interestingstuffronnie

Sunny?

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Pdog on May 23rd, 2011 at 6:41pm

Ginda wrote on May 23rd, 2011 at 11:23am:

Pdog wrote on May 23rd, 2011 at 10:53am:
why do you all think it's over? This type of work has preceeded a tour for the last two decades, icluding the rancour that gets hyped in the media... if it was over, do you think the band would've met for the regular band meeting and recorded music for Stu? They all discussed 2012 tour and decided to warm up in 2011. I'd put good money on them begining recording in the next 9 months. The variable would be, if Mick and Keith are inspired enough to tour any new solo music before getting into the studio for a new Stones record... They can build a tour itinerary and make a record in the early months of 2012, and have recorded solo work and toured without any conflicts.


IMO, this is entirely different on many levels - health, age and rancor.  I do not believe Keith has another tour in him.  I just don't think he can do it.  Rather than admit to this he will use the excuse that Mick's feelings were hurt and didn't want to tour.  

Corporate meetings will go on.   The tribute to Stu was for Stu - and had it not been for Charlie climbing on board first, I doubt if it would have occurred to the others to participate.

I'll be very happy to be proven wrong.



good points. I too hope you're wrong, and if you turn out to be, i will be the first to not rub it in your face, in fact, I hope we forget about our nervousness now, because it is replaced by tingle...

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on May 23rd, 2011 at 9:11pm
Listen, the problem why many fans of the Rolling Stones don't like Mick Jagger's solo stuff is simple: They expect a Rolling Stones album, and it's Mick, not the Rolling Stones

Title: Re: Super Heavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on May 23rd, 2011 at 11:21pm

Mick Jagger announces new album – with fusion group Super Heavy



Mick Jagger, seen here performing at the 2011 Grammy Awards, will play harmonica for his new group
Super Heavy.
  Lucy Nicholson/Reuters


Angela Hickman  May 23, 2011


What do you call a secret series of jam sessions featuring Mick Jagger, Joss Stone, Dave Stewart, Damian Marley, and A.R. Rahman? Super Heavy, of course. The supergroup — kind of a modern-day Traveling Wilburys — has been a secret for 18 months, but now they’re ready to share what they’ve come up with, and their debut “fusion” album is coming out in September.

“It’s a bit odd,” Jagger told Rolling Stone. “A different kind of record than what people would expect.”

To be fair, it’s hard to believe anyone would have been expecting a record from such a disparate group, so to suggest that it’s “different” is just the tip of the iceberg.

The brainchild of Stewart, a founder of the Eurythmics, Super Heavy — featuring three British musical heavyweights, Bob Marley’s youngest son, and India’s most famous film composer — certainly has a range of influences to draw upon, “from reggae to ballads to Indian songs in Urdu.” It doesn’t sound as if any of the influences include Jagger’s famous voice, though.

Instead, the rock ‘n’ roll machine will put his famous mouth to work in a different pursuit: the harmonica. Jagger, who also plays some guitar, decided to leave the singing to the others and work to provide some “high energy” mouth organ accompaniment instead.

The group has no plans yet for a tour, although Jagger has said the door isn’t closed to the idea. Maybe he’s thinking his new group would be a nice compliment to his old band. Although the Stones haven’t toured since 2007, next year marks the 50-year anniversary of their first concert in London, in July 1962, and Stones’ guitarist Keith Richards has already expressed a desire to tour.

The Rolling Stones featuring Super Heavy? That would be something to see.

National Post


So Ms. Hickman has gleaned that Rolling Stones lead singer Mick Jagger will play harp and guitar in support of the other vocalists in Super Heavy.

Clearly on a vacuous roll, she also reckons that a commingling of his bands might be in order...

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Pdog on May 24th, 2011 at 12:07am
as Stones fans, were kinda of only looking at this from our POV, but i'm sure this is exciting news to fans of the other artists involved, and not b/c it's with Mick Jagger, but because they are making new music.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by chris girard on May 24th, 2011 at 12:07pm
I think we need to face a reality here, Mick, Charlie and Ronnie have successful lives outside of the Stones. Charlie is playing jazz each summer and touring Europe. He certainly isn't doing it for the money, he is playing in small jazz clubes. He is doing it because he loves it, he's a true musican. Ronnie has cleaned up his act, is hosting a very successful radio program and he has said many times he makes more money selling his paintings than from the Stones royalities. He has a new girlfriend, plays some special gigs now, looks and seems to be pretty happy.  Mick is working with Dave Stwart again, and Keith wasn't invited into this "super Group". Mick is working on a movie, is active in the social scene and has built a life outside ot constant touring and being the Rolling Stones.

The one person who has not built a life outside the Stones is Keith. I read parts of his book and they come off to me as vindictive in some places and childish in others. It seems his point was to show how he stood up to Mick at times. I'm not surprised Mick is bit pissed at his treatment in the book. Keith can't deal with the fact that the Stones, as great as they were, are not contemporary any more. They probably can't fill up a staidum any more and who is going to pay $250 a ticket in this economy.

I certainly don't think badly of Mick with working with other people. I've never seen anyone on this board critiize Charlie for working with other and same can be said for Ronnie.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by polytoxic on May 24th, 2011 at 1:20pm
On the upside at least Lenny Kravitz is nowhere to be found.   :smilestu

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by paul on May 24th, 2011 at 5:01pm
I think it can be summed up in a quote i heard from Mick many years ago. "For Keith, the Stones is his whole life, for me its only a part of my life". Keith is happy to look back, Mick isn't. Keith is happy to becaome a caracature of himself. Mick wants to re invent himself. For all these reasons i think the Stones are over, and the talk of a 50th Anniversary tour, its the sort of thing Mick would hate.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by uncleson on May 24th, 2011 at 5:04pm

chris girard wrote on May 24th, 2011 at 12:07pm:
I think we need to face a reality here, Mick, Charlie and Ronnie have successful lives outside of the Stones. Charlie is playing jazz each summer and touring Europe. He certainly isn't doing it for the money, he is playing in small jazz clubes. He is doing it because he loves it, he's a true musican. Ronnie has cleaned up his act, is hosting a very successful radio program and he has said many times he makes more money selling his paintings than from the Stones royalities. He has a new girlfriend, plays some special gigs now, looks and seems to be pretty happy.  Mick is working with Dave Stwart again, and Keith wasn't invited into this "super Group". Mick is working on a movie, is active in the social scene and has built a life outside ot constant touring and being the Rolling Stones.

The one person who has not built a life outside the Stones is Keith. I read parts of his book and they come off to me as vindictive in some places and childish in others. It seems his point was to show how he stood up to Mick at times. I'm not surprised Mick is bit pissed at his treatment in the book. Keith can't deal with the fact that the Stones, as great as they were, are not contemporary any more. They probably can't fill up a staidum any more and who is going to pay $250 a ticket in this economy.

I certainly don't think badly of Mick with working with other people. I've never seen anyone on this board critiize Charlie for working with other and same can be said for Ronnie.


You dont think Keith has built a successful life outside of The Rolling Stones? Hes done several albums and toured with The Winos, unlike Mick hes been successful in movies, and hes done recording with numerous artists ranging from Ziggy Marley to George Jones.

Also, blaming Keith for the imagined end of The Stones is a very simple and easy explanation.  Seems to me Mick and Keith's problems with each other are a two way street. I dont think Mick sleeping with Anita, and Keith's retaliation by sleeping with Marianne Faithful helped out their friendship. Sounds to me like sibling rivalry with plenty of fault on both sides.

Nevertheless, Pdog makes a good point above.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by chris girard on May 24th, 2011 at 6:17pm

uncleson wrote on May 24th, 2011 at 5:04pm:

chris girard wrote on May 24th, 2011 at 12:07pm:
I think we need to face a reality here, Mick, Charlie and Ronnie have successful lives outside of the Stones. Charlie is playing jazz each summer and touring Europe. He certainly isn't doing it for the money, he is playing in small jazz clubes. He is doing it because he loves it, he's a true musican. Ronnie has cleaned up his act, is hosting a very successful radio program and he has said many times he makes more money selling his paintings than from the Stones royalities. He has a new girlfriend, plays some special gigs now, looks and seems to be pretty happy.  Mick is working with Dave Stwart again, and Keith wasn't invited into this "super Group". Mick is working on a movie, is active in the social scene and has built a life outside ot constant touring and being the Rolling Stones.

The one person who has not built a life outside the Stones is Keith. I read parts of his book and they come off to me as vindictive in some places and childish in others. It seems his point was to show how he stood up to Mick at times. I'm not surprised Mick is bit pissed at his treatment in the book. Keith can't deal with the fact that the Stones, as great as they were, are not contemporary any more. They probably can't fill up a staidum any more and who is going to pay $250 a ticket in this economy.

I certainly don't think badly of Mick with working with other people. I've never seen anyone on this board critiize Charlie for working with other and same can be said for Ronnie.


You dont think Keith has built a successful life outside of The Rolling Stones? Hes done several albums and toured with The Winos, unlike Mick hes been successful in movies, and hes done recording with numerous artists ranging from Ziggy Marley to George Jones.

Also, blaming Keith for the imagined end of The Stones is a very simple and easy explanation.  Seems to me Mick and Keith's problems with each other are a two way street. I dont think Mick sleeping with Anita, and Keith's retaliation by sleeping with Marianne Faithful helped out their friendship. Sounds to me like sibling rivalry with plenty of fault on both sides.

Nevertheless, Pdog makes a good point above.


I would love to  see them again in concert, I agree with Pdog, I'm not blaming Keith for trhe breakup of the stones, they will never break up. ALl I'm saying is that they all have active lives outside of the Stoiones. The Wino's haven't played for years, although they may be recording again.  Keith seems lost to me without a life outside the Stones. Who slept with splet with aho'a girlfriend 30 years agao probably doesn't affect their relationship today.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Pdog on May 24th, 2011 at 6:20pm

uncleson wrote on May 24th, 2011 at 5:04pm:

chris girard wrote on May 24th, 2011 at 12:07pm:
I think we need to face a reality here, Mick, Charlie and Ronnie have successful lives outside of the Stones. Charlie is playing jazz each summer and touring Europe. He certainly isn't doing it for the money, he is playing in small jazz clubes. He is doing it because he loves it, he's a true musican. Ronnie has cleaned up his act, is hosting a very successful radio program and he has said many times he makes more money selling his paintings than from the Stones royalities. He has a new girlfriend, plays some special gigs now, looks and seems to be pretty happy.  Mick is working with Dave Stwart again, and Keith wasn't invited into this "super Group". Mick is working on a movie, is active in the social scene and has built a life outside ot constant touring and being the Rolling Stones.

The one person who has not built a life outside the Stones is Keith. I read parts of his book and they come off to me as vindictive in some places and childish in others. It seems his point was to show how he stood up to Mick at times. I'm not surprised Mick is bit pissed at his treatment in the book. Keith can't deal with the fact that the Stones, as great as they were, are not contemporary any more. They probably can't fill up a staidum any more and who is going to pay $250 a ticket in this economy.

I certainly don't think badly of Mick with working with other people. I've never seen anyone on this board critiize Charlie for working with other and same can be said for Ronnie.


You dont think Keith has built a successful life outside of The Rolling Stones? Hes done several albums and toured with The Winos, unlike Mick hes been successful in movies, and hes done recording with numerous artists ranging from Ziggy Marley to George Jones.

Also, blaming Keith for the imagined end of The Stones is a very simple and easy explanation.  Seems to me Mick and Keith's problems with each other are a two way street. I dont think Mick sleeping with Anita, and Keith's retaliation by sleeping with Marianne Faithful helped out their friendship. Sounds to me like sibling rivalry with plenty of fault on both sides.

Nevertheless, Pdog makes a good point above.



Saying Keith hasn't done anything outside The Stones is a joke... Mick has tried often, and failed and a few successes, and I think it was ego driven to be relevant, not to be creative. He was working with Michael Jackson, and teamed up with many pop contemporaries... Keith does music with Jamaicans no one has ever heard of, and creates a buzz around those unknown musicians. Granted, Keith may not be doing as much, but when he does do something, its pretty damn good IMO... I can't say that about Mick, he's left me gringing alot, and I want to like his acting and albums... When Keith did the wIno's, it seemed effortless, while Micks work at the same times has felt forced, like he needs to prove something. I hope Mick is confident. We shall see, I still stand by me idea, they are doing what they have done for the past 25 years before tours and albums... We saw what went on when they were pissed and The Stones were over... Remember,, they did call it off, and made it real clear how they felt... I don't see anything like that, there's so much conjecture. Mick is making an album b/c Keith said he had a small cock? and may not tour over it too... If they don't tour, it's b/c someone is dead or physically unable. At this point, Keith could say anything and Mick can make as many weird side projects as he wants, Stones will still go on, until the graveyard gets them... Search your hearts, not your heads, you know this.. You all are just getting all emotional and impatient and thinking nervous thoughts.

Title: Re: Super Heavy
Post by gotdablouse on May 24th, 2011 at 6:53pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on May 23rd, 2011 at 11:21pm:
Mick Jagger announces new album – with fusion group Super Heavy



Mick Jagger, seen here performing at the 2011 Grammy Awards, will play harmonica for his new group
Super Heavy.
  Lucy Nicholson/Reuters


Angela Hickman  May 23, 2011


What do you call a secret series of jam sessions featuring Mick Jagger, Joss Stone, Dave Stewart, Damian Marley, and A.R. Rahman? Super Heavy, of course. The supergroup — kind of a modern-day Traveling Wilburys — has been a secret for 18 months, but now they’re ready to share what they’ve come up with, and their debut “fusion” album is coming out in September.

“It’s a bit odd,” Jagger told Rolling Stone. “A different kind of record than what people would expect.”

To be fair, it’s hard to believe anyone would have been expecting a record from such a disparate group, so to suggest that it’s “different” is just the tip of the iceberg.

The brainchild of Stewart, a founder of the Eurythmics, Super Heavy — featuring three British musical heavyweights, Bob Marley’s youngest son, and India’s most famous film composer — certainly has a range of influences to draw upon, “from reggae to ballads to Indian songs in Urdu.” It doesn’t sound as if any of the influences include Jagger’s famous voice, though.

Instead, the rock ‘n’ roll machine will put his famous mouth to work in a different pursuit: the harmonica. Jagger, who also plays some guitar, decided to leave the singing to the others and work to provide some “high energy” mouth organ accompaniment instead.

The group has no plans yet for a tour, although Jagger has said the door isn’t closed to the idea. Maybe he’s thinking his new group would be a nice compliment to his old band. Although the Stones haven’t toured since 2007, next year marks the 50-year anniversary of their first concert in London, in July 1962, and Stones’ guitarist Keith Richards has already expressed a desire to tour.

The Rolling Stones featuring Super Heavy? That would be something to see.

National Post


So Ms. Hickman has gleaned that Rolling Stones lead singer Mick Jagger will play harp and guitar in support of the other vocalists in Super Heavy.

Clearly on a vacuous roll, she also reckons that a commingling of his bands might be in order...

What, no singing by Mick ?! What a letdown...and it's not what previous info suggested, it was that he wasn't the *ONLY* singer.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by lavendar on May 24th, 2011 at 7:00pm
I think we need to face Reality here....... that line makes me chuckle  :willya

I just started reading  "Life"  entertaining so far,How fortunate Keith is to share his tale with all thatare interested-Thanks ;)

Lets just hope "Super Heavy Fusion" will be as good as the "BlackBird Diaries"
 :keithpunky

Title: Re: Super Heavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on May 24th, 2011 at 7:48pm

gotdablouse wrote on May 24th, 2011 at 6:53pm:
What, no singing by Mick ?! What a letdown...and it's not what previous info suggested, it was that he wasn't the *ONLY* singer.

Check the other articles...Mick sings. In Urdu even.

The National Post author quoted the Rolling Stone piece, so she must've read it. Perhaps the others, too.
Comprehension? Maybe not so much.
 
Hence the "vacuous" reference...


Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Some Guy on May 24th, 2011 at 9:23pm
I did a load of clothes on super heavy

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by luxury on May 25th, 2011 at 9:47am
so Mick  provides some “high energy” mouth organ --!!

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Gazza on May 25th, 2011 at 10:43am

uncleson wrote on May 24th, 2011 at 5:04pm:
 You dont think Keith has built a successful life outside of The Rolling Stones? Hes done several albums and toured with The Winos, unlike Mick hes been successful in movies, and hes done recording with numerous artists ranging from Ziggy Marley to George Jones.


In fairness, he made two albums with the Winos and toured with them. The last time they worked together was 18 years ago. He's barely recorded with anyone else in the last decade either.  

Dont really think you can say he's been more successful in movies - Jagger's movie appearances were in roles where he was at the very worst a co-star. Keith's appearances have been brief cameos in a couple of blockbusters which were parts of an already successful franchise. Its not as if the success of the movies had anything to do with his participation. Mick has accomplished more as an actor - to paraphrase Norma Desmond's classic line from 'Sunset Boulevard', he's bigger, but the pictures were smaller....

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gimmekeef on May 25th, 2011 at 3:03pm
they are keeping busy...waiting for the economy to improve and the 50th anniversary.....and oh yeah...for U2 to fuck the hell off....wonder though if the thought they can't regain top gross will put them in a been there done that mode...and just let things die a natural death?....Neither Keith nor Mick has had any real success in anything but the Stones.....way more misses than hits and the success they had was more attributed to being Stones than what they produced individually. Hardly call a total of 6 minutes of Keith spread across 2 movies as an acting "career"..its been a great 49 years folks..I've loved the ride and will hate when it stops but I hear the train whistle getting closer..........

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by lavendar on May 25th, 2011 at 4:13pm

Some Guy wrote on May 24th, 2011 at 9:23pm:
I did a load of clothes on super heavy


That is VERY FUNNY.

Title: Re: Super Heavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on May 25th, 2011 at 5:12pm

Dave Stewart posts frequent Twitter updates. Super Heavy got a shout out from über-gossip Perez Hilton:

Mick Jagger Has Formed A Secret Supergroup!


Image via WENN


Mick Jagger has formed a secret supergroup of musicians, and as of now they're called Super Heavy.

Pretty great band name, not going to lie. So who's in it?

Well, a lot of people:
Eurythmics star Dave Stewart, Damian Marley, Joss Stone and Indian musician and producer A.R. Rahman.

Holy shizz! Not only is that a LOT of talent, but that's extremely eclectic! We wonder if it works!

Here's what people in the know have been saying about it:

   "They just finished a record and their first video and are talking to major labels about a deal. The name for the band at the moment is Super Heavy."

   "Each member has a very distinct and different style, but it works. Mick has been recording with Dave for a while, and both worked with Joss in the past."

Such a cool and interesting group of people put together to record. We have no idea what the music would even sound like, but we'd be lying to say that we aren't extremely curious!

Send us a sample, Mick! We'll premiere it for you!
__

Dunno why, but I was expecting snarky. Fo' rizzle...

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by lavendar on May 25th, 2011 at 5:16pm
I listened to a remake of "Alfie" by  an artist  with a very odd name and Joss Stone was in it along with Mick singing a little, I didn't know if anyone would be interested !?

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by uncleson on May 25th, 2011 at 5:17pm

Pdog wrote on May 24th, 2011 at 6:20pm:

uncleson wrote on May 24th, 2011 at 5:04pm:

chris girard wrote on May 24th, 2011 at 12:07pm:
I think we need to face a reality here, Mick, Charlie and Ronnie have successful lives outside of the Stones. Charlie is playing jazz each summer and touring Europe. He certainly isn't doing it for the money, he is playing in small jazz clubes. He is doing it because he loves it, he's a true musican. Ronnie has cleaned up his act, is hosting a very successful radio program and he has said many times he makes more money selling his paintings than from the Stones royalities. He has a new girlfriend, plays some special gigs now, looks and seems to be pretty happy.  Mick is working with Dave Stwart again, and Keith wasn't invited into this "super Group". Mick is working on a movie, is active in the social scene and has built a life outside ot constant touring and being the Rolling Stones.

The one person who has not built a life outside the Stones is Keith. I read parts of his book and they come off to me as vindictive in some places and childish in others. It seems his point was to show how he stood up to Mick at times. I'm not surprised Mick is bit pissed at his treatment in the book. Keith can't deal with the fact that the Stones, as great as they were, are not contemporary any more. They probably can't fill up a staidum any more and who is going to pay $250 a ticket in this economy.

I certainly don't think badly of Mick with working with other people. I've never seen anyone on this board critiize Charlie for working with other and same can be said for Ronnie.


You dont think Keith has built a successful life outside of The Rolling Stones? Hes done several albums and toured with The Winos, unlike Mick hes been successful in movies, and hes done recording with numerous artists ranging from Ziggy Marley to George Jones.

Also, blaming Keith for the imagined end of The Stones is a very simple and easy explanation.  Seems to me Mick and Keith's problems with each other are a two way street. I dont think Mick sleeping with Anita, and Keith's retaliation by sleeping with Marianne Faithful helped out their friendship. Sounds to me like sibling rivalry with plenty of fault on both sides.

Nevertheless, Pdog makes a good point above.



Saying Keith hasn't done anything outside The Stones is a joke... Mick has tried often, and failed and a few successes, and I think it was ego driven to be relevant, not to be creative. He was working with Michael Jackson, and teamed up with many pop contemporaries... Keith does music with Jamaicans no one has ever heard of, and creates a buzz around those unknown musicians. Granted, Keith may not be doing as much, but when he does do something, its pretty damn good IMO... I can't say that about Mick, he's left me gringing alot, and I want to like his acting and albums... When Keith did the wIno's, it seemed effortless, while Micks work at the same times has felt forced, like he needs to prove something. I hope Mick is confident. We shall see, I still stand by me idea, they are doing what they have done for the past 25 years before tours and albums... We saw what went on when they were pissed and The Stones were over... Remember,, they did call it off, and made it real clear how they felt... I don't see anything like that, there's so much conjecture. Mick is making an album b/c Keith said he had a small cock? and may not tour over it too... If they don't tour, it's b/c someone is dead or physically unable. At this point, Keith could say anything and Mick can make as many weird side projects as he wants, Stones will still go on, until the graveyard gets them... Search your hearts, not your heads, you know this.. You all are just getting all emotional and impatient and thinking nervous thoughts.


Agreed.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Gimme Shelter on May 25th, 2011 at 5:32pm
Rolling Stones Planning Anniversary Concert?

Andrew Vaughan|05.24.2011    Keith Richards has suggested that The Rolling Stones may be playing a 50th anniversary gig next year in England. Their first-ever show as The Rolling Stones (actually The Rollin’ Stones) happened the Marquee Club in London on July 12, 1962.

According to NME, the band have a notion to mark the occasion. Richards told The Sun: “The idea is there. We kind of know we should do it, but nobody’s put their finger on the moment yet.”

The Stones guitarist also said he and Jagger had patched up any differences that arose from Richards’ memoirs, published last year.

“Mick pouted a bit, as is his wont, ” he said. “I told him, ‘It’s water under the bridge. I want to talk about the future. We’re larger than a little bitching.’”

News came out last week that Jagger has been working with a new group, Super Heavy, alongside Eurythmics’ Dave Stewart, Joss Stone, A.R. Rahman and Damian Marley, while Richards has been working with his X-pensive Winos band.



Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on May 25th, 2011 at 5:37pm

Damn, that "news" is several times removed from the original source!

Keith didn't tell The Sun anything.
Per usual, they cut and pasted. Sans attribution, of course.
 
Those quotes were culled from Keith's recent USA Today interview.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by sweetcharmedlife on May 25th, 2011 at 9:53pm
That has to be at least the 4th or 5th different publication to take the same basic quotes and info and turn it into a new story. :whydontcha

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Ian Billen on May 26th, 2011 at 10:01pm

A few words from Jagger on the project and a bit more of what it entails:


http://ultimateclassicrock.com/mick-jagger-super-heavy-new-group/



Ian

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by AngieBlue on May 27th, 2011 at 12:16am
The one article did say the Stones hadn't toured and do not have firm plans for the future for 'legal and personal issues.'   Super Heavy taking so long is probably one of the personal issues.

I don't think it's the end of the Stones.  The last few years have been nutty.

Keith takes two years to write his book, in part delayed because of Patti's illness that no one outside the inner circle knew about until well after the fact.  In the meantime he did record with Marsha Hansen, Marianne Faithful, the Dirty Strangers, Tom Waits, new Wingless Angels project, etc. etc.  And the work on Exile.

Ronnie was in the middle of a divorce not long ago.  Can't tour during that because of the money issues with the separation of property/money.  Then he nearly nose-dived with Katia.  Couldn't tour during that mess either.  Thank goodness he has made a marvelous come back.

Mick has been working on Super Heavy and Exile.  I could be wrong on the timing, but didn't his film production company make at least one film in the last three years or so?  He would had to have spent time on that.

Charlie has been doing the boogie woogie gigs.

Then we have the unknown of how much the Cohl/Live Nation lawsuit is really affecting any future plans.  Or given how much money Cohl has lost on the Spiderman musical has affected his ability to promote a tour.  That would cause delays even if the Stones decide to give Cohl the heave ho.

I wish Mick well with Super Heavy.  I'll give it a listen.  I'm not a fan of his solo work for the most part, but this sounds like it won't be the standard stuff.

There is still time to put together a tour/residency/short tour, etc. for next year.  I'm just not hopeful for a new Stones album.  Although, if Some Girls has a bounty of 'new' material available touring behind that project wouldn't be an awful idea.  Most of the world didn't get a show for the Some Girls tour.  Make up for it now.

I know, I know, but I'm trying to be glass half full.  ;)

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Pdog on May 27th, 2011 at 7:19am

sweetcharmedlife wrote on May 25th, 2011 at 9:53pm:
That has to be at least the 4th or 5th different publication to take the same basic quotes and info and turn it into a new story. :whydontcha



that's what I keep saying...

Title: Re: Super Heavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on May 27th, 2011 at 7:26am

Nothing new. Happens all the time.
It's the internet. Stories spread like wildfire.
Sometimes they get reported accurately, sometimes they get completely convoluted.

Google "Jagger + Super Heavy" and you'll get pages of links.     
The article at the link Ian posted is just one of those.
At least they cite Rolling Stone as their source...

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by sweetcharmedlife on May 27th, 2011 at 8:31am

AngieBlue wrote on May 27th, 2011 at 12:16am:
I know, I know, but I'm trying to be glass half full.  ;)

Nothing wrong with that Angie. :booze

Title: Re:Super Heavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on May 28th, 2011 at 1:48pm

Making music, super heavy



SUDHA MENON

28 May 2011


What happens when one Stones frontman, one Eurythmics founder, one English soul singer, Bob Marley’s youngest son and India’s most famous film composer AR Rahman come together?

WILL THIS BE another Rolling Stones in the making? We don’t know if the magic of that vintage sixties band can ever be replicated but with the band just an year away from its fiftieth anniversary, the rumour mills were agog last week with news that the legendary Rolling Stones front man was all set for the next phase of his checkered life and is in the final stages of announcing an all-new band that would be way different from his gang of boys from back then.

While Mick Jagger initially dismissed the rumour as too premature, saying that it was just a group of music-lovers jamming and trying to create a new type of music, it was music’s new discovery, the “Mozart of Madras”, AR Rahman, who let the cat out of the bag, through, what else, but Facebook?

Rahman’s post on Facebook titled “and Super Heavy is born”, gave away all the details of the new venture. “Eighteen months ago Dave Stewart, Mick Jagger, Damian Marley, Joss Stone and me experimented at a studio in Los Angeles...We had a couple of more sessions...and presently we have aro-und 16 to 18 songs...all have a world sound by contributions from all of us. Dave’s and Mick’s incredible musicality and Joss’ soul singing, Marley’s Jamaican influence and me bringing musicality from my world,” Rahman wrote.

“It’s a bit odd,” Jagger said recently. It’s certainly a motley crew: one Stones frontman, one Eurythmics founder, one English soul singer, plus Bob Marley’s youngest son and India’s most famous film composer. Jagger has promised that Super Heavy’s music is the kind that fans “will find most of it accessible”.

Super Heavy was Stewart’s idea, inspired by the sounds washing into his home in St Ann’s Bay, Jamaica. “I’d hear three sound systems all playing different things,” he said. “I always love that, along with Indian orchestras. I said to Mick, ‘How could we make a fusion?’” They started brainstorming and making phone calls and, six months later, Stewart, Jagger, Stone, Marley and Rahman converged in a Los Angeles studio for the initial trials to find their own rhythm.

We don’t know about the others in the group but we are mighty proud of Rahman, the  earnest young man who sings his heart out and makes heavenly music. A movie called 'Roja' catapulted him to a national level musician. That set the pace for a great body of work but somewhere, the freshness of his work began to fade a bit and the man who pushed the envelope continually found comfort in churning out predictably Rahman kind of stuff.

It took a 'Slumdog Millionaire' to give him his groove back and to get him a global audience and fan base that he richly deserves. His music is the kind that works beyond geographical boundaries and it is perhaps this quality that attracted Jagger to him, leading him to be part of the band.  That and possibly the fact that he is also known as the world’s most prominent and prolific music composer, a man who is film composer, record producer, musician, singer and philanthropist, all rolled into one and the winner of two Academy Awards, two Grammy Awards, a BAFTA Award, a Golden Globe and four National Film Awards.

Rahman’s work is a master stroke of integration — he skillfully fuses eastern classical with electronic music sounds, world music genres and traditional orchestral arrangements and that is perhaps also what got him Jagger’s attention — the latter is a well-known lover of Indian music.

The new band will be a motley bunch of talented people but with four vocalists around, Jagger will get to do other stuff including playing guitar and a producing lots of “high energy” mouth organ. The music is informed by all of the band’s contributors, ranging “from reggae to ballads to Indian songs in Urdu”.

The record is rumoured to be ready to go and negotiations are supposed to be underway with major labels. We hear September is D-day for the new band. Watch this space...

Khaleej Times

Some insight on another of Super Heavy's members.

Slightly skewed perhaps, since the author claims that Rahman was first to confirm the rumors...  

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gimmekeef on May 28th, 2011 at 10:22pm
some how this just seems lame..........Mick chasing todays thing....damn boys can we all get together for one last blast

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by mojoman on May 28th, 2011 at 10:50pm
as long as keith isn't in the studio with rain, adam ant, sean lennon and amy crackhouse i could care less who mick feels like he needs to work/play/sleep with...........

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by steel driving hammer on May 29th, 2011 at 8:38am
  Dave S is way too common w/ no feeling whatsoever.

 Marley is famous only cause his father, talent skips a generation, ie Marlon Richards, Chris Jagger etc...

 After the Grammys, all the  "wow hype" about how good he & the band sounded went to Mick's head big time.

 The only super group is The Rolling Stones.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by sweetcharmedlife on May 29th, 2011 at 3:12pm

gimmekeef wrote on May 28th, 2011 at 10:22pm:
some how this just seems lame..........Mick chasing todays thing....damn boys can we all get together for one last blast

I know. It would be nice to see some of this new found creativity and inspiration put towards a Stones project.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Some Guy on May 29th, 2011 at 5:53pm
enough of this horse shit :scary

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Brainbell Jangler on May 29th, 2011 at 6:49pm

Some Guy wrote on May 29th, 2011 at 5:53pm:
enough of this horse shit :scary

That's what I say to GOLDMAN SACHS
Brainy
:whydontcha

Title: Re: Super Heavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 6th, 2011 at 3:33pm



Dave Stewart talks Super Heavy with muziek.nl:

It would be an understatement to say that Dave Stewart is currently quite productive. The former half of the Eurythmics produced the new albums by Stevie Nicks and Joss Stone, was responsible for the supervision of the musical 'Ghost', and together with Mick Jagger is part of the Super Heavy supergroup. His new solo CD, 'The Blackbird Diaries' seems almost an afterthought, but make no mistake: this is his best so far.

Stewart undertook 'The Blackbird Diaries' when he already had plans for the creation of Super Heavy, the justifiably labeled "supergroup": in addition to Stewart, there's Mick Jagger, Joss Stone, Damian Marley and the Indian multi-talent AR Rahman, the latter of whom won an Oscar three years ago for the score of 'Slumdog Millionaire'. Strange that stories about the origins of the group usually overlook the fact that Stewart, Jagger and Stone had previously worked together on the 'Alfie' soundtrack. "Yes, that's true. Mick and I knew immediately that we would ask Joss again. Tremendous enthusiasm, incredible voice. AR Rahman is called the "Mozart of India". I've known him for twelve years. A brilliant composer. Damian is very good at experimenting with words. During the first jam session it clicked right away. In the beginning a song would last thirty minutes. Of the thirty songs that were eventually completed, we have sixteen selected for the album. We're currently working on the mixing. Producing Super Heavy was really crazy. So many different personalities, so many different voices. I was right in the firing line."

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gotdablouse on Jun 7th, 2011 at 8:52pm
Still no taster?

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jun 7th, 2011 at 9:43pm

gotdablouse wrote on Jun 7th, 2011 at 8:52pm:
Still no taster?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T-LZGXwdSqs

Title: Re: Super Heavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 17th, 2011 at 12:53pm


Mick Jagger, David Stewart, Joss Stone, Damian Marley Form ‘Super Heavy’





June 16th, 2011

Mick Jagger, Joss Stone, The Eurythmics’ Dave Stewart and Damien Marley have been secretly recording together in a Los Angeles studio for the past 18 months. The supergroup dubbed ‘Super Heavy’ spawned from a phone conversation between Jagger and Stewart discussing how they could replicate the ‘fusion’ of the many sounds that Stewart encountered while living in his home above Jamaica’s St. Anne’s Bay. A few phone calls later and the two settled on Stone, Marley and prolific film composer A. R. Rahman (Slumdog Millionaire, 127 Hours). Their album titled ‘Fusion,’ which consist of 18 tracks, has no release date but the band is hoping for a September release.

mxdwn.com

Dunno about the source, but this report includes an album title.

Also says there'll be 18 tracks, while Dave Stewart himself has said there'd be 16, so...

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by steel driving hammer on Jun 17th, 2011 at 4:09pm
 

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 21st, 2011 at 1:42pm

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f256/leftshoeshuffle/SuperHeavy.jpg


SuperHeavy - an introduction to......

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Mel Belli on Jun 21st, 2011 at 2:09pm
Dude, how'd you find that within an hour of its posting?!

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jun 21st, 2011 at 2:19pm

Mel Belli wrote on Jun 21st, 2011 at 2:09pm:
Dude, how'd you find that within an hour of its posting?!

It was already on IORR and Facebook? :wtf2

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Some Guy on Jun 21st, 2011 at 2:36pm
undefined

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 21st, 2011 at 2:50pm

Mel Belli wrote on Jun 21st, 2011 at 2:09pm:
Dude, how'd you find that within an hour of its posting?!

Stumbled across it while doing a Google search for Supertramp...

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by Mel Belli on Jun 21st, 2011 at 2:57pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on Jun 21st, 2011 at 2:50pm:

Mel Belli wrote on Jun 21st, 2011 at 2:09pm:
Dude, how'd you find that within an hour of its posting?!

Stumbled across it while doing a Google search for Supertramp...




 


:)

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by luxury on Jun 21st, 2011 at 2:58pm
i enjoy little somethings. thanks

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gotdablouse on Jun 21st, 2011 at 5:45pm
That last snipped is not too bad.

Well at least Keith can't say he's doing something he could have done with the Stones as he did for She's the Boss ("he could have gone out and play with a bling Irish harp player" or something like that).

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Bitch on Jun 21st, 2011 at 8:39pm
Thanks Lefty! I kinda like it, sweet mellow raggae laid back style/soft rock. I prefer kick ass rock and roll but at this point I'll be happy with ANYTHING from MICK. If MICK thinks it worth doing than for me its worth listening to. I'm so fvcking loyal.  ;)

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Steel Wheels on Jun 21st, 2011 at 9:43pm
My idea of a super heavy rock band would be Mick, Keef, Ronnie, Charlie and Darryl.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jun 21st, 2011 at 10:56pm
10 seconds out of a 55 second clip actually has music? Yeah,that's enough to make an impression huh? :will-ya

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gimmekeef on Jun 22nd, 2011 at 10:48am
so they have Ringo on acoustic?

Title: Uh-Oh:  Looks like Superheavy is real
Post by patioaintdry on Jun 22nd, 2011 at 9:08am
stumbled across this:  http://www.examiner.com/rolling-stones-in-national/mick-jagger-s-super-heavy-band-launches-official-youtube-channel



link to youtube clip within the story:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q3fkbMvUNJY


Title: Re: Uh-Oh:  Looks like Superheavy is real
Post by gimmekeef on Jun 22nd, 2011 at 10:04am
thanks for the info and link...but sure underwhelmed me.........

Title: Re: Uh-Oh:  Looks like Superheavy is real
Post by patioaintdry on Jun 22nd, 2011 at 10:12am
Underwhelmed may be too kind.  I'd call it boring.  

Title: Re: Uh-Oh:  Looks like Superheavy is real
Post by Some Guy on Jun 22nd, 2011 at 10:58am
prepare to be merged

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jun 22nd, 2011 at 11:11am
This ain't bringing Goddess in the Doorway back. :whatapostronnie

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gimmekeef on Jun 22nd, 2011 at 11:16am
Ringo on acoustic?.........

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 22nd, 2011 at 6:15pm

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f256/leftshoeshuffle/SuperHeavy/SuperHeavy_orange.jpg


Superheavy countdown starts now



Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gotdablouse on Jun 22nd, 2011 at 7:32pm
That's better...some pretty good stuff on there and it must have been nice for Mick to find some people to collaborate with again after all these years of being left to his devices, whether for his solo albums or albums with the Stones.

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 23rd, 2011 at 4:23pm

Mick Jagger's SuperHeavy Supergroup to Drop Album in September

by Phil Gallo | June 23, 2011


Grammy Images


Universal Music's A&M will release the album from SuperHeavy, a group featuring Mick Jagger, Eurythmics founder Dave Stewart, singer Joss Stone, composer A.R. Rahman and reggae artist Damian Marley. No exact release date is set. An official release said the album will be unveiled in September; the first single is titled "Miracle Worker" and the five stars will be recording a video for the track. Jagger and Stewart co-produced the album.

Recording in various studios around the world -- France, Cyprus, Miami, India -- the majority of the tracks laid down over three weeks in Los Angeles earlier this year. The quartet wrote 22 songs in their first six days together. The term "SuperHeavy" was inspired by Muhammad Ali.

Jagger and Stewart had worked together on the 2004 soundtrack to the film "Alfie," and Stewart produced Stone's last album. Both wanted to bring in a Jamaican musician and Damian Marley entered the picture with his rhythm section, bassist and composer Shiah Coore and drummer Courtney Diedrick. They met Rahman while recording in Los Angeles.

According to the band's bio, SuperHeavy came together after Jagger and Stewart wondered what a band of musicians from different genres would sound like.  Jagger had his doubts it would come together.

One of the first on the album is Jagger singing in Urdu. He takes lead on Rahman's song "Satyameva Jayate," which translates to "the truth alone triumphs."

Billboard

Really liked some of the stuff in the clip posted yesterday.
Hope it's back somewhere soon...

Official website's up - www.superheavy.com

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gotdablouse on Jun 23rd, 2011 at 4:49pm
Ah it got pulled, let's see if I can find it my cache...nope, can't find it

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Bitch on Jun 23rd, 2011 at 9:04pm
I dont see this becoming 'Super' popular. By using the the word "Super" in the name, is pushes the point down our throats. "Superheavy" is a self-proclaimed "Superspecial" band and sounds pompous, doesnt it?  Soon we'll see how Super this group actually is! A single and video coming in September.

An official release said the album will be unveiled in September; the first single is titled "Miracle Worker" and the five stars will be recording a video for the track. Jagger and Stewart co-produced the album.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Steel Wheels on Jun 23rd, 2011 at 9:34pm
As much as I want to goof on this and call it "SUPERSLEEPY" I can't help but get excited while watching that 53 second video.  I see Mick in there. Holy Fuck! Mick is a rock god, right? Fuck yeah. It's cool that Mick is expressing himself though new music even though it's not with the Stones. It's better than the alternative. He could be in fucking retirement but instead our lead singer is cutting a new album. Good for him.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gotdablouse on Jun 24th, 2011 at 12:33am
Yes and it's probably the first in a long, long time that he's collaborated with a group of people on "equal" terms.

All I could find in my firefox cache was a link to this pictures of the video, surely someone must have saved the video?


Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gimmekeef on Jun 24th, 2011 at 9:18am
bring on the Winos.........least we might get Keef chunking out some riffs......guess Lady Gaga was unavailable for Superheavy?

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 24th, 2011 at 10:07am

Dave Stewart's been a very busy man. Besides SuperHeavy, he's worked on recent albums with Stevie Nicks and Joss Stone, and has his own solo record coming out soon.
Below are excerpts from a wide ranging interview posted today @ http://www.musicradar.com/]musicradar.com:[/url]  
 

Corbis


...in September Stewart will unveil an intriguing 'supergroup' Super Heavy, in which he's teamed with Mick Jagger, Joss Stone, Damien Marley and AR Rahman. "Some might say it's an odd mix," says Stewart. "But that's kind of what I do: I take disparate talents, put them all together and see if I can come up with something new and different. With Super Heavy, I'd say that's been realized."


And if you weren't busy enough, now you have a band called Super Heavy. Joss Stone is in it, as is Mick Jagger, Damien Marley and AR Rahman. How did this come into being, and what can we expect?

"Well, it's been going on for quite a while, actually, pretty much in secret. But in the last year or so, we've been taking our jam sessions and turning them into songs and things, and it's really sounding huge. We've got a lot of material that we've managed to whittle down to 18 songs, so we're in the process of editing those and shooting videos and making artwork. It's a fun thing.

"Musically, I don't know if it's 'super heavy.' That name came up when Damien was doing vocals on a song, and he started going, 'Heavy, heavy…we're super heavy!' And that just kind of stuck, you know? It's more super-heavy in a Jamaican way, not so much a heavy rock way. I think we'll have a single coming out in a few weeks, and then the album will be in the fall."


musicradar.com

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 24th, 2011 at 10:27am






Images © Dave Stewart's Weapons Of Mass Entertainment

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Mel Belli on Jun 24th, 2011 at 1:00pm
Here's what frustrates me: Mick has an admirable penchant for not wanting to endlessly repeat himself, and so he does these intriguing little side projects, explores different sounds, etc. But when he works with the Stones lately, he seems content to ... endlessly repeat himself.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jun 24th, 2011 at 1:06pm

Mel Belli wrote on Jun 24th, 2011 at 1:00pm:
Here's what frustrates me: Mick has an admirable penchant for not wanting to endlessly repeat himself, and so he does these intriguing little side projects, explores different sounds, etc. But when he works with the Stones lately, he seems content to ... endlessly repeat himself.

Then him and Keith blame each other for the lack of creativity.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gimmekeef on Jun 24th, 2011 at 1:43pm
I've given myself a head ache trying to think of one great song Dave Stewart ever wrote?

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gotdablouse on Jun 24th, 2011 at 2:35pm
Not sure who wrote what in Eurythmics, but they had a few good songs.

@Mel Belli - same old story, he comes up with what he thinks the fans want, like when they play the war horses on stage to avoid the "when we play a new song I see all these blank stares" annoyance. Why would he take any risks...

So it looks like someone saved the video, can it find its way onto YouTube or elsewhere ? ;-)

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by steel driving hammer on Jun 25th, 2011 at 9:55am
Will the Supergroup be this good?


Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by mojoman on Jun 25th, 2011 at 9:59am

steel driving hammer wrote on Jun 25th, 2011 at 9:55am:
Will the Supergroup be this good?




no

:boring

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by steel driving hammer on Jun 25th, 2011 at 10:00am
lol, yer prolly right.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Mr. Sex Drugs Rock n Roll on Jun 25th, 2011 at 12:33pm
I'd like to see this tank just because Dave Stewart looks like such a pretentious ass, I'd like to piss in his face

:nomames

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by lavendar on Jun 25th, 2011 at 3:22pm
Thats 1 persons' opinion.  :stinkypost

I like Josses, Jagger and Stewarts work,

as for the other 2 ???? [unfamiliar]

We shall learn soon enough.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by coot tone on Jun 25th, 2011 at 8:27pm
To me it's obvious why Mick would be in this "band"....he wants to shag Joss Stone!

I really, really hope that the first time he came on too her she laughed at him and said, "No interest, Grandpa, I've read Keith's book."

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Ginda on Jun 25th, 2011 at 8:51pm

gimmekeef wrote on Jun 24th, 2011 at 1:43pm:
I've given myself a head ache trying to think of one great song Dave Stewart ever wrote?


Well...how about co-wrote?  I nominate I Saved the World Today.  It works for me.

Title: Super Stoned
Post by Bitch on Jun 26th, 2011 at 3:16pm
Dave Stewart says Musically, I don't know if it's 'super heavy.' That name came up when Damien was doing vocals on a song, and he started going, 'Heavy, heavy…we're super heavy!' And that just kind of stuck, you know? It's more super-heavy in a Jamaican way, not so much a heavy rock way. I think we'll have a single coming out in a few weeks, and then the album will be in the fall."

Super Heavy in a Jamacian way = Super Stoned in a spaced out way. This could be good after all!

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by mojoman on Jun 26th, 2011 at 4:10pm

coot tone wrote on Jun 25th, 2011 at 8:27pm:
To me it's obvious why Mick would be in this "band"....he wants to shag Joss Stone!

I really, really hope that the first time he came on too her she laughed at him and said, "No interest, Grandpa, I've read Keith's book."




LOL!!!

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Steel Wheels on Jun 26th, 2011 at 4:33pm
I'll give it a listen and if it's good I'll certainly buy it.

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 27th, 2011 at 6:33am

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f256/leftshoeshuffle/SuperHeavy/JS_CanalPlus.jpg
Joss Stone Talks SuperHeavy

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by riffkeither on Jun 27th, 2011 at 7:01am

Why not admit once and for all that Jagger might be a little tired of being a Rolling Stones and that after all he has done, said and wrote, he wants a bit of novelty and joy. I find your judgments very bitter and pretentious, have you  only made ​​music in a band once in your life ? let these kinds of comments to fans of Justin Bieber or Britney Spear to better focus on the essentials: music.
Maybe this new project will be better than another  under Dirty Work album  by the band ! :stinkypost

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 27th, 2011 at 7:07am


SuperHeavy

Launch date set for Jagger, Stewart and Stone SuperHeavy supergroup single

June 25, 2011

By Paul Williams, Stephen Jones


Universal has lined up a worldwide radio and commercial release date of July 7 for 'Miracle Worker', the first single from a newly-launched supergroup featuring Mick Jagger, Dave Stewart and Joss Stone.


'Slumdog Millionaire' soundtrack composer A R Rahman and reggae artist Damian Marley also feature as part of SuperHeavy, whose eponymous first album is due to be released via Universal’s A&M label on September 19.

Jagger told Music Week, “Dave really wanted to make a record with a different group of musicians; in other words, with different backgrounds of music. Instead of everyone being a rock musician, or basically a blues musician, or some other genre, he wanted to get as many genres together that would fit. I said,

‘It sounds like a good idea.’ I never thought it would actually happen.”

A&M UK managing director Orla Lee, who with her team is co-ordinating the project’s global roll-out, said the unique collection of the artists involved meant the campaign could target a wide range of fans both musically and geographically.

Lee, who also looks after The Rolling Stones for Universal, added, “On paper it maybe shouldn’t work but the combination of their voices together makes it work and when you look at it from a social-networking side

A R Rahman, for example, has 5m Facebook friends and The Rolling Stones 6.4m so you’ve got a truly global project.”

Ahead of the first single’s release, teaser images will roll out this week online and will include the album’s artwork, designed by American artist Shepard Fairey who was behind Barack Obama’s Hope poster for the 2008 US presidential election.

Other activity, including a video for the single, will follow in the run-up to the album’s release.

SuperHeavy brings together Jagger and Stewart for the first time since they worked on the soundtrack to the 2004 remake of the movie 'Alfie', while Stewart explained to Music Week that Stone was an “obvious” addition to the group. “She’s such an incredible singer and spirit,” he said.

Marley’s involvement was born from Jagger and Stewart’s shared love of Jamaican music. “We’d always wanted a Jamaican musician because Mick and I are crazy about Jamaica and Jamaican music,” said Stewart.

As for Rahman, he ended up in the group as the album began to be recorded in his home city of Los Angeles and they crossed paths with him. “He brings so much musical knowledge, amazing musicianship, melody and singing power from a different culture,” Stewart explained.

In just the first six days together 26 songs were written by the collective, while recording spread from LA to the south of France, Turkey, Miami, the Caribbean and Chennai in India, the locations mirroring the variety of the musical and geographical backgrounds of the five members.

And, despite all those egos in the same studio, Jagger said they found a way of working harmoniously together.

“With five of you everyone has to give and take quite a lot. We tried to understand everyone wouldn’t be too egotistical, start throwing things around the studio, we wouldn’t have fights,” he said.

“We were writing a lot of stuff and throwing it away. I would say, ‘That’s rubbish, another cliché Joss,’ and she’d say, ‘Well, you come up with something then!’”

But what emerged, according to Jagger, was something refreshing for everyone involved. “We’re four vocalists. We’ve never worked like that before. It’s great because the whole burden’s not on you and that made it fun.”

Music Week

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Some Guy on Jun 27th, 2011 at 7:47am
I wonder what radio station they will play it on.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by luxury on Jun 27th, 2011 at 8:12am
my gut tells me there may be a handful of shows/appearances this fall.  i hope it aint lyin to me

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by steel driving hammer on Jun 27th, 2011 at 8:13am
Sorry if this is a repost you bastards...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q3fkbMvUNJY&feature=player_embedded

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhP1CCwvj-0

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 27th, 2011 at 8:35am

luxury wrote on Jun 27th, 2011 at 8:12am:
my gut tells me there may be a handful of shows/appearances this fall.  i hope it aint lyin to me

Gotta think they'll do something...

The 'Live On Letterman' webcasts are great.
It'd be a slight to Mick's pal Jimmy Fallon, though...so maybe not.  

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Pdog on Jun 27th, 2011 at 8:39am
if they have their fingers within 100 miles of a pulse, it will debut online and be sold on iTunes.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Mel Belli on Jun 27th, 2011 at 8:47am

Some Guy wrote on Jun 27th, 2011 at 7:47am:
I wonder what radio station they will play it on.


What are radio stations?  [smiley=happy.gif]

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jun 27th, 2011 at 10:59am
Looks like they got the PR machine all cranked up and ready to promote. We'll see how it sounds. Thinking that another visit to Fallon might be in order. Other than that. I don't see much in the way of live performances. Maybe another talk show or 2.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gimmekeef on Jun 27th, 2011 at 11:10am

Some Guy wrote on Jun 27th, 2011 at 7:47am:
I wonder what radio station they will play it on.


Here in the ATL unless it is hip hoppy it might go on heavy rotation......between Sweet Home Alabama and....(insert any Steve Miller song here)

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jun 27th, 2011 at 11:38am

gimmekeef wrote on Jun 27th, 2011 at 11:10am:

Some Guy wrote on Jun 27th, 2011 at 7:47am:
I wonder what radio station they will play it on.


Here in the ATL unless it is hip hoppy it might go on heavy rotation......between Sweet Home Alabama and....(insert any Steve Miller song here)

It'll have to be really good to knock the Mumford Brotehrs out of their rotation on local radio. :stinkypost

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Some Guy on Jun 27th, 2011 at 12:06pm

gimmekeef wrote on Jun 27th, 2011 at 11:10am:

Some Guy wrote on Jun 27th, 2011 at 7:47am:
I wonder what radio station they will play it on.


Here in the ATL unless it is hip hoppy it might go on heavy rotation......between Sweet Home Alabama and....(insert any Steve Miller song here)

Steve and Vicki???

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 28th, 2011 at 4:29pm

From a Dave Stewart interview posted today @ http://www.spinner.com]Spinner:[/url]  


Kristin Burns

You've said that you like being a behind-the-scenes man. That's not the impression many people have of Mick Jagger. With this SuperHeavy supergroup, was he able to be a team player, or was it hard for him not to be the star?

He was great about it, actually. Everybody was adding their parts. He joined in a big room where we were recording, and there was only a tiny few occasions where there was mixed opinion about what should happen in a certain song. It was a real flow that happened, flowing out of everybody. Most of it was born out of huge long jams we started a couple years ago. I might start it or Damian might start it, and these recordings would be like 40 minutes for one song. It wasn't until the next few times we all started going, "That was as good bit. Let's use that, and let's put this together." And lyrics started to come more and more, and it just started to build and build, and now we've got 18 great songs. We started mixing, and then we said, "These sound killer."

A lot of fans have speculated about what SuperHeavy might sound like. Is it primarily reggae-based?

Some of it is reggae-kind of Caribbean, dancehall feeling. And then it flips into bluesy rock, and suddenly an Indian string section comes in -- all in one song. Anybody I've played it for has gone, "Holy s---. I've never heard anything like this."

With regard to Mick's other band, the Rolling Stones, what are your thoughts on rockers continuing to tour into old age? You've spoken fondly of the old bluesmen, such as RL Burnside, who played into his twilight years. Should the Stones be allowed to do likewise?

Yeah, I think these guys should do whatever they want to do, whenever they want to do it. They're true pioneers and legends, and just like RL Burnside and lots of my favorite blues players, any recordings of them, or last recordings, would be valuable to me.

Are there plans to tour behind SuperHeavy?

We're talking about how to perform such an epic fusion of sounds. There's lots of talk of different ways, almost like a happening, and I think when we do something, it'll be a happening. And it will have all sorts of people intersecting from different cultures and different walks of life and different ages, because of the fusion.

http://www.spinner.com]Spinner[/url]

A happening might be a-happening...

8-)

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 28th, 2011 at 4:32pm

http://img694.imageshack.us/img694/1724/332873748.jpg
Mixing Magic : ) - Dave Stewart, Chris Lord Alge, Mick Jagger




Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Nellcote on Jun 28th, 2011 at 6:32pm
They used to call these "sniglets"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eKyWVvuitbU&feature=youtu.be

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gotdablouse on Jun 28th, 2011 at 7:19pm
Sounds like that was ripped from the 10 minute clip posted by DS the other day, wish someone would put it back up again.

That track is interesting because MJ isn't the main singer, at least in that extract, but you can still here him very clearly. I'm sure he had more fun than trying to coax out some guitar lines or melodies from Keith like he had to do for ABB.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by LanternHigh on Jun 29th, 2011 at 8:06am
As far as I'm concerned, I'll not look for anything about he's doing.
Album? Just a shit.. :scary

            :forfucksake

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 29th, 2011 at 8:34am


SuperHeavy


Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Some Guy on Jun 29th, 2011 at 9:30am
I'm in

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gimmekeef on Jun 29th, 2011 at 9:37am
the more pictures etc I see the more I think Dave Stewart is full of himself.....reminds me of Jeff Lynn of ELO back in the day prancing around with his freakin cello like he was Jimmy Page ffs........

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by gimmekeef on Jun 29th, 2011 at 9:38am

left shoe shuffle wrote on Jun 29th, 2011 at 8:34am:

SuperHeavy


wouldnt mind exchanging that drum with my face!

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by lavendar on Jun 29th, 2011 at 3:31pm
YOW-ZA :willya

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jun 29th, 2011 at 4:01pm

gimmekeef wrote on Jun 29th, 2011 at 9:38am:

left shoe shuffle wrote on Jun 29th, 2011 at 8:34am:

SuperHeavy


wouldnt mind exchanging that drum with my face!

And you call me a perv! :nooslajaleisk

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Jun 29th, 2011 at 5:18pm
Our friend Curro Richards from Mérida, Spain extracted the audio from the video at the band's website, then re-recorded it backwards (so now you can listen forwards LOL), he also uploaded it and posted it at our message board in Spanish

It's 8 seconds... enjoy

Can't wait I'm sure it will a very good mix of reggae, soul, blues, rock, indian music, etc (don't expect the Stones, that's whay many of you don't like Mick's solo)

Download, play it LOUD and enjoy it http://www.megaupload.com/?d=SRQ8A0AE sounds good!

¡¡ Gracias Curro !!

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 29th, 2011 at 10:05pm

Joss Stone's releasing a new record, 'LP1', and doing some live dates to support it.
The SH-related excerpt below is from an interview with Gary Graff, published in today's Billboard.


Dimitri Hakke/Redferns



She hopes to line up more shows to support "LP1," but she's also in set-up mode for the September release of an album by SuperHeavy, the Stewart-organized band that also includes Mick Jagger, Academy Award-winning Indian film composer A.R. Rahman and Damian Marley.

"It feels like it was ages ago when we started that," Stone says. "It's quite interesting, because there's all these different dynamics in one room with all of these different people who have different styles and different ideas. It was really fun. I was running around like a little child going, 'This is so fun! I can't believe this!' and they were all looking at me like, 'OK, calm down...' "

Stone says the SuperHeavy album has "the weirdest sound...very eclectic. It's like world music, but it's not one style. It's just not normal, but it's a great to listen to." She isn't sure, however, what the group's plans will be once the album comes out.

"I'm waiting for Dave to call me and tell me what to do," Stone says. "I hope there is a tour, but you can imagine how hard it would be to get all of these people in one place at one time with everyone's schedules. Damian's making an album, and I thought I might be doing some acting. God knows what's going to happen, but I would definitely try to make myself available for any tour dates that come up. It would be the experience of a lifetime."


Billboard

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 29th, 2011 at 10:38pm




SuperHeavy: An Introduction

Mick Jagger - Damian Marley - A.R. Rahman - Dave Stewart - Joss Stone

Mick Jagger has teamed up with Eurythmics founder Dave Stewart, soul singer Joss Stone, Academy Award winning composer and global superstar A.R. Rahman and reggae star Damian Marley to form a band cooperative project called SuperHeavy.  This diverse and eclectic line up who share eleven Grammy Awards between them, have been recording together in various studios around the world, with the majority of the tracks on the project laid down over three weeks in Los Angeles earlier this year. The album will be unveiled in September and tracks include the first single ‘Miracle Worker’, plus ‘One Day One Night’, ‘Energy’, ‘Unbelievable,’ ‘SuperHeavy,’ I Can’t Take It No More,’ ‘You’re Never Gonna Change’ and ‘I Don’t Mind.’

A promo video for ‘Miracle Worker’ will be shot later this month and will feature Jagger, Stewart, Marley, Stone and Rahman.

It’s little wonder that Stewart refers to SuperHeavy as, “A mad alchemist type experiment”. Fusing the talents of one of the greatest front-men of all time, a two time Academy award winning Indian composer, a soul vocal prodigy, a three time Grammy winning reggae star, and one of the most sought after producers in the world, you would expect the explosive results to defy categorisation.

SuperHeavy came together after Jagger and Stewart considered what a band comprising of musicians from different genres would sound like. Jagger explains, “Dave really wanted to make a record with a different group of musicians, in other words, with different backgrounds of music. Instead of everyone being a rock musician, or basically a blues musician, or some other genre, he wanted to get as many genres together that would fit. I said it sounds like a good idea, I never thought it would actually happen.”

Yet soon enough Jagger found himself back in the studio with Stewart and Joss Stone, having previously worked together on the 2004 Alfie movie soundtrack. Stewart says Stone was, “an obvious choice for us. She’s such an incredible singer and spirit.”  Stewart and Jagger’s dream team took further shape when they were inspired to bring Damian Marley into the mix, says Stewart, “We’d always wanted a Jamaican musician because Mick and I are crazy about Jamaica and Jamaican music. Stewart has worked with legend Jimmy Cliff while Mick has duetted with Peter Tosh from the Wailers on the Temptations tune “Don’t Look Back” in 1978.

We were listening to loads of stuff and suddenly a light bulb went off and we thought about Damian Marley.” Jagger had long been a fan of Marley’s, fresh from another cross-genre collaboration with American rapper Nas, citing his strength as a lyricist and toaster along with his penchant for experimentation and collaborative spirit.  Marley brought on board his rhythm section, bassist and composer Shiah Coore and drummer Courtney Diedrick, while Stewart introduced the band to his long-term collaborator Ann Marie Calhoun, a rock violinist who had previously worked with the Foo Fighters.

Recording in LA meant the band’s path crossed with legendary Indian composer A.R. Rahman, in the City of Angels fresh from his Slumdog Millionaire Oscar glory. Jagger explains, “We didn’t know what kind of music we’d make, we didn’t know if it would be any good, but we hoped we’d have fun.” They were thrilled to have Rahman on board, Stewart says, “He brings so much musical knowledge, amazing musicianship, melody and singing power from a different culture.”

Despite their disparate backgrounds, they instantly connected and hit the ground running, writing twenty-two songs in the first six days. Stone was thrilled with the results, “That’s what you need, all these opinionated people who have been brilliant in their own field, shove them together and see what comes out. It’s really unexpected, it’s mind blowing” she enthuses. Similarly enthused was Rahman, “The first day I was in a daze thinking, ‘What am I doing? What’s my role?’ and then slowly we started writing with each other, and it was great. It took me way back to my high school days when I was playing in a rock band, but this one was a real one!” Jagger says of the writing process, “We ran the gamut of all our different styles mixed up, so we got Joss singing, Damian doing toasting, and me singing different styles.”

However, despite the free flow of creative juices and the easy rapport they established, getting the band together in one place became very difficult, as Stewart explains, “It’s the most complicated record ever made. Imagine, some of it’s recorded in LA, some of it’s recorded in the South of France, some of it’s recorded off the coast of Cyprus, some of it’s recorded in Turkey, some of it’s recorded in Miami, some of it’s recorded in the Caribbean, and some of it’s recorded in Chennai, in India.”

The project needed a name. Marley had been riffing the term “SuperHeavy”, inspired by Muhammad Ali being the super heavy weight champion of the world and the phrase became the band’s catchphrase, “It was Mick who said, ‘Why don’t we call it SuperHeavy?”, recalls Stewart, “We all thought about it for ages and then it sort of stuck.”

SuperHeavy is a new and spontaneous way of working for all the collaborators as Jagger explains, “I said to Dave, normally [with the Stones] we’d always have written songs before we go into the studio, but the jam sessions resulted in some great work believes Stone, “It felt better when we were just jamming, that way we made it up as we went along and it was easy.”

The band found a harmonious way of working together, “With five of you everyone has to give and take quite a lot. We tried to understand everyone wouldn’t be too egotistical, start throwing things around the studio, we wouldn’t have fights!” says Jagger.  However they weren’t averse to telling each other to be better either, Jagger continues, “We were writing a lot of stuff and throwing it away.  I would say, ‘That’s rubbish, another cliché Joss’, and she’d say, ‘Well you come up with something then!’” The experience was refreshing and exciting for the band, “We’re four vocalists, we’ve never worked like that before.  It’s great because the whole burdens not on you, and that made it fun.” Jagger enthuses.

Back to that alchemical experiment, Jagger, Stewart, Marley, Rahman and Stone appear to have created a new genre. It’s a new kind of music, it’s a new genre, one that cannot be placed” says Stone. Yet, Jagger is keen to point out the music is accessible, “It’s very approachable. If you’re a Rolling Stones fan there’s definitely stuff you can relate to. Other stuff that you can’t relate to so much, maybe if you listen you’ll enjoy it.”

A first for Mick Jagger is singing in Urdu, on a song composed by Rahman, entitled “Satyameva Jayate”, meaning, “the truth alone triumphs”, Rahman wrote the song after some gentle teasing from the others.  Rahman explains, “In the daytime I was playing with them, in the night time and evenings I was gigging” “Then”, says Jagger, “He didn’t come into the studio one day, so I said, ‘Where’s A.R?’ and he came in really late at night, really pleased saying, ‘I’ve got my song!’ I manage one line in Urdu, only one!”

Marley’s way of working was different to the rest of the band. Stone reveals, “Damian is kind of quiet but he has some brilliant ideas. He works on stuff at night. Sometimes he’ll just go away and sit with the lyrics and bring something to it. His rhythm section brings so much. He has his own thing going in the next room so I pop in and out.” Marley would work on toasting over the record by himself and re-join the band when he was happy with it.

As far as the future of SuperHeavy goes, “We haven’t planned to do a tour or anything, but if people really like it maybe we will. We’d love to get out and play some of it live,” says Jagger humbly. “As soon as we started playing together in the studio it gelled, and all these different styles didn’t seem to be a problem to make them fit together... I hope people will like it....”

Main Credits on the ‘SuperHeavy’ album are - Mick Jagger (vocals, guitar and harmonica), Dave Stewart (guitar), Joss Stone (vocals), Damian Marley (vocals) and A. R. Rahman (vocals plus a variety of keyboards).

The SuperHeavy album is co-produced by Jagger & Stewart.

Universal Music will release the album worldwide on their A& M label imprint.

universal-music.de


Some choice morsels in that EPK.

@DaveStewart says the video shoot's been happening the last two days...

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gotdablouse on Jun 30th, 2011 at 2:44am
"I said to Dave, normally [with the Stones] we’d always have written songs before we go into the studio"

"Normally" being post-1986, before that there was a lot jamming going on. I bet Keith isn't going to be happy about that.

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by LanternHigh on Jun 30th, 2011 at 3:56am
http://www.zikeo.com/pop-rock/2396-mick-jagger-rolling-stones/

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by gotdablouse on Jun 30th, 2011 at 4:01am
What a bunch of idiots, they couldn't even get his age right!

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Gazza on Jun 30th, 2011 at 7:49am
Not only that - the suggestion that he's 'abandoned' the Rolling Stones makes it sound like he's jumped ship from the band completely!

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 30th, 2011 at 9:26am


SuperHeavy


Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by riffkeither on Jun 30th, 2011 at 11:14am

left shoe shuffle wrote on Jun 30th, 2011 at 9:26am:

SuperHeavy

where 's the drummer ?

Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by Gazza on Jun 30th, 2011 at 1:57pm

Voodoo Chile in Wonderland wrote on Jun 29th, 2011 at 5:18pm:
Our friend Curro Richards from Mérida, Spain extracted the audio from the video at the band's website, then re-recorded it backwards (so now you can listen forwards LOL), he also uploaded it and posted it at our message board in Spanish

It's 8 seconds... enjoy

Can't wait I'm sure it will a very good mix of reggae, soul, blues, rock, indian music, etc (don't expect the Stones, that's whay many of you don't like Mick's solo)

Download, play it LOUD and enjoy it http://www.megaupload.com/?d=SRQ8A0AE sounds good!

¡¡ Gracias Curro !!



I like the sound of this. The reggae track sounded good too, going by the 45-second clip.

Title: Re: SuperHeavy
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jun 30th, 2011 at 3:08pm



'SuperHeavy' Song Teaser

'evvy, 'evvy...


Title: Re: Mick's "Secret" Album - Super Heavy
Post by lavendar on Jun 30th, 2011 at 5:36pm
No Justice WHAT-So-Ever.   :thatwassmart

What about the commercial for the Car ???

and Mick was singin ??

I just listened to "UnderMy Thumb"
I bet it was remastered cuz it sounded Great.

Dave Stewart singing "Can't Get You Out Of My Head" the JAMMIN was ExCellent,

but he sounded like Keith !!! WTF ?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 1st, 2011 at 8:39am


SuperHeavy

Video shoot – done! What a great couple of days - we can't wait for you to see it… In the meantime a little something for you .....

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 1st, 2011 at 8:42am

Mick Jagger's New Group SuperHeavy Unveils Music

by Phil Gallo, Los Angeles  |   July 01, 2011


Frank W. Ockenfels


Details about the Mick Jagger-Dave Stewart supergroup SuperHeavy have been released slowly and the first public introduction of the music was almost as cagey. Jagger, Stewart, soul singer Joss Stone, reggae artist Damian Marley and film composer A.R. Rahman gathered to speak about the making of the album after about half of it was played -- no song titles provided --  Thursday (June 30) afternoon at the Jim Henson Studios in Los Angeles. Their chat emphasized the unique nature of the project and the random way in which the music, a multi-cultural free-for-all at the start, came together.

They entered the studio with "ideas, a few guitar riffs and a few snippets of lyrics," Jagger told the small group assembled to hear the tracks. "It's not my usual sort of way of working. You always want to leave some room for improvisation, but you need to have something, some songs, when you walk into the studio.

"It evolved very quickly. We sat around with our little pads (writing). We did do a lot of jams but it's all coherent and arranged. We just wrote them quickly."

"I wasn't really familiar with everyone else's music before," Marley added, "but you observe how they work. It was a great experience."

Stewart received gasps of amazement and then rolls of laughter when he said they recorded 29 songs in 10 days. "Some are an hour and 10 minutes long, some songs are 42 minutes long," he said. It total, he guessed there was more than 35 hours of music recorded, from which he and his engineer found the highlights that would work as the roots of songs. "We re-convened and then sort of made it into a shape and in the last year it fell into place," he said.

One of the seven tracks played Thursday was the first single "Miracle Worker," a video for which was shot Wednesday. While most of the tracks played mix and match elements from multiple cultures -- Indian film music, reggae, blues, soul music and a dose of "Sister Morphine" -- "Miracle Worker" is a straight reggae tune. (The album's concept, from the start, was to see what would happen if a band of musicians from different cultures composed and recorded together.)

"One Day One Night" has the strongest collage construction, a mix of electronic beats, Indian and Jamaican rhythms and the blues with Jagger singing about the life of a run-down man -- the cheap motel, the fuzzy picture on the TV set and the warm vodka. "You're Never Gonna Change" is the most Rolling Stones-like song of the batch, a tense acoustic-guitar-driven number sung with a street-smart swagger by Jagger. "Energy," with Marley rapping the verses, is an upbeat "Slumdog Millionaire"-style dance track and the track "SuperHeavy," too, has a distinct Indian flavor in the beats and, toward its conclusion, a cinematic string section.

Other, less obviously named cuts included a ballad sung by Stone and fascinating blend of a dub bass line and strings to create a compelling pop song. Jagger said the selections chosen are representative of the album.

"It's powerful," Stewart said after noting how he got the idea for SuperHeavy from hearing various sounds from off in the distance while in Jamaica. "I love musicians from all over the world, but never liked the term 'world music.' That sounds like people knitting with yogurt."

After the event Stone said in a separate interview that they would wait to see the reaction to the album after it is released Sept. 20 before determining a next step for the band. Stone intends to tour the U.S. in early 2012 in support of her upcoming "LP1" and "by then, fingers crossed, if the world likes SuperHeavy, we'll do some shows."

Billboard

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Jul 1st, 2011 at 9:09am
hmmmmmm..the most Stonesy sounding tune has Jagger belting..."You're Never Gonna Change"......wonder who that might be directed at?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Jul 1st, 2011 at 11:25am
Keith should of done a solo Super Group Ego Trip Power thing FIRST then invite ALL his close (and new) friends to record w/ some "Super Heavy People" god I hate that phrase.

Mick ain't no Travelling Wilburys either.

Was at the pool yesterday and heard that Moves Like Mick song and thought to meself, you have to be kidding.

This album may be raw and rootsy, but lol, it's not a Super Group.

Prolly be better than Dogshit in the Doorway though.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Heart Of Stone on Jul 1st, 2011 at 12:25pm
it will be interesting to hear this when it comes out, it certainly isn't a supergroup, outside of Stewart, I never heard of the others, this ain't Blind Faith or Ringo's all star band.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Jul 1st, 2011 at 12:53pm
Which is probably a good thing too!

I'm glad Mick found a good group of people to work with , must have been a nice change from being the top dog on his solo stuff and not getting proper input, except maybe from Rick Rubin, or putting up with Keith and his diminishing creativity and guitar skills, not to mention the boring Don Was.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Soldatti on Jul 1st, 2011 at 5:52pm
A video with snippets of 5-6 songs:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6YyheJkhFGc&feature=player_embedded


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Jul 1st, 2011 at 8:07pm
Sounds GOOD.


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by The Wick on Jul 1st, 2011 at 8:23pm
Unlike many other fans, I'm a fan of Mick's solo stufff. With some better production, there are some amazing songs there. However, and I hate to say this, but this sounds like utter crap. One of the greatest lyricists of all time is twatting on with "evy evy evy" and other shocking lyrics. The sad truth is that the Mick many of us want may have just evolved out of him and many of us unfortunately don't like this Mick. I thought this would sound much better because Dave Stewart has done some great stuff and the other influences sounded interesting but it just sounds crap. It could also be Joss Stone. I know she's supposed to have this amazing voice but there's something about her singing that's annoying. Her fake American accent is even more shocking. Mick should be above playing with musicians who are not close to his league.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Some Guy on Jul 1st, 2011 at 8:56pm
I'm out. We will not support this.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Bitch on Jul 1st, 2011 at 9:13pm
I like the sound of Miracle Worker, it's got sexy lyrics. So for me, it's good since any new MICK is exciting, and I like the Rastaman, he's hot too! Joss Stone, yeah I agree, she's annoying. Dave Stewart seems like a pompous ass but I respect him anyway, at least he's got experience and talent. THANKS FOR POSTING THE VIDEO CLIP!!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 12:29am

Soldatti wrote on Jul 1st, 2011 at 5:52pm:
A video with snippets of 5-6 songs:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6YyheJkhFGc&feature=player_embedded
Thanks, looks like the clip that DS posted on FB the other day. Seemed to remember it was 10 minutes long but everything seems to be there.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by PartyDoll MEG on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 6:26am
It's got me interested.-Like the sound of most of the video teaser.  Miracle Worker sounded great!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 9:45am
Mick Jagger and SuperHeavy Preview Album, Ponder Tour in Los Angeles
by Steve Baltin
Mick Jagger, Dave Stewart, Joss Stone, AR Rahman and Damian Marley got together at L.A.'s Jim Henson Studios on Thursday to preview their new SuperHeavy album and talk to a few invited guests about one of the most anticipated records of the fall.
The hour-long listening session began with a short documentary showing the band recording at Henson Studios, before the invited guests got a taste of what it sounds like when cultures, genres and generations gather together for a supergroup.
In the press conference afterward, Stone said, "We've made this crazy music that doesn't sound like anything else. It's its own thing." And Jagger joked it will end up in the uncategorized section of iTunes. It may indeed, and that is a good thing.
The eight songs played showed an impressive array of diversity, from the heavy rock and reggae feel of 'SuperHeavy' and the uplifting pop lilt of the first single, 'Miracle Worker' to a double shot of vintage Jagger, the ballad 'You're Never Gonna Change, and the slightly ominous feel of 'One Day, One Night,' which also features Marley taking the song home with a huge finale.
Jagger also spoke about how much fun it was for him to do a project with four other vocalists. "For me, working with four other vocalists was interesting. I realized we all had a part to play," he said. While Jagger might be the main attraction for those curious what his first band outside of the Stones sounds like, this is a collective. And what was truly exciting about the music was the seamlessness with which the vocalists work together. Often in the eight songs the group played, which Jagger said was just half the record, Jagger and Stone could be heard exchanging vocals with Marley coming in and toasting, all three of the voices interwoven brilliantly.
As the band made their way out yesterday to the five chairs seated in front, Jagger commented on the video shoot they had done the night before at the Paramount lot. Later on, Stone commented on the video, "We need to play again, but without extras, for real people." So, will the collective hit the road?

"It was fun miming it," Jagger said. "If everyone wants to hear it, I'm sure we'll do it."

Count us in.

[www.spinner.com]

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 9:47am

PartyDoll MEG wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 6:26am:
It's got me interested.-Like the sound of most of the video teaser.  Miracle Worker sounded great!


'Miracle Worker' single is now available for pre-order' Released July 7th.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 11:46am

PartyDoll MEG wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 6:26am:
It's got me interested.-Like the sound of most of the video teaser.  Miracle Worker sounded great!

Kind of interesting, would sound a lot better without Damien Marley's cringe inducing vocals.IMHO

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 11:55am

sweetcharmedlife wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 11:46am:

PartyDoll MEG wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 6:26am:
It's got me interested.-Like the sound of most of the video teaser.  Miracle Worker sounded great!

Kind of interesting, would sound a lot better without Damien Marley's cringe inducing vocals.IMHO


Agreed, I can't stand that rap/reggae shit either. :boring

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 12:48pm

steel driving hammer wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 11:55am:

sweetcharmedlife wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 11:46am:

PartyDoll MEG wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 6:26am:
It's got me interested.-Like the sound of most of the video teaser.  Miracle Worker sounded great!

Kind of interesting, would sound a lot better without Damien Marley's cringe inducing vocals.IMHO


Agreed, I can't stand that rap/reggae shit either. :boring


The irony of that statement, considering your footer picture....

Really looking forward to this. The video preview posted today augurs well. And it appears that Mick has re-discovered his vocal chops.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 1:06pm

steel driving hammer wrote on Jul 1st, 2011 at 11:25am:
Keith should of done a solo Super Group Ego Trip Power thing FIRST then invite ALL his close (and new) friends to record w/ some "Super Heavy People" god I hate that phrase.

Mick ain't no Travelling Wilburys either.

Was at the pool yesterday and heard that Moves Like Mick song and thought to meself, you have to be kidding.

This album may be raw and rootsy, but lol, it's not a Super Group.



Yes it is. Just because some of them arent from a musical genre that you have any interest in.

Marley  - winner of three Grammys. Promising enough career for a 32-year old.

Rahman - hugely successful producer, musician and film composer (Slumdog Millionaire). From wikipedia - He has won two Academy Awards, two Grammy Awards, a BAFTA Award, a Golden Globe, four National Film Awards, fourteen Filmfare Awards, eleven South Filmfare Awards in addition to numerous other awards and nominations. Time has referred to him as the "Mozart of Madras" and several Tamil commentators and fans have coined him the nickname Isai Puyal (Tamil: இசைப் புயல்; English: Music Storm). In 2009, Time placed Rahman in its list of World's Most Influential People....then again, you probably think no one watches Indian films...

Stone - Grammy award 2007. Two Brit Awards 2005. UK number 1 album 2004. US number 2 album 2007. First two albums went triple platinum in the UK.

Stewart hardly needs much introduction, but he's an acclaimed producer and musician who as well as selling millions of records with the Eurythmics has worked with several top artists from Dylan and Jagger downwards.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 1:07pm

Gazza wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 12:48pm:

steel driving hammer wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 11:55am:

sweetcharmedlife wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 11:46am:

PartyDoll MEG wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 6:26am:
It's got me interested.-Like the sound of most of the video teaser.  Miracle Worker sounded great!

Kind of interesting, would sound a lot better without Damien Marley's cringe inducing vocals.IMHO


Agreed, I can't stand that rap/reggae shit either. :boring


The irony of that statement, considering your footer picture....

Really looking forward to this. The video preview posted today augurs well. And it appears that Mick has re-discovered his vocal chops.


Rap/Reggae mixed it was Gazza.

You know there IS a difference...Sounded like top 40 popular bullshit.

There is a difference,

vs something say,

But yes, there is some feeling in the other songs.


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 1:25pm

Gazza wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 12:48pm:

steel driving hammer wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 11:55am:

sweetcharmedlife wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 11:46am:

PartyDoll MEG wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 6:26am:
It's got me interested.-Like the sound of most of the video teaser.  Miracle Worker sounded great!

Kind of interesting, would sound a lot better without Damien Marley's cringe inducing vocals.IMHO


Agreed, I can't stand that rap/reggae shit either. :boring

And it appears that Mick has re-discovered his vocal chops.

Really? Sounds just like the vocals on Following the River that you said you couldn't stand.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Tumbling Dijs on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 2:45pm
Well, it's way to early to make any well thought comment, but what I hear really surprises me in a positve way. My expectations were zero but now??

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 2:57pm
Yes Dijs, this confirms my previous expectations of an exquisite mixture of rock, blues, soul and reggae with a delicious touch of Indian music. Be prepared!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 3:46pm

sweetcharmedlife wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 1:25pm:

Gazza wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 12:48pm:

steel driving hammer wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 11:55am:

sweetcharmedlife wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 11:46am:

PartyDoll MEG wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 6:26am:
It's got me interested.-Like the sound of most of the video teaser.  Miracle Worker sounded great!

Kind of interesting, would sound a lot better without Damien Marley's cringe inducing vocals.IMHO


Agreed, I can't stand that rap/reggae shit either. :boring

And it appears that Mick has re-discovered his vocal chops.

Really? Sounds just like the vocals on Following the River that you said you couldn't stand.


Dont recall saying I 'couldnt stand' his vocal on that one. 'Watching The River Flow' was another thing. That was truly hideous. This sounds like he's put a bit of effort into it, instead of being something he phoned in during a break in his afternoon tennis lesson.  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Tumbling Dijs on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 4:57pm
I guess it must be difficult for Keith watching his lifetime "friend" making music and having fun with another band. This is something completely different than another solo album of Mick which was so easy to critisize, and this could be bigger then we thought it would be. He will have to swollow his nasty comments to make it possible for the Stones to tour again for maybe the last time. After all, this time, time is NOT on our side.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 6:45pm
Yes very different and the best thing that could happen to Mick really, being part of a band again, I mean the Stones haven't been a real band since BJ nosedived, ever since it's been Mick running the show pretty much...and 40 years of doing that is not good for your ego. The only time he was ever really challenged was by Rubin during the WS sessions and he didn't like that. This time was 4 other contributing band members there was no direct confrontation.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 6:53pm

Gazza wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 3:46pm:

sweetcharmedlife wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 1:25pm:

Gazza wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 12:48pm:

steel driving hammer wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 11:55am:

sweetcharmedlife wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 11:46am:

PartyDoll MEG wrote on Jul 2nd, 2011 at 6:26am:
It's got me interested.-Like the sound of most of the video teaser.  Miracle Worker sounded great!

Kind of interesting, would sound a lot better without Damien Marley's cringe inducing vocals.IMHO


Agreed, I can't stand that rap/reggae shit either. :boring

And it appears that Mick has re-discovered his vocal chops.

Really? Sounds just like the vocals on Following the River that you said you couldn't stand.


Dont recall saying I 'couldnt stand' his vocal on that one. 'Watching The River Flow' was another thing. That was truly hideous. This sounds like he's put a bit of effort into it, instead of being something he phoned in during a break in his afternoon tennis lesson.  

Yeah I got my rivers mixed up. But I didn't mind the vocals on WTRF. Same way he's been singing for the last 20 years. :-/

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by LadyJane on Jul 3rd, 2011 at 12:57am
If Superheavy is a death knell for The Rolling Stones (as I suspect) I can't listen.
And I really mean CAN'T.
That's just me.

LJ.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gorda on Jul 3rd, 2011 at 1:59am
Keith!  Help!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 3rd, 2011 at 7:43am


SuperHeavy



Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 3rd, 2011 at 7:45am


SuperHeavy


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by moy on Jul 3rd, 2011 at 8:26pm
Sir Mick Jagger Considers Super Heavy Tour
04 July 2011 01:40  

Rock fans hoping for a Rolling Stones tour have been dealt a blow after Sir Mick Jagger hinted at plans to hit the road with his new supergroup.

Speculation has been rife that the Brown Sugar hitmakers will kick off a string of concerts to mark their 50th anniversary next year (12), but frontman Jagger admits he is considering a trek with his new band, Super Heavy, if their debut proves to be a hit.

He says, "We haven't planned to do a tour but if people really like it maybe we will."

The rocker has formed Super Heavy with Joss Stone, the Eurythmics' Dave Stewart, reggae superstar Damian Marley and Oscar-winning composer A.R. Rahman.

Super Heavy is due to release its first LP in September (11)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by LadyJane on Jul 3rd, 2011 at 10:49pm
"Rock fans hoping for a Rolling Stones tour have been dealt a blow after Sir Mick Jagger hinted at plans to hit the road with his new supergroup."

Insert photo of large bell ringing the death knell..............

I'm really starting to believe it's over.  :forfucksake

Damn.
LJ.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 3rd, 2011 at 11:37pm

Not exactly "new" news. Just contactmusic.com taking a single quote from the UMG electronic press kit and sensationalizing it.
Meanwhile they couldn't even be bothered to attach a picture of Mick to their article, ffs.

Mick talked about the possibility of some live dates weeks ago when he first confirmed his involvement with the project.
Dave Stewart and Joss Stone have also mentioned it.

Will SuperHeavy tour?
Maybe. Maybe not.

But imo the album/tour won't be the reason the Stones stop rolling...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by LanternHigh on Jul 4th, 2011 at 5:37am
No LJ! If you, just YOU begin to say that's over for the Stones.. I dsagree totally.  :scary
Maybe I cant get it.. but what I wish and hope is that they guys will return in their own minds and then decide to tour togetther.
There's no reason to think it, Mick may do a short tour to promote his solo.. and stop, he couldnt go on so long nevertheless his biggest ego. :stinkypost

If you give up.. also the other will do.   :forfucksake

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 4th, 2011 at 6:58am

LadyJane wrote on Jul 3rd, 2011 at 10:49pm:
"Rock fans hoping for a Rolling Stones tour have been dealt a blow after Sir Mick Jagger hinted at plans to hit the road with his new supergroup."

Insert photo of large bell ringing the death knell..............

I'm really starting to believe it's over.  :forfucksake

Damn.
LJ.



For fucks sake, LJ. Some unnamed dimwit reporter (contact music for chrissake - the WORST source of music news on the PLANET) puts 2 and 2 together and gets 9 just for the sake of a headline (as they always do) and you fall for it hook, line and sinker every time. Come on, girl, shake yourself!  [smiley=2vrolijk_08.gif]

This record is out in September. They probably WONT tour as there's unlikely to be a market for it,. If they do, it'll be brief. This record has been in the planning for TWO years. Its not something Jagger suddenly threw together in a fit of pique because Keith said he had a small cock. And Joss Stone (as far as I know) is touring soon anyway in her own right.

The Stones were never going to tour until at LEAST next summer. There's nothing there that would prevent their plans to do so. Universal will release a Some Girls deluxe later this year and a new greatest hits record in 2012 which the band will probably use to promote any touring. They dont even need to make a new record.

There's hundreds of millions of dollars waiting for them to pick up if they choose to tour again next year. Mick's going to pass that up because of some stupid quote in a book that the media chose to blow out of all sense of proportion.  Doubtful.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 4th, 2011 at 7:02am

left shoe shuffle wrote on Jul 3rd, 2011 at 11:37pm:
Not exactly "new" news. Just contactmusic.com taking a single quote from the UMG electronic press kit and sensationalizing it.
Meanwhile they couldn't even be bothered to attach a picture of Mick to their article, ffs.

Mick talked about the possibility of some live dates weeks ago when he first confirmed his involvement with the project.
Dave Stewart and Joss Stone have also mentioned it.

Will SuperHeavy tour?
Maybe. Maybe not.

But imo the album/tour won't be the reason the Stones stop rolling...


The interview I read with Stewart suggested a tour in it's headline. Stewart's quote however didnt even hint at it. He merely talked about a possible 'event' or a 'happening'.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 4th, 2011 at 1:47pm


SuperHeavy


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ian Billen on Jul 4th, 2011 at 4:58pm

Gazza wrote on Jul 4th, 2011 at 6:58am:

LadyJane wrote on Jul 3rd, 2011 at 10:49pm:
"Rock fans hoping for a Rolling Stones tour have been dealt a blow after Sir Mick Jagger hinted at plans to hit the road with his new supergroup."

Insert photo of large bell ringing the death knell..............

I'm really starting to believe it's over.  :forfucksake

Damn.
LJ.



For fucks sake, LJ. Some unnamed dimwit reporter (contact music for chrissake - the WORST source of music news on the PLANET) puts 2 and 2 together and gets 9 just for the sake of a headline (as they always do) and you fall for it hook, line and sinker every time. Come on, girl, shake yourself!  [smiley=2vrolijk_08.gif]

This record is out in September. They probably WONT tour as there's unlikely to be a market for it,. If they do, it'll be brief. This record has been in the planning for TWO years. Its not something Jagger suddenly threw together in a fit of pique because Keith said he had a small cock. And Joss Stone (as far as I know) is touring soon anyway in her own right.

The Stones were never going to tour until at LEAST next summer. There's nothing there that would prevent their plans to do so. Universal will release a Some Girls deluxe later this year and a new greatest hits record in 2012 which the band will probably use to promote any touring. They dont even need to make a new record.

There's hundreds of millions of dollars waiting for them to pick up if they choose to tour again next year. Mick's going to pass that up because of some stupid quote in a book that the media chose to blow out of all sense of proportion.  Doubtful.


__________________________________________

Lol ... I see LJ's concern Gazza. Why? Because it is occurring this fall. Not much time left for The Stones to write/record if this is gonna be a three, four, oe five month ordeal. However your saying the don't "need" a new record to tour. I agree, however it's my opinion they (Mick/Keith) are going to want to do one. I don't see them re-doing a Forty Licks album/tour specifically. They have already been there and done that. The Stones are going to want it different from  the forty year extravaganza. I truly think they will want to do an album for it. What LJ means is simply that there won't be much time. Honestly, I can only see Superheavy doin a small string of shows or a few promo gigs. Still ... If we are headed into early Winter and The Stones gotten together it would be pushing time constraints especially if they wanted to get an album out. Just sayin.

Ian


Ian

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Tumbling Dijs on Jul 4th, 2011 at 5:52pm
As I said here before, Mick is always very involved in every little detail of a tour organisation, and we can only imagine how much work this is and how much time this takes. If he says a Super Heavy tour is possible, it means (imo) that at this moment there's not even a beginning of planning a new Stones tour. If the possibility of a Super Heavy tour exists, this tour will be maybe the last monts of this year. BUT, no way it's possible to organize a Stones tour in let's say, a half year (from january) for 2012. Maybe they'll surprise us with a few concerts to celebrate their 50th, but I wouldn't bet on it. Then, their last chance (again imo) will be 2013.

ps. until now I haven't read or heard any comments from Keith about Super Heavy. Maybe he's keeping a low profile. That could be a good sign!!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Joey on Jul 4th, 2011 at 6:46pm
" Rock fans hoping for a Rolling Stones tour have been dealt a blow after Sir Mick Jagger hinted at plans to hit the road with his new supergroup.  "


THIS MAKES YOUNG JOEY CRY LIKE BABY !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Why ?!  

WHY .. ?!


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Why ?!


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 4th, 2011 at 7:10pm

Ian Billen wrote on Jul 4th, 2011 at 4:58pm:

Gazza wrote on Jul 4th, 2011 at 6:58am:

LadyJane wrote on Jul 3rd, 2011 at 10:49pm:
"Rock fans hoping for a Rolling Stones tour have been dealt a blow after Sir Mick Jagger hinted at plans to hit the road with his new supergroup."

Insert photo of large bell ringing the death knell..............

I'm really starting to believe it's over.  :forfucksake

Damn.
LJ.



For fucks sake, LJ. Some unnamed dimwit reporter (contact music for chrissake - the WORST source of music news on the PLANET) puts 2 and 2 together and gets 9 just for the sake of a headline (as they always do) and you fall for it hook, line and sinker every time. Come on, girl, shake yourself!  [smiley=2vrolijk_08.gif]

This record is out in September. They probably WONT tour as there's unlikely to be a market for it,. If they do, it'll be brief. This record has been in the planning for TWO years. Its not something Jagger suddenly threw together in a fit of pique because Keith said he had a small cock. And Joss Stone (as far as I know) is touring soon anyway in her own right.

The Stones were never going to tour until at LEAST next summer. There's nothing there that would prevent their plans to do so. Universal will release a Some Girls deluxe later this year and a new greatest hits record in 2012 which the band will probably use to promote any touring. They dont even need to make a new record.

There's hundreds of millions of dollars waiting for them to pick up if they choose to tour again next year. Mick's going to pass that up because of some stupid quote in a book that the media chose to blow out of all sense of proportion.  Doubtful.


__________________________________________

Lol ... I see LJ's concern Gazza. Why? Because it is occurring this fall. Not much time left for The Stones to write/record if this is gonna be a three, four, oe five month ordeal. However your saying the don't "need" a new record to tour. I agree, however it's my opinion they (Mick/Keith) are going to want to do one. I don't see them re-doing a Forty Licks album/tour specifically. They have already been there and done that. The Stones are going to want it different from  the forty year extravaganza. I truly think they will want to do an album for it. What LJ means is simply that there won't be much time. Honestly, I can only see Superheavy doin a small string of shows or a few promo gigs. Still ... If we are headed into early Winter and The Stones gotten together it would be pushing time constraints especially if they wanted to get an album out. Just sayin.

Ian


Ian



Why? No one apart from us cares about a new Stones record. Universal gave them a contract without even insisting on new material and as can be seen from the last tour, the band certainly have no faith in new material. The next tour will be a nostalgiafest built around their 50th anniversary - not a celebration of new music - and we all know that the decision to make it a nostalgia tour in 2002 has been the template ever since, no matter how much they chose to dress the last tour up.

There'll be two new releases between now and this time next year. A Some Girls deluxe and a greatest hits release (both of them probably multi-disc releases). An album of new material would be flooding the market and will be the one that will probably gather the least interest commercially.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 4th, 2011 at 7:42pm

Tumbling Dijs wrote on Jul 4th, 2011 at 5:52pm:
As I said here before, Mick is always very involved in every little detail of a tour organisation, and we can only imagine how much work this is and how much time this takes. If he says a Super Heavy tour is possible, it means (imo) that at this moment there's not even a beginning of planning a new Stones tour. If the possibility of a Super Heavy tour exists, this tour will be maybe the last monts of this year. BUT, no way it's possible to organize a Stones tour in let's say, a half year (from january) for 2012. Maybe they'll surprise us with a few concerts to celebrate their 50th, but I wouldn't bet on it. Then, their last chance (again imo) will be 2013.

ps. until now I haven't read or heard any comments from Keith about Super Heavy. Maybe he's keeping a low profile. That could be a good sign!!


Keith was asked about it in a recent interview and said that he wished Mick luck with it.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Jul 4th, 2011 at 8:02pm
For Mick’s sake!! My dear LadyJane… SuperHeavy was conceived in 2008, the recordings begun in 2008 and it’s almost done, if they tour this year it doesn’t matter, If the Stones want, they would record later this year, the 50th anniversary album and tour (I can read in my crystal ball that the tour will be announced in May 2012  to start on July 12, 2012)

:spooky :blankfriggingstare1 :pullanolte :smoking

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jul 4th, 2011 at 8:49pm

Voodoo Chile in Wonderland wrote on Jul 4th, 2011 at 8:02pm:
For Mick’s sake!! My dear LadyJane… SuperHeavy was conceived in 2008, the recordings begun in 2008 and it’s almost done, if they tour this year it doesn’t matter, If the Stones want, they would record later this year, the 50th anniversary album and tour (I can read in my crystal ball that the tour will be announced in May 2012  to start on July 12, 2012)

:spooky :blankfriggingstare1 :pullanolte :smoking

Let's hope your crystal ball is right Voo! :smilebrian :spooky

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ian Billen on Jul 4th, 2011 at 9:23pm

Gazza wrote on Jul 4th, 2011 at 7:10pm:

Ian Billen wrote on Jul 4th, 2011 at 4:58pm:

Gazza wrote on Jul 4th, 2011 at 6:58am:

LadyJane wrote on Jul 3rd, 2011 at 10:49pm:
"Rock fans hoping for a Rolling Stones tour have been dealt a blow after Sir Mick Jagger hinted at plans to hit the road with his new supergroup."

Insert photo of large bell ringing the death knell..............

I'm really starting to believe it's over.  :forfucksake

Damn.
LJ.



For fucks sake, LJ. Some unnamed dimwit reporter (contact music for chrissake - the WORST source of music news on the PLANET) puts 2 and 2 together and gets 9 just for the sake of a headline (as they always do) and you fall for it hook, line and sinker every time. Come on, girl, shake yourself!  [smiley=2vrolijk_08.gif]

This record is out in September. They probably WONT tour as there's unlikely to be a market for it,. If they do, it'll be brief. This record has been in the planning for TWO years. Its not something Jagger suddenly threw together in a fit of pique because Keith said he had a small cock. And Joss Stone (as far as I know) is touring soon anyway in her own right.

The Stones were never going to tour until at LEAST next summer. There's nothing there that would prevent their plans to do so. Universal will release a Some Girls deluxe later this year and a new greatest hits record in 2012 which the band will probably use to promote any touring. They dont even need to make a new record.

There's hundreds of millions of dollars waiting for them to pick up if they choose to tour again next year. Mick's going to pass that up because of some stupid quote in a book that the media chose to blow out of all sense of proportion.  Doubtful.


__________________________________________

Lol ... I see LJ's concern Gazza. Why? Because it is occurring this fall. Not much time left for The Stones to write/record if this is gonna be a three, four, oe five month ordeal. However your saying the don't "need" a new record to tour. I agree, however it's my opinion they (Mick/Keith) are going to want to do one. I don't see them re-doing a Forty Licks album/tour specifically. They have already been there and done that. The Stones are going to want it different from  the forty year extravaganza. I truly think they will want to do an album for it. What LJ means is simply that there won't be much time. Honestly, I can only see Superheavy doin a small string of shows or a few promo gigs. Still ... If we are headed into early Winter and The Stones gotten together it would be pushing time constraints especially if they wanted to get an album out. Just sayin.

Ian


Ian



Why? No one apart from us cares about a new Stones record. Universal gave them a contract without even insisting on new material and as can be seen from the last tour, the band certainly have no faith in new material. The next tour will be a nostalgiafest built around their 50th anniversary - not a celebration of new music - and we all know that the decision to make it a nostalgia tour in 2002 has been the template ever since, no matter how much they chose to dress the last tour up.

There'll be two new releases between now and this time next year. A Some Girls deluxe and a greatest hits release (both of them probably multi-disc releases). An album of new material would be flooding the market and will be the one that will probably gather the least interest commercially.


_____________________

Well then ... very simply there are to be absolutely new Stones album's then ... I mean... if not next year then when Gazza?? Personally, I think the Stones will do another album. They did one in 2005... and they certainly didn't need one then either. Sure, it wasn't played much live but still, they took special time to write/record one. Why bother? They didn't need new songs in 2002 either. They did it because they feel they must do new material for tours. Hasn't been a tour in ...well forever without some sort of new studio out-put (unless your counting No Security... a novelty tour). Gazza, they are loaded to the max... they have been for a while. They are the richest band in the world. Why bother if a Stones thing doesn't really interest them besides the cash ..as you are indicating. Gazza, they are the richest band on the planet ... Sure the money is the enticement but it's only 1/2 of it. I am sure they still want to release a product with new studio stuff... If they didn't want to make records they could of stopped that last three times out... easy... heck ..even back further. Besides they have mentioned it... Why mention something that doesn't interest you as a group. Why spend months recording or working on an album when there is no need. They could of easily just skipped that entire step last time... and went right to a tour. Point is.. They feel the "need" to get into the studio when a tour is on the line. This time will be the same... (we hope hehe)

Ian

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 5th, 2011 at 4:49am
It's quite simple.

They did one for the last tour because they were still contractually obligated to EMI to deliver a new record and they had released a hits record to promote their previous tour.

They're no longer obligated to make a record for ANYONE. And with a new label, a 50th anniversary looming plus '40 Licks' no longer in print, the next tour has 'retrospective' and 'cash in'  written all over it even larger than ever.

You continue for some reason to harbour this delusion that the Stones are a band driven by artistic endeavour. Theyve been a nostalgia driven act for the last decade and a financially driven one for longer - and when offered the chance to make a lot of money, they're always going to pick a way of doing it which involves the least effort possible.

If they do release any new material next year, I'd expect it to be 3-4 songs bashed out in a couple of weeks to fill space on the next greatest hits album. Same as 2002. If they tour next year, UMG will be more keen to push a hits album than a new record as it will sell more. And given the choice of doing one or the other, the Stones will always plump for a choice which delivers maximum reward for the minimum of effort.

And No Security wasnt a 'novelty' tour. It was an extension of the BTB tour done to generate a lot of cash (using a template of high prices which had been tried out at some shows on the BTB US leg in '98) and keep the band active as otherwise they would have had a year off between the '98 Euro tour and the UK shows which had been postponed for one year for tax reasons.


You're seriously telling me that they're not primarily driven by money despite being insanely rich? That would explain why their concert tickets are so cheap then, right enough.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 5th, 2011 at 9:03am



1. Miracle Worker (Chris Lord-Alge Radio Mix)

2. Miracle Worker (Damian "Jr Gong" Marley Main Mix - Radio Edit)

Audio samples @ amazon.com



Mick trading vocals with Joss Stone and Damian Marley...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 5th, 2011 at 10:17am


Kristin Burns

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ian Billen on Jul 5th, 2011 at 10:56am

Gazza wrote on Jul 5th, 2011 at 4:49am:
It's quite simple.

They did one for the last tour because they were still contractually obligated to EMI to deliver a new record and they had released a hits record to promote their previous tour.

They're no longer obligated to make a record for ANYONE. And with a new label, a 50th anniversary looming plus '40 Licks' no longer in print, the next tour has 'retrospective' and 'cash in'  written all over it even larger than ever.

You continue for some reason to harbour this delusion that the Stones are a band driven by artistic endeavour. Theyve been a nostalgia driven act for the last decade and a financially driven one for longer - and when offered the chance to make a lot of money, they're always going to pick a way of doing it which involves the least effort possible.

If they do release any new material next year, I'd expect it to be 3-4 songs bashed out in a couple of weeks to fill space on the next greatest hits album. Same as 2002. If they tour next year, UMG will be more keen to push a hits album than a new record as it will sell more. And given the choice of doing one or the other, the Stones will always plump for a choice which delivers maximum reward for the minimum of effort.

And No Security wasnt a 'novelty' tour. It was an extension of the BTB tour done to generate a lot of cash (using a template of high prices which had been tried out at some shows on the BTB US leg in '98) and keep the band active as otherwise they would have had a year off between the '98 Euro tour and the UK shows which had been postponed for one year for tax reasons.


You're seriously telling me that they're not primarily driven by money despite being insanely rich? That would explain why their concert tickets are so cheap then, right enough.



_______________________________

I think they are driven by money but as well as just wanting to be The Stones. It's pretty much a 50/50 in my eyes. I mean, these one to three year jaunts, all over the globe are wearing to any band or group of people....let alone a group of nearly 70 year old men. It's a hell of alot of work and you have to devote your life to it. We know they are up there in years... they have all the riches they need... and could live quite comfortably from here on out. Why go out there in the wind and cold or sweat your butt off living out of a suitcase for a few at this age (though that's a relative phrase being as they have the best when they are on tour). They didn't need songs to fill gaps on 40 licks. There are "plenty" of songs that may not of been major hits, but would of filled the gaps nicely (memory motel, hot stuff, stray cats blues, hang fire, she was hot, monkey man etc. etc.) This time is no different. There are plenty enough songs in their immense catalog to have a greatest hits.. easily. They don't need to go into the studio for quality work or to fill in gaps. They have more than anyone in history. So the only reason they went in in 2002, or now is because they feel compelled to be in the studio. This is why I think they will make another album.

Ian  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 5th, 2011 at 11:58am

Ian Billen wrote on Jul 5th, 2011 at 10:56am:

Gazza wrote on Jul 5th, 2011 at 4:49am:
It's quite simple.

They did one for the last tour because they were still contractually obligated to EMI to deliver a new record and they had released a hits record to promote their previous tour.

They're no longer obligated to make a record for ANYONE. And with a new label, a 50th anniversary looming plus '40 Licks' no longer in print, the next tour has 'retrospective' and 'cash in'  written all over it even larger than ever.

You continue for some reason to harbour this delusion that the Stones are a band driven by artistic endeavour. Theyve been a nostalgia driven act for the last decade and a financially driven one for longer - and when offered the chance to make a lot of money, they're always going to pick a way of doing it which involves the least effort possible.

If they do release any new material next year, I'd expect it to be 3-4 songs bashed out in a couple of weeks to fill space on the next greatest hits album. Same as 2002. If they tour next year, UMG will be more keen to push a hits album than a new record as it will sell more. And given the choice of doing one or the other, the Stones will always plump for a choice which delivers maximum reward for the minimum of effort.

And No Security wasnt a 'novelty' tour. It was an extension of the BTB tour done to generate a lot of cash (using a template of high prices which had been tried out at some shows on the BTB US leg in '98) and keep the band active as otherwise they would have had a year off between the '98 Euro tour and the UK shows which had been postponed for one year for tax reasons.


You're seriously telling me that they're not primarily driven by money despite being insanely rich? That would explain why their concert tickets are so cheap then, right enough.



_______________________________

I think they are driven by money but as well as just wanting to be The Stones. It's pretty much a 50/50 in my eyes. I mean, these one to three year jaunts, all over the globe are wearing to any band or group of people....let alone a group of nearly 70 year old men. It's a hell of alot of work and you have to devote your life to it. We know they are up there in years... they have all the riches they need... and could live quite comfortably from here on out. Why go out there in the wind and cold or sweat your butt off living out of a suitcase for a few at this age (though that's a relative phrase being as they have the best when they are on tour). They didn't need songs to fill gaps on 40 licks. There are "plenty" of songs that may not of been major hits, but would of filled the gaps nicely (memory motel, hot stuff, stray cats blues, hang fire, she was hot, monkey man etc. etc.) This time is no different. There are plenty enough songs in their immense catalog to have a greatest hits.. easily. They don't need to go into the studio for quality work or to fill in gaps. They have more than anyone in history. So the only reason they went in in 2002, or now is because they feel compelled to be in the studio. This is why I think they will make another album.

Ian  



Yeah, those four songs tossed off (literally) in two weeks really sounded like they were artistically driven. Instantly forgettable, and only one EVER was performed live.  And then forgotten about when the tour ended.

Pretty much every major act who releases a career retrospective pads it out with a couple of new tunes to remind people that theyre still alive. No one likes to be dismissed as has-beens or an oldies act. Compelled?? Four albums in 25 years. The entire second half of their career. Compelled??

You make touring sound like theyre still travelling around in Stu's van and having to piss against garage walls. They never play two nights in a row, take a week or so off every month, are ferried everywhere by private jet and limos and stay in luxury hotels and a 100 date tour takes about 16 months to complete.  And no Stones tour has ever lasted three years. The last one lasted 15 months then they had six months off before playing 30 shows in 3 months.

Good luck to them with that - theyve earned that life and owe no one another note of music. But to say they have to devote their lives to it is pushing the bounds of credibility. If that was the case, why do they take off years at a time? Why have they not performed a note of music in public outside of a tour for over three decades? If they're so  intent on 'wanting to be the Stones' why dont they work together even occasionally? Apart from three or four movie premieres and probably a couple of annual business meetings, they havent been in the same room together for four years!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Jul 5th, 2011 at 1:59pm
hey guys...they creatively retired a long time ago...just never filed the papers. Mick is having fun looking for that new "thing" to be relevant again and maybe this album will give him that. It's too bad that perhaps the best post 78 Ronnie will be never see a Stones show to help his legacy. Maybe we will be surprised next year with the 50th but it will be fewer shows, higher prices, 100% warhorses.....but if Ronnie keeps his act together I will try and get there for..."The Last Time"

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 5th, 2011 at 4:38pm

gimmekeef wrote on Jul 5th, 2011 at 1:59pm:
hey guys...they creatively retired a long time ago...just never filed the papers. Mick is having fun looking for that new "thing" to be relevant again and maybe this album will give him that. It's too bad that perhaps the best post 78 Ronnie will be never see a Stones show to help his legacy. Maybe we will be surprised next year with the 50th but it will be fewer shows, higher prices, 100% warhorses.....but if Ronnie keeps his act together I will try and get there for..."The Last Time"


Beautifully put.

Its a bit like a couple who have reached old age and havent much in common anymore  - they're pretty much separated but are still living in the same house because its too much bother to divorce.

Every once in a while they socialise together to keep up appearances.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Jul 5th, 2011 at 5:36pm
little bag of tricks?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ian Billen on Jul 5th, 2011 at 9:57pm

Gazza wrote on Jul 5th, 2011 at 11:58am:

Ian Billen wrote on Jul 5th, 2011 at 10:56am:

Gazza wrote on Jul 5th, 2011 at 4:49am:
It's quite simple.

They did one for the last tour because they were still contractually obligated to EMI to deliver a new record and they had released a hits record to promote their previous tour.

They're no longer obligated to make a record for ANYONE. And with a new label, a 50th anniversary looming plus '40 Licks' no longer in print, the next tour has 'retrospective' and 'cash in'  written all over it even larger than ever.

You continue for some reason to harbour this delusion that the Stones are a band driven by artistic endeavour. Theyve been a nostalgia driven act for the last decade and a financially driven one for longer - and when offered the chance to make a lot of money, they're always going to pick a way of doing it which involves the least effort possible.

If they do release any new material next year, I'd expect it to be 3-4 songs bashed out in a couple of weeks to fill space on the next greatest hits album. Same as 2002. If they tour next year, UMG will be more keen to push a hits album than a new record as it will sell more. And given the choice of doing one or the other, the Stones will always plump for a choice which delivers maximum reward for the minimum of effort.

And No Security wasnt a 'novelty' tour. It was an extension of the BTB tour done to generate a lot of cash (using a template of high prices which had been tried out at some shows on the BTB US leg in '98) and keep the band active as otherwise they would have had a year off between the '98 Euro tour and the UK shows which had been postponed for one year for tax reasons.


You're seriously telling me that they're not primarily driven by money despite being insanely rich? That would explain why their concert tickets are so cheap then, right enough.



_______________________________

I think they are driven by money but as well as just wanting to be The Stones. It's pretty much a 50/50 in my eyes. I mean, these one to three year jaunts, all over the globe are wearing to any band or group of people....let alone a group of nearly 70 year old men. It's a hell of alot of work and you have to devote your life to it. We know they are up there in years... they have all the riches they need... and could live quite comfortably from here on out. Why go out there in the wind and cold or sweat your butt off living out of a suitcase for a few at this age (though that's a relative phrase being as they have the best when they are on tour). They didn't need songs to fill gaps on 40 licks. There are "plenty" of songs that may not of been major hits, but would of filled the gaps nicely (memory motel, hot stuff, stray cats blues, hang fire, she was hot, monkey man etc. etc.) This time is no different. There are plenty enough songs in their immense catalog to have a greatest hits.. easily. They don't need to go into the studio for quality work or to fill in gaps. They have more than anyone in history. So the only reason they went in in 2002, or now is because they feel compelled to be in the studio. This is why I think they will make another album.

Ian  



Yeah, those four songs tossed off (literally) in two weeks really sounded like they were artistically driven. Instantly forgettable, and only one EVER was performed live.  And then forgotten about when the tour ended.

Pretty much every major act who releases a career retrospective pads it out with a couple of new tunes to remind people that theyre still alive. No one likes to be dismissed as has-beens or an oldies act. Compelled?? Four albums in 25 years. The entire second half of their career. Compelled??

You make touring sound like theyre still travelling around in Stu's van and having to piss against garage walls. They never play two nights in a row, take a week or so off every month, are ferried everywhere by private jet and limos and stay in luxury hotels and a 100 date tour takes about 16 months to complete.  And no Stones tour has ever lasted three years. The last one lasted 15 months then they had six months off before playing 30 shows in 3 months.

Good luck to them with that - theyve earned that life and owe no one another note of music. But to say they have to devote their lives to it is pushing the bounds of credibility. If that was the case, why do they take off years at a time? Why have they not performed a note of music in public outside of a tour for over three decades? If they're so  intent on 'wanting to be the Stones' why dont they work together even occasionally? Apart from three or four movie premieres and probably a couple of annual business meetings, they havent been in the same room together for four years!


_________________________________


When they are on tour it "is" their life. I said three year jaunts because by the time they start writing or recording through rehearsals till the final show it is basically three years at times. 2/12-3. Gazza, it would be a drag though... if your not completely into it anymore. Seriously... I mean state to state, country to country, show after show...away from home.  You can't really work on any other projects unless it's band related during the time frame. Ya can't take up fishing... your on the road and involved in The Rolling Stones bubble. It takes away your freedom... regardless of the high class behind the scenes things. It would be a drag to someone who wasn't totally interested or seriously into it anymore. Forget about the money. Charlie would much rather raise his horseys and stick around the house. Truth is he likes it... deep down. They all do. Fuck man... when is it gonna end for them. Picture if it were you and you were seventy years old with a famaily. If it were you and it truly wasnt your passion would YOU, a multi-millionaire... who has been forever...someone who has mansions, cars, royalties, and plenty of cash for your family and their family's to live plenty comfortably... wouldnt you say ... you know what guys... I'm 70. I don't need it anymore. I am gonna coast out my twilight years and kick back. I aint throwin away another couple years of my life at this point? Wouldn't you  say that if you really were not into it anymore? Well they do not say that. It isn't all about the money at this point guy... they are loaded beyond loaded and they are old men. There is more to it than all that...

Ian

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 6th, 2011 at 6:52am
I'd agree that they're certainly into it whenever they're doing it - yes. The 'bubble' anology is a valid one. That said, they do get a lot of downtime during a tour.

Whether its 'their life' anymore, or even a huge part of it, is where we part company.

I dont think it is. I think things have changed considerably in recent years.  For all his bluster and 'anything for a quote' bullshit about being ready to tour, I think Keith is pretty much semi-retired. And with valid reasons, I should add - the man has been through a lot health-wise in the last five years and has been confronted with both his own and his wife's mortality. Add to the equation his own lack of output in recent years which suggests creative burnout, and you have a band whose major musical driving force hasn't been as committed in recent years as was previously the case.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Jul 6th, 2011 at 9:54am
 What the F*uck? I couldn't stand to listen to this for long at all...

Sorry Mick Jagger, you don't move me anymore... :interestingstuffronnie

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SMCWBkgMYY&feature=player_embedded#at=32

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 6th, 2011 at 10:12am
I liked the sample, although I dont actually think that Mick adds a lot to it. Joss sounds good.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Jul 6th, 2011 at 10:15am

Gazza wrote on Jul 6th, 2011 at 10:12am:
Joss sounds good.


lol, but that's IT.

You know it sucks too Gazza, come on now!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Some Guy on Jul 6th, 2011 at 10:18am

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 6th, 2011 at 11:11am

steel driving hammer wrote on Jul 6th, 2011 at 10:15am:

Gazza wrote on Jul 6th, 2011 at 10:12am:
Joss sounds good.


lol, but that's IT.

You know it sucks too Gazza, come on now!


Based on 30 seconds?

No.

And I dont need a stones involvement of any description to be the basis of whether a record is good or not.


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 6th, 2011 at 11:46am

Horrific - and unauthorized - "remix".

Nice picture though...





Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 6th, 2011 at 11:50am


Kristin Burns

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 6th, 2011 at 12:19pm

Mick Jagger Discusses SuperHeavy Collaboration

By DERRIK J. LANG AP Entertainment Writer
LOS ANGELES July 6, 2011 (AP)


Frank W. Ockenfels/SuperHeavy, LLC


Mick Jagger isn't sure where his latest musical creation will end up on iTunes.

The Rolling Stones rocker has teamed up with Eurythmics co-founder Dave Stewart, reggae maestro Damian Marley, soul songtress Joss Stone and "Slumdog Millionaire" composer A.R. Rahman for SuperHeavy, a new group fusing their different styles on an as-yet untitled album set for release Sept. 20 in the United States, and a day before in the rest of the world.

"What bit of iTunes genres does it go on? The unknowable? Isn't there an unknown section?" Jagger joked during a preview event last week at Jim Henson Studios, where the group recorded some of their eclectic music.

Stewart called the collaboration wide-ranging. The recording process began in Hollywood with the entire group, but they also recorded separately. Other recordings took place in Florida, France, Greece, Turkey, India and the Caribbean. Stewart said the group recorded about 35 hours of music with some songs originally lasting "an hour and 10 minutes" before they were whittled down.

One of seven tracks teased Thursday included "Miracle Worker," the first single off the album, which features the vocalists crooning: "Ooh, you're a miracle worker/Ooh, you're the surgeon of love." The group filmed a music video last Wednesday for the mid-tempo track, which like most of the music previewed, combined rock, soul, reggae and world music.

"Working with four other vocalists was interesting to me," said Jagger. "I've never actually done it before. Normally, I have to do everything, which I'm quite happy to do. Don't worry. It was kind of fun because when we had to finish it off, I realized we all had a part to play."

Jagger said the group would wait for reaction to the album before deciding if the supergroup will go on tour.

"We'll probably end up playing in the unclassified gig section," Stewart quipped.

"Yeah, in a tent at Glastonbury with the unclassifiable acts," Jagger added.



Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 6th, 2011 at 1:01pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on Jul 6th, 2011 at 12:19pm:
Mick Jagger Discusses SuperHeavy Collaboration

By DERRIK J. LANG AP Entertainment Writer
LOS ANGELES July 6, 2011 (AP)


Frank W. Ockenfels/SuperHeavy, LLC


Mick Jagger isn't sure where his latest musical creation will end up on iTunes.

The Rolling Stones rocker has teamed up with Eurythmics co-founder Dave Stewart, reggae maestro Damian Marley, soul songtress Joss Stone and "Slumdog Millionaire" composer A.R. Rahman for SuperHeavy, a new group fusing their different styles on an as-yet untitled album set for release Sept. 20 in the United States, and a day before in the rest of the world.

"What bit of iTunes genres does it go on? The unknowable? Isn't there an unknown section?" Jagger joked during a preview event last week at Jim Henson Studios, where the group recorded some of their eclectic music.

Stewart called the collaboration wide-ranging. The recording process began in Hollywood with the entire group, but they also recorded separately. Other recordings took place in Florida, France, Greece, Turkey, India and the Caribbean. Stewart said the group recorded about 35 hours of music with some songs originally lasting "an hour and 10 minutes" before they were whittled down.

One of seven tracks teased Thursday included "Miracle Worker," the first single off the album, which features the vocalists crooning: "Ooh, you're a miracle worker/Ooh, you're the surgeon of love." The group filmed a music video last Wednesday for the mid-tempo track, which like most of the music previewed, combined rock, soul, reggae and world music.

"Working with four other vocalists was interesting to me," said Jagger. "I've never actually done it before. Normally, I have to do everything, which I'm quite happy to do. Don't worry. It was kind of fun because when we had to finish it off, I realized we all had a part to play."

Jagger said the group would wait for reaction to the album before deciding if the supergroup will go on tour.

"We'll probably end up playing in the unclassified gig section," Stewart quipped.

"Yeah, in a tent at Glastonbury with the unclassifiable acts," Jagger added.





Note for fans who take this at face value - he's joking. There's no Glastonbury festival next year...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Some Guy on Jul 6th, 2011 at 1:05pm
why is Mick slumming?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 6th, 2011 at 1:06pm
the 'Aloisus' remix is unauthorised? Really?

So this is being bootlegged before it has even been premiered?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Jul 6th, 2011 at 1:11pm

steel driving hammer wrote on Jul 6th, 2011 at 9:54am:
 What the F*uck? I couldn't stand to listen to this for long at all...

Sorry Mick Jagger, you don't move me anymore... :interestingstuffronnie

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SMCWBkgMYY&feature=player_embedded#at=32


I totally hate this crap...which is why in todays market it will no doubt be #1..........

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jul 6th, 2011 at 1:14pm
Well they certainly have the posing down. :forfucksake

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Some Guy on Jul 6th, 2011 at 1:26pm
welp, it's out there :nooslajaleisk

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Bitch on Jul 6th, 2011 at 6:48pm

sweetcharmedlife wrote on Jul 6th, 2011 at 1:14pm:
Well they certainly have the posing down. :forfucksake


Yeah they sure do! MICK probably sent a memo telling everyone to wear black and gray, then MICK shows up in blue & white, positions himself prominantly in the middle, they all put on serious no joke faces, and Superheavy looks superficial!  ;D

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 6th, 2011 at 7:52pm
Just downloaded it off i-tunes.

Again, I dont think its Mick's finest vocal (the first bit anyway - it gets better later on) but the song's bloody good. Both mixes. Marley and Stone's voices work together really well.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by PartyDoll MEG on Jul 6th, 2011 at 7:56pm

Gazza wrote on Jul 6th, 2011 at 7:52pm:
Just downloaded it off i-tunes.

Again, I dont think its Mick's finest vocal (the first bit anyway - it gets better later on) but the song's bloody good. Both mixes. Marley and Stone's voices work together really well.


mostly I agree with you Gary...

actually I hate too say this...but Mr. Jagger does not add much to this song

maybe it will grow on me....

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jul 6th, 2011 at 9:17pm

Gazza wrote on Jul 6th, 2011 at 7:52pm:
Just downloaded it off i-tunes.

Again, I dont think its Mick's finest vocal (the first bit anyway - it gets better later on) but the song's bloody good. Both mixes. Marley and Stone's voices work together really well.

Good God man,what time was it when you downloaded it? Like 1 in the morning local time? Because I can't DL it yet. Bit anxious are we? :willya

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ian Billen on Jul 6th, 2011 at 10:20pm
I can say I do find this an interesting concept and I dunno... I gotta ask... Has any other group of people ever tried this very idea of taking a group of artist's, each of which are identified and associated with a certain music genre, and seeing what they can write and record together as a band in a sort of group project? If not, I am very surprised the idea hadn't been attempted until now?

It is almost like a reality TV show but it involves musicians from different walks of music...

Anyway, it is much more interesting than simply another a solo album from Mick again... Right now... that definitely does not seem to interest any of us. At least this DOES... as well as the public in general. If we can't get The Stones in the studio, this at least is much more enticing than another boring Mick Solo...


Ian

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Some Guy on Jul 6th, 2011 at 11:52pm
They will be large in India and China thus no real need for the US market.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Jul 7th, 2011 at 12:31am
Nice Mick vocal on these iTunes Japan extracts : http://itunes.apple.com/jp/album/miracle-worker-chris-lord/id446843699?i=446843706 (click on the number to the left of the song)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 7th, 2011 at 8:49am

Mick Jagger's SuperHeavy should not be written off just yet

Mick Jagger’s new band, SuperHeavy, releases its first single today, with an album to follow in September. Andrew Perry marvels at the line-up.


SuperHeavy: Damian Marley, Dave Stewart, Mick Jagger, A R Rahman, Joss Stone      
Photo: Frank W. Ockenfels



By Andrew Perry
07 Jul 2011

The news that Mick Jagger has put together a new band, outside the Rolling Stones, was never likely to be greeted with huge enthusiasm around the world. His latest venture, a super group appropriately called SuperHeavy, releases its debut single today, Miracle Worker, with an album, 18 months in the making, to follow in September.

On paper, the project has all the surrealism of a band put together according to the principles of fantasy football. The band initially comprised of Jagger, former Eurythmic Dave Stewart, Devon singer Joss Stone, and Bob Marley’s son Damian. Just looking at all those singers, one wonders who did all the real work (i.e. played the instruments).

To that end, perhaps, Jagger and Stewart called in A R Rahman, the Indian film composer best known for his work on Slumdog Millionaire. According to Jagger, “We thought, that’ll be different. Then we had another continent involved.” He has also revealed that he sings one song in Urdu, but that “it’s not world music per se”. The smart money is on SuperHeavy being a kind of reggae fusion. “Natty dread inna Bollywood”, as it were.

Jagger’s solo albums have always been panned – there again, so has every Stones album since Tattoo You, and that was 30 years ago. It has almost become a reflex reaction to diss Mick, as the majority of the Stones-loving world has long since sided with Keith Richards, as the man who really makes the Stones tick.

This, frankly, is a little unfair. A devil’s advocate might contest that Richards’s inflexibility, and refusal to try different things, has held the Stones back in their comfort zone, and prevented them from moving with the times.

It’s Jagger who has collaborated widely, trying to bring a contemporary zip to the band, as when he hired the then-trendy Black Grape producer, Danny Sabre, on 1997’s Bridges to Babylon album. His Wandering Spirit (1993), recorded with Rick Rubin, was arguably the best Stones solo record. Jagger definitely knows his reggae, having been instrumental in the signing of Peter Tosh, the former Wailer, to the Rolling Stones’s label in the 1970s, and having led the Stones out to Jamaica around that time for some sessions at Kingston’s Channel One studios, which were only scuppered by security issues that forced them to flee the island. And he has certainly spent plenty of time in the Caribbean.

So, SuperHeavy shouldn’t be written off just yet. In the meantime, Richards, who has been recording again with his critically and commercially unloved side project, X-pensive Winos, has reiterated his desire to tour with the Stones next year, celebrating their 50th anniversary as a live act. “I’m trying to nail [the others] down,” he told American chat show host Jimmy Fallon in May, “but I don’t want to crucify them.”

The Telegraph

A devil's advocate just might be spot on...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Jul 7th, 2011 at 8:56am
Still waiting for Keith's response to the single... :wtf3


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 7th, 2011 at 9:38am

Digging the single, especially the Marley mix.

Fat riddim, Stone and Marley work well, and Mick fairly spits out his part.

Nice little bit o' fiddle in there...and Urdu, too.





 

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Winter Tour on Jul 7th, 2011 at 10:00am

PartyDoll MEG wrote on Jul 6th, 2011 at 7:56pm:

Gazza wrote on Jul 6th, 2011 at 7:52pm:
Just downloaded it off i-tunes.

Again, I dont think its Mick's finest vocal (the first bit anyway - it gets better later on) but the song's bloody good. Both mixes. Marley and Stone's voices work together really well.


mostly I agree with you Gary...

actually I hate too say this...but Mr. Jagger does not add much to this song

maybe it will grow on me....



what bothers me even more than the melody itself is the way Jagger sings with "emphasis" ,especially on the last syllabes .
It's not new,though,but it sounds worse than ever.


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 7th, 2011 at 10:05am

‘Jai Ho’ Jagger Jams with A.R. Rahman

July 7, 2011
By Paul Beckett


Getty Images


A.R. Rahman, fresh from a panning for his Commonwealth Games theme song, has been collaborating of late with — how shall we say this politely? – Western rock stars most closely associated with bygone eras. Like the 80s, the 70s, and the 60s.

Today, the “Mozart of Madras” releases a single, “Miracle Worker,” as part of a new lineup called SuperHeavy (which we thought was a type of British beer.) Fronting the group is Sir Mick Jagger of The Rolling Stones, the world’s greatest rock ‘n’ roll band when they play together but whose individual efforts have been much less favorably received.

The new band — which also includes Dave Stewart (formerly of ‘80s sensation, the Eurythmics), Bob Marley’s son, Damian, and British singer Joss Stone — is slated to release an album in September.

Some reports suggest that this polyglot lineup will feature the singer of such ribald rock anthems as “Start Me Up,” “Brown Sugar” and “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” tackling a song in Urdu. In Sir Mick’s defense for what otherwise appears to be a rather ill-advised idea, we’ll note that in previous solo albums he has tackled various musical genres, from gospel to sailors’ ditties.

But the closest a Rolling Stone may have actually come to singing in another language (unless you count the way Keith Richards speaks as a language all to itself) is former bassist Bill Wyman’s “(Si, Si) Je Suis un Rock Star.” Actually, that might include at least two non-English languages.

For Mr. Rahman, however, playing with SuperHeavy would appear to be a step up when it comes to jamming with Western musicians. His latest other collaboration was a song on a new album released last month by an 80s crooner best known for his now-trimmed flowing locks. You guessed it: Michael Bolton.

The Wall Street Journal

Bet the author won't be getting a Ramadan card from A. R. this year...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Some Guy on Jul 7th, 2011 at 10:16am
gibbers??

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 7th, 2011 at 11:58am

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f256/leftshoeshuffle/SuperHeavy/SuperHeavy_MiracleWorker.jpg

Single's premiered about 1 hr 45 min in @ BBC Radio 2

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Jul 7th, 2011 at 12:12pm
Thanks, found it by :
- typing miracle in the search box
- FFWD to 1:46:00

Very good stuff with a jaggerish chorus and very intense vocal from our man Mick although it sounds a bit processed? Good bass too, a nice change from the shapeless noise made by Daryll "The Munch" Jones.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by BONOISLOVE on Jul 7th, 2011 at 12:14pm

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by The Wick on Jul 7th, 2011 at 1:25pm
Based on the previews, I'm surprised that I actually liked it. It's obvious that Mick wrote his own bits and those are the good parts. The riff is fantastic and this is a better reggae track than Sweetness or Words of Wonder. I'm just not a big Joss Stone fan nor do I like the modern style of reggae singing. What this song could have been with Pete Tosh. Still, as far as Mick goes, I loved the vocal. He's singing with more passion than I've heard in ages, even more than his solo records. The old Jagger soul comes alive here. The Indian stuff also sounded nice. Could have done without the nonsense of declaring everyone's name at the end.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Jul 7th, 2011 at 1:43pm
but they be super heavy mon--needin the call outs and all that.

i be diggin Mick sliding his verse into the chorus--nice touch

good car song, cruising to the beach, no?


LJ is gonna have to come around...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by LadyJane on Jul 7th, 2011 at 2:11pm
"LJ is gonna have to come around..."

Oh alright. I'll give it try when I get home.
Makin NO promises.
:tongui

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 7th, 2011 at 5:39pm


Kristin Burns

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Jul 7th, 2011 at 7:11pm
I LIKEY.

Funny how Mick changed his voice  so, I didn't hear Dave Stewart et all Hmmm
I need a Miracle LOL
I like reggae.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by LadyJane on Jul 7th, 2011 at 7:58pm
Listened to it twice.
Does nothing for me.


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Jul 8th, 2011 at 1:28am
Love it -> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qw2hDap-sJQ

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by philgood on Jul 8th, 2011 at 3:22am

LadyJane wrote on Jul 7th, 2011 at 7:58pm:
Listened to it twice.
Does nothing for me.


ditto

To me it's really boring.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by albert on Jul 8th, 2011 at 7:25am
Good reggae tune. Could be a summer hit. Think the voices match well together. Pity Mick sings in a 'over the top' way....

Has to grow on me......

grt,
Albert
Holland

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 8th, 2011 at 10:43am

sweetcharmedlife wrote on Jul 6th, 2011 at 9:17pm:

Gazza wrote on Jul 6th, 2011 at 7:52pm:
Just downloaded it off i-tunes.

Again, I dont think its Mick's finest vocal (the first bit anyway - it gets better later on) but the song's bloody good. Both mixes. Marley and Stone's voices work together really well.

Good God man,what time was it when you downloaded it? Like 1 in the morning local time? Because I can't DL it yet. Bit anxious are we? :willya


I'm eight hours ahead of you, dont forget.  So while I can download it just after midnight on the release date (7th July) its still just mid-afternoon where you are.

And as I had to go to London yesterday, I wanted to hear it properly before I hit the sack.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 8th, 2011 at 10:45am

steel driving hammer wrote on Jul 7th, 2011 at 8:56am:
Still waiting for Keith's response to the single... :wtf3



Yeah, the barometer of good taste personified, right there....   ::)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jul 8th, 2011 at 11:36am

Gazza wrote on Jul 8th, 2011 at 10:43am:

sweetcharmedlife wrote on Jul 6th, 2011 at 9:17pm:

Gazza wrote on Jul 6th, 2011 at 7:52pm:
Just downloaded it off i-tunes.

Again, I dont think its Mick's finest vocal (the first bit anyway - it gets better later on) but the song's bloody good. Both mixes. Marley and Stone's voices work together really well.

Good God man,what time was it when you downloaded it? Like 1 in the morning local time? Because I can't DL it yet. Bit anxious are we? :willya


I'm eight hours ahead of you, dont forget.  So while I can download it just after midnight on the release date (7th July) its still just mid-afternoon where you are.

And as I had to go to London yesterday, I wanted to hear it properly before I hit the sack.

Yes I understand you had serious elbows to rub in London. :booze

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 8th, 2011 at 2:42pm

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f256/leftshoeshuffle/SuperHeavy/SuperHeavy_MiracleWorker.jpg

Single's streaming @ joss-stone.net

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by riffkeither on Jul 8th, 2011 at 4:58pm
just listened it now , sorry but no miracle with this one, i try to hear it and i finally get back to dirty work !!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Nellcote on Jul 8th, 2011 at 5:26pm
2nd, 3rd run thru, as Luxy said, good beach vibe.  Played it for my teenage daughter, she dug it.  Not embarrassing, just not what hard core Stones fans want.  WE WANT THE STONES!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by BILL PERKS on Jul 8th, 2011 at 6:22pm
PERKS DIGS IT !

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Jul 8th, 2011 at 6:24pm
Voodoo likes them!!

:weed :weed :weed :weed :weed :weed






Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Jul 8th, 2011 at 7:55pm
What a Parade !  :weed

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Bitch on Jul 8th, 2011 at 9:01pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on Jul 8th, 2011 at 2:42pm:
http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f256/leftshoeshuffle/SuperHeavy/SuperHeavy_MiracleWorker.jpg

Single's streaming @ joss-stone.net



OK It's a catchy little tune with some sexy vibes I'm getting from Damian Marley! He sounds sweet, I'm an instant fan! Want to hear more of Damian Marley's voice and so I hope he shows what he can do! Maybe I'll even be impressed with the rest of the band! MICK may not get all the attention here!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 9th, 2011 at 8:05am


Kristin Burns


Can you tell us what’s going on with SuperHeavy?

AR: The biggest thing now is our band SuperHeavy’s single “Miracle Worker” is coming out on [July] 7th, and in India we also want to release one more song, called “Satyameva Jayate,” that the band, all of us, have done together. And I’m very excited about it, too.


gibson.com


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jul 9th, 2011 at 2:18pm
It's awwwright. Catchy little riff and hook. Obviously their still isn't a producer willing to tell Mick to stop singing like shit. If this is their most commercial friendly material off the album,the rest of it is going to be very to tough to listen to. :thatwassmart

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Honky Tonk Man on Jul 10th, 2011 at 5:44am
It's Damien Marley. I just cannot stand his vocals on this recording. It's piercing and horrible. I have always struggled with reggae as a genre and I think I may struggle with this project. I admire Jagger for embracing the unknown and for still showing a willingness to be creative - I just wish the music was a little more to my liking.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 11th, 2011 at 8:22am


Kristin Burns


Looking for Miracles

Pooja Pillai
Jul 10 2011

If you were wary when you first heard the news that AR Rahman was teaming up with Mick Jagger, Dave Stewart, Damien Marley, and Joss Stone to form a ‘super band’ called, Super Heavy, you’re probably not alone. Given Jagger’s inability to produce any work of note away from the Rolling Stones, and the fact that Stewart stopped being a significant name since the Eurythmics dissolved in 1990, one didn’t really expect fireworks. There was also some worry expressed in music circles about how the music would sound with so many disparate styles coming together from Stone’s R&B to Marley’s reggae tunes and Rahman’s more ambiguous ‘world music’ style. And the biggest question was: what role can one expect heavyweight Jagger to play?

But all those fears may yet be unfounded. The group’s first single, Miracle Worker, doesn’t seem so bad after all. It works a traditional reggae beat, with fairly conventional lyrics about the lover being a miracle worker and a surgeon of love. Stone’s vocals are strong and carry the song through and Marley — the youngest son of the legendary Bob Marley and a three-time Grammy award winner in his own right — is a good match for her. Jagger himself pops up only occasionally to growl out some truly weird lyrics: “my loving laser will regenerate your heart/ no need for anesthetics, I’ll go check your charts/ I will reshape you, recast you from the mold/ a brand new beautiful woman will blossom from the old”.

He leaves most of the heavy work to his younger colleagues, although that may not hold true for the rest of the album. In this particular song itself, Stewart and Rahman don’t really stand out. But the indications seem to be there that the next few tracks will be as different from each other, as the musicians themselves. So there’s still some chance that Rahman, at least, will produce something we can all be proud of.

Indian Express



http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f256/leftshoeshuffle/SuperHeavy/SuperHeavy_small.jpg
 'Miracle Worker'

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Jul 11th, 2011 at 5:10pm
Headline reads:

Womens World Cup:

MIRACLE WORKERS

someone heard the song.  8-)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by corgi37 on Jul 11th, 2011 at 8:35pm
Aussie model Jess Hart showing her love

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 13th, 2011 at 7:58am


Kristin Burns

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Jul 13th, 2011 at 8:05am
i cant find the single on itunes??

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jul 13th, 2011 at 11:46am

luxury wrote on Jul 13th, 2011 at 8:05am:
i cant find the single on itunes??

Not out in the U.S. yet.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 13th, 2011 at 1:26pm

luxury wrote on Jul 13th, 2011 at 8:05am:
i cant find the single on itunes??

'Miracle Worker' is also n/a @ amazon.com

Single was scheduled for US/Canada release yesterday.
Questions asked at the "official" SuperHeavy site since then haven't gotten a reply.

But - they did post a new picture today...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 13th, 2011 at 9:33pm

SuperHeavy: Not your average supergroup

By Edna Gundersen, USA TODAY
Posted July 13, 2011


Frank W. Ockenfels


LOS ANGELES — SuperHeavy isn't music's first supergroup. Remember Cream, The Highwaymen, the Traveling Wilburys and Temple of the Dog?

But it may be the first to hatch its own genre, which should come as no surprise considering the ensemble's diverse membership.

As Rolling Stones fans awaited word of the band's next tour ("It's not on the table," Mick Jagger says), the iconic singer and his friend/collaborator Dave Stewart (Eurythmics) formed SuperHeavy with British soul singer Joss Stone, reggae star Damian Marley and Indian composer/musician A.R. Rahman.

Their anticipated self-titled debut arrives Sept. 20 with an indefinable fusion of rock, soul, reggae, blues, pop and Indian music. Reggae-steeped first single Miracle Worker showcases Marley's toasting skills, Stone's strapping vocals and Jagger's sexy yowl. A video will be released this month.

Jagger and Stewart, who co-produced the album and share a passion for Jamaican and Caribbean sounds, cooked up the multicultural concept and sought out sterling collaborators.

Stone, who worked with the pair on the 2004 Alfie soundtrack, was high on the list, as was Marley, youngest son of reggae icon Bob Marley. Rahman, whose Slumdog Millionaire soundtrack had just won Oscars for best song and score, was considered a catch for his pop-exotica sensibilities.

I said, 'Hey, look, we're going to try this experiment,'" Stewart says. "Everyone turned up without knowing what it was. Mick said: 'This is mad. We haven't written any songs.' We started jamming, and it was amazing. It got to certain peaks where it was, whoa, this is happening."

The group hammered out most tracks over three weeks at The Village studio in L.A. They also recorded off the coast of Cyprus, as well as in France, Turkey, Miami, the Caribbean and India. Jagger and Stewart shaped the sessions into 17 songs.

The results — ranging from dance track Energy to Satyameva Jayate, a Rahman composition that finds Jagger singing in Urdu — defy categorization.

"It's definitely an unknown genre," Jagger says. "But it's accessible and structured. I worry people will think it's some kind of world jam. It's not."

No live dates are confirmed. Nor is a sequel. Yet.

"I know Dave is already talking about the next one," Jagger says. "As far as I'm concerned, it was a one-off thing. But we'll see what happens."


USA Today

No real surprise that SuperHeavy is likely one and done.
So even though Mick says that the next Stones tour is "not on the table", imo he's just keeping the focus on this project.

But that quip could make for some interesting conversation when/if Woody and Keith get together...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Jul 14th, 2011 at 9:33pm
I like 'Miracle Worker' - that little bag of tricks does it for me.  I like the sound and the feel.  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Steel Wheels on Jul 14th, 2011 at 9:50pm
Super heavy, super heavy, super heavy, super heavy, super heavy....

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by LadyJane on Jul 15th, 2011 at 10:33am
Mick Jagger's latest bid to break orbit from Keith Richards

Nick March
The National
Jul 15, 2011  


                       


Mick Jagger, the frontman of the Rolling Stones, has, according to Keith Richards, been unbearable for 30 years. Richards made this not altogether shocking revelation last year in Life, his appropriately named autobiography. He would also describe his love-hate relationship with Jagger as being "like a marriage with no divorce".

Looking at the band's output over that same period, it's hard to disagree. The creative spark that once propelled the Stones to the top of the world was extinguished years ago, replaced by an efficient, profitable but largely cheerless union of two of rock and roll's greatest figures.

Indeed, Tattoo You, released in 1981, marked the band's last truly great album. There have been high points since - notably, patches of 1983's Undercover and fragments of 1994's Voodoo Lounge - but the modern era has been largely fallow, a time when Jagger and Richards may have stopped fighting, but they also stopped loving each other, too.

Periodically, Jagger has tried to break free from the ties that bind, only to find out that Richards was right all along: theirs is a marriage from which there is no escape. Or is there?

Last week Jagger announced his latest bid for liberation, this time as one-fifth of a fledgling supergroup called SuperHeavy.

Despite the band's big name, Jagger is the outright star of an otherwise middleweight combination, in which the other members are Dave Stewart, most famous for being one-half of the Eighties duo Eurythmics; AR Rahman, the composer of the Slumdog Millionaire soundtrack; Damian Marley, known in these parts for cancelling his appearance at the Womad music festival last year, and Joss Stone, once a platinum-selling teenage prodigy, but most recently in the news for being the subject of a thankfully foiled murder plot.

Miracle Worker, SuperHeavy's first single, broke cover late last week (an album will follow in September) and while the reactions of Jagger's most ardent fans have generally been warm, the song has yet to seriously trouble the download charts in either the US or the UK. Which is a shame. The track, an odd and not particularly innovative mishmash of styles, features vocals by Marley, Stone and Jagger (whose opening salvo is to declare that "there's nothing wrong with you that I can't fix" - a message for Richards, perhaps?) is, nevertheless, hookey enough to warrant a place on a longish list of tracks to wile away the summer to.

According to a video posted on the SuperHeavy website, the idea for the band came to Stewart when he was in the Caribbean where, he explains in the slightly absurd manner of a mystic rock star: "I went to the top of a hill and when I got [there] a light was kind of coming through the leaves on the trees and I had this flash of how there could be a fusion of music from different parts of the world ... I never actually thought it would happen."


But happen it has, and SuperHeavy could well be Jagger's smartest move for a generation. Of all his work outside the Stones, his one-hit 1985 collaboration with David Bowie is most fondly remembered.

Now with SuperHeavy, Jagger might once again have the creative forces surrounding him to ease the burden of expectation we continue to place on the greats of a bygone era, although only time will tell whether the unusual mix of a performer-producer (Stewart), composer (Rahman), dancehall-reggae star (Marley) and soul singer (Stone) will end up delivering that elusive success or even the fusion to which Stewart alluded to.

One thing we do know: Jagger won't be distracted by his supergroup for long, especially when his best buddy-worst enemy is waiting patiently for him to roll home to the Stones. Even if we hurt the ones we love the most, we can't help returning to them either.


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Jul 15th, 2011 at 12:59pm
the only heavy thing about this new album...will be how quickly it drops from view.........U2 have set a new bar and we'll see if the boys have anything left to chase it?..Have my doubts but hope for at least a few shows next year for the 50th....We should know by October or so........

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 15th, 2011 at 1:48pm
Know about a new tour by October??

Seriously doubt you'll hear anything at all in 2011, to be honest.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Jul 15th, 2011 at 1:54pm

Gazza wrote on Jul 15th, 2011 at 1:48pm:
Know about a new tour by October??

Seriously doubt you'll hear anything at all in 2011, to be honest.


Well perhaps so...but if there is nothing floating by then I doubt 2012 will be anything to get excited about tour wise......maybe by then Keith will have laid down one Wino's track anyway........

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 15th, 2011 at 3:28pm

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f256/leftshoeshuffle/SuperHeavy/SH_FB_video.png
MTAB

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Jul 15th, 2011 at 7:37pm
Thanks, that's the video that DS had posted a couple of weeks ago and quickly pulled.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 16th, 2011 at 11:09am

Yep. Supposedly a 48 hour FB exclusive.
Dunno if that means it'll get yanked - again - or if they'll post it @ superheavy.com and their YouTube channel.

Nice little taster of what each member contributes. Rahman's Urdu counterpoint in 'Superheavy' is very cool...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Jul 16th, 2011 at 11:21am
Crap, can't download : "Error: That Facebook video is marked private and therefore cannot be downloaded" with Freecorder

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 18th, 2011 at 4:41pm


SuperHeavy/UMG

'SuperHeavy - In The Studio' is posted @ superheavy.com and the SuperHeavyOfficial YouTube channel.



http://img38.imageshack.us/img38/608/superheavymiracleworker.jpg

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Jul 18th, 2011 at 5:58pm
Anybody know the name of the song when Mick sings, I said hey, I need you crazy energy, I need your body chemsistry '...?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Bob Tamp on Jul 19th, 2011 at 8:12am
the single is now available for download in States on Itunes/amazon.  I definately found some of the other pieces in the clip more interesting musically than Miracle worker

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Some Guy on Jul 19th, 2011 at 12:02pm
SuperRubbish.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by riffkeither on Jul 19th, 2011 at 12:51pm
the others songs seem to be really better than the "miraculous "single .

By the way , they are enjoying playing together and that sounds !!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 19th, 2011 at 1:20pm
The album tracklisting :

Miracle Worker
You're Never Gonna Change
One Day, One Night
Energy
SuperHeavy
Satyameva Jayate
Beautiful People
I Don't Mind
Common Ground
Unbelievable
Hey Captain
Soul Music
Mahya
Warning People
Rock the Country
New Born Baby
I Can't Take It No More


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 19th, 2011 at 1:57pm

Don't think that's the actual tracklist.

There was a handwritten list posted on SuperHeavy's FB recently:

http://goo.gl/6seLV

Third song is 'The World Keeps Turning', used as the fade-out on 'SuperHeavy - In The Studio'.
It's not included on that tracklist.

Also looks like 'Rock Me Gravity' was misread as 'Rock The Country'...

:-/

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Teiz on Jul 19th, 2011 at 5:22pm
It surprises me that there's plenty of folks that like this. Gave it three shots but never made it to the end. I have to admit the whole project pisses me off since it was announced, but it's worse than I feared.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Jul 19th, 2011 at 10:31pm
Is this me? All the pictures of A. R. Rahman shows devil's cornes!!



See his hair in all pictures, look like cornes to me!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by BONOISLOVE on Jul 20th, 2011 at 12:34am
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jc7lPwfQAKk

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Jul 20th, 2011 at 5:17am
"cornes"?  you mean horns, Voodoo?  I guess you should know....

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by polytoxic on Jul 20th, 2011 at 1:31pm

Some Guy wrote on Jul 19th, 2011 at 12:02pm:
SuperRubbish.


...in the doorway.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 20th, 2011 at 2:00pm


Kristin Burns

Joss Stone talks Mick and SuperHeavy with "Access Hollywood"



http://img38.imageshack.us/img38/608/superheavymiracleworker.jpg

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Jul 20th, 2011 at 2:13pm

polytoxic wrote on Jul 20th, 2011 at 1:31pm:

Some Guy wrote on Jul 19th, 2011 at 12:02pm:
SuperRubbish.


...in the doorway.

:charlieperv :tongui :warhorse :willya

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Honky Tonk Man on Jul 21st, 2011 at 4:19am
At the time posting, the official Super Heavy Facebook Page has a measly 512 fans - and one of 'em is our very own crazy bastard, Marko! Come on! Let's all show Mick and co. our support!  :nomames

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Jul 21st, 2011 at 6:27am

Honky Tonk Man wrote on Jul 21st, 2011 at 4:19am:
At the time posting, the official Super Heavy Facebook Page has a measly 512 fans - and one of 'em is our very own crazy bastard, Marko! Come on! Let's all show Mick and co. our support!  :nomames


Dont think thats the official one, though. The real one (it's called 'SuperHeavy' - ie, no space between the two words) has over 18,000.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Some Guy on Jul 21st, 2011 at 6:31am

polytoxic wrote on Jul 20th, 2011 at 1:31pm:

Some Guy wrote on Jul 19th, 2011 at 12:02pm:
SuperRubbish.


...in the doorway.

that's just postin

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 21st, 2011 at 8:30am


Kristin Burns


From the AR Rahman interview in today's The Times Of India:  

He is miles away in Los Angeles, busy working on his "biggest project" — the band SuperHeavy — featuring Mick Jagger, Dave Stewart, Joss Stone and Damien Marley. But when the telephone line crackles, AR Rahman's voice is as clear as crystal. "I've always wanted to be part of a band once again. Working with such legends from the industry is indeed a dream come true. This is as big as it gets for me," says the maestro from Chennai, the excitement palpable in his voice.

With his time considerably spent working on his new project, Rahman recounts the moment when the offer came by him. "I was going through a very dark phase in my life. The Mumbai shootout happened and a sound technician of mine was a victim. I drew into a shell. I couldn't fathom who could orchestrate such an act of barbarity. That's when I got a call offering me the project. At that time, I really needed something to immerse myself into and this was the perfect project. Not only did I get to work with such legends, it also helped me channel my pain in a more creative manner.

Known to work in a solitary environment, Rahman confesses that he changed his style of working only for the band. "When I'm in my studios I work alone, in the silence of the night. But with "SuperHeavy", we had the other band members drop in to do their bit, give their ideas and suggestions and bond musically. The one thing we all knew was that no matter how big a star one is, we had all put our egos in our bags to come up with something that would blow the listener's mind away. Plus, everything with "SuperHeavy" is recorded live, whereas I'm used to working on production pieces," he admits.

Despite a heavy lineup, the music from the album will not be very different from what's expected of the band members. "We haven't tried to make it very different for the western audience. But at the same time, I wanted to design something with an Indian feel. That's when I created "Satyameva Jayate". It will be interesting to hear Mick (Jagger) sing in Sanskrit!" laughs ARR.


The Times Of India

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Jul 21st, 2011 at 7:50pm
Nice interviews with Joss Stone and AR Rahman.   Creative people leaving their egos at the door, coming together to make music and then feeling excited with the result.  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Jul 21st, 2011 at 8:31pm

Kristin Burns

I LOve when she belts this out. WTF is going on.....

OH YAH!


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 22nd, 2011 at 7:57am

Dunno about the iTunes numbers, but this week's US release of 'Miracle Worker' has generated barely a ripple at amazon.com - it's currently #1,197 in mp3 sales...


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Jul 22nd, 2011 at 3:16pm
I like going to the store annnnd I'm not so saavy with buying over the internet.

I suppose it is a New ERA..........................

I just asked and my  son said just get on your cellphone.

Imagine that.  :-/

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 26th, 2011 at 5:45pm

http://goo.gl/lwo7E
Kristin Burns


From the Joss Stone interview in Us:

Us: How is it working with Mick Jagger in SuperHeavy?

JS: It is quite a funny old world I have stepped into, isn't it?  It is very surreal. He is a legend, as is Dave, Damian Marley, and A.R. Rahman to the people in India. It is a compliment that they picked me to be the girl in the group to cover it up with my silly lyrics. The way that Mick writes is so clever. He is more intelligent than you would expect this rock and roll god to be. He has so much information to give and I love that because I learn more. When I was working with Mick, I realized that taking more time could be beneficial. He paints pictures with his lyrics, and it is brilliant. He is a lovely man who is bloody talented. I am lucky to be able to work with him. I pinch myself sometimes!

Us: Did you get to do anything fun with him?

JS: He asked me to go out to a club with him once. He is so naughty. He is like, 'I am going to go out and I am going to dance around.' I was like, 'Mick I can't do that I have to go to bed.' He is a party animal who jokes around and is very funny.  He is not what some people suggest him to be. A lot of people asked if he came on to me. Of course he bloody didn't. He has always been like my dad and more, but he is a mentoring chap. He is not that rock and roll flirt; he is a carefree gentleman.

Us: Did you get to meet his girlfriend, stylist L'Wren Scott?

JS: When she walked in I was like, 'my goodness how beautiful is this woman?' Of course Mick's wife is a stunning six-foot tall, longhaired woman.


Us

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 26th, 2011 at 5:50pm

http://goo.gl/4G1D6
Kristin Burns

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Jul 27th, 2011 at 10:29pm
Love the man but hate the shirt.  Mick's long sleeved dark brown shirts are a pet peeve of mine.  Stick to jeans and tee shirts, Mick.  You're made for them.  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Jul 29th, 2011 at 9:43am

http://img546.imageshack.us/img546/9782/shdsjsro0729.jpg
Kristin Burns


Super Heavy Miracle Worker Sir Mick Jagger's already ridiculed "supergroup" should be the aural equivalent of a cut-and-shut car, but against expectations, this is great. In the mould of Jagger's 1977 sublime Walk But Don't Look Back single with Peter Tosh, this is bouncy, feelgood reggae with Damian Marley, Joss Stone and Sir Mick sharing vocal duties on an instantly infectious tune.

The Guardian

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Jul 31st, 2011 at 7:14pm
Hmmm...not quite sure what a 'cut and shut' car is but nice to read another enthusiastic response.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 1st, 2011 at 11:41pm


Kristin Burns


From a Joss Stone interview @ Huffington Post:  

Mike Ragogna: As far as the LP1's songs, did you write most of them during that six-day excursion (to Nashville)?

JS: I wrote a lot of them, yes. We did have a couple songs that we pulled out of the woodwork because Dave (Stewart) and I had done some before just randomly, for no good reason. We just thought, "Oh, let's write some songs," so we did that in LA. We wrote one song there. And in fact, one of the songs that's on the album came from the SuperHeavy sessions. We were writing with all the guys from SuperHeavy, and Dave and I, if you can imagine, we're all in one room. There's Mick (Jagger), Damian (Marley), A.R. (Rahman), Dave, and myself, and then a couple musicians, which are brilliant also. So, we're all jamming together, and then there were little lulls in that where there was kind of silence, and people were tuning and making gibberish noises. In that little lull, Dave and I were listening to each other for some reason, and we wrote "Newborn."

MR: The first song on the album. Joss, how did SuperHeavy come together? That rostery is pretty impressive.

JS: It is interesting, isn't it? It's definitely a different thing to do. Dave, at the same time, he's got this thing where he just has these ideas, and he just does them. He just randomly has crazy ideas and a lot of people say, "Oh, well you know, he's got thousands of ideas. He's mental. It's never going to work." But then, five minutes, and it's done. He calls me up, and it's the same thing. "Hey Joss, how're you doing? Um, I've got a really cool idea. Do you want to come? Mick Jagger and I, we're going to make a band. Do you want to sing in the band?" "Yeah, okay." The next minute, I find myself in the studio with all these amazing people, and--"wham bam thank you ma'am"--now we've got an album coming out in September. Just look at it! It's really, really wicked. (laughs) The situations I find myself in are just, like, ridiculous. (laughs)

MR: And the song "Miracle Worker" already has a video.

JS: Yeah, we did it just the other day.

MR: What was that like?

JS: I like the video, it's got this whole story that's running through it. At the beginning, Damian and I have this conversation and our conversation is about a love that's in a little bit of turmoil. It's not a love lost, but it is kind of going through something. Then Mick, in the video--and also in the lyrics and the song--plays this character that's kind of like the witchdoctor that puts everything right and, I guess, is a little bit of a love therapist in a way. And then, in the chorus, we all come together, sing it, and everything gets fixed, of course, because that's the only way that it could possibly happen. (laughs)

Huffington Post


Video shoot was in June, so it should be surfacing sometime soon...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 2nd, 2011 at 12:08am

http://goo.gl/oHNdU


Song titles and writing credits for 12 of the album's tracks...with 4 more to be revealed.  

01 “Superheavy” (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart/Rahman)
02 “Unbelievable” (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart/Rahman)
03 “Miracle Worker” (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart/Rahman)
04 “Energy” (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart)
05 “Satyameva Jayathe” (Rahman /Marley/Stone)
06 “One Day One Night” (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart/Rahman)
07 “Never Gonna Change” (Jagger/Stewart)
08 “Beautiful People” (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart/Rahman)
09 “Rock Me Gently” (Marley/Stone/Stewart)
10 “I Can’t Take It No More” (Jagger)
11 “I Don’t Mind” (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart)
12 “World Keeps Turning” (Stone/Marley/Jagger/Stewart)


- UMG Brazil via tenhomaisdiscosqueamigos.com

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Aug 2nd, 2011 at 8:06am
I am so lookin forward to this release!  When is it out-- in Sept. sometime?

Title: SuperHeavy sounds fantastic!
Post by the juf on Aug 2nd, 2011 at 2:49pm
This afternoon I was at UMG headquarters and listened to eight tracks of the new SuperHeavy album. I must say I was amazed by its diversity! Although I had been listening to Miracle Worker on my iPod several times and quite digged its reggae beat, yet I did not expect such a variety on this album.

SuperHeavy includes a ballad in which Mick truly excels, some really catchy rocksongs with good riffs that really swept me off my feet. Moreover, some good world music is added to this album: Indian and reggae tunes. And I think the artwork is beautiful too! The Dutch release is due 16 September, rest of Europe to follow on 20 September. iTunes will exclusively release four extra tracks to the album.



Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Aug 2nd, 2011 at 4:32pm
I can't hear swat!?

http://www.trademarkia.com/services/logo.ashx?sid=76659943

Title: Re: SuperHeavy sounds fantastic!
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 3rd, 2011 at 7:15pm

the juf wrote on Aug 2nd, 2011 at 2:49pm:
This afternoon I was at UMG headquarters and listened to eight tracks of the new SuperHeavy album. I must say I was amazed by its diversity! Although I had been listening to Miracle Worker on my iPod several times and quite digged its reggae beat, yet I did not expect such a variety on this album.

SuperHeavy includes a ballad in which Mick truly excels, some really catchy rocksongs with good riffs that really swept me off my feet. Moreover, some good world music is added to this album: Indian and reggae tunes. And I think the artwork is beautiful too! The Dutch release is due 16 September, rest of Europe to follow on 20 September. iTunes will exclusively release four extra tracks to the album.

Nice...lucky you!
Did you catch the name of that ballad? Or any of the other songs?

Guess the iTunes exclusive explains the missing 4 from the tracklist above.
That blurb also mentioned a "deluxe edition", so maybe they'll be part of that...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 3rd, 2011 at 7:29pm


SuperHeavy/UMG


SuperHeavy
"Miracle Worker"



By Jon Dolan
August 3, 2011

People don’t often use the term "world music" anymore, but the first offering from SuperHeavy — Mick Jagger's collaboration with Dave Stewart, Joss Stone, Damian Marley and Indian theatrical composer A.R. Rahman — is some pretty worldly stuff. Jagger really goes for it, tasting every word he rolls out over the soul-splashed roots-reggae groove, which is cut with a gorgeous fiddle melody strung between Nashville and Istanbul. It's a summertime single built for every beach.



Listen to "Miracle Worker":

http://goo.gl/J7xnT

Rolling Stone

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Aug 3rd, 2011 at 7:32pm
The credits are interesting, most are signed "Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart/Rahman", which is not the alphabetical order. Probably the "full" collaborations, the others probably being songs brought to the sessions in a more finished state...so when are the first leaks coming out!

Title: Re: SuperHeavy sounds fantastic!
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Aug 4th, 2011 at 12:28am

the juf wrote on Aug 2nd, 2011 at 2:49pm:
This afternoon I was at UMG headquarters and listened to eight tracks of the new SuperHeavy album. I must say I was amazed by its diversity! Although I had been listening to Miracle Worker on my iPod several times and quite digged its reggae beat, yet I did not expect such a variety on this album.

SuperHeavy includes a ballad in which Mick truly excels, some really catchy rocksongs with good riffs that really swept me off my feet. Moreover, some good world music is added to this album: Indian and reggae tunes. And I think the artwork is beautiful too! The Dutch release is due 16 September, rest of Europe to follow on 20 September. iTunes will exclusively release four extra tracks to the album.


Thanks a lot juffy!

As I was expected, seems it is a deliciuos mix of rock, blues, soul, reggae and indian music!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by the juf on Aug 4th, 2011 at 3:46am

gotdablouse wrote on Aug 3rd, 2011 at 7:32pm:
...so when are the first leaks coming out!

I have leaked as much as I could.
I will update every now and then.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Some Guy on Aug 4th, 2011 at 7:18am
I have really never listened to MW in any of these threads, just haven't been into it. But yesterday running errands I heard the song on 92.9 Dave FM and I gotta tell ya I smell a hit! It just sounded so much better hearing it while tooling around on a hot summer day.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 4th, 2011 at 7:44am

Good move to reserve judgment.

Others hastily declared themselves "out" and dismissed it as "SuperRubbish" without having heard a note...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Some Guy on Aug 4th, 2011 at 8:05am

left shoe shuffle wrote on Aug 4th, 2011 at 7:44am:
Good move to reserve judgment.

Others hastily declared themselves "out" and dismissed it as "SuperRubbish" without having heard a note...

"I keed I keed"

lefty's bustin chops today.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 4th, 2011 at 8:26am

Nah. Just what I've seen on the Van Halen and U2 boards...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Aug 4th, 2011 at 8:28am
BTW, even that I love what I have heard so far, I laughed when I read "SuperRubbish in the Doorway" LOL

:wtf2 :wtf2 :wtf2 :thatwassmart :thatwassmart :thatwassmart  :nomames :stinkypost

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Aug 4th, 2011 at 9:24am

Some Guy wrote on Aug 4th, 2011 at 7:18am:
I have really never listened to MW in any of these threads, just haven't been into it. But yesterday running errands I heard the song on 92.9 Dave FM and I gotta tell ya I smell a hit! It just sounded so much better hearing it while tooling around on a hot summer day.

It's a summertime feelgood. :interestingstuffronnie

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Some Guy on Aug 4th, 2011 at 9:26am

Voodoo Chile in Wonderland wrote on Aug 4th, 2011 at 8:28am:
BTW, even that I love what I have heard so far, I laughed when I read "SuperRubbish in the Doorway" LOL

:wtf2 :wtf2 :wtf2 :thatwassmart :thatwassmart :thatwassmart  :nomames :stinkypost

that was pretty damn funny!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 4th, 2011 at 10:11am


Kristin Burns


Back in the spring, when the band SuperHeavy — featuring the WTF-lineup of Mick Jagger, the Eurythmics' Dave Stewart, Joss Stone, Damian Marley, and A.R. Rahman — was announced, Vulture's helpful commentary was that "either these people have the most scintillating conversations ever heard, or they just sit around after practice avoiding eye contact." Luckily, by way of premiering their debut track, "Miracle Worker," Super Heavy has released an in-studio clip, and it is fascinating. At one point, the principals are all standing around, amicably discussing what to do with the next part of a song. Stone throws out some lyrics. Stewart tells Jagger, who is rocking some sick airport newsstand sunglasses, to bring back a "great riff" he had before. Damian Marley looks like he wishes he were still chiefing blunts with Nas. And then they keep it moving forward. Is this really happening? It looks like it's really happening!

New York Magazine

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Aug 4th, 2011 at 10:19am
man, I hope they take this on the road for a few shows

im having dreams of new music in exotic lands


BTW, I thought the funniest line so far was "I just did a load of clothes on Super Heavy"--cant remember the author....

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by BILL PERKS on Aug 4th, 2011 at 10:51am
SONG FUCKIN ROCKS ! AND MY 13 YEAR OLD DAUGHTER AGREES.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Aug 4th, 2011 at 12:58pm
hmmmmm..nice little toe tappin time waster...yawwwwwwwwnnnnnn..all they need is John Mayer to really put us to sleep

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Aug 4th, 2011 at 1:14pm

gimmekeef wrote on Aug 4th, 2011 at 12:58pm:
hmmmmm..nice little toe tappin time waster...yawwwwwwwwnnnnnn..all they need is John Mayer to really put us to sleep

Yeah old fathead does it everytime GK. :will-ya

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Holden on Aug 4th, 2011 at 3:37pm
The song is magic after a purple/skywalker joint. :weed

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by mojoman on Aug 4th, 2011 at 4:41pm

Holden wrote on Aug 4th, 2011 at 3:37pm:
The song is magic after a purple/skywalker joint. :weed




:smoking

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 5th, 2011 at 11:41am




Mick Jagger's Super Heavy Single Super Sucks

Posted Thu Aug 4, 2011 by Daniel Kreps

Back in May, we told you about the new "supergroup" Super Heavy, featuring the Rolling Stones' Mick Jagger, Indian composer A.R. Rahman, Joss Stone, Damien "Jr. Gong" Marley, and the Eurythmics' Dave Stewart. A lineup that eclectic could only have two results: Either the disparate talents help bring something new to each other's genre of choice, or it sounds like an unmitigated disaster. Based on the first single "Miracle Worker," a reggae track meant to showcase Marley's skills, it's likely that Super Heavy falls into that latter category.

Built on the same beat that 90 percent of radio reggae songs use as a foundation, "Miracle Worker" kicks off with Marley and Stone trading simple verses, then Jagger sweeps in and almost resuscitates this track. It's genuinely refreshing to hear Jagger on something new after being out of the studio and off the stage for so long, but unfortunately Super Heavy take his microphone away to launch into a very adult contemporary chorus. At one point, we think we hear a fiddle. Because fiddles and reggae always go hand-in-hand.

We're not the biggest fans of Bob Marley, who has become the poster child for reggae, but we still love music from Jamaica. Legends like King Tubby, Mikey Dread, and Lee "Scratch" Perry all deserve a spot in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and all three are perhaps more worthy than Jimmy Cliff, who was inducted in 2010. "Miracle Worker," however, is the type of reggae you'd hear a rent-a-band performing to vacationers on the deck of a Carnival Cruise line. There's nothing "super heavy" about this "supergroup," except for the way they super heavy-handedly pillage the Bob Marley songbook.

Hopefully, this is Super Heavy's one descent into Damien "Jr. Gong" Marley's reggae music, and the rest of their September-bound debut album focuses on Rahman's Bollywood soundscapes, Joss Stone's soul, and of course, Jagger's brand of rock & roll.


Yahoo! Music

Likes Mick alright, but the rest not so much...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 5th, 2011 at 11:57am


Kristin Burns


UMG Germany has posted edited versions of the 'In The Studio' clip:

SuperHeavy Trailer Reggae Version - http://youtu.be/PeiAmrWWBLs

SuperHeavy Trailer Rock Version - http://youtu.be/fdpcvivm6oo


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Aug 5th, 2011 at 1:18pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on Aug 5th, 2011 at 11:41am:



Mick Jagger's Super Heavy Single Super Sucks

Posted Thu Aug 4, 2011 by Daniel Kreps

Back in May, we told you about the new "supergroup" Super Heavy, featuring the Rolling Stones' Mick Jagger, Indian composer A.R. Rahman, Joss Stone, Damien "Jr. Gong" Marley, and the Eurythmics' Dave Stewart. A lineup that eclectic could only have two results: Either the disparate talents help bring something new to each other's genre of choice, or it sounds like an unmitigated disaster. Based on the first single "Miracle Worker," a reggae track meant to showcase Marley's skills, it's likely that Super Heavy falls into that latter category.

Built on the same beat that 90 percent of radio reggae songs use as a foundation, "Miracle Worker" kicks off with Marley and Stone trading simple verses, then Jagger sweeps in and almost resuscitates this track. It's genuinely refreshing to hear Jagger on something new after being out of the studio and off the stage for so long, but unfortunately Super Heavy take his microphone away to launch into a very adult contemporary chorus. At one point, we think we hear a fiddle. Because fiddles and reggae always go hand-in-hand.

We're not the biggest fans of Bob Marley, who has become the poster child for reggae, but we still love music from Jamaica. Legends like King Tubby, Mikey Dread, and Lee "Scratch" Perry all deserve a spot in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and all three are perhaps more worthy than Jimmy Cliff, who was inducted in 2010. "Miracle Worker," however, is the type of reggae you'd hear a rent-a-band performing to vacationers on the deck of a Carnival Cruise line. There's nothing "super heavy" about this "supergroup," except for the way they super heavy-handedly pillage the Bob Marley songbook.

Hopefully, this is Super Heavy's one descent into Damien "Jr. Gong" Marley's reggae music, and the rest of their September-bound debut album focuses on Rahman's Bollywood soundscapes, Joss Stone's soul, and of course, Jagger's brand of rock & roll.


Yahoo! Music

Likes Mick alright, but the rest not so much...


Why do reviewers seem to go out of their way to be unnecessarily snotty?  Comparing "Miracle Worker" to something you'd hear from a rent-a-band on a Carnival Cruise?  This reviewer should take that cruise and jump overboard.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Pdog on Aug 5th, 2011 at 3:33pm

luxury wrote on Aug 4th, 2011 at 10:19am:
man, I hope they take this on the road for a few shows

im having dreams of new music in exotic lands


BTW, I thought the funniest line so far was "I just did a load of clothes on Super Heavy"--cant remember the author....




I was wondering if they came up with the name while in a laundromat... Other choices included:
Gentle Cycle
Permanent Press
Damp Dry
Quick Wash
Rinse & Spin
Hand Washables
Whitest Whites (might attract the nazi crowd)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Aug 5th, 2011 at 11:16pm
Is Daniel Kreps Pierce Morgan by chance?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 7th, 2011 at 10:08am

http://img40.imageshack.us/img40/8268/shrahmanro080711.jpg
SuperHeavy/UMG


From the 'Miracle Worker' 4 track CD - 'Satyameva Jayathe'

The "Mick sings in Urdu" song...big sound with an even bigger chorus. Roll credits.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Moonisup on Aug 7th, 2011 at 4:09pm
As I posted over on IORR, it looks like Mick is singing: Suck your maid at 1.19

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by uncleson on Aug 7th, 2011 at 4:14pm
MW sounds good.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Aug 7th, 2011 at 5:14pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on Aug 7th, 2011 at 10:08am:
http://img40.imageshack.us/img40/8268/shrahmanro080711.jpg
SuperHeavy/UMG


From the 'Miracle Worker' 4 track CD - 'Satyameva Jayathe'

The "Mick sings in Urdu" song...big sound with an even bigger chorus. Roll credits.


Speaking of credits...check out the Mick Jigger.  That's a new one!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Deathgod on Aug 8th, 2011 at 6:40am
I just saw a pic of Mick in a pink suit and pink fedora from the clip.

Oh my ....
:nooslajaleisk

Waiting on a Pimp
:Youmakeagrownmancrylikejoey

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 8th, 2011 at 7:05am

From the 'Miracle Worker' video shoot. Video premieres Friday on Vevo.

http://goo.gl/EHu91

http://goo.gl/1uzRh

http://goo.gl/DMF9Q

http://goo.gl/X99ua
SuperHeavy


Shades of 'Waiting On A Friend'...Mick's outfit by Pepto-Bismol.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Aug 8th, 2011 at 10:26am
oh man, that suit and hat are gonna steal the show

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Aug 8th, 2011 at 10:45am
Jesus H Christ on a bike.

Even the costume he wore in 'Bent' looked less ridiculous.  

On the positive side, at least there's no chance of him bring run over by a car on an unlit country road.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by riffkeither on Aug 8th, 2011 at 10:54am

Gazza wrote on Aug 8th, 2011 at 10:45am:
Jesus H Christ on a bike.

Even the costume he wore in 'Bent' looked less ridiculous.  

On the positive side, at least there's no chance of him bring run over by a car on an unlit country road.



Hey man it's Mick Jagger , there is no thin line between him and others !!! :-)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Aug 8th, 2011 at 10:57am
Oh by the way,which one's pink? :areyoufuckingserious

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Jeep on Aug 8th, 2011 at 11:11am
         :paristhong                                     :paristhong

               


               

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Aug 8th, 2011 at 11:47am
LOL Jeep you made me laugh really out loud RMAOTFF

:paristhong :paristhong :paristhong :paristhong

Your crazy creativity is the funniest thing on the whole net  8-)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Aug 8th, 2011 at 12:04pm
Hey!  That's a fine header.  I love the suit AND the setup of the photo.   Pink was a perfect choice!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Aug 8th, 2011 at 12:29pm

Ginda wrote on Aug 8th, 2011 at 12:04pm:
Hey!  That's a fine header.  I love the suit AND the setup of the photo.   Pink was a perfect choice!

AYE AYE Agreed. :paristhong

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Holden on Aug 8th, 2011 at 12:40pm
That is the coolest fuckin' suit I have ever seen! And the thing is Mick is the ONLY guy in the world who can pull it off.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Aug 8th, 2011 at 12:45pm

Holden wrote on Aug 8th, 2011 at 12:40pm:
That is the coolest fuckin' suit I have ever seen! And the thing is Mick is the ONLY guy in the world who can pull it off.


Agree with you about the coolness, Holden.  But there was another who wore pink with GREATNESS.  Behold:

http://t1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTauW9XXCW0l84dsZ2hytQQcfvFDg7I7vHDe_P5k_gDoYofVuNA2Q-

And as far as cool suits goes?  I think the one below tops Mick's.
 
http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTdLlzAyxI4uXDXIi1oPyOFGjW2BHVLRApXRIpGl5qLKT4OYc-e


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Aug 8th, 2011 at 1:23pm

Ginda wrote on Aug 8th, 2011 at 12:45pm:
I think the one below tops Mick's.
 
http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTdLlzAyxI4uXDXIi1oPyOFGjW2BHVLRApXRIpGl5qLKT4OYc-e


The suits too  :blankfriggingstare1

;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D




I agree with Luxy, lavendar, Holden, Ginda, etc... that suits rocks!! I love it, would wear ot for sure,specially with Jeep's spec

:paristhong :paristhong :paristhong

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Aug 8th, 2011 at 1:58pm
Isn't He Pretty In Pink, Isn't he ?!! :paristhong

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Moonisup on Aug 8th, 2011 at 2:07pm
this is the end of the rolling stones

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Aug 8th, 2011 at 2:10pm
LOL Moonisup!! Your statement and your footer image together made me laugh too!!

Chuck Leavell was the end of the Rolling Stones

;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by The Wick on Aug 8th, 2011 at 2:19pm
I'll take that suit over the second song any day. That was horrid.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by riffkeither on Aug 8th, 2011 at 3:09pm
Not the first time he is in pink !

Take a look    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I2Hn-98fqKw

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Tumbling Dijs on Aug 8th, 2011 at 3:34pm
The setting makes me think of "Waiting on a friend". Maybe Mick's still waiting.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Aug 8th, 2011 at 3:55pm
He's the Miracle Worker, for cryin out loud!

...at least his hair is much cooler now than in Bent, no, gazza?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 8th, 2011 at 4:05pm

The MJ hair conspiracists would say it's just a different wig...



Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Aug 8th, 2011 at 6:09pm
Stop it!! take it down!! I cant bear it....

nice little titties tho

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by mojoman on Aug 8th, 2011 at 6:13pm

Tumbling Dijs wrote on Aug 8th, 2011 at 3:34pm:
The setting makes me think of "Waiting on a friend". Maybe Mick's still waiting.


exactly!!!

:wtf1

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Aug 9th, 2011 at 2:00am
Yep I thought at first it was some kind of spoof of Waiting on a Friend!

Nice suit, I wish he stopped wearing sneekers though, these flat shoes he wore in 1981 were smarter, probably has back problems...dude's old

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Edith Grove on Aug 9th, 2011 at 4:33am

gotdablouse wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 2:00am:
Nice suit, I wish he stopped wearing sneekers though, these flat shoes he wore in 1981 were smarter, probably has back problems...dude's old


Probably doesn't have back problems, partially due to the shoes he wears. Dude's been taking care of himself in his later years. Been following a meticulous exercise regimen for a long time now. :thatwassmart

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Zack on Aug 9th, 2011 at 5:05am
Joss on stage in bare feet turns me on . . .  :areyoufuckingserious

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by philgood on Aug 9th, 2011 at 5:49am
During the 1970 European Tour Mick wore a light-colored pink satin-suit.
Short time later Rod Stewart came up with a very similiar one when on tour with the Faces.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by TomL on Aug 9th, 2011 at 6:48am
I like pink  :kissmyass, but not on a man.  :aimama

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 9th, 2011 at 7:11am

http://img853.imageshack.us/img853/2280/sharro080911.jpg
Kristin Burns


A R Rahmans Satyameva Jayathe releases!

Aug 9, 2011

A R Rahman releases second song with band SuperHeavy

True to it's meaning, the song could not been released at a better time and just before India's Independence Day on 15th Aug. International legends such as Mick Jagger, Dave Stewart, Joss Stone and Damian Marley are collaborating on it as part of the global band SuperHeavy. Incidentally, Mick Jagger singing in Sanskrit on the track is a treat for all. And this song will be premiering exclusively on Radio Mirchi 98.3 FM today across 22 cities!

On the release of "Satyameva Jayathe" A R Rahman says, "When Dave said A R we want your voice in this album we want this to be a great Indian song too; a long dream for me was to take one of the morals of Indian culture which is Satyameva Jayathe and make it as a song. This is historic if Mick Jagger, Joss Stone, Damian '"Jr Gong" Marley and Dave Stewart and me come together for a song like this, it is iconic in a way. I hope people like it."

"Satyameva Jayathe" is the band's second single after the summer hit "Miracle Worker". The much awaited album drops on September 19th.

Devraj Sanyal, Managing Director, Universal Music India says, "There is little to say about the massive excitement we have in releasing a single and an album from a line up that is stellar & huge beyond description from our UMGI stable. What is interesting on this deal is the sheer size of the marketing wraparound that we have done for Satyameva Jayathe From a VH1 " Shot by You" which will see the creation & release of the global video of the song made by our fans here in India, to a substantial ATL & BTL push through our partner Tata Docomo which will promote the song & the album on mass media, to the all India exclusive release of the song in 22 cities simultaneously on Radio Mirchi, to never before executed PR like having Mick Jagger and AR Rahman in the studio with Sunil Gavaskar at Edgbaston discussing Cricket and SuperHeavy, to finally the enormous play in our partner telcos. It's safe to say that no international song till date has ever received this kind of innovation driving it."


The Times Of India
_____

Listen to 'Satyameva Jayathe'

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 9th, 2011 at 7:23am

More from the 'Miracle Worker' video shoot:




SuperHeavy

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 9th, 2011 at 7:31am




SuperHeavy

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Aug 9th, 2011 at 8:09am
...could that be the Classic Choral Society at the intro??

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Aug 9th, 2011 at 8:51am
Is there a video?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:20am

steel driving hammer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 8:51am:
Is there a video?


It's out on Friday. Mick's birthday present to me of course... ;)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Starbuck on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:22am
i had a dream last night that mick asked me to join superheavy as a backup singer. we nailed "the last time" in front of an international audience. i sang my backup lines from my backyard. then he wanted to sing some superheavy songs and i had to bow out, not having heard the album yet. very embarrassing.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:25am

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:20am:

steel driving hammer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 8:51am:
Is there a video?


It's out on Friday. Mick's birthday present to me of course... ;)


Thank you.

Almost can't wait.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:30am

steel driving hammer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:25am:

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:20am:

steel driving hammer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 8:51am:
Is there a video?


It's out on Friday. Mick's birthday present to me of course... ;)


Thank you.

Almost can't wait.


Same here. I don't know what to think about the suit. Cool or horrible?

It looks good in the black and white photo if that counts for anything.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:37am

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:30am:

steel driving hammer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:25am:

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:20am:

steel driving hammer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 8:51am:
Is there a video?


It's out on Friday. Mick's birthday present to me of course... ;)


Thank you.

Almost can't wait.


Same here. I don't know what to think about the suit. Cool or horrible?

It looks good in the black and white photo if that counts for anything.


Love the Pink, pure Mick as only he can, w/ the suit that is, maybe not the pop music though.  

But Mick looks great in anything.

Even brown.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 9th, 2011 at 10:14am

steel driving hammer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:37am:

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:30am:

steel driving hammer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:25am:

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:20am:

steel driving hammer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 8:51am:
Is there a video?


It's out on Friday. Mick's birthday present to me of course... ;)


Thank you.

Almost can't wait.


Same here. I don't know what to think about the suit. Cool or horrible?

It looks good in the black and white photo if that counts for anything.


Love the Pink, pure Mick as only he can, w/ the suit that is, maybe not the pop music though.  

But Mick looks great in anything.

Even brown.


http://tinyurl.com/3cmbbyh

This looks pretty damn bad!

I'm looking forward to the album though. I enjoyed the studio video.
What's the new single like? I haven't had the chance to hear it yet.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Starbuck on Aug 9th, 2011 at 11:02am
come one people. look at that thing! worst suit ever. it's like tele dressed him.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Aug 9th, 2011 at 11:16am

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:30am:

steel driving hammer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:25am:

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:20am:

steel driving hammer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 8:51am:
Is there a video?


It's out on Friday. Mick's birthday present to me of course... ;)


Thank you.

Almost can't wait.


Same here. I don't know what to think about the suit. Cool or horrible?

It looks good in the black and white photo if that counts for anything.

It looks a lot better in black & white. :wtf3

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by LadyJane on Aug 9th, 2011 at 11:49am
I have given this much thought.
I hate it.
I don't know if it's the matching sneakers and socks....
I don't know if it's the "Waitin on a Friend" vid similarities.
I don't know if it's the Pepto Bismol shade.
Thumbs down.

I do like it in black and white and would love to see Mick WITH THE STONES
dressed in suits.

LJ.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by TomL on Aug 9th, 2011 at 1:01pm
LMFAO- it's like tele dressed him. Very fucking funny.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Aug 9th, 2011 at 3:05pm
christ I nearly went blind looking at that abomination.......L'Wren too busy trying to sort out the NBA lockout to dress him?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Aug 9th, 2011 at 3:41pm

I Like this pic.

BLACKBIRD Diaries

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Aug 9th, 2011 at 6:17pm

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:30am:

steel driving hammer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:25am:

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 9:20am:

steel driving hammer wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 8:51am:
Is there a video?


It's out on Friday. Mick's birthday present to me of course... ;)


Thank you.

Almost can't wait.


Same here. I don't know what to think about the suit. Cool or horrible?

It looks good in the black and white photo if that counts for anything.


Yep...my first reaction was 'eeeeeeeeeeugh'. Mostly because of the shoes and hat.

The 'stage' pics look much better tho, as do the B&W ones.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 9th, 2011 at 6:58pm
Mick looks really cool in the black and white photo. I don't even mind the pink but it's a bit luminous. An someone should please buy the man a pair of decent shoes!

I think it would have been cool of he had a sort of shaman look going on for the "surgeon of love" character but that mightn't suit the story of the video. If it's any consolation, Joss Stone is looking pretty well.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Steel Wheels on Aug 9th, 2011 at 7:34pm
I'm digging the fact Mick is mixing it up with musicians and laying down vocals and having some fun.

There's the pink suit too...which i fucking love.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gorda on Aug 10th, 2011 at 2:33am
I DON'T WANT SOME "SUPERHEAVY GROUP"!

I WANT MY ROLLING STONES NOW!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 10th, 2011 at 5:38am

gorda wrote on Aug 10th, 2011 at 2:33am:
I DON'T WANT SOME "SUPERHEAVY GROUP"!

I WANT MY ROLLING STONES NOW!


My heart bleeds...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Aug 10th, 2011 at 7:28am
10 August 2011

Rolling Stone Mick Jagger sings in Sanskrit  

Mick Jagger teams up with AR Rahman on the song


Rolling Stones front man Mick Jagger has sung in Sanskrit on a new album by a supergroup, which stars Oscar-winning Indian musician AR Rahman.

Jagger sings Satyameva Jayate (Truth alone triumphs), the second single from a supergroup called SuperHeavy which also features Dave Stewart, Joss Stone and Damian Marley.

Satyameva Jayate is the band's second single.

SuperHeavy's album is expected to be released in September.

"Dave said AR [Rahman] we want your voice in this album... we want this to be a great Indian song too. A long dream for me to raise one of the morals of Indian culture which is Satyameva Jayate and make it as a song," Rahman was quoted as saying by the Press Trust of India.

"This is historic... it is iconic in a way. I hope people will like it," he said.

Jagger formed the band in May, saying that he "wanted a convergence of different musical styles".

"It's different from anything else I've ever been involved in," Jagger told Rolling Stone magazine .

"The music is very wide-ranging - from reggae to ballads to Indian songs in Urdu."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-14471568

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 10th, 2011 at 7:39am
I wonder will this be a hit in India. I know that Rahman is massive in India and if I'm correct has sold more records than the Stones but I'm not sure about him having hit singles.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 10th, 2011 at 7:52am

Cover art for the 'Miracle Worker'/'Satyameva Jayate' single:

http://img834.imageshack.us/img834/9341/shsjro0810.jpg
arrahmansg

'Satyameva Jayathe'


Interestingly, Rahman and Jagger will promote the single on the first day of the third test between India and England at Edgbaston on August 10. Since Jagger is a huge cricket fan, he and Rahman will join commentators Sunil Gavaskar and Harsha Bhogle for a special session during the lunch break.

Hindustan Times

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 10th, 2011 at 8:07am

Posted @ SuperHeavyOfficial:

http://img217.imageshack.us/img217/1180/mwteaser.jpg

Nanonsecond blur of the guy in the pink suit...


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 10th, 2011 at 3:41pm

From today's England v. India cricket match:


rahman360

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 10th, 2011 at 6:34pm
More shit trainers for Mick...  :stinkypost

Nice pic though

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 10th, 2011 at 7:52pm



AR Rahman and Mike Jaggers talk SuperHeavy at today's cricket match - http://youtu.be/QqnmkhVOUD0

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Aug 10th, 2011 at 10:17pm
That's the most relaxed I've seen Mick in a long while.  Mike Jaggers?  I guess that's better than Mick Jigger.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 11th, 2011 at 7:07am
Our favourite and most reputable ( ::) ) tabloid on Mick's outfit

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2024685/Forty-years-Mick-Jagger-revives-flamingo-look-new-Superheavy-video.html

The thing I love most about the Daily Mail's website are the ridiculous reader comments under the stories which are even more inane than the content of the articles.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 11th, 2011 at 7:11am

                                                                                       

SUPERHEAVY
Mick Jagger - Dave Stewart - Joss Stone - Damian “Jr Gong” Marley - A.R. Rahman

SUPERHEAVY UNVEIL FULL ALBUM TRACK LISTING
RELEASED ON UNIVERSAL, SEPTEMBER 19



SuperHeavy, the brand new musical project featuring Mick Jagger, Damian “Jr Gong” Marley, A.R. Rahman, Dave Stewart and Joss Stone, are set to release their eponymously titled album on September 19 through Universal Music.  Co-produced by Jagger and Stewart the album was recorded in various studios around the world earlier this year, with the majority of the tracks laid down in LA. A standard and deluxe version of the album will be available both digitally and on CD. The deluxe package features 4 additional bonus tracks and expanded artwork by Shepard Fairey.

SuperHeavy fuses the talents of one of the greatest front-men of all time, Mick Jagger, Grammy/Brit/Golden Globe multi award winning, songwriter, producer and musician, Dave Stewart, a two time Academy award winning Indian composer and Asian superstar, A.R Rahman plus Brit /Grammy Award winning soul star, Joss Stone, and three time Grammy winning reggae star, Damian “Jr Gong” Marley.

Despite their disparate backgrounds they instantly connected and hit the ground running; “as soon as we started playing together in the studio it gelled, all these different styles, it didn’t seem to be a problem to make them fit together” says Jagger.

This new and spontaneous way of working for all the collaborators has resulted in an explosive album that defies categorisation.  Debut single ‘Miracle Worker’, which was released in July, has received rave reviews, The Guardian said “this is great…bouncy, feelgood reggae…an instantly infectious tune”.

Dave Stewart describes SuperHeavy as a ‘mad alchemist type experiment’, with Mick Jagger adding, “We didn’t know what kind of music we’d make, we didn’t know if it would be any good, but we hoped we’d have fun”.

Main Credits on the SuperHeavy album are – Mick Jagger (vocals, guitar and harmonica), Dave Stewart (guitar), Joss Stone (vocals), Damian “Jr Gong” Marley (vocals) and A. R. Rahman (vocals plus a variety of keyboards).

Full album track listing :

01. Superheavy (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart/Rahman)
02. Unbelievable (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart/Rahman)
03. Miracle Worker (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart/Rahman)
04. Energy (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart)
05. Satyameva Jayathe (Rahman/Marley/Stone)
06. One Day One Night (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart/Rahman)
07. Never Gonna Change (Jagger/Stewart)
08. Beautiful People (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart/Rahman)
09. Rock Me Gently (Marley/Stone/Stewart)
10. I Can’t Take It No More (Jagger)
11. I Don’t Mind (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart)
12. World Keeps Turning (Stone/Marley/Jagger/Stewart)

Bonus tracks:
01. Mihaya (Rahman/Stone/Marley)
02. Warring People (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Rahman)
03. Common Ground (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart)
04. Hey Captain (Jagger/Marley/Stone/Stewart)


AAA Music

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Aug 11th, 2011 at 7:44am
hmmmm, mick mentions how much they enjoyed performing it...

if they take this thing on the road, methinks lefty, voodoo and I may be the only ones representing Rocks Off.


...it's the tie--it pulls it all together or rips it all apart, I cant decide which, but Im lovin him in that pic.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 11th, 2011 at 7:53am
Interesting to see that track 10, I Can't Take It No More is written solely by Mick. It sounded pretty good from the clip in the studio video. I'm looking forward to this album quite a bit now.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by LadyJane on Aug 11th, 2011 at 9:41am

luxury wrote on Aug 11th, 2011 at 7:44am:
hmmmm, mick mentions how much they enjoyed performing it...

if they take this thing on the road, methinks lefty, voodoo and I may be the only ones representing Rocks Off.


...it's the tie--it pulls it all together or rips it all apart, I cant decide which, but Im lovin him in that pic.


Damn you Jagger.
Now in THAT pic, I'm thinking that's a lollipop I'd like to lick. ;)

LJ.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Steel Wheels on Aug 11th, 2011 at 10:47am
I'll go see Mick read the fucking phone book. I say take this on the road Mick!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by LadyJane on Aug 11th, 2011 at 11:12am

Steel Wheels wrote on Aug 11th, 2011 at 10:47am:
I'll go see Mick read the fucking phone book. I say take this on the road Mick!


Would you feel that way if I told you that Mick blew off the Keith and Charlie in December to go to India to work on Superheavy??

I hear things................ :whydontcha

LJ.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Aug 11th, 2011 at 11:44am

luxury wrote on Aug 11th, 2011 at 7:44am:
if they take this thing on the road, methinks lefty, voodoo and I may be the only ones representing Rocks Off.


It will a pleasure to meet you again and meet lefty for the first time before a show!!!

:willya

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Aug 11th, 2011 at 11:55am

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 11th, 2011 at 7:53am:
Interesting to see that track 10, I Can't Take It No More is written solely by Mick. It sounded pretty good from the clip in the studio video. I'm looking forward to this album quite a bit now.


Micks cryptic dig at Keith?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Steel Wheels on Aug 11th, 2011 at 12:50pm
If Mick blew off Keith, I can understand that. But to blow off Charlie Watts is another matter!

The muse is with Mick right now. He's writing with these other people and remaining active.  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by dadrob on Aug 11th, 2011 at 1:05pm
I do not enjoy the more mannered way in which Mick sings these days...nearly as unappealing to me as the very young Mick. I still think he was at his very very best for Its Only Rock n Roll n the Black n BLue sessions...even singing hard sounded more gutsy and less "high end recording gear styled."  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Nellcote on Aug 11th, 2011 at 1:15pm

LadyJane wrote on Aug 11th, 2011 at 11:12am:

Steel Wheels wrote on Aug 11th, 2011 at 10:47am:
I'll go see Mick read the fucking phone book. I say take this on the road Mick!


Would you feel that way if I told you that Mick blew off the Keith and Charlie in December to go to India to work on Superheavy??

I hear things................ :whydontcha

LJ.

Yeah, I would.  
I'm coming to the conclusion
it's not the end of the world as we
know it.  Too many years of working
together will withstand this.
They will go out on their own terms.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by BONOISLOVE on Aug 11th, 2011 at 1:52pm

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Aug 11th, 2011 at 2:09pm
I hope the road it's taken on leads to Seattle.  I'll be there.

Mick is absolutely entitled to pursue his own interests no matter who he blows off.   They are all at an age when they should be doing things that bring them fulfillment.   And three of the four seem to be finding that fulfillment with others.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Steel Wheels on Aug 11th, 2011 at 2:13pm
I can afford a Superheavy ticket even in this tough economy. I say bring a gig my way and I'm there. I'm pay to see Mick, Keith, Charlie or Ronnie any day of the week. Just give me a gig and I'm there.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Aug 11th, 2011 at 2:28pm
I believe Mick is on record as saying their no plans to tour with Super Heavy.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by LadyJane on Aug 11th, 2011 at 2:32pm
"Mick is absolutely entitled to pursue his own interests no matter who he blows off.   They are all at an age when they should be doing things that bring them fulfillment.   And three of the four seem to be finding that fulfillment with others."

I know the Stones don't owe ME anything.
Frankly, my bank account can't afford too much these days.
But I don't know of ANY other act that can claim 50 YEARS AS A WORKING BAND!!
How proud it would be for us as fans and FOR THEM AS MUSICIANS to stake that claim with a small
Tour!
Stones legacy vs Superheavy??
No brainer for me IF it comes down to that choice.
Can't help my passion and will never apologize for it.

LJ.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Aug 11th, 2011 at 2:43pm
I passed on Ravi Shankars sitar crap..and I'll pass on this too......but to each his own.....

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 11th, 2011 at 2:54pm
I doubt it would ever come down to a SuperHeavy vs Stones choice. SuperHeavy has been on the cards for a while now so if Mick had any Stones plans he would have known not to let this interfere. Plus, it's highly unlucky SuperHeavy will actually tour because it would be difficult to get all five members free for an extended period of time. I think I remember hearing that Joss Stone is planning to tour her new album, although I'm not sure how true that is.

If they are to play at all it would be a few promotional gigs or maybe an appearance at the Grammys or something.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Aug 11th, 2011 at 3:02pm

LadyJane wrote on Aug 11th, 2011 at 2:32pm:
"Mick is absolutely entitled to pursue his own interests no matter who he blows off.   They are all at an age when they should be doing things that bring them fulfillment.   And three of the four seem to be finding that fulfillment with others."

I know the Stones don't owe ME anything.
Frankly, my bank account can't afford too much these days.
But I don't know of ANY other act that can claim 50 YEARS AS A WORKING BAND!!
How proud it would be for us as fans and FOR THEM AS MUSICIANS to stake that claim with a small
Tour!
Stones legacy vs Superheavy??
No brainer for me IF it comes down to that choice.
Can't help my passion and will never apologize for it.

LJ.


I suppose it depends on your definition of "working" band.  IMO their legacy speaks for itself without another tour.  I would rather see them live out their lives with as much happiness and health as is left to them.  

If there is another tour, I hope you get a good seat.  I won't be there.  Keith's book did it for me.  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 11th, 2011 at 3:35pm

LadyJane wrote on Aug 11th, 2011 at 11:12am:
Would you feel that way if I told you that Mick blew off the Keith and Charlie in December to go to India to work on Superheavy??

I hear things................

Don't know eg666 or exactly how "inside" he might be, but December was a while ago.

Since then Keith himself has spoken about meeting with Mick. The following appeared in his May interview with USA Today:

When Jagger and Richards, boyhood pals since the early '50s, met in New York a month ago, "Mick pouted a bit, as is his wont," Richards says. "I told him, 'It's water under the bridge. I want to talk about the future. We're larger than a little bitching here and there. It's only rock 'n' roll.' I love working with Mick. Maybe that friction that makes it work, that bit of sand in the oyster that makes the pearl."


'Course that's Keith talking, and there's been no corroboration from Mick, but at the very least it's a quote from a Rolling Stone...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 11th, 2011 at 3:43pm

More from the 'Miracle Worker' video shoot:

http://goo.gl/jggvI

http://goo.gl/FHIOO

http://goo.gl/WTi5A
SuperHeavy

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 11th, 2011 at 3:56pm

http://goo.gl/NqlgR

http://goo.gl/vQXqB
SuperHeavy

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 11th, 2011 at 3:57pm
In that second pic are Mick and Joss laughing or has she grabbed him by the balls?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Aug 11th, 2011 at 4:19pm
hey, wait a minute.  I dont see anyone that looks like us at that Super Heavy gig.  Maybe we wont be invited after all

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Aug 11th, 2011 at 4:27pm

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 11th, 2011 at 3:57pm:
In that second pic are Mick and Joss laughing or has she grabbed him by the balls?

Examining the size of his todger? :charlieperv

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Aug 11th, 2011 at 4:47pm


For the music.  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 11th, 2011 at 4:52pm

luxury wrote on Aug 11th, 2011 at 4:19pm:
hey, wait a minute.  I dont see anyone that looks like us at that Super Heavy gig.  Maybe we wont be invited after all


That's not fair, I look quite a bit like all those handsome male models!  8-)

Sweetcharmedlife - I wonder will she report back to Keith after her examinations.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 11th, 2011 at 5:06pm
All I know is that L'Wren is going to be pissed off!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 11th, 2011 at 5:11pm

Pink suit, naff trainers and dick jokes aside, how 'bout the music, eh, Zoolander?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Tom on Aug 11th, 2011 at 5:16pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on Aug 11th, 2011 at 5:11pm:
Pink suit, naff trainers and dick jokes aside, how 'bout the music, eh, Zoolander?


Are the other tracks available somewhere???


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 11th, 2011 at 5:20pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on Aug 11th, 2011 at 5:11pm:
Pink suit, naff trainers and dick jokes aside, how 'bout the music, eh, Zoolander?


I'm looking forward to the music mostly. I've listened to the studio clip many times and all the songs sound promising to me.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 11th, 2011 at 5:21pm

Tom wrote on Aug 11th, 2011 at 5:16pm:
Are the other tracks available somewhere???

Two mixes of 'Miracle Worker' and two of 'Satyameva Jayathe' have been released so far.  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 11th, 2011 at 6:04pm
Does anyone know when the second single will be available on iTunes?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by The Wick on Aug 11th, 2011 at 11:54pm
Mick's dodgy trainers are quite astonishing. It's as if he's a Trekkie but instead he goes to 1980's New Balance conventions. I'm really beginning to wonder if he's got something wrong with his feet or something because they're just shocking and he wears them EVERYWHERE.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Starbuck on Aug 12th, 2011 at 12:04am
has mick pulled a "mackenzie philips" with joss yet?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 12th, 2011 at 5:35am
Video released in 25 minutes  :perverted:

What's the site it's being released to?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 12th, 2011 at 6:18am
http://www.vevo.com/watch/superheavy/miracle-worker/GBUV71101079?source=instantsearch

Here's the SuperHeavy video. What do you think of it?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:08am

Good tune and fun video. Guy in the pink suit still owns the stage.

http://img836.imageshack.us/img836/679/mwyoutube.jpg


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Jumacfly on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:19am
I hate it. Clichés, all those Marley stuff ("this is mick jagger joss stone.." yes we also got eyes thank you), Worst Mick's brushing since the 80's, AR Ramahn and the dancers in front of the car...
Time for me to go back to the Ronnie thread to hear great rock n roll ;)

cheers mates! :stinkypost

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:30am

left shoe shuffle wrote on Aug 11th, 2011 at 3:35pm:

LadyJane wrote on Aug 11th, 2011 at 11:12am:
Would you feel that way if I told you that Mick blew off the Keith and Charlie in December to go to India to work on Superheavy??

I hear things................

Don't know eg666 or exactly how "inside" he might be, but December was a while ago.

Since then Keith himself has spoken about meeting with Mick. The following appeared in his May interview with USA Today:

When Jagger and Richards, boyhood pals since the early '50s, met in New York a month ago, "Mick pouted a bit, as is his wont," Richards says. "I told him, 'It's water under the bridge. I want to talk about the future. We're larger than a little bitching here and there. It's only rock 'n' roll.' I love working with Mick. Maybe that friction that makes it work, that bit of sand in the oyster that makes the pearl."


'Course that's Keith talking, and there's been no corroboration from Mick, but at the very least it's a quote from a Rolling Stone...



If (and its a big if) he chose to go to India to work instead of 'meet' Keith and Charlie, whats the big deal exactly? If it didnt suit him, then its not significant.

Much easier to reschedule a meeting amongst four semi-retired musicians who mostly live within a few miles of each other than it is to get five musicians who live on three different continents together to work on an ongoing project.

Quite why this is worthy of analysis escapes me.

Plus, Mick spending time with Keith in late 2010 just after the publication of that book may not have been a particularly good idea....

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:36am

Jumacfly wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:19am:
I hate it. Clichés, all those Marley stuff ("this is mick jagger joss stone.." yes we also got eyes thank you), Worst Mick's brushing since the 80's, AR Ramahn and the dancers in front of the car...
Time for me to go back to the Ronnie thread to hear great rock n roll ;)

cheers mates! :stinkypost


The whole point is that it's not just more Rock N Roll. What's the issue with A R Rahman exactly?
And most of Ronnie's last album could be described as pretty cliché.

Isn't it better that Mick wants to do something new and potentially innovative at this point in his career rather than just trotting out a typical Stones album + tour to try and make some can that he doesn't even need?

I wonder will this thing even be commercially successful. Probably not, although the Rahman involvement could push it to be big in India.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by LadyJane on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:40am
The supposition, per a fairly reliable source, was that Keith traveled to England to meet with Charlie and Mick to discuss future Band plans. Further supposition is that Mick cut meeting very short to leave for India (for Superheavy work (?) pissing off Keith and Charlie.

Pure supposition. Shouldn't have mentioned it I suppose. IF true it really isn't a big deal amongst lifelong mates. But with time running out, any delay in getting these guys on the same page, is disturbing to me.

As for the video, it's okay. Not my cup of tea and I'd rather see new material from Mick with The Stones, but he's Mick, I love him and no one comes close to him. He's still got it.

LJ

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:43am
Mick can hardly be blamed for focusing on something real (SuperHeavy) ahead of something hypothetical (Stones activity)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by LadyJane on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:57am

Gazza can you please change my Board name to jbLJ without me losing my post count??!!!!  :aimama

(Old reference lost to newer posters!!!)


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Jumacfly on Aug 12th, 2011 at 8:35am

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:36am:

Jumacfly wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:19am:
I hate it. Clichés, all those Marley stuff ("this is mick jagger joss stone.." yes we also got eyes thank you), Worst Mick's brushing since the 80's, AR Ramahn and the dancers in front of the car...
Time for me to go back to the Ronnie thread to hear great rock n roll ;)

cheers mates! :stinkypost


The whole point is that it's not just more Rock N Roll. What's the issue with A R Rahman exactly?
And most of Ronnie's last album could be described as pretty cliché.

Isn't it better that Mick wants to do something new and potentially innovative at this point in his career rather than just trotting out a typical Stones album + tour to try and make some can that he doesn't even need?

I wonder will this thing even be commercially successful. Probably not, although the Rahman involvement could push it to be big in India.



AR Ramahn coming with indian dancers, dave stewart with his superheavy tatoo, Marley with the jamaican flag... To me this is cliché, but I have a real problem with mainstream and commercial music and videos :boring

But you re right with the fact that Mick can do something different, I won't judge him but it's just not my cup of tea  :interestingstuffronnie




Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Aug 12th, 2011 at 9:01am
I've loved the sound and feel of Miracle Worker from the first time I heard it and thought the video captured the spirit of the song very well.   [smiley=thumbsup.gif]

Will Super Heavy be a commercial success?  I don't know.  I've liked everything I've heard up to now with the exception of Satymeva Jayate.  I think it's been successful on a personal level for all involved - and how often does that happen with what passes for today's instant hits?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Holden on Aug 12th, 2011 at 9:34am
I like the video. It's colorful and perfect for summer. It's a very good pop song.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Paranoid Android on Aug 12th, 2011 at 10:29am
A simple pop song...quite catchy tune...
I hope this side project doesn't derail any "other" plans.
Sir Mick looks good in the Hot Pink...but at times looks like he trying to hard to "move like Jagger".

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Aug 12th, 2011 at 10:42am
Mick still commands a stage and is the consumate front man....but for me his singing was much more enjoyable and passionate on the real early stuff....12x5...Aftermath everything up to and including Sticky.....then downhill as he tried to be Mick the star..or Mick the current trend. If he wanted to he could be one of the best blues singers ever by going back to his roots. I think his vocals these days sound forced...maybe it is just me?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:02am

LadyJane wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:40am:
The supposition, per a fairly reliable source, was that Keith traveled to England to meet with Charlie and Mick to discuss future Band plans. Further supposition is that Mick cut meeting very short to leave for India (for Superheavy work (?) pissing off Keith and Charlie.

Pure supposition. Shouldn't have mentioned it I suppose. IF true it really isn't a big deal amongst lifelong mates. But with time running out, any delay in getting these guys on the same page, is disturbing to me.


So they did meet (thats what I recall hearing at the time, which is what surprised me when I read your comment that he'd 'blown them out')

I also recall being told that at said meeting, things were somewhat frosty to say the least. For obvious reasons!

But how long does a band meeting take?  Seriously? Three hours?  Six hours?  

And how difficult can it be for four semi-retired multi-millionaires who are otherwise doing very little to reconvene in one room? Shit - they can have a meeting by videolink if they wanted to.

If the guy is in the middle of working on a record, then sometimes things come up at short notice that need worked on. Its really no big deal.

And this 'time running out' thing I dont get either. Its not as if theyre terminally ill, and a couple of weeks delay is going to change anything.  If deadlines for doing something before a tour is a big deal, they're more aware of that than any of us, I'd guess.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Nellcote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:03am

gimmekeef wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 10:42am:
Mick still commands a stage and is the consumate front man....but for me his singing was much more enjoyable and passionate on the real early stuff....12x5...Aftermath everything up to and including Sticky.....then downhill as he tried to be Mick the star..or Mick the current trend. If he wanted to he could be one of the best blues singers ever by going back to his roots. I think his vocals these days sound forced...maybe it is just me?

I agree about the forced vocals.  I heard it in the Stu recording, some of the stuff on ABB.  
Maybe what we end up with, unless there's a producer they enlist who will have their way
towards ending it.
Video has a good feel, maybe a slight too chummy, however, that is a small knock on my part.
New music, with Mick at the helm, is a good thang....

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:03am

LadyJane wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:57am:
Gazza can you please change my Board name to jbLJ without me losing my post count??!!!!  :aimama

(Old reference lost to newer posters!!!)


:willya

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:13am

Nellcote wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:03am:
I agree about the forced vocals.  I heard it in the Stu recording, some of the stuff on ABB.  
Maybe what we end up with, unless there's a producer they enlist who will have their way
towards ending it.
Video has a good feel, maybe a slight too chummy, however, that is a small knock on my part.
New music, with Mick at the helm, is a good thang....


Agree with all of that. There's a bit of self-parody in that video, although on the positive side, the suit is growing on me!

Still like the song, though. Joss steals it, however. She sounds really good on it.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by The Wick on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:22am
I like the video although it is cheesy in parts. Even though I like the song, I said when it came out that I'm not a big fan of this toasting nonsense. I would have liked to have heard Marley sing rather than rap. Mick looks great and threw in some newer moves and stole the show. I actually think the vocal has an edge that Mick hasn't had in years.

What I find funny is that Mick should reorganize his whole schedule of actually doing something to meet with someone who insults him at every opportunity and whose activity is at best lending guitars to an odd guest appearance for every 5 years and, at worst, trotting out cliches for a blues or country documentary once in a while. Apparently the Winos are working again, so that plus the Wingless Angels makes 2 efforts in 20 years- what a true passion for creativity he has.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:22am

LadyJane wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:40am:
The supposition, per a fairly reliable source, was that Keith traveled to England to meet with Charlie and Mick to discuss future Band plans. Further supposition is that Mick cut meeting very short to leave for India (for Superheavy work (?) pissing off Keith and Charlie.

Pure supposition. Shouldn't have mentioned it I suppose. IF true it really isn't a big deal amongst lifelong mates. But with time running out, any delay in getting these guys on the same page, is disturbing to me.

As for the video, it's okay. Not my cup of tea and I'd rather see new material from Mick with The Stones, but he's Mick, I love him and no one comes close to him. He's still got it.

LJ


Given the huge fan base AR has in India, it seems that if the AR-Jagger meeting in India did take place it would have generated some headlines.  And those headlines would have found their way here.  Not saying it didn't happen, just seems unlikely.  Even if the meeting was kept quiet, Mick's arrival and presence would not have gone unnoticed.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by AngieBlue on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:40am
Mick sounds fantastic in Miracle Worker!  I suspected he would.  But I don't like the song as a whole.  Joss Stone's vocal sticks out instead of blending with the others to me.

The video is just too cheesy.  Although I love Mick's hat!  In making sure everyone had their screen time on their little stamp on it the video became a mess.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:58am

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:36am:

Jumacfly wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:19am:
I hate it. Clichés, all those Marley stuff ("this is mick jagger joss stone.." yes we also got eyes thank you), Worst Mick's brushing since the 80's, AR Ramahn and the dancers in front of the car...
Time for me to go back to the Ronnie thread to hear great rock n roll ;)

cheers mates! :stinkypost


The whole point is that it's not just more Rock N Roll. What's the issue with A R Rahman exactly?
And most of Ronnie's last album could be described as pretty cliché.

Isn't it better that Mick wants to do something new and potentially innovative at this point in his career rather than just trotting out a typical Stones album + tour to try and make some can that he doesn't even need?

I wonder will this thing even be commercially successful. Probably not, although the Rahman involvement could push it to be big in India.

Disagree with you about Ronnie's last album. Thought it was pretty good. Some nice rock tunes on it. Think the Stones could pull off a decent album if they put some effort into it.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 12th, 2011 at 12:07pm

Gazza wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:13am:

Nellcote wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:03am:
I agree about the forced vocals.  I heard it in the Stu recording, some of the stuff on ABB.  
Maybe what we end up with, unless there's a producer they enlist who will have their way
towards ending it.
Video has a good feel, maybe a slight too chummy, however, that is a small knock on my part.
New music, with Mick at the helm, is a good thang....


Agree with all of that. There's a bit of self-parody in that video, although on the positive side, the suit is growing on me!

Still like the song, though. Joss steals it, however. She sounds really good on it.


She looks pretty good in the video too.  ;)
Seriously though, I like Joss and I hope the public takes to her again like they did when she was younger. She's no Amy but she still has one of the best voices around and its good to hear a young singer like her not using that voice for dull, over-produced pop ballads etc.


In terms of Mick's vocals, they are a bit OTT, but any review of the song that I've read have complimented them. He sounds better in some of the other tracks from the studio video and has some great interplay with Joss and Marley. I'm looking forward to hearing his guitar playing get a more prominent role, maybe even a few solos.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Aug 12th, 2011 at 12:13pm

Gazza wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:13am:

Nellcote wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:03am:
I agree about the forced vocals.  I heard it in the Stu recording, some of the stuff on ABB.  
Maybe what we end up with, unless there's a producer they enlist who will have their way
towards ending it.
Video has a good feel, maybe a slight too chummy, however, that is a small knock on my part.
New music, with Mick at the helm, is a good thang....


Agree with all of that. There's a bit of self-parody in that video, although on the positive side, the suit is growing on me!

Still like the song, though. Joss steals it, however. She sounds really good on it.


Gazza......you like that suit?........lol...geeez next you will be humming Livin on a Prayer!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 12th, 2011 at 12:27pm

gimmekeef wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 12:13pm:

Gazza wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:13am:

Nellcote wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:03am:
I agree about the forced vocals.  I heard it in the Stu recording, some of the stuff on ABB.  
Maybe what we end up with, unless there's a producer they enlist who will have their way
towards ending it.
Video has a good feel, maybe a slight too chummy, however, that is a small knock on my part.
New music, with Mick at the helm, is a good thang....


Agree with all of that. There's a bit of self-parody in that video, although on the positive side, the suit is growing on me!

Still like the song, though. Joss steals it, however. She sounds really good on it.


Gazza......you like that suit?........lol...geeez next you will be humming Livin on a Prayer!


Statements like that are punishable by death I believe...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Aug 12th, 2011 at 2:02pm

gimmekeef wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 12:13pm:

Gazza wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:13am:

Nellcote wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:03am:
I agree about the forced vocals.  I heard it in the Stu recording, some of the stuff on ABB.  
Maybe what we end up with, unless there's a producer they enlist who will have their way
towards ending it.
Video has a good feel, maybe a slight too chummy, however, that is a small knock on my part.
New music, with Mick at the helm, is a good thang....


Agree with all of that. There's a bit of self-parody in that video, although on the positive side, the suit is growing on me!

Still like the song, though. Joss steals it, however. She sounds really good on it.


Gazza......you like that suit?........lol...geeez next you will be humming Livin on a Prayer!

Or even worse. Streets of Love. :scary

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Aug 12th, 2011 at 3:10pm
Geeezus H  Chrissssssssst...just watched that video....havent cringed as much since Macca and Jacko cruised by on that truck in Ebony and Ivory............

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 12th, 2011 at 3:42pm

sweetcharmedlife wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 2:02pm:

gimmekeef wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 12:13pm:

Gazza wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:13am:

Nellcote wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:03am:
I agree about the forced vocals.  I heard it in the Stu recording, some of the stuff on ABB.  
Maybe what we end up with, unless there's a producer they enlist who will have their way
towards ending it.
Video has a good feel, maybe a slight too chummy, however, that is a small knock on my part.
New music, with Mick at the helm, is a good thang....


Agree with all of that. There's a bit of self-parody in that video, although on the positive side, the suit is growing on me!

Still like the song, though. Joss steals it, however. She sounds really good on it.


Gazza......you like that suit?........lol...geeez next you will be humming Livin on a Prayer!

Or even worse. Streets of Love. :scary


Surely even Streets Of Love beats Linin' On A Prayer?!?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Aug 12th, 2011 at 4:15pm

gimmekeef wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 12:13pm:

Gazza wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:13am:

Nellcote wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:03am:
I agree about the forced vocals.  I heard it in the Stu recording, some of the stuff on ABB.  
Maybe what we end up with, unless there's a producer they enlist who will have their way
towards ending it.
Video has a good feel, maybe a slight too chummy, however, that is a small knock on my part.
New music, with Mick at the helm, is a good thang....


Agree with all of that. There's a bit of self-parody in that video, although on the positive side, the suit is growing on me!

Still like the song, though. Joss steals it, however. She sounds really good on it.


Gazza......you like that suit?........lol...geeez next you will be humming Livin on a Prayer!


I'll kick you up the hole for that!

Like it? No. But a few days ago I was saying it was the worst thing I've seen him wear since 'Bent'.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Aug 12th, 2011 at 4:19pm

Ginda wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 11:22am:

LadyJane wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:40am:
The supposition, per a fairly reliable source, was that Keith traveled to England to meet with Charlie and Mick to discuss future Band plans. Further supposition is that Mick cut meeting very short to leave for India (for Superheavy work (?) pissing off Keith and Charlie.

Pure supposition. Shouldn't have mentioned it I suppose. IF true it really isn't a big deal amongst lifelong mates. But with time running out, any delay in getting these guys on the same page, is disturbing to me.

As for the video, it's okay. Not my cup of tea and I'd rather see new material from Mick with The Stones, but he's Mick, I love him and no one comes close to him. He's still got it.

LJ


Given the huge fan base AR has in India, it seems that if the AR-Jagger meeting in India did take place it would have generated some headlines.  And those headlines would have found their way here.  Not saying it didn't happen, just seems unlikely.  Even if the meeting was kept quiet, Mick's arrival and presence would not have gone unnoticed.


All very true. And news stories from India on the Stones do tend to filter through to here.

I think many people are overlooking how big a star Rahman is on the Indian subcontinent. And that him working or even hanging out with someone like Jagger would be a far bigger story over there (where both of them are big stars) than it would in the west, where only one of them is.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by 72Tele on Aug 12th, 2011 at 6:03pm
You just don't move me anymore.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by PartyDoll MEG on Aug 12th, 2011 at 6:21pm
OK.. the video is just too much...

The whole "feel" of the song is off to me. I don't know what bothers me most- the reggae or Micks over the top singing.  Josh is excellent.  But the three of them together just doesn't cut it for me. The video really doesn't help the song either. I really am trying to like it.....

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 12th, 2011 at 6:25pm

PartyDoll MEG wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 6:21pm:
OK.. the video is just too much...

The whole "feel" of the song is off to me. I don't know what bothers me most- the reggae or Micks over the top singing.  Josh is excellent.  But the three of them together just doesn't cut it for me. The video really doesn't help the song either. I really am trying to like it.....


Have you tried this video? Some of the other tracks seem promising and Mick is sounding good

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hu_MhgIFDGM

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Aug 12th, 2011 at 6:37pm

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 6:25pm:
[quote author=PartyDoll MEG link=1305464000/475#499 date=1313191275]Some of the other tracks seem promising and Mick is sounding good



Mick always sounds and looks great.

But what are those "other tracks that seem promising" at please, please post the links!

:willya

Please.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by CS on Aug 12th, 2011 at 6:43pm
Steelie he means the tracks on the video, I like a lot how it starts with Joss singing out loud "WTFIGO?"

:nomames

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by PartyDoll MEG on Aug 12th, 2011 at 6:58pm

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 6:25pm:

PartyDoll MEG wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 6:21pm:
OK.. the video is just too much...

The whole "feel" of the song is off to me. I don't know what bothers me most- the reggae or Micks over the top singing.  Josh is excellent.  But the three of them together just doesn't cut it for me. The video really doesn't help the song either. I really am trying to like it.....


Have you tried this video? Some of the other tracks seem promising and Mick is sounding good

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hu_MhgIFDGM


Yes I've seen that video.  It is much better than the one at the top of the page.  But I am still having trouble with this song... ;)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:05pm
The Video is about having FUN.
Many people dancin...
Flowers, tatoos, cars, painting, just watch  :paristhong
Lots going on...
We are surrounded by Life.
Miracles

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:10pm

PartyDoll MEG wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 6:58pm:

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 6:25pm:

PartyDoll MEG wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 6:21pm:
OK.. the video is just too much...

The whole "feel" of the song is off to me. I don't know what bothers me most- the reggae or Micks over the top singing.  Josh is excellent.  But the three of them together just doesn't cut it for me. The video really doesn't help the song either. I really am trying to like it.....


Have you tried this video? Some of the other tracks seem promising and Mick is sounding good

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hu_MhgIFDGM


Yes I've seen that video.  It is much better than the one at the top of the page.  But I am still having trouble with this song... ;)


I'd have thought the song SuperHeavy would be a more natural first single. Or maybe I Just Can't Take It No More to get a bit of Mick vs Keith media attention.

I suppose, with the first two songs being a reggae and a song in Indian they were trying to emphasise the cultural fusion aspect of the group though.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:23pm

SoulPlunderer wrote on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:10pm:
Or maybe I Just Can't Take It No More to get a bit of Mick vs Keith media attention.

You're able to glean the subject matter of a song by hearing a few seconds of the chorus?  

As for the media, Mick has kept the focus on SH and deftly avoided discussion of his day job.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:27pm
I'm not saying that's what it's about. I'm just saying that the tabloids (like our friends at the Daily Mail  ::) ) would probably try and make that sort of connection.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Steel Wheels on Aug 12th, 2011 at 8:29pm
Thank you Mick Jagger for giving me the song of the summer of 2011.  I enjoy it greatly. I love the suit, the vocals, the dancing about.  It's a fun fucking summer song.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Some Guy on Aug 12th, 2011 at 9:49pm
cool video.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 13th, 2011 at 9:15am

Sneak Peek At Jagger's Supergroup Released

Friday August 12, 2011

A glimpse of Mick Jagger's supergroup has been released with a behind-the-scenes look at the making of its first single and video.

http://img193.imageshack.us/img193/4128/shskynews.jpg

The Rolling Stones frontman is heading up the group named SuperHeavy, which mixes up the almighty talent of ex-Eurythmics guitarist and producer Dave Stewart, Joss Stone, Damian Marley and Slumdog Millionaire composer A R Rahman.

Their sound combines different styles ranging from reggae to Indian music.

The artists made songs up in the studio as they went along.

"As soon as we started to play together in the studio it gelled and all these different styles didn't seem to be a problem to make them fit together," Dave Stewart said.

The group's first two singles include Miracle Worker and Satyameva Jayate.

SuperHeavy's debut album will hit stores 19 September.

Sky News

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 13th, 2011 at 9:20am

New music: SuperHeavy – Miracle Worker

Can this supergroup featuring Mick Jagger and Joss Stone buck the trend and be more than the sum of its parts?

http://img836.imageshack.us/img836/679/mwyoutube.jpg

From Cream to Monsters of Folk to the Abba All-stars (cruelly, they split after just one performance), the history of supergroups is littered with dream collaborations (Jay-Z and Kanye West's pairing), oddly unnecessary bass guitar workouts and, usually, a trail of bruised egos. Never one to miss the chance to flex his own ego, Mick Jagger announced the formation of SuperHeavy in May this year, featuring Joss Stone, Dave Stewart, Damian Marley and producer/composer AR Rahman. Apparently, the initial recording sessions resulted in songs that were more than an hour long, all recorded under the banner of writing songs that "had a meaning". From the 35 hours of music recorded, the album, also called SuperHeavy, selects 12 tracks (none of them an hour long), with the future single Satyameva Jayate featuring Jagger singing in Sanskrit.

Still, let's not get ahead of ourselves. First up is the video for Miracle Worker, a reggae number with a hint of No Doubt. Stone sings with Marley before a fantastically awkward Jagger emerges to drawl a litany of medical metaphors, including "no need for anaesthetics, I'm gonna check your chart". In the video the group go about their day – Stone selling flowers, Marley playing records, Rahman sitting in a car, Stewart getting a tattoo (for some reason, he's billed as the band's rebel) and Jagger fidgeting awkwardly in a bright pink suit. Like the song, it's a mess but there's something oddly compelling about it.

The Guardian

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Aug 13th, 2011 at 9:27am
Wow, a hit on YouTube!!

Honors for this video (56)


#33 - Most Discussed (Today) - Music

#75 - Top Favorited (Today)

#12 - Top Favorited (Today) - Music

#19 - Top Rated (Today) - Music

#106 - Top Rated (This Week) - Music

#86 - Most Viewed (Today) - Algeria

#12 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Algeria

#71 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Egypt

#160 - Most Viewed (Today) - Jordan

#20 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Jordan

#62 - Most Viewed (Today) - Morocco

#7 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Morocco

#73 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Saudi Arabia

#76 - Most Viewed (Today) - Tunisia

#8 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Tunisia

#15 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Yemen

#69 - Most Viewed (Today) - Czech Republic

#10 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Czech Republic

#37 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Australia

#123 - Most Viewed (Today) - Canada

#11 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Canada

#117 - Most Viewed (Today) - United Kingdom

#17 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - United Kingdom

#141 - Most Viewed (Today) - Ireland

#17 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Ireland

#73 - Most Viewed (Today) - Israel

#23 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Israel

#12 - Most Viewed (Today) - India

#2 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - India

#123 - Most Viewed (Today) - New Zealand

#14 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - New Zealand

#58 - Most Viewed (Today)

#14 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music

#148 - Most Viewed (Today) - South Africa

#33 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - South Africa

#10 - Most Viewed (Today) - Argentina

#2 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Argentina

#43 - Most Viewed (Today) - Spain

#7 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Spain

#97 - Most Viewed (Today) - Mexico

#14 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Mexico

#82 - Most Viewed (Today) - France

#12 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - France

#58 - Most Viewed (Today) - Italy

#9 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Italy

#78 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Japan

#52 - Most Viewed (Today) - Netherlands

#9 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Netherlands

#127 - Most Viewed (Today) - Poland

#18 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Poland

#39 - Most Viewed (Today) - Brazil

#6 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Brazil

#33 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Russia

#171 - Most Viewed (Today) - Sweden

#15 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Sweden

#148 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Taiwan


:scary


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Aug 13th, 2011 at 9:42am
Very interesting to see it sorted by rankings

#002 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Argentina
#002 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - India
#006 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Brazil
#007 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Morocco
#007 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Spain
#008 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Tunisia
#009 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Italy
#009 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Netherlands
#010 - Most Viewed (Today) - Argentina
#010 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Czech Republic
#011 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Canada
#012 - Most Viewed (Today) - India
#012 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Algeria
#012 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - France
#012 - Top Favorited (Today) - Music - USA
#014 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - USA
#014 - Most Viewed (Today) - Music - Mexico
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Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Aug 13th, 2011 at 9:44am
Dr. Trik, work your miracles on me...

fun blend of the various talents.  Works for me

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Aug 13th, 2011 at 10:01am
Yes, Luxy, if they tour we all meet ok?

:willya

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Aug 13th, 2011 at 10:32am
Great numbers for a very uplifting song.  It's been in my head for days and so has that skinny little devil in the pink suit.  The video captures the spirit of the song perfectly.  Bravo!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 13th, 2011 at 10:46am
The video seems to be doing well on Youtube. Thanks for that info Voodoo!

I wonder will that translate into sales? Maybe Mick will do the chat show circuit when the album release date comes closer.
The project doesn't seem like the most commercial thing in the world but the Youtube stats are promising.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 15th, 2011 at 8:58am

SuperHeavy’s Third Single – Mahiya

Posted August 15 2011




SuperHeavy is out with their third single – Mahiya (thanks a lot to @shaneem for the info). Quite obviously this is also a work from A R Rahman, evident from the predominantly Hindi/Urdu-based lyrics rendered by ARR. The sinister Arabic-tinged arrangement also bears ARR elements. And to be frank, I like this song best of the three singles. But, I must add, as an Indian fan of ARR. The song is very Indian in its sound barring the brief cameos from Joss Stone and Damien Marley, so it is bound to appeal to us. I am not very sure how the Western audience will take it though. And no sign of Jagger, beginning to wonder if his role is primarily to add to the brand value. In any case, you can listen to the song here.

Music Aloud

One of the bonus tracks. Not the full song, but a healthy three minute sample.
Very close on the heels of 'Satyameva Jayathe', so doubt the "single" claim is accurate - at least not yet.

Writer might not have heard MJ, but he's in there...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 15th, 2011 at 9:13am

left shoe shuffle wrote on Aug 15th, 2011 at 8:58am:
SuperHeavy’s Third Single – Mahiya

Posted August 15 2011




SuperHeavy is out with their third single – Mahiya (thanks a lot to @shaneem for the info). Quite obviously this is also a work from A R Rahman, evident from the predominantly Hindi/Urdu-based lyrics rendered by ARR. The sinister Arabic-tinged arrangement also bears ARR elements. And to be frank, I like this song best of the three singles. But, I must add, as an Indian fan of ARR. The song is very Indian in its sound barring the brief cameos from Joss Stone and Damien Marley, so it is bound to appeal to us. I am not very sure how the Western audience will take it though. And no sign of Jagger, beginning to wonder if his role is primarily to add to the brand value. In any case, you can listen to the song here.

Music Aloud

One of the bonus tracks. Not the full song, but a healthy three minute sample.
Very close on the heels of 'Satyameva Jayathe', so doubt the "single" claim is accurate - at least not yet.

Writer might not have heard MJ, but he's in there...


I like this song! At first I was unsure but after 3-5 listens it's grown on me. The writer wondering if Mick is only there to add "brand value" should realise tha he has a writing credit on most of the songs and that in a group of so many vocalists will feature songs where one isn't as prominant as the other etc. So if it really was a brand exercise to have Mick in then they'd put out all the songs that feature him most heavily.

Anyhow, I thought he was pretty prominant on the previous song.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Tom on Aug 15th, 2011 at 10:33am
According to the track list posted before this is a "bonus tracK" written by Rahman/Stone/Marley, not Jagger involved

:stinkypost

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Aug 15th, 2011 at 10:42am
Did Dave Stewart really get a superheavy tattoo?  :forfucksake


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Aug 15th, 2011 at 11:30am
I wasn't a fan of Satymeva Jayate but I really do like Mahiya.   I've listened twice - the only hint of Jagger I thought I picked up was in the humming part.  I'm giving it a  [smiley=thumbsup.gif]  Thanks for bringing the new cuts to us!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Aug 15th, 2011 at 1:39pm
Mick Jagger trending #2 on Yahoo...with this article..nice promotion for Dave Stewart...lmao...:


Mick Jagger
By Claudine Zap, Yahoo!
Sun, Aug 14, 2011, 12:00 am PDT
The rock icon is singing a new tune, literally. The Rolling Stones singer has recorded a song in ancient Sanskrit, "Satyameva Jayate." The single is being released under the band SuperHeavy, which also features the Rolling Stones' Dave Stewart, Oscar winner A.R. Rahman and Joss Stone.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Aug 15th, 2011 at 2:14pm

gimmekeef wrote on Aug 15th, 2011 at 1:39pm:
Mick Jagger trending #2 on Yahoo...with this article..nice promotion for Dave Stewart...lmao...:


Mick Jagger
By Claudine Zap, Yahoo!
Sun, Aug 14, 2011, 12:00 am PDT
The rock icon is singing a new tune, literally. The Rolling Stones singer has recorded a song in ancient Sanskrit, "Satyameva Jayate." The single is being released under the band SuperHeavy, which also features the Rolling Stones' Dave Stewart, Oscar winner A.R. Rahman and Joss Stone.

Well at least they didn't say,former Oakland A's pitcher Dave Stewart. :wow

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Aug 15th, 2011 at 3:45pm
For some reason, from what I've heard so far I'm actually preferring Mick's vocals when he sings in Sanskrit than when he does in English.  

'Satyameva Jayathe' is really good. He absolutely soars on it - his best singing for some time (the first time I heard it I did a double take as I thought I heard Marley singing 'Me no like Mick and Keith' at about 1:40!. 'Mahiya' is nice as well. Looking forward to hearing the rest of this.  Very impressed with Joss Stone too - she blends in well.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Tumbling Dijs on Aug 15th, 2011 at 4:37pm
After hearing bits and pieces a couple of weeks ago, I thought, maybe it's not so bad after all. But now, after hearing more, I think it sucks big time. We're gonna hear this alot in shops and elevators around christmas I'm afraid. I admire Mick for trying something new, and I even kind of like the video of Miracle Worker, and I think of myself as openminded, concerning music at least, that means, besides the blues and rock n roll I do like a lot of good popsongs from all kind of artists, this is not what one expects from the greatest rocksinger in the world. I have often disagreed with Keith when he critisised Mick, but now he has my permission to burn him to the ground. I can't imagine I'm ever gonna change my mind about this.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Aug 15th, 2011 at 6:04pm
WOW -

I couldn't hear Mick singin et all in 'Satyameva Jayathe'

I'll have to give it another listen.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 15th, 2011 at 6:35pm
He is one of the most prominent voices.  I think he and Rahman do the Sanskrit stuff while Joss Stone takes all the English lines.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 16th, 2011 at 9:04am

http://img98.imageshack.us/img98/593/shsignedartwork.jpg

Competition ends at noon UK time on 22/8/2011.


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Aug 16th, 2011 at 10:57am
Listened to Mahiya yesterday. Sounds like something you'd hear in the back of a taxicab. :boring

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by the juf on Aug 16th, 2011 at 1:17pm
Dutchies on this board can follow the SuperHeavy release via Twitter: SuperHeavyNL is the newly created account .  
En: gewoon in het Nederlands...  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Nellcote on Aug 16th, 2011 at 1:32pm

sweetcharmedlife wrote on Aug 16th, 2011 at 10:57am:
Listened to Mahiya yesterday. Sounds like something you'd hear in the back of a taxicab. :boring

:smilestu

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 17th, 2011 at 7:26am

Vh1 India's "Shot By U" fan video for 'Satyameva Jayathe':    

  http://img217.imageshack.us/img217/2791/sjvh1shotbyu.jpg



Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Aug 17th, 2011 at 11:53am
The video helped me understand the song - it's beginning to grow on me.  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Aug 17th, 2011 at 3:04pm

Gazza wrote on Aug 15th, 2011 at 3:45pm:
For some reason, from what I've heard so far I'm actually preferring Mick's vocals when he sings in Sanskrit than when he does in English.  

'Satyameva Jayathe' is really good. He absolutely soars on it - his best singing for some time (the first time I heard it I did a double take as I thought I heard Marley singing 'Me no like Mick and Keith' at about 1:40!. 'Mahiya' is nice as well. Looking forward to hearing the rest of this.  Very impressed with Joss Stone too - she blends in well.


Maybe we need to get Keith on the sitar!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 17th, 2011 at 3:21pm

Transcript from the June presser in LA:

17.08.2011

Interview with SuperHeavy

SuperHeavy - Listening Party Los Angeles - Interview


Kristin Burns


Mick Jagger: Hi everybody, we're very pleased to be here, we had a bit of a late night last night doing our video in the Paramount lot and that was really fun, we were up there till, well quite late...

Joss Stone: Too late...

Mick Jagger: Well it was a long day, but we just about made it here for lunch. The songs we picked out for you we thought were sort of representative of the record, and it was a lot of fun to make wasn't it, Dave?

Dave Stewart: Yeah, it was an interesting process, that involved several countries but started actually in this room, which I think you sort of feel. I was halfway up a hill in Jamaica and I called Mick and what happens in Jamaica as Damian well knows, that as the sun goes down various sound-systems start.  I live in a place just above St. Anne, the Limehall. I have a house there and you can hear one village, playing something that might be a bass sound, but at the other village you can hear something that might be cutting through like somebody’s voice toasting, but quite trebly and sometimes there's three or four going on at once, and at this one particular moment, I don't think it was anything to do with any herb or anything like that, it just all started to fuse together and make sense and this incredible sort of sound and I was like, "wow, that would be interesting" . Then  I chatted to Mick about it and he said "Yeah, that'd be interesting" and he said "I never thought it’d fucking happen!", but anyway, the journey between that and getting here and the experiments and the jamming, and the fun and meeting everybody and learning from everybody and working together has been brilliant.

So maybe Damian can tell us a little bit about how he got involved?


Damian Marley: Well I got involved, when my manager called me and told me that Dave wanted to get together and experiment on some music with a bunch of other musicians you know. For me it’s just been a great learning experience you know, I wasn’t really familiar with a lot of everyone else's music before coming into the project so I've been exposed to a lot of great music; and even just observing how everyone works and the different approaches to making music you know what I mean, it's been a great experience.

Joss Stone: It's funny 'cause I never thought that we'd sit here like making the music, then you guys would turn up, it's quite funny really. Yeah I got a call from Dave, which randomly I do every now and then, he had some kind of crazy idea and I, pretty much every time say "yeah alright, that sounds fun!", and that was as simple as that; "Hey Joss, you wanna do something fun I've got this idea, Mick and I are going to make this band, do ya wanna come? Um, yeah ok, of course I wanna come!" And now look what’s happened, it’s quite funny and now we've made this crazy music that doesn't sound like anything at all; It just is its own thing and I like that, it’s nice to work with different styles and working with you was really cool as well, 'cause obviously you know, I've never touched upon any kind of Indian-styles stuff so it's really really great to work with all these different sounds, its lovely.

Dave Stewart: A.R was a bit taken aback when I called. I first met him about 12 years ago through a close friend of mine Shekhar Kapur the film director.  I called A.R and said "Look I'm forming this group and you know, there's me and Mick and Joss and Damian" and he went "Really?"

A.R Rahman: Yeah I was personally going through a lot of loss at that time, my close friend had died, it was very depressing, coming here and working on this project was a kind of redemption for me, going to a completely new space helped me forget the stuff, so it was a great experience working with all you guys, and last night was probably the first audience thing, of course they were all extras, but they loved the music and it was made for real, apart from the playback stuff, so that was great.

Could you talk a little bit about what the writing process was like, in the songs did you all write together, how did it work?

Dave Stewart: That was a funny thing, I am a little bit ADD and have sort of like, spontaneous moments and then I get really excited about it, all organised and then Mick goes as we’re nearly walking into the studio, "But we haven't got any songs" and I’m going, "It'll be alright!"

Mick Jagger: Because Dave and I and everyone I've ever worked with usually has something. You always want to leave room for some improvisation in the studio, which is great but it's much better if you have something as well to play then you can improvise and you have everything going for you. We'd been spending so much time organising this project  that we forgot about the guitar riffs and some of the lyrics, and then we were sat there in the studio and I'm looking at Dave and going, "How's this going to be?" But fortunately we just evolved this way of working very quickly, getting the grooves going, people coming up with lyric ideas and melodies and everyone threw things together and Joss and I got our little pads going, "Oh that line's not going to work, oh it’s too feminine, I can't deal with anymore of that, no!". And then you know, Damian would be looking in and thinking and I can see his brain turning and he’s coming up with his toasting fix in the middle and so it was very exciting doing it like that, and I was very surprised that we managed it. We wrote the songs very, very quickly, so in ten days we had how many in the first, twenty?

Dave Stewart: Twenty-nine in the first ten days?

Joss Stone: Did we?!

Dave Stewart: Well you see some of them were like an hour and ten minutes long and some of them were forty two minutes long. See the first part of the process really was just completely mad jamming, and everybody left and I was with my engineer just listening back and I was like, "Fucking shit..." Thirty-seven hours of music and it's all over the place. But then there were suddenly little bits that went "boom!" and then we reconvened and we went, "Oh these bits are quite good, let's fiddle about with that." and we kept making it into a shape and over the last year really it started to fall into place. But we did end up all over the place, putting on odd bits with A.R. One time, it was really funny, I was in a studio in Miami with Damian and A.R was in Chennai. We had him singing from his place in Chennai and that was one of the easier moments.

It's been a strange and interesting process but the end result, we love it. I think its created a powerful new music, what I always say is, "I love musicians from all different parts of the world though I've never been a great fan of "world music" (in inverted commas, you know), to me it sounds like people knitting yoghurt sweaters", if you know what I mean.

Mick Jagger: But that’s people think this was going to be like but it’s not really like that at all, there's no knitting, you weren't knitting for a moment I seem to remember...

Joss Stone: Knitting, but not with yoghurts.

Dave Stewart: But I think we've actually managed to capture some kind of, you know, rocking, dancing, fusion of music that could fit in anywhere, from radio stations, to arenas, to my pocket. I don't know how the hell they're going to programme something like this...

Mick Jagger: Where does it go on iTunes? Which bit of iTunes genre does it go on? The "unknowable",  "unclassifiable" I think it's called!

Dave Stewart: I remember years ago when there was record shops we used to go in and there'd be like, labels like saying, "rock", "country", "hip hop", there was only about seven labels and then there became about 137 different labels and now there's no record stores, hardly at all. Never mind that, but can you imagine the normal radio programmer in American radio, "Here you go!", yeah, it's going to be interesting to see what's going to develop.

Mick Jagger: Yeah, great...

Mick Jagger: What will develop, we hope something.

Is there anything anybody would like them in particular to talk about?

Journalist: How different was it from your normal, 'cause you were all very busy with you own individual projects that you're working on all the time, did this give you something special that made it particularly fun?

Mick Jagger: Well for me, it was working with four other vocalists and that was kind of interesting because I'd never actually done that before. Normally I have to do nearly everything, which I'm quite happy to do so don't worry, but it was kind of fun because when we came to finish it off I realized that we all had a part to play and you had to pick your part, have your rests and you get to do harmonies. I would get to reply to Joss, she would get to reply to me, we'd do a harmony together, A.R would then do his thing then there would be Damian doing his toasting thing in the middle or coming in doing something else so it a very interesting process vocally. It's more than just a vocal group but it is a vocal group so I never really worked with a vocal group before so for me that was a completely new experience, I mean, it wasn't like The Andrew Sisters but it was a vocal group...

Dave Stewart: Well we do have one bit like The Andrews Sisters, because we did this song called "Common Ground" and I actually, I played Joss on YouTube The Andrews Sisters and she was like going, "Wow!, I've never heard anything like it".

Damian, how was it different for you?

Damian Marley: Well I mean I think a lot of what Mick said really covers how it was different for me usually when I do my stuff, it's just me alone, from the concept of the song, the whole melody, everything that you do and put to all the song is usually individual. This is the first time I've really worked with such a vast group of people in that kind of space. I do a lot of work with my brothers, so I do have experience of collaboration in song-writing and stuff like that, but you know, this is completely different in terms of the respective genres that everyone comes from.

Dave Stewart: For me it was easy because I've already been through the hardest thing that anybody sitting here could ever go through, which is to live with somebody for five years.

Mick Jagger: Who was that, not me?

Dave Stewart: In a duo, I once had...

Mick Jagger: A male-female duo?

Dave Stewart: But you know, we lived together for five years as a couple and didn't write one song, then we broke up and wrote ten albums about it, and that is pretty tough, when every interview you do it’s like, "So you used to live together, what happened?" for ten years, so I've been through all the therapy you could possibly go through with any kind of altercation that might happen in a writing process or a studio so I was just laughing all the time 'cause it seemed so easy.

Is there any possibility; is there any talk that you might perform live?

Joss Stone: I hope so!

Mick Jagger: It was fun doing the miming last night, can't we just do miming?

Joss Stone: Let's do it, no!

Dave Stewart: Well In think if we get a lot of dancers, we could get away with it.

Mick Jagger: It actually was a lot of fun, you know if there's people who want to hear it then I'm sure, I would love to do it, but if everyone goes, "Oh, well I'm not sure about this" I'm not sure I want to foist it on everybody, but it was great fun doing it and I love being up there, doing my part.

Dave Stewart: We'll probably end up playing on the "unclassified gig" section...

Mick Jagger: In that tent at Glastonbury for unclassifiable people, anyway good, thanks so much guys!


vertigo.fm

Nice to read the collective SH comments rather than just the select bits and pieces previously quoted...  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Aug 17th, 2011 at 8:57pm
The exchange between Mick and Dave was funny.  A.R.'s remarks were touching.  I hope it is "foisted" upon the public.  I think it's an effort they can all be proud of.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 19th, 2011 at 7:35am


SuperHeavy.com


You may have noticed that www.SuperHeavy.com has undergone a recent facelift. Take a look and let us know what you think.

More exciting features will be released over the coming weeks, so be sure to check back often to find out what SuperHeavy have been up to and how you can be a part of the project.


SuperHeavy

Changed to look more like rollingstones.com and mickjagger.com...maybe UMG's web designers should try another template.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Aug 20th, 2011 at 8:01am
Nice little piece about SuperHeavy in The Times review pull-out. It's part of the "everyone's taking about" feature so it must be garnering some attention.

"SuperHeavy, Mick Jagger's new supergroup

The supergroup has a chequered history. For every Cream (Eric Clapton's revered hook-up with Ginger Baker and Jack Bruce) there is an Asia (unholy marriage of King Crimson, Yes and the Buggles) But even though their success is far from guaranteed, these collisions of rock-star egos are never less than fascinating-- like the Avengers in comic books or the British Lions in rugby union. So it was inevitable that, when Mick Jagger decided to mess about in the studio with his close friends Dave Stewart of Eurythmics, the soul-child Joss Stone, Damain "Jr Gong" Marley, the son of Bob, and A.R Rahman, the Oscar-winning Indian composer who wrote the music for Slumdog Millionaie, there would be a smattering of interest.
With 19 Grammy's between them, SuperHeavy have an eponymous album out next month that features Jagger singing in Sanskrit. Before that there's a single, Miracle Worker, a bouyent slice of reggae-soul in which the Glimmer Twin's cackling growl is interpersed with Stone's burnished purr and Marley's Jamacian lilt.
The video--Which features witchcraft paraphernalia, shelves of skulls, Stewart having a tatoo done and Jagger cavorting in a pink satin suit--is clearly designed to give the impression of outlandish musical alchemy, although it feels at times like four middle-aged men perving over Joss Stone"



Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 20th, 2011 at 8:25am

http://goo.gl/1l8hY
Kristin Burns


From the Dave Stewart interview in today's The Australian:  

Next month is the launch of supergroup SuperHeavy, which features Stewart, singer Joss Stone, Mick Jagger, Damian Marley and A.R. Rahman. Stewart produced Stone's latest album as well -- that, along with the Nicks collaboration, being evidence that he doesn't like to be idle.

The SuperHeavy project has been brewing for more than a year and again it's Stewart's jack-of-all-trades credentials that have a hand in it. Aside from Stone's new album, Stewart has produced Jagger, working on his 1987 album Primitive Cool.

Work on SuperHeavy's debut album is finished. The intention, he says, was to make it a spontaneous recording, letting the music take it in whatever direction felt right.

"It was great," Stewart says. "We were recording in a big room and it was like a jam session that went on for weeks. Some of the songs were about an hour long before we thought we'd better edit them down a bit. We ended up coming out with 16 really strong songs."

That album is released next month, but there are plans to bring it to the stage as well, even if the logistics of having so many individual artists with their own careers to take care of poses a problem.

"We are talking about all of the different ways that we might perform it," he says. "I personally want to create a festival called SuperHeavy. We'll be the curators and each member will invite another act to play. Then we'll have a smaller tent with up-and-coming acts and create a little Meltdown-type festival.

"We want to keep this fun and jamming thing going as well. Artists playing along with each other . . . that's a lot of what I'm about. Obviously we've all had the industry thing down our throat for years but, hey, remember when we just used to play?"


The Australian

Not a festie, but like the talk of SH doing something...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Aug 20th, 2011 at 10:10am
well Dave certainly has some pretty big ideas!  Not sure if they sit well with our resident control-freak front man...

but maybe i'm underestimating Dr. Trik, and he is all about a bit of a jam session these days.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Aug 20th, 2011 at 4:07pm
Blind Faith = Supergroup...Superheavy??...not so much.............

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Edith Grove on Aug 20th, 2011 at 4:57pm
Billboard magazine predicts tough sell for SuperHeavy album

Add a comment
Carla Hay, Rolling Stones Examiner
August 20, 2011 - Like this? Subscribe to get instant updates.

The members of Mick Jagger's band SuperHeavy may have had hits with other projects, but SuperHeavy's debut album may not be one of those hits, according to Billboard magazine, the leading U.S. music industry trade publication.

In its issued dated August 27, 2011, Billboard has an article on SuperHeavy with a sidebar analysis of what the album is projected to sell, based on solo music sales of SuperHeavy's band members.


SuperHeavy consists of Rolling Stones lead singer Jagger, Joss Stone, Eurythmics co-founder Dave Stewart, Damian Marley and Oscar-winning "Slumdog Millionaire" songwriter/composer A.R. Rahman.

SuperHeavy's eponymous debut album (produced by Jagger and Stewart) is set for release on September 20, 2011, in the United States and Canada. The album will be released in other countries on September 19, 2011. Universal Republic is handling the U.S. release, while A&M is handling the release outside of the United States. Both companies are part of Universal Music Group.

As previously reported, the "SuperHeavy" album will have two versions: a standard edition with 12 tracks and a deluxe edition with 16 tracks. The album will be available in digital and CD formats.

The Billboard article on SuperHeavy doesn't really have any new information from the band members, but A&M/Universal Music managing director Amy Lee says in the article that SuperHeavy has no immediate plans to make any public appearances as a group to promote the album. "All of the members will be doing media interviews and appearances in connection with other projects," reports Billboard.

According to Billboard, the record company plans to market SuperHeavy mostly through advertising and Facebook.

Although there is speculation that SuperHeavy might tour in 2012, the band has not announced any live performances so far. Stone and Stewart will be touring separately to promote their respective solo albums: Stone's "LP1" (released in the U.S. and Canada on July 26) and Stewart's "The Blackbird Diaries" (set for a U.S./Canadian release date on August 23).

The "SuperHeavy" album's first single is "Miracle Worker," available in digital format only. "Miracle Worker" went on sale in the United States and Canada on July 12, 2011. The single was initially released in other countries on July 7, 2011. The reggae-styled "Miracle Worker" has gotten mostly positive reviews from critics, but it has not made an impact on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart. (Click here to read a roundup of reviews.)

As previously reported, the music video for "Miracle Worker" (directed by Stewart) premiered on August 12, 2011, and has gotten mostly positive reactions from people who posted comments on the Internet.

But positive reviews don't necessarily add up to a hit, as Billboard notes. Jagger's music outside of the Rolling Stones has sold 810,000 copies in the U.S. since 1991 (compared to 25 million with the Rolling Stones). Stewart's solo work has sold even less. Jagger, Stewart and Stone previously worked together on the soundtrack to the 2004 remake of the movie "Alfie," which peaked at No. 171 on the Billboard 200 album chart and sold only 74,000 copies in the Untied States.

Out of all the SuperHeavy members, Stone has sold the most for her solo music (3 million in the U.S., according to Billboard), but her sales have been declining with each of her subsequent solo albums. Marley is a successful reggae artist (with 1.5 million sold in the U.S.), and Rahman had an international hit with the "Slumdog Millionaire" song "Jai Ho," which hit No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. But other than his "Slumdog Millionaire" music, Rahman is not considered a big contender on mainstream pop charts in English-speaking countries.

The Billboard article implies that because SuperHeavy's music has a variety of international influences that are not mainstream pop, it could be a blessing and a curse for the band's music sales. The album may sell better outside of the United States in countries where reggae and Indian music are considered more mainstream.

Universal Music is also considering the possibility that SuperHeavy might get nominated for a Grammy, which could spur sales and public interest in the band. Nominations for the 54th annual Grammy Awards will be announced November 30, 2011. The 54th annual Grammy Awards ceremony takes place in Los Angeles on February 12, 2012.

Several Grammy categories have been eliminated, beginning with the 54th annual Grammy Awards. The Grammy Award field for world music now has just one category: Best World Music Album, the category in which SuperHeavy has the best shot of scoring a nomination. The Grammy field for world music previously had two categories: Best Traditional World Music Album and Best Contemporary World Music Album.



http://www.examiner.com/rolling-stones-in-national/billboard-magazine-predicts-tough-sell-for-superheavy-album

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Aug 20th, 2011 at 7:10pm
From Nico Zengraf's "Collector circles News" http://www.nzentgraf.de/books/news.htm
08/15/11:
The first physical release of SuperHeyvy was just released in India. It's a four-track CD-single with two SuperHeavy-tracks (both coming in two versions). Available here.

CD-single by SuperHeavy 'Miracle Worker (two versions)/Satyameva Jayathe (two versions)' (Universal Music Group, -India).



http://www.webmallindia.com/buy_dvd_online-movie-SUPER+HEAVY-p-27668.html#

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Egon on Aug 24th, 2011 at 6:12am
I think it's time for a RS Tour, so Jagger can boost his confidence...


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by mojoman on Aug 25th, 2011 at 2:54pm

Egon wrote on Aug 24th, 2011 at 6:12am:
I think it's time for a RS Tour, so Jagger can boost his confidence...




male enhancement?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Aug 25th, 2011 at 4:40pm

mojoman wrote on Aug 25th, 2011 at 2:54pm:

Egon wrote on Aug 24th, 2011 at 6:12am:
I think it's time for a RS Tour, so Jagger can boost his confidence...




male enhancement?

:wtf2

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 26th, 2011 at 6:59am

Mick Jagger & Joss Stone Improvise a Classic

By Raphael Chestang

http://goo.gl/728qP
SuperHeavy


The band SuperHeavy, composed of music heavyweights Mick Jagger, Dave Stewart, Joss Stone, Damian Marley and A.R. Rahman, have just released their first single and we're giving you a behind-the-scenes look!

The reggae/pop song "Miracle Worker," may have been a miracle in itself, considering that it wasn't planned.

"It was very different because we didn't know the people really well, we didn't rehearse and we didn't have songs written," said Mick, who produced the album with Dave Stewart. "We just sort of sat there looking at each other and just started playing."

Joss Stone revealed that her favorite part about "Miracle Worker" is the fact that it was improvised.

"That's why I love that one," Joss said. "That was just a jam and then we just kind of made it up as we went along."

SuperHeavy's self-titled album drops September 20. Watch the video for a behind-the-scenes look at how the single was made.


ET Online

'Miracle Worker' video has over a million views on YouTube...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Jumacfly on Aug 26th, 2011 at 7:23am
:charlieperv
Egon wrote on Aug 24th, 2011 at 6:12am:
I think it's time for a RS Tour, so Jagger can boost his confidence...


Agree bro! this Satamayate song sounds like cheap rai music, I bet it will be a hit in Marseille campings!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 26th, 2011 at 7:32am


UMG


From USA Today's Fall music preview:

SuperHeavy

SuperHeavy (Sept. 20)

Outline: Rolling Stones singer Mick Jagger and Eurythmics founder Dave Stewart, longtime pals and collaborators, co-produced this eclectic debut by a multicultural supergroup that also includes British soul singer Joss Stone, reggae star Damian Marley (Bob's youngest son) and Indian composer/musician A.R. Rahman. The ensemble initially met for spontaneous jams and recorded in far-flung locales, crafting a genre-melding blend of rock, soul, reggae, blues, pop and Indian music. Jagger's vocal swagger and Marley's toasting dominate reggae-splashed first single Miracle Worker.

Outside the lines: While the songs adhere to a pop structure, the spontaneity, exotic strains and daring cross-pollination will surprise fans. On Rahman composition Satyameva Jayate, Jagger sings a line in Urdu.

Outlook: Miracle Worker reviews are strong, and the project's diverse all-star lineup has stirred anticipation. The group hasn't booked a tour, which would goose sales, but the combined power of five fan bases should improve its prospects.  — Edna Gundersen


USA Today

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 31st, 2011 at 12:53pm


Getty Images


From the Joss Stone interview in New York Magazine:

Speaking of big artists, you’re working with Mick Jagger, Damien Marley, and Dave Stewart in Super Heavy. What’s that like?
Super Heavy is Dave’s brainchild. He called Mick, and when those two get together, it’s over; it’s happened. We got everyone together in a room, miked them up, and just made noise for two weeks. Hopefully we’ll be able to tour. It’ll be up to Mick, really.

Is Mick as crazy as he seems?
He’s very far from crazy. He’s very intelligent. He knows exactly what he’s doing.

That’s a bummer. You seem like a pretty tame bunch, then.
Well, I only sing songs. Thank God, eh?


New York Magazine

Wonder if Mick knows that a tour's up to him...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 31st, 2011 at 1:12pm




From the AR Rahman interview in The Telegraph:

How did you become a part of SuperHeavy?
I was doing a lot of movies in 2008 at the end of which there were a lot of dark things that happened in my life. I lost my sound engineer, we had those floods in Chennai and so many negative things were happening around me. I was going through a lot of stress in my work. At that point of time I got this call from Dave (Stewart) saying, ‘AR, would you be interested in collaborating with me and Mick (Jagger)?’ So I was like ‘anything to get out of here at this point’.

The first meeting happened probably at that time when I was in LA, when I was doing promotions for the Oscars and stuff during Slumdog (Millionaire). So we met, some sessions happened and then I met Joss (Stone), Damian (Marley) and the whole band and the lovely players from Jamaica.

How did the studio and jam sessions with the other super heavies go?
The story would be — well to go on the more spicy side — in one zone there would be a lot of very beautiful smells in the studio where we recorded, a lot of scented candles all around and the piano. A nice and almost angelic atmosphere. On another side you could smell marijuana. We wouldn’t go to that zone! But ultimately I think the music has always been a core essence of the whole experience.

We had sessions in different places like Turkey, Greece, on a yacht, in India, in Singapore — all over the place. Dave worked with Damian in Miami. We had jamming sessions where Mick would be playing something, Joss would be singing, Dave would join in, Damian would add to it and a melody would just evolve from all the interaction.

We’ve heard your vocal bits in Miracle Worker and Satya Meva Jayathe but people back home are curious to know your exact role in the band…
I was playing solos in most of the songs — on piano and synth — but my full-fledged compositions would be two of the songs, Satya Meva Jayathe and Mahiya. And then I did harmonies and extra vocals, Persian strings and Indian strings.

Satya Meva Jayathe is essentially an Indian song. How did it come to be the second single from SuperHeavy’s stable?
Dave said ‘AR we want your voice in this album and we want this to be a great Indian song too’. A long dream for me was to take one of the morals of Indian culture, which is ‘Satyameva Jayate’ and turn it into a song. I said this is historic if Mick Jagger, Joss Stone, Damian Marley, Dave Stewart and me come together for a song like this. It’s iconic in a way. I had to act spontaneously because I didn’t have any other lyrics than Satya Meva Jayathe when we started with the song. Then later we filled in the lyrics and brought in a choir to make it more epic. I hope people like it.

And you got Mick Jagger to sing in Sanskrit!
I’d like to think of Jagger singing in Sanskrit as an iconic moment.

Is a SuperHeavy tour on the cards? Any plans of coming to India and, of course, Calcutta?
If the album is a super duper hit and people are going to shout at us saying ‘Come on we need you’ and of course give a lot of love, definitely it will happen. I’m looking forward to that (coming to India/Calcutta) too.


telegraphindia.com

If this band plays anywhere, India's gotta be on the itinerary...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Aug 31st, 2011 at 2:09pm

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f256/leftshoeshuffle/SuperHeavy/SuperHeavy_orange.jpg

Album preview's posted @ ReverbNation.

Mick's out front on quite a few tracks...'Never Gonna Change' is the standout. Add some great harp on 'Energy'.

Joss Stone shines, too.

Some really good stuff. Check it out...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by riffkeither on Aug 31st, 2011 at 3:02pm
Is " Never Gonna Change" about Keith ?

Jagger makes me cry !!!!!!!!!!

Superb


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Aug 31st, 2011 at 6:12pm
I'm impressed.  There is a good feeling (as well as good musicianship) all through SuperHeavy.  Miracle Worker and Energy would be my top picks, followed by Hey Captain, World Keeps Turning, I Can't Take It No More, Mahiya, Never Gonna Change and Beautiful People.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 1st, 2011 at 7:15am

Ashley Beedle remix of 'Miracle Worker' is included on this collection:



Nice dub version...  




Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Nellcote on Sep 1st, 2011 at 7:43am

left shoe shuffle wrote on Aug 31st, 2011 at 2:09pm:
http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f256/leftshoeshuffle/SuperHeavy/SuperHeavy_orange.jpg

Album preview's posted @ ReverbNation.

Mick's out front on quite a few tracks...'Never Gonna Change' is the standout. Add some great harp on 'Energy'.

Joss Stone shines, too.

Some really good stuff. Check it out...

Much better than I expected.
Thanks very much for posting this.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Sep 1st, 2011 at 8:23am
give the love, peeps, give the love! and maybe they will take this thing on the road

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Sep 1st, 2011 at 10:36am
This album was much better...



Stones have come a long way, since Mick beat it up.

But Mick in Pink?

He wears it well, but after all these years he still want's to be popular, and not care about the music.  


Title: listen tor preview of new Superheavy CD on Itunes
Post by Bob Tamp on Aug 30th, 2011 at 9:13am
If you have Itunes( who doesn't)...go to UK store and do a search for Superheavy. YOu can hear approx 90 seconds of each track including the bonus tracks.

Title: Re: listen tor preview of new Superheavy CD on Itu
Post by gotdablouse on Sep 1st, 2011 at 3:13am
Thanks for the tip, here is a direct link : http://itunes.apple.com/gb/preorder/superheavy/id459183759

Title: Re: listen tor preview of new Superheavy CD on Itu
Post by Gazza on Sep 1st, 2011 at 6:52am
Liked what I heard.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Sep 1st, 2011 at 6:29pm

steel driving hammer wrote on Sep 1st, 2011 at 10:36am:
This album was much better...



Stones have come a long way, since Mick beat it up.

But Mick in Pink?

He wears it well, but after all these years he still want's to be popular, and not care about the music.  


Have you actually listened to any of the songs (except MW) or did you just read about them?  Like Keith's book.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 2nd, 2011 at 7:22am

http://img143.imageshack.us/img143/2039/shrs0911.jpg


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Jumacfly on Sep 2nd, 2011 at 8:22am
Just heard snipets on FB, well is it me or Mick, like Keith, is still playing the same harps lines??

ps: It still  think this satamayate song is cheap and ridiculous but the rest seems better.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Some Guy on Sep 2nd, 2011 at 11:15am
I'm out.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Sep 2nd, 2011 at 11:34am

steel driving hammer wrote on Sep 1st, 2011 at 10:36am:
This album was much better...



Stones have come a long way, since Mick beat it up.

But Mick in Pink?

He wears it well, but after all these years he still want's to be popular, and not care about the music.  


He can hardly be accused of not caring about the music if he's undertaking an off the wall project like this...


I actually think this will be far better than Main Offender too, which I never liked. I enjoyed Talk Is Cheap but I think Main Offender is all a bit samey and it gets dull quickly. At least SuperHeavy has a bit of variety going on.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 2nd, 2011 at 11:39am

Some Guy wrote on Sep 2nd, 2011 at 11:15am:
I'm out.

Your opinion, or another cut and paste?

http://goo.gl/hcMKH

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Zack on Sep 2nd, 2011 at 12:49pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on Sep 2nd, 2011 at 11:39am:

Some Guy wrote on Sep 2nd, 2011 at 11:15am:
I'm out.

Your opinion, or another cut and paste?

http://goo.gl/hcMKH


:loloncemore

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Sep 2nd, 2011 at 12:57pm
Another RS cover for Mick....he keeps adding to his record for most covers..........

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Sep 2nd, 2011 at 7:51pm
I replied this yesterday but I thgink I didn't click the "post" button

I finally heard the whole thing (well, the 1:30 samples) and I like some songs a lot, especially "Energy", too bad I couldn't listen the song that starts with Joss singing out loud "What the fuck is goin' on" Which track is that?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Steel Wheels on Sep 2nd, 2011 at 8:18pm
Joss looks great on the cover.  Juicy!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by corgi37 on Sep 3rd, 2011 at 3:53am
She is hotter than ever. Never wears shoes though.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Sep 3rd, 2011 at 5:32am

Voodoo Chile in Wonderland wrote on Sep 2nd, 2011 at 7:51pm:
I replied this yesterday but I thgink I didn't click the "post" button

I finally heard the whole thing (well, the 1:30 samples) and I like some songs a lot, especially "Energy", too bad I couldn't listen the song that starts with Joss singing out loud "What the fuck is goin' on" Which track is that?


I think it might be I Can't Take It No More, although that part isn't in the clip.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 3rd, 2011 at 7:38am




Japanese SHM-CD has 17 tracks. Extra's an acoustic version of 'Never Gonna Change'.

Universal Music Japan

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 3rd, 2011 at 7:52am

SuperHeavy - SuperHeavy

Summer songs from Mick Jagger and the dream team of the global beat


Illustration by Costhanzo


Loosely translated from Claudio Kleiman's review in Rolling Stone AR:

The idea came to former Eurythmic Dave Stewart, workaholic and producer of fashion (Stevie Nicks, Joss Stone, Ringo Starr, Bryan Ferry, as well as his own solo album) while he was in Jamaica, hearing the mixture of sounds that came from various soundsystems in the distance: assemble a band with musicians from different genres and cultures. Thanks to his connections, in a short time he'd formed a so-called supergroup. His friend Mick Jagger (Stewart's collaborator on the Alfie soundtrack) joined the project, and then soul singer Joss Stone was summoned, reggae musician Damian Marley (son of Bob) and Indian keyboardist/composer A.R. Rahman, famous for the soundtrack of Slumdog Millionaire were also added. Apparently, the "experiment of a mad Alchemist" - in the words of Dave - worked: they joined in the studio with just some sketches, riffs and loose ideas, and recorded 29 songs in ten days. From there Stewart, who usually works quickly, took the raw material and fine tuned the twelve songs on the self-titled debut album of SuperHeavy, the name inspired by Muhammad Ali. The cover recalls the debut album by Santana, another standard bearer of crossing cultures.

In SuperHeavy, the styles of each are clearly identifiable, yet blend naturally. As expected, the voice and melodies of Jagger occupy a central role, but the one who predominates is Marley, whose rhythm section [bassist Shiah Coore and drummer Courtney Diedrick], colors a strongly reggae-flavored album. Rahman brings Eastern orchestrations; Stone, the black soul; and Stewart passes almost unnoticed, although his guitars and production details are omnipresent throughout the disc. These seemingly disparate elements are able to blend smoothly in the first half of the album.

The single, "Miracle Worker", hooks immediately with it's reggae rhythm, pop chorus, and combination of the three voices. "Energy" is dominated by the keyboard dance of Rahman, as in Slumdog, with a quick Damian freestyle and Mick adds his characteristic harmonica; "Satyameva Jayathe", which means "truth alone triumphs", begins as a religious mantra until the emergence of a dancehall beat, and includes a beautiful keyboard solo by the Indian musician. "One Day One Night" finds Jagger playing sexy with that youthful arrogance he hasn't lost with age, oriental percussion and a violin that adds an aura of mystery, amplified by the dub production; at the end, Joss matches vocals with Mick in an unforgettable duel.

The second half of the album has more individual highlights, especially Jagger, with "Never Gonna Change" an acoustic song reminiscent of the Rolling Stones' "Ruby Tuesday", and "I Can't Take It No More" a rocker accentuated by the rhythm guitar, the singer spelling out the things he doesn't like. "Rock Me Gently", with it's lilting, almost Latin rhythm, is the ideal vehicle for Stone to deploy her vocal melismas, and for which Stewart allows the album's only violin solo. In "I Don't Mind", a dreamy ballad with a gentle reggae rhythm, Mick and Joss alternate verses, with Marley's toasting referencing the Eurythmics "Sweet Dreams". "Beautiful People", a reggae universalist message by Damian, sounds like another potential single, and "World Keeps Turning" is the anthem of the album, closing with a proper circular Jagger chorus urging "that your heart stays strong ". Stewart says he likes musicians from around the world, but not the term "world music". With SuperHeavy, he and his cronies have managed to create a new hybrid different from the stereotype, with songs ideal for a beach house atmosphere.


rollingstone.com.ar

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Sep 3rd, 2011 at 10:25am
"I Can't Take It No More" is not Mick's best song...strange he didn't get any input from the others (he's the only one to be credited)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Sep 4th, 2011 at 1:22pm
Although I usually like all things Mick, One Day One Night didn't make it to my favorites list.  Joss was great but Mick sounded forced. His voice was strong but the enunciation was too pronounced.  I guess I prefer him a little slurry and sloppy.  Still wouldn't skip past it though.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Sep 5th, 2011 at 11:23am

gotdablouse wrote on Sep 3rd, 2011 at 10:25am:
"I Can't Take It No More" is not Mick's best song...strange he didn't get any input from the others (he's the only one to be credited)


It could be something he was already working on.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Some Guy on Sep 6th, 2011 at 7:36am
slowly losing interest.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 6th, 2011 at 2:54pm


@DaveStewart

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Sep 6th, 2011 at 5:30pm
That's a cool pic Lefty  :)

The only thing is, with SuperHeavy, Some Girls Deluxe and now Fort Worth 78 coming out in the next few months, I'm not going to have any money...

I'm really looking forward to this album though, I've been listening to the iTunes samples every day since they were available.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Bob Tamp on Sep 6th, 2011 at 7:55pm
Now on the US Itunes they have 90 second clips also of all the songs. For the most part, they are a different than what was previously published. Not sure now what I think of One day/one night after hearing the second sample.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Sep 7th, 2011 at 5:03am
Indeed, the singing is really "peculiar"...I quite like the phrasing on MW but here I'm not so sure ! Never Gonna Change has some of these problems too :-(

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 7th, 2011 at 8:55am

Shepherd's Bush Market Tube Station, London:


@DaveStewart

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Sep 7th, 2011 at 4:17pm
'I'd like to see this on a BillBoard in Buffalo NY  8-)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 7th, 2011 at 5:49pm

Get in touch with UMG. Or - blow some of these up, print 'em out and paper Buffalo yourself...  ;)



HMV

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Sep 8th, 2011 at 4:52pm
http://ultimateclassicrock.com/superheavy-i-cant-take-it-no-more/

A review of the newest SuperHeavy song. This one is credited as being written solely by Mick.
The song can be listened to on the link.



(thanks to ProudMary on IORR for putting up this link)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Egon on Sep 9th, 2011 at 3:39am

the juf wrote on Aug 4th, 2011 at 3:46am:

gotdablouse wrote on Aug 3rd, 2011 at 7:32pm:
...so when are the first leaks coming out!

I have leaked as much as I could.
I will update every now and then.


I leaked as well when i heard miracle worker...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 9th, 2011 at 7:47am

SoulPlunderer wrote on Sep 8th, 2011 at 4:52pm:
http://ultimateclassicrock.com/superheavy-i-cant-take-it-no-more/

A review of the newest SuperHeavy song. This one is credited as being written solely by Mick.
The song can be listened to on the link.

Thanks for posting, SP.

Sounds less "SuperHeavy" than the other tracks. Doubtless a song that Mick brought with him...not my favorite vocal.    

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 9th, 2011 at 7:51am




Mick's in London for more than just Stones business. French newspaper Le Figaro interviewed him yesterday for a piece about SuperHeavy.

Full translation's dicey, and a lot of the same ground is covered - Dave Stewart wanted to mix genres, improvising in the studio, lots of songs recorded, some over an hour long...

He says Charlie and Ronnie have heard and "liked" SuperHeavy, and that SuperHeavy was a unique experience, "not a commitment for the rest of my life."

Tour's also unlikely "in light of our agendas", but maybe a few concerts.  


Le Figaro

Footnote for the trainer mavens - Mick was wearing his pink Nikes.  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 9th, 2011 at 8:47am

Posted in another thread - thanks Gazza and HighwireC - but since it's heavy on the SuperHeavy, posting it here, too:

http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f256/leftshoeshuffle/SuperHeavy/MJ_ZDF.jpg

Mick Jagger talks SuperHeavy with ZDF
___

Mick looks great, and is ever the pro...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Sep 10th, 2011 at 4:42am

Thank You Mick for sharing   :),

Plans Do change  ;)   :paristhong

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 10th, 2011 at 6:11pm

'It was all very secret so I set up the Supergrass Police': Mick Jagger's new supergroup with Joss Stone and Dave Stewart'

By Louise Gannon
10th September 2011

Live tells the inside story of how five of the greatest talents in music came together – across four continents, on board a luxury superyacht and in utmost secrecy – to record an album that is set to redefine the term ‘supergroup’


SuperHeavy is a collaboration between Mick Jagger, Dave Stewart, Joss Stone, Damian Marley (son of reggae
legend Bob Marley) and Indian-born Oscar-winning soundtrack writer AR Rahman



‘Boats are very private places. Fake names in recording sessions – keep it simple… you know’ – ‘Mr Gibson 3.3’, aka Mick Jagger

Under the blinding glare of the Los Angeles sun, on the same dusty Paramount New York street lot where The Godfather was filmed, a jumbled crew of cameramen, anxious assistants, exhausted runners and jaded punk extras all stare as a great boom of sound blares from a hastily constructed, battered voodoo shop frontage – pitched completely at odds against the iconic Forties brownstones.

There’s a momentary, familiar high-pitched wail. Then the battered doors crash open and Mick Jagger, in a tight neon-pink suit and Panama hat, struts into the sunlight, his feet in cerise Nikes kicking up dirt as he leaps through a series of perfectly co-ordinated vocal and physical twists, effortlessly spinning a pair of female dancers as he sings the opening lines of Miracle Worker.

Nobody moves, spellbound by what they’re watching. Even the jaw on the most scary-looking punk has dropped open. Joss Stone, sitting just feet away on a pavement, is completely fixated. Then Jagger stops, walks over to a monitor, frowning as he scrutinises the reel with ex-Eurythmics musician Dave Stewart.

Eventually, Jagger nods to Stewart and says in his ultra-liquid London drawl, ‘OK guys, let’s go again.’

This is an extraordinary event. Live magazine is the only UK publication invited to witness the filming of Jagger’s latest venture. SuperHeavy is a collaboration between Jagger, Stewart, Stone, Damian Marley (son of reggae legend Bob Marley) and Indian-born Oscar-winning soundtrack writer AR Rahman.

Over a period of four days we were given unprecedented access to the performers as the final touches were put to a project that has taken two years, crossed four continents, involved one of the world’s largest superyachts, the personal assistance of Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, the input of America’s answer to Banksy, Shepard Fairey, not to mention levels of secrecy MI5 would be proud of (more of this later), to achieve. The outcome is a wholly unexpected return of the musicians’ collective ideal of the Sixties and Seventies – the supergroup.

As Dave Stewart says, ‘It was all totally secret and we kept it that way for a hell of a long time, which is amazing given the people concerned. This was a journey that could only really develop if it was given space without the rest of the world putting their expectations on it.

'It was essential we kept it secret. We had a codename for recording studios – DD Jam – and when a few people got to hear about Joss and Mick being in a session together it was put out that it was a Nokia campaign.

‘We recorded all over the place: LA, Jamaica, Turkey, Italy, Greece, India, Miami. We had people coming in at different times, different places. Paul Allen lent us his boat (a 414ft megayacht called Octopus with two helicopters, two submarines and a jet-ski dock). Mick would check in under names like Mr Gibson 3.3 – all very Ocean’s Eleven.’

‘Boats are very private places. Fake names in recording sessions – keep it simple… you know’ – ‘Mr Gibson 3.3’, aka Mick Jagger

Hours later, in a suite at the Beverly Hills Four Seasons, Mr Gibson 3.3 – Mick Jagger – is chilling before being driven off to a dance lesson where he will perfect his moves for tomorrow’s filming.

He is dressed in a peacock-blue cotton shirt and steel-grey trousers cut in the skinny, tapered style of a Sixties beatnik. His brown hair remains anti-establishment shoulder length and his face is a Francis Bacon portrait – fantastically riven by a life as extreme as you could get, untouched by surgery and defiantly his own.

Talking to Jagger is like trying to grasp mercury. He smiles and laughs, jokes and parries his way around questions. As it turns out, maintaining absolute secrecy was the least of his concerns.

‘I never found it that hard,’ he says. ‘I was worried about Dave because he often blabs when he’s talking and then my brother (Chris) said something. But if you want to keep things private you can. Dave blagged Paul Allen’s boat and we recorded vocals sailing round Greece and Turkey; boats are very private places. Fake names in recording sessions, keep it simple… you know.’



'It's good, I'm really happy with it. You sit back, you let others do their thing. You have your go, then you let the
others go. It's a good process. I'm interested to see what happens next, move on,' said Jagger



Ask him what it was like playing with a completely new band and he grins.

'Well, it was really great but really pressured. Great because it’s good to challenge, to do something different; pressure because day one, we got into a room, no one had written anything, none of us had worked together as a group. I knew Damian’s dad but not really him or AR (Rahman). Then, me and Dave are sitting there with guitars and everyone is sort of looking at the guys with the guitars…’

Were the others looking to him specifically because he was the legend in the room?

‘Well, I dunno about that. Definitely the oldest, the senior. But in a room full of musicians it doesn’t take long to work out the dynamics. I’ve known Dave and worked with him for the past 25 years on projects like Alfie and Ruthless People and just doing our own stuff together.

'And Joss has opened for the Stones. I knew what singing with Joss was actually like and I hung out with her. I know she talks all the time and she is always up and laughing spontaneously. She is not like some broody, moody kind of girl who sits in the corner and you don’t know what she’s thinking. She’s telling you what she is thinking all the time, which is quite good really. And she sings all the time. She sings all her thoughts. I say, “Joss, can I get five minutes off the singing? Joss, shut up. Joss!”’ Jagger laughs.

‘It’s good, I’m really happy with it. You sit back, you let others do their thing. You have your go, then you let the others go. It’s a good process. I’m interested to see what happens next, move on.’

Jagger likes to keep moving; his motto is ‘Don’t look back.’



Jagger, Stewart, Marley and Stone in rehearsal


He nods. ‘I live in the now. But I don’t ever think, “This is amazing, I can’t believe I’m still doing this.” I am doing it. I’m just doing it. And I don’t think, “It’s all gone so fast”, because for me it’s still happening. When I started it was a different century and it seems like it. You move on. This band, this project, it’s all good.’

But it’s impossible to remove Jagger from his extraordinary past and even though we’re here to talk about SuperHeavy, the ghosts of the Rolling Stones and Keith Richards swirl around those skinny shoulders.

Richards’ autobiography, Life, torpedoed the fragile partnership of the Glimmer Twins, as Richards laid in to Jagger for being unbearable and betraying the ethos of the Stones by accepting a knighthood. Worse, Richards struck at the core of Jagger’s legend as a lover by boasting he slept with Mick’s girlfriend, Marianne Faithfull, and claiming Jagger has a ‘tiny todger’.

As bizarre as it seems, ‘Todgergate’ has led to such a rift between the two that the Stones’ long-awaited 50th anniversary tour – due for next year – is currently off, although rumours have emerged recently that lawyers are desperately trying to broker an agreement between the two men.
I tell Jagger I want to ask him something.

He leans back and smiles, ‘When is the next Rolling Stones mega-tour? I don’t know really. There isn’t one so far. But there might be anything, anything can happen. It is the 50th anniversary next year. Everyone kept asking what was the date of our first ever performance, no one was giving the answer, so I decided I may as well bloody well find out myself.

‘The first ever performance we did was in July at the Marquee Club in London and it was billed as Mick Jagger and the Rolling Stones. It was just me and Keith, Brian (Jones) and a backing band. No one else – no Charlie (Watts), he wasn’t even there. I remember it exactly. I was 19 years old. Ricky Fenson on bass, Carlo Little on drums and Nicky Hopkins on piano. They all told us to **** off when we tried to hire them but it was a big deal getting a gig at the Marquee because it was the hottest London club. It was a jazz club trying to break into blues.

‘The gig was amazing – the drummer was going mad and Nicky was rocking his electric piano and I remember the crowd going absolutely wild. I was thinking as I was singing, they obviously have to book us again, this is the most rocking gig they’ve had in the Marquee ever. But they didn’t. They didn’t let us back in there for ages because rock was working-class, rubbish music. It didn’t exist on an intellectual level like jazz. They saw the future and they didn’t like it. That was our first gig and the people we wanted to get the point just didn’t get it.

‘Maybe we could go back to the Marquee to accept a plaque for 50 years of service instead (of a tour). That could work – except Keith can’t obviously come. Charlie could come but he wouldn’t get the plaque, obviously.’

It is the first time Mick has mentioned Keith. It is clearly not looking good for any kind of reunion. I ask him if he played the SuperHeavy album to the Stones (Never Gonna Change is particularly reminiscent of the Stones sound).

‘Ronnie’s listened to it. He’s sweet, he’s very supportive. He liked it very much, he liked it all, particularly some of the first tracks we started with. And Charlie liked it. He’s all about the grooves, he’s got a great ear. Charlie and Ronnie both have their own things but they see the bigger picture. Not everyone sees the big picture.’



Stone and Stewart at the mixing desk


And Keith?

‘I don’t know if Keith really listens to that much. I don’t know what Keith listens to.’

I tell him Keith is usually quoted as saying he listens to Chuck Berry.

Jagger shrugs: ‘Yeah, that is what he says. I wonder if it is actually true.’

Why, given the forensic detail in Richards’ book, did Jagger take it upon himself to research details of the Stones’ first gig?

‘It isn’t necessarily correct,’ he says. ‘Everyone’s recollections of these things are all dim and distanced. It’s a very long time ago. A lot of things have been taken in the intervening period and your memory of it is different from one day to the next. Everyone has a different memory of what actually happened.

‘But if someone said to me, you are completely wrong Mick, Charlie played at the Marquee gig, here’s a picture – well maybe I was wrong. I don’t remember it like that but maybe he was there. But you see, then, that picture might have come from the October gig in the Marquee and who’s to know? And so the point is that somewhere around there, there was a band called the Rolling Stones but the actual first gig in July was not with Charlie or Bill (Wyman).’


‘It was all very secret so I set up the Supergrass Police. Word spreads. We  had to keep this under wraps’  – ‘The Lynchpin’, aka Dave Stewart


In his hi-tech offices on Hollywood Boulevard, opposite the old Capitol Records building, Dave Stewart is sifting through Shepard Fairey’s drawings of a tiger, the SuperHeavy logo. He rolls up his sleeve and shows me a tattoo of the same image on his arm.

On the walls are framed albums from Stevie Nicks, Bryan Ferry, George Harrison, Ringo Starr, Bob Dylan, Beyoncé, Paul McCartney, Bono. Stewart has worked with everybody.

Those who remember Stewart as the guy who stood behind Annie Lennox in the Eurythmics need to reassess. In America Stewart is huge; he has his own label, he makes films and he writes books on business.

His book The Business Playground (including Jagger’s own account of his business style), was so well received he is invited to lecture by major companies all around the world. Jay-Z asks him for advice, Bob Dylan (a member of supergroup the Traveling Wilburys, who recorded in his home studio) counts him as his closest friend. In his custom-made fedora (he has them made at Lock & Co in St James’s) and shades Stewart is a Sunderland-born reinvention of Andy Warhol.
SuperHeavy was his idea.

‘I’ve loved reggae music since Annie (Lennox) and I used to share a squat above a reggae dub shop in Crouch End. Tony Parsons and Julie Burchill used to come and trade their records and you’d hear these sounds blasting.

'Years later I was at my home in Jamaica and one night I heard all these sounds coming from all different areas, from these huge sound systems – reggae, rock, blues. I thought, that was what I wanted to do, bring all these different sounds together in one band.’

This musical cocktail, mixed with a uniquely Eastern sound, made him think of all the great musicians he’d worked with, from Jagger to his friend AR Rahman, and whetted his appetite. Stewart first met Mick in 1984. Their bond, he says, was forged in ‘blues and a shared sense of humour’.

‘We both talk about obscure blues bands, we both laugh at the same things. He was my first call. We came up with names: Joss was obvious because of the voice and the fact we’ve both worked with her, like her and rate her. No one has a voice like Joss Stone. I’ve known Damian since he was nine and AR for 12 years. Mick was just up for the idea – “Go for it. Do it.” He’s like that. He commits. It wasn’t about egos, it was about getting a bunch of musicians together.

‘I was the lynchpin, organising, pulling things together. Everyone just got there when they could. It was all very secret so I set up the Supergrass Police, getting people to check Facebook sites, MySpace. Any studio you turn up in, other musicians look in saying, “Hey, what’s going on there?” Word spreads. Engineers may make a comment on Twitter.

'This was two years in the making, we had to keep it under wraps. Mick was great, he never says a word to anyone. I called in Shepard to help; he wanted to hear the music. He loved the idea and came up with this perfect image.

‘What was different was when we got in a room. That was the end of the planning. There was no music. We had to write, do it as we were there. That’s pretty exposing for a lot of people and it was a good way of just getting everyone’s ideas going.

'Joss would sit there with the notepad, everyone throwing in ideas. It was Damian who kept riffing with this line, “Super-heavy, super-heavy”. We loved that and then Mick and I work in a similar way. It was pretty fascinating to get all  these different people writing songs together. Egos  go, you become musicians, you talk in this musicians’ shorthand.’

Stewart is often described as an eccentric yet, like Jagger, he is a man of absolute discipline. His day begins at 8am – coconut juice, a trainer and then work. He works till 7.30pm and then leaves.

‘I was working with Stevie Nicks recently and she couldn’t believe I’d walk out of the recording studio the same time every day. But I’ve learnt that creativity has to be rested to stop it burning out. I did that in my Eurythmics days. Now I understand how to work, how others work – how to make it the best.’


‘I didn’t tell Prince William or Kate Middleton about the project. Definitely not. They are lovely people, but I kept it quiet’  – ‘The Outsider’, aka Joss Stone


Next day on set, 24-year-old Joss Stone is waiting in her trailer to be called on set. She is rolling tobacco into a cigarette paper as a hairdresser works on her hair. For her, this project was a gift.

‘I’ve been in this business almost half my life. I’ve been signed by a label, fought with a label (she paid millions to get herself out of a contract with EMI two years ago), been forced to make certain albums, told I couldn’t make others and now I’m at the stage of my life where my attitude is very simple: if you want to do something and you think it’s great, just do it. Don’t let anything stop you.

‘I love Dave, I love Mick – he’s always having a go at me for smoking – and I loved this idea. I got two more friends out of it and most of all I got an education in songwriting from Mick. I sort of felt I was getting my songwriting degree.’



'I love Dave, I love Mick - he's always having a go
at me for smoking - and I loved this idea,' said Stone



Stone is a one-off. Having rebelled against the celebrity culture she was once so caught up in (as a teenager she was one of the most famous singers in the UK and U.S. but a disastrous incident at The Brits in 2007 in which she gave a speech in a strange American accent saw her ridiculed by the press), she remains on the outskirts of the industry.

She has no official manager, runs her own home-grown record label and leads the lifestyle of a Devon hippie. Prior to being called by Stewart to make a solo album, she had taken off to Spain in her second-hand camper van without heating, with her dogs and lived in a boatyard for a month and a half while a friend fixed up his boat.

Her new album, LP1, was recorded simultaneously with SuperHeavy. Her recollections of working with Mick shed a fascinating light on one of history’s greatest songwriters.

‘My style with lyrics has just been to blurt what I think on to the page and think, “Great, that’s words.” And you have to remember, when we were getting together the idea was to come up with songs fairly quickly. So I was thinking, just get words down, words, words words. Fill up a page.

‘I’d sit in a room with Mick. I had the notepad so I was the one writing. Mick kept stopping me – he’d go over every word. There would be an expression like “there’s the rub” and he’d look at it and ask me if I knew where the expression came from, that it was from Shakespeare, and why it would be right or wrong and why maybe using an older sort of word afterwards would work.

‘The one big row we had was over his idea and my idea of soul. He then started explaining how “soul” was derived from French and how it was a much broader school than I thought. He is so unbelievably knowledgeable about literature, music, music history, classical music. When we finished the sessions he gave me a really old book of Shakespeare sonnets. He really made me think about lyrics, about words – he was like the best teacher I’ve ever had.’

Like the others, Stone had to swear the oath of secrecy.

‘I definitely kept it quiet. I never really talk about what I’m doing to anyone. You’d sound like a bit of a show-off in my local pub banging on about being in a recording studio with Damian Marley and Mick Jagger. I didn’t tell Prince William or Kate Middleton about it either, definitely not. They are lovely people and they are interested in what I do but I didn’t mention it.’

Stone had her own dramas to contend with. When her name came up in the top five of Britain’s richest female singers, a plot to kidnap and murder her was uncovered, with police arresting two men just yards from her home. The case has yet to go to court, but Stone is seemingly untroubled by the hideous twist.


Marley, Jagger, Stone and Stewart


‘You know what?’ she says. ‘My life has been so bizarre, so extreme, that this just seems to fit into the madness of all of it. It’s not going to make me change anything in my life. It’s not going to make me move or act in a different way. Why would I? If you do that  then you are allowing someone to get to you, to affect you, to change you. I actually laugh about it now.  I’m not going to be a crazy, paranoid person who’s afraid of the world.

‘I am actually thinking about writing a thank-you note to those guys. The whole thing has meant I can get two more dogs. I have three already and my mum says that’s enough, but now I think, just get two more for protection. So a good thing has come out of it.’

Unsurprisingly Stone is not big on ego. She is protective of Jagger as ‘a really nice guy’.

‘It was a genuine collaboration,’ she says of working with SuperHeavy. ‘You can hear everyone, everyone’s voice, everyone’s musical fingerprint. It’s all clearly there.’

On set there is trailer equality; each artist has an identical-sized van. Outside his, AR Rahman, an Indian prodigy who won an Oscar for his score for Slumdog Millionaire, is somewhat bemused by the razzmatazz of his surroundings – and worried about having to be driven in a vintage Chevrolet through the Miracle Worker video set.

Before SuperHeavy he was only vaguely aware of Jagger.

‘Growing up in India pop music was Michael Jackson, Queen and Pink Floyd. I never heard of the Stones. Mick is a very nice man but I keep meaning to go and listen to his music. It was a very wonderful, different experience for me.

‘Being on the yacht was totally amazing. There was a studio there and everyone relaxed and drank – except me because I don’t drink. I did a lot of work and it was very fun and creative – lots of swimming off the boat.  I missed going down in the submarine but I gained from being with these people. Joss has an extraordinary voice and Mick has real magic in him. You have to watch him, hear him.’



'Paul Allen lent us his boat (a 414ft megayacht called Octopus with two helicopters, two submarines
and a jet-ski dock). Mick would check in under names like Mr Gibson 3.3 - all very Ocean's Eleven,' said Stewart



With a face poignantly reminiscent of his father and dreadlocks scraping the floor, Damian Marley emerges from his trailer to talk as the session starts to wrap.

‘Mick knew my dad but I only knew of  him through the Stones’ Satisfaction, that’s it. Dave and Mick are both geniuses in my opinion. They got this thing together, mixed a great cocktail, young and old, east and west.’

Back at his hotel, Jagger is in good spirits. The initial reception to Miracle Worker is very positive and a buzz is starting to build about the album. Stewart is already talking of a tour – and a festival. Mick laughs.

‘That’s Dave, he loves ideas,’ he says. ‘If people love it and they want it then we’ll do gigs. If they can’t be bothered we won’t do them.’

Jagger still goes to gigs: ‘I like small venues, the smaller the better. It’s more fun for me – you get the touchy-feely thing.’

His current favourites include Bruno Mars, Janelle Monae, Lady Gaga and Beyoncé.

‘I watched Beyoncé at Glastonbury on television. I was impressed, really impressed; she has come on miles and miles. She’s a very up-to-date, very modern version of Tina Turner. I rate Lady Gaga too – good musician, good songwriter, good piano player.’

It is said that Tina Turner taught Jagger to dance. He laughs.

‘I don’t ever remember Tina giving me any tips. I think I was giving her tips, wasn’t I?’

He puts on his campest voice: ‘Swish that dress dear, come on. No, no, no.’

He grins. ‘I think that’s actually how it went.’

At 68 Mick Jagger is ridiculously fit.

‘I’m still a 28in waist, same as I was at 19. I’ve got good stamina. You watch what you eat, you exercise, you have a bit of fun. You keep on going forward. Don’t stop. Do what makes you happy. Don’t look at the clouds of tomorrow through the sunshine of today. That’s it.’


Daily Mail


Nice piece, but perhaps a little outdated.

Writer had "unprecedented access" in June. Recent events merit a postscript.

Or maybe she hasn't read the Daily Mail...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Sep 11th, 2011 at 12:02pm
Thanks for sharing that. I was just about to scan and upload the article.

But Jesus Christ on a bike, has Mick got a CLUE about the history of the band he's fronted for most of his life?

‘The first ever performance we did was in July at the Marquee Club in London and it was billed as Mick Jagger and the Rolling Stones. It was just me and Keith, Brian (Jones) and a backing band. No one else – no Charlie (Watts), he wasn’t even there. I remember it exactly. I was 19 years old. Ricky Fenson on bass, Carlo Little on drums and Nicky Hopkins on piano. They all told us to **** off when we tried to hire them but it was a big deal getting a gig at the Marquee because it was the hottest London club. It was a jazz club trying to break into blues.

‘The gig was amazing – the drummer was going mad and Nicky was rocking his electric piano and I remember the crowd going absolutely wild. I was thinking as I was singing, they obviously have to book us again, this is the most rocking gig they’ve had in the Marquee ever. But they didn’t. They didn’t let us back in there for ages because rock was working-class, rubbish music. It didn’t exist on an intellectual level like jazz. They saw the future and they didn’t like it. That was our first gig and the people we wanted to get the point just didn’t get it.


Incredible that he remembers 'exactly' the band's first appearance - and gets three of the six band members wrong. Leaving out Dick Taylor is bad enough, but omitting IAN STEWART??

:sad


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Edith Grove on Sep 11th, 2011 at 12:21pm

Gazza wrote on Sep 11th, 2011 at 12:02pm:
Incredible that he remembers 'exactly' the band's first appearance - and gets three of the six band members wrong. Leaving out Dick Taylor is bad enough, but omitting IAN STEWART??

:sad


Selective or age-related memory, or perhaps the author got it wrong ?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Soldatti on Sep 11th, 2011 at 12:37pm
Listening right now, Never Gonna Change is the best song IMO.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Sep 11th, 2011 at 12:46pm
ah...we knew that was coming, for those who want to stay on the "good" side, here is preview of the Deluxe version on iTunes : http://itunes.apple.com/us/preorder/superheavy-deluxe-edition/id460441520 - quite like "Warring People", sounds like a Mick tune, "Honest Man" comes to mind...

Did some digging and just wasted 20 minutes with two files protected by a password, hum...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Sep 11th, 2011 at 12:52pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on Sep 10th, 2011 at 6:11pm:
Nice piece, but perhaps a little outdated.

Writer had "unprecedented access" in June. Recent events merit a postscript.

Or maybe she hasn't read the Daily Mail...



I think thats a point in all of this which needs emphasised. The 'magazine' features in the Sunday papers are often put together weeks (and in this case) months before the publishing date, leaving them often rendered contradictory by subsequent events.

...and its not helped by The Mail On Sunday's main paper today cherrypicking selected quotes from the interview, twisting it to make it out that Jagger has said there's no room in his new band for Keith, no Stones tour - but that they might do ONE gig to mark their anniversary. At The Marquee.  ::)

You couldnt make this shit up.  :forfucksake . But with the Mail, you can always bank on them doing precisely that.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Heart Of Stone on Sep 11th, 2011 at 2:16pm

Gazza wrote on Sep 11th, 2011 at 12:02pm:
Thanks for sharing that. I was just about to scan and upload the article.

But Jesus Christ on a bike, has Mick got a CLUE about the history of the band he's fronted for most of his life?

‘The first ever performance we did was in July at the Marquee Club in London and it was billed as Mick Jagger and the Rolling Stones. It was just me and Keith, Brian (Jones) and a backing band. No one else – no Charlie (Watts), he wasn’t even there. I remember it exactly. I was 19 years old. Ricky Fenson on bass, Carlo Little on drums and Nicky Hopkins on piano. They all told us to **** off when we tried to hire them but it was a big deal getting a gig at the Marquee because it was the hottest London club. It was a jazz club trying to break into blues.

‘The gig was amazing – the drummer was going mad and Nicky was rocking his electric piano and I remember the crowd going absolutely wild. I was thinking as I was singing, they obviously have to book us again, this is the most rocking gig they’ve had in the Marquee ever. But they didn’t. They didn’t let us back in there for ages because rock was working-class, rubbish music. It didn’t exist on an intellectual level like jazz. They saw the future and they didn’t like it. That was our first gig and the people we wanted to get the point just didn’t get it.


Incredible that he remembers 'exactly' the band's first appearance - and gets three of the six band members wrong. Leaving out Dick Taylor is bad enough, but omitting IAN STEWART??

:sad


Actually he did mention Dick Taylor in that video interview, but again he didn't mention Ian ever!! seems to me he doesn't care for anything from the past, & doesn't give people who started The Stones, Brian & Ian credit!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Sep 11th, 2011 at 3:29pm
We'll do without your "comments", I don' think I tried to put you down when you asked where you could find "Goddess in the Doorway" (instrumental), right ? Anyway, I'm curious what you used as your original search query in Google ?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Bitch on Sep 11th, 2011 at 5:51pm
Heard the song on the radio today on the classic rock station. I didnt recognize it at first but it sounded pretty cool.  Not a top ten hit but somebody at the station must have added it to the playlist.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Sep 11th, 2011 at 5:56pm
Miracle Worker ? Most catchy song so far, of course it's also the one we know best ;-)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 12th, 2011 at 11:03am




Loosely translated from "The 'heavy' adventure of Mick Jagger" in Spain's El Pais:

About singing in Sanskrit - "As a young man I was interested in Indian music because it was linked to drugs. It made you go into a trance state.
Now I travel to India a few times a year. I'm sorry I didn't learn to sing in the traditional Hindu way, because it's a good parlor trick."

He hasn't read 'Life', and declines further comment - 'If I start to talk about that subject, I don't have enough hours in the day."

The SuperHeavy experience was reinvigorating, since they had "nothing to lose".

A tour remains unlikely, as everyone "has their own things to do."


El Pais

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Sep 12th, 2011 at 12:31pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on Sep 12th, 2011 at 11:03am:
The SuperHeavy experience was reinvigorating, since they had "nothing to lose".

A tour remains unlikely, as everyone "has their own things to do."  



:nomames

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 12th, 2011 at 2:54pm

Mick Jagger Talks SuperHeavy 'Egos,' the Rolling Stones' 50th Anniversary and Their Upcoming 'Some Girls' Reissue

Posted on Sep 12th 2011 by Dan Reilly


Frank W. Ockenfels

Summer saw the enormous release of Kanye West and Jay-Z's 'Watch the Throne,' and autumn will get the genre-blending debut from SuperHeavy, the group consisting of Mick Jagger, Dave Stewart, Joss Stone, Damian Marley and A.R. Rahman. Mixing rock, reggae, soul, hip-hop, Indian and more, the band released its 'Miracle Worker' video last month and will drop its self-titled full-length debut on Sept. 20.

Spinner recently caught up with Jagger to discuss both his new band and his slightly more famous one. Check out the exclusive Q&A below to read about the singer's thoughts on the differences between the groups, his joy at not being the sole frontman, how he feels about seeing the Rolling Stones turn 50 and the band's plans for the 'Some Girls' reissue.


The project started with you and Dave Stewart. Why did you decide to bring in Joss, Damian and A.R.?

We were looking to do a record that didn't sound like anything we'd heard before, and we thought we'd do this musical mixture of people that would harmonize together yet bring things from musical places that we knew about and might have even dabbled in, people that specialize in different things and would bring different voices. Joss brings the female voice, obviously, and the English soul thing. We've worked with her before, so we knew her capabilities and that she was very easy to work with, and we knew we wanted to bring in another voice like A.R., who's a very sweet guy, super musical, but added a completely different dimension. The same with Damian.

So, [it was] people coming from different musical places but able to subsume their egos for a while and throw everything into the mix and hope something's gonna come out [laughs] because we didn't know what was going to happen. We didn't know if we would get songs. We wanted to make songs; we weren't interested in jams.

What was the songwriting process like with SuperHeavy compared to the Stones?

Well, songwriting is songwriting, you know what I mean? You can come at it from all different points of view. With the Stones, we do lots of different ways of songwriting. You've got the sort of "hope for the best" songwriting, where you turn up and you've got nothing, and you've got like writing everything completely demoed and then laying it on people, so I'm used to writing in very, very different ways.

I've written a lot of songs with Dave, so I knew that part of it. We purposely didn't write a lot of stuff first to sort of say, "OK, this is how this is gonna go." We wanted people to contribute, we wanted people to write, so we didn't have a lot prepared, which is always sort of worrying, because you may get nothing. But very quickly, on the first day, we got like six things. They weren't all finished, but they were very good ideas, and some of them were sort of finished songs, so we got this real good buzz, where you went from having absolutely nothing one minute and then you've got almost a finished record 15 minutes later. We missed out all these intervening periods of soul-examining lyric writing and demos and "do you like this?" and "should this be faster?" to almost a finished record with the voices on it, with A.R. singing in Hindi and Joss singing harmonies to me and a rap in the middle. So, your idea, or the germ of your idea, was very quickly realized, and that's a very exciting thing, because just writing songs where you've got nothing one minute and then suddenly you've got a song, melody and a lyric is great.

How was it for you not being the sole frontman?


Well, it's a lot easier for me, to be honest [laughs]. That's one of the things Dave sold me on in the beginning. He said, "You know, it won't be so hard for you, because you won't have to do everything all the time," and I said, "Yeah, right." But of course, you're present the whole time. When I wasn't singing I was playing the guitar, and when I wasn't playing the guitar, I was playing harmonica, and when I wasn't doing any of that, I was producing, and when wasn't doing that, I was making the tea.

But you know, I'm not singing all the time, so what I have to do is work out what harmonies I'm going to do and when Joss is going to sing. "OK, it's your turn, sing this, and now we sing the chorus." It's quite easy to do that with Joss, and yeah, it's fun not having to do the whole thing, but you can't abdicate responsibility. You have to be there.

The song 'Never Gonna Change' really stood out as a Stones-like ballad. How did that come about?


Dave starts playing this chord sequence, and I had two lines that I had written the night before as I was going to bed. I was seeing this image in my mind of this girl with very white skin painting her face, and I just wrote it in my book. Dave started playing this descending chord sequence, and I started singing these lines, and we made the song up on the spur of the moment. We did it in like two takes. That sort of things is fun, so I'm glad you liked that one.

In terms of age and success, you're the elder statesman of the group. Did it seem that way, or did the personalities all balance out?


I didn't really feel that, to be honest. The youngest person in the room is Joss, who's a serious soul music student, so it's not like a person I have to explain references to, explain who Aretha Franklin is. She knows it all. If you're working sometimes with very young people, they don't know anything like that, and you do have to explain references, but with Joss, she's not in that tradition. She's completely different, and she's the youngest person in the room. The rest of them, it's not really a generational thing. A.R. had never played in a band since he was at high school, so he found it I think slightly more difficult than anybody, joining in rather than only playing stuff that he created, but he soon quickly got on to it. Damian understands all my ancient reggae references. If I'd refer back to a Jamaican record of the early '70s when his father was even doing ska he would still know what that was.

So now that the record is coming out, have you discussed taking it on tour?


Yeah, we talked about doing some special shows for it. I don't think it's a band you'd want to go out on a 100-city tour with and do theaters, and everyone's very busy and got their own careers, so I think we'd be up for something if it seemed to fit.

What do you have planned with the Stones right now?

I just finished off doing all the outtakes for the 'Some Girls' album we're releasing at Thanksgiving. We did 'Exile,' we did a lot of different takes, a lot of different cuts that hadn't come out before, so we're doing the similar kind of thing with 'Some Girls,' so I've just been doing them because a lot of them weren't complete, so I had to complete them, and then we're gonna mix those and put them out for Thanksgiving. Then we talked about maybe what events are going to be going around for the 50th anniversary of the Rolling Stones. We don't really know the answer to that, but we talked about it a bit.

Does it blow your mind that the anniversary is coming up?

It sounds a lot of years to me. But you know, you're very lucky to have been doing it that long, so I guess I should be happy [laughs].


Spinner

SH next week, and more to be thankful for in November...

http://goo.gl/lHHdE

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by the juf on Sep 13th, 2011 at 10:01am
Every day snippets from the first 12 tracks available on www.twitter.com/SuperHeavyNL.
Enjoy!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 14th, 2011 at 6:31am

Mick Jagger on SuperHeavy: 'Everyone subsumed their egos'

By Mark Savage
BBC News entertainment reporter



SuperHeavy: AR Rahman, Mick Jagger, Damian Marley, Joss Stone and Dave Stewart

Rolling Stone Sir Mick Jagger introduces his "chaotic" new supergroup and explains why the Rolling Stones won't be playing at the Olympics.

SuperHeavy is a band that shouldn't work.

Sir Mick Jagger's latest side project is a genre-splicing supergroup, starring Damian Marley, Joss Stone and Slumdog Millionaire composer AR Rahman.

Musically, it flits between rock, reggae, soul, bhangra and blues - with all four vocalists competing for space across 12 eclectic tracks.

Yet the record is oddly compelling, its musical flights of fancy grounded by the supple, rootsy rhythms of Marley's backing band.

"It was chaotic," admits Jagger of the recording sessions, "but it was also a lot of fun".

"Everyone had to subsume their egos to some point. There wasn't really someone who was 'the boss.'"

Jagger cooked up the idea for SuperHeavy with Eurythmics producer Dave Stewart, who convened the band for a fortnight of breakneck recording sessions in Los Angeles in 2009.

"This wasn't a project where you put a band in the studio and you take as long as you want," Jagger says.

"Everyone was busy, so we set the parameter so on the first 10 days, to see how much we could do."

Those sessions produced nearly 40 hours of music, often in the form of extended jams, which were gradually whittled down to form coherent songs.

"If you can play something for 35 minutes, you've got to be enjoying it," Jagger points out.

Revelations

As someone who has chiefly written alone or in partnership with Keith Richards for nearly 50 years, the collaborative process was something of a revelation for the strutting Stones frontman.

By way of illustration, he describes the creation of a song called One Day, One Night.

"AR Rahman set up this really simple groove," he says, "and on top of that I started playing two minor chords on the guitar."

"I drifted into the lyrical idea of this guy being drunk in a hotel room, and he'd obviously had a row with his girlfriend.

"Dave said: 'Why doesn't this guy wander across the street where Joss is singing?'

"So I had to write a bit where I go outside, and we changed the key from a minor key to a major key. Joss is singing in that major key, and I go on stage to join her.

"That was a very different way of writing a song. I'd never really done that before."

In the end, the album contains just one track where Jagger is credited as the sole author.

I Can't Take It No More is a brutally straightforward rock song with a caustic lyric.

"All you scurvy politicians," the 68-year-old spits, "crying endless contrition. It really gets my goat, it sticks in my throat."

It's angry ("angry-ish," Jagger corrects) but he denies that the song was directed at anyone in particular.

"It's just general. It is so apparent that politicians' promises are usually broken.

"They expect us to believe they're going to provide a panacea, but they're always entrapped by the problems they inherit. They find themselves the prisoners of practicalities and realities."

It's a sympathetic reading of the political system for someone who is more readily associated with the revolutionary counter-culture of the 1960s.

This is, after all, the man who wrote Street Fighting Man in response to rioters who almost toppled Charles De Gaulle's government in France in 1968.

But Jagger has often said the single was not supposed to be a call to arms for "sleepy London town".

"I never believed that the violent course was necessary for our society," he told one interviewer in 1987.

"For other societies, perhaps, but in ours it's totally unnecessary."

Asked about this summer's riots in the UK, Jagger's response is measured and dryly analytical.

"There's a long history of rioting in England and it seems to be that it goes in cycles," he says.

"We had the poll tax riots, the race riots, the Toxteth riots.

"This summer was described as the 'consumer riots' but, you know, in the race riots in the US 1960, there was always looting as well. It's always a by-product.

"Whether this all portends a complete breakdown in society, as David Cameron portrayed it, I don't know.

"Of course it exposes problems that have to be faced. But whether these problems are insuperable or not is a matter of conjecture."

Rolling rumours

Jagger proves easier to pin down on musical matters - specifically whether the Rolling Stones will play at the 2012 Olympics.

"Has anyone actually approached us? No," he says.

"But Bryan Adams said: 'Whatever you do, don't do any Olympic openings,' after he did the winter Games in Canada.

"It was so cold, and he had to wear this bizarre suit... Although that's not going to happen here - it would just rain."

The star adds that he was unimpressed with the UK's contribution to the closing ceremony at the Beijing Olympics.

"It wasn't a brilliant piece of theatre when they left the stadium with a London bus with Jimmy Page on it," he laughs.

"I don't want to be on that bus when it arrives in London…"

SuperHeavy is released on Monday, 19 September on Polydor Records. The single, Miracle Worker, is out now.


BBC News

All those Olympics rumors...and the Stones were never actually approached.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Sep 14th, 2011 at 7:33am
Mick interview on Dutch Tv - filmed just a couple of days ago

Thanks to marcovandereijk for the link :

http://nieuwsuur.nl/video/272546-a-mad-alchemist-type-experiment.html

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Sep 14th, 2011 at 7:35am
I knew that eventually I'd find some reason for liking Bryan Adams. If it entailed doing his bit to talk the Stones out of thinking about playing the Olympics, then so be it....

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 14th, 2011 at 8:00am

Gazza wrote on Sep 14th, 2011 at 7:33am:
Mick interview on Dutch Tv - filmed just a couple of days ago

Fun - and funny - interview. Thanks for reposting.



Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 14th, 2011 at 9:02am

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/images/episode/b0140xm8_640_360.jpg

Mick guests on "Simon Mayo Drivetime" today on BBC Radio 2.

Program airs 5 - 7pm London time.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by SoulPlunderer on Sep 14th, 2011 at 10:05am

left shoe shuffle wrote on Sep 14th, 2011 at 9:02am:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/images/episode/b0140xm8_640_360.jpg

Mick guests on "Simon Mayo Drivetime" today on BBC Radio 2.

Program airs 5 - 7pm London time.



I saw this on the offical Stones facebook page:

"stand by for some news at 5pm GMT......"

I assume it refers to this interview. Nice to see Mick actually promoting SuperHeavy and this is one of the most popular UK radio shows so it was a good slot to get. Maybe he'll drop a mention of the Some Girls/Fort Worth stuff coming up too.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 14th, 2011 at 2:27pm

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/images/episode/b0140xm8_303_170.jpg

For those that missed the Simon Mayo interview - or those that want to hear it again - show's archived for a week @ BBC Radio 2.

Mick was relaxed, witty and engaging. Really good stuff.




Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Sep 14th, 2011 at 3:32pm
Witty, relaxed and engaging - that's the type of interview I like.  Unfortunately, I get a message saying Not available in your area.  I was typing with my fingers, so don't think it's operator error.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Sep 14th, 2011 at 4:38pm
same here ginda.  Joss's singing reminds me of Mavis Staples, with a touch of sweetness.  Lookin forward to the release.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Sep 14th, 2011 at 5:13pm

luxury wrote on Sep 14th, 2011 at 4:38pm:
same here ginda.  Joss's singing reminds me of Mavis Staples, with a touch of sweetness.  Lookin forward to the release.


Thanks to some behind the scenes fine tuning, I was finally able to get the interview to play.  What a pleasure.  Intelligent and articulate - just the way we like him.  Agree with the Mavis/Joss camparison.  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Sep 14th, 2011 at 5:29pm
I'm still watchin this thanks to Edith Grove  :D  

http://www.youtube.com/embed/VSyNUAzPofI?rel=0

What year is this 1973 - 2011 ?

Moves like JaGGeRRR.....

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by The Wick on Sep 14th, 2011 at 7:30pm
Great interview but Mick's interviews do always tend to be interesting. I love that he still sees himself as a blues player and I can't wait for the Some Girls blues tracks.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 15th, 2011 at 8:55am

http://goo.gl/DLA0p


Some Mick quotes from an interview in Italy's l'Unità:

This is a game for you ...

"No, it's serious, but fun. See, there's nothing to lose, this isn't a project for life. It's not the end of the world if it doesn't work. I don't know how long it will last, that depends on how people accept it. I won't be upset if they don't like it. But I had fun doing new things, like singing in Sanskrit, or trying to imitate Marley in doing "toasting". My favorite piece is "I Don't Mind", a very sweet song and very English in mood, despite the reggae rhythm. It's like "As Tears Go By".

The stated purpose of SuperHeavy is to go beyond the known genres. Could you explain?


"It's good that people start thinking outside of categories. Music has always been categorized into what I call "cages for birds," not a new problem to be honest.  I-tunes is a great deal of cages... Here's an example. You get an email from the Grammy organization: If you want your record to be eligible, complete this document within the next week, checking the genre box of the album. The thing with the Grammys is that they expect you to indicate the category they want or you're out."

Do you listen to a lot of music?

"Yes, what's out there. There are times I'll listen to more "easy" things and other times I'll throw on classical music. Then I'll go to hard rock, then I'll want to know everything about new releases, and I'll dive back into great blues rock. "  

Why haven't you written an autobiography? After the great success of Richards it's your turn...

"Well, I think it's self-destructive to stir up the past. I consider it dangerous for your psyche, especially if it was a difficult past. In short, if you had a hard life, looking back on it is destabilizing. Or you could think 'Oh well, I had an easy life...' "

Did you like Keith's?


"I haven't read it! Have you? Did you like it? I don't know...I think it's a dramatic thing to relive."

There are hopes for a fiftieth anniversary tour with the band?


"That's a topic I don't want to discuss."

If the album's a great success will there be a tour?

"Oh no! I can imagine individual performances, festivals. Each of us is very busy."

After 50 years with the Rolling Stones has the SuperHeavy project made you feel younger?

"No! (Laughs). It's a fun project, but not a band for the rest of my life."


l'Unità

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Sep 15th, 2011 at 9:16am
Ok Mick, time to put your money where your mouth is....enjoy the smaller venues you say? the "touchy-feeliness" ??  So does your audience...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Nellcote on Sep 15th, 2011 at 9:27am
From Lefty's post

There are hopes for a fiftieth anniversary tour with the band?

"That's a topic I don't want to discuss."  

Wasn't there some lawsuit with Live Nation & The Stones towards a future tour?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 15th, 2011 at 10:11am

Lawsuit's between LiveNation and Michael Cohl, not the Stones.
LN and Cohl's bidding on a potential Stones tour was part of the story.

Mick's brush-off was just steering the conversation back to SH.

Check out that Dutch TV spot. Interviewer mentions topics he was told not to bring up...Stones was one of them.  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Nellcote on Sep 15th, 2011 at 11:19am

left shoe shuffle wrote on Sep 15th, 2011 at 10:11am:
Lawsuit's between LiveNation and Michael Cohl, not the Stones.
LN and Cohl's bidding on a potential Stones tour was part of the story.

Mick's brush-off was just steering the conversation back to SH.

Check out that Dutch TV spot. Interviewer mentions topics he was told not to bring up...Stones was one of them.  


So, the suit has not been settled, correct?
To think of a tour where Cohl would not be involved is not proper
given what he has done for them in that regard.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Sep 15th, 2011 at 11:49am

Nellcote wrote on Sep 15th, 2011 at 11:19am:

left shoe shuffle wrote on Sep 15th, 2011 at 10:11am:
Lawsuit's between LiveNation and Michael Cohl, not the Stones.
LN and Cohl's bidding on a potential Stones tour was part of the story.

Mick's brush-off was just steering the conversation back to SH.

Check out that Dutch TV spot. Interviewer mentions topics he was told not to bring up...Stones was one of them.  


So, the suit has not been settled, correct?
To think of a tour where Cohl would not be involved is not proper
given what he has done for them in that regard.

Done for them maybe.........For us ,not so much. >:(

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Sep 15th, 2011 at 2:17pm
they'll dump Cohl like they did Bill Graham if theres a buck more on the table.......

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 15th, 2011 at 2:26pm

Nellcote wrote on Sep 15th, 2011 at 11:19am:

left shoe shuffle wrote on Sep 15th, 2011 at 10:11am:
Lawsuit's between LiveNation and Michael Cohl, not the Stones.
LN and Cohl's bidding on a potential Stones tour was part of the story.

So, the suit has not been settled, correct?

Suit hasn't been settled.

StonesCo issued a statement distancing themselves from Cohl earlier this year:

"In light of recent reports surrounding the 'Breach of Contract' Court Case in America between Live Nation Entertainment and former Live Nation chairman Michael Cohl, The Rolling Stones wish to clarify their position regarding representation and touring," the statement reads. "Following the end of the 2007 'A Bigger Bang' world tour, The Rolling Stones became free from any contractual arrangements or agreements with Michael Cohl. He is neither their representative nor their tour promoter. Also the Stones confirmed today they have no firm plans to tour at this time." - Billboard

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Nellcote on Sep 15th, 2011 at 7:37pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on Sep 15th, 2011 at 2:26pm:

Nellcote wrote on Sep 15th, 2011 at 11:19am:

left shoe shuffle wrote on Sep 15th, 2011 at 10:11am:
Lawsuit's between LiveNation and Michael Cohl, not the Stones.
LN and Cohl's bidding on a potential Stones tour was part of the story.

So, the suit has not been settled, correct?

Suit hasn't been settled.

StonesCo issued a statement distancing themselves from Cohl earlier this year:

"In light of recent reports surrounding the 'Breach of Contract' Court Case in America between Live Nation Entertainment and former Live Nation chairman Michael Cohl, The Rolling Stones wish to clarify their position regarding representation and touring," the statement reads. "Following the end of the 2007 'A Bigger Bang' world tour, The Rolling Stones became free from any contractual arrangements or agreements with Michael Cohl. He is neither their representative nor their tour promoter. Also the Stones confirmed today they have no firm plans to tour at this time." - Billboard


Thanks for this digging, Lefty.
It's my contention Stones will use Cohl for a long tour, as he's made more dough for them
than anyone ever.  They may not need him for a more limited run of shows.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 16th, 2011 at 7:26am

Jagger, Joss and Co really pack a punch

By Adrian Thrills
15th September 2011

Verdict: Jagger and company pull their weight



The idea of five mega-rich superstars teaming up to make an album of rock, reggae, soul and Indian rhythms sounds like a recipe for musical disaster.

Throw in the fact that some recordings were made on board a luxury yacht tootling around the Mediterranean and you’d bet your bottom dollar on the whole project turning out to be a self-indulgent mess.

And yet, despite being the year’s most extravagant side-project, the first album by SuperHeavy - a ‘mad, alchemist-type experiment’ launched by Rolling Stone Mick Jagger and Eurythmics founder Dave Stewart - succeeds, thanks largely to the lack of ego displayed by those involved.



SuperHeavy: From left to right, Damian Marley, Joss Stone, Mick Jagger, Indian film
composer A.R. Rahman and Dave Stewart join forces



The idea of the supergroup is hardly new. But SuperHeavy take things further than the likes of Eric Clapton’s Cream, giving equal billing to talented artists from a series of seemingly incompatible genres.

Joining co-producers Jagger and Stewart are Devon soul diva Joss Stone, Indian film composer A. R. Rahman and reggae singer Damian Marley, the youngest son of icon Bob Marley.

It could have turned into a series of disorderly jams. But, give or take the odd track, it works, even if the band’s intoxicating rhythms occasionally take precedence over memorable tunes.

According to Jagger, SuperHeavy embarked on the recording with no preconceptions. ‘Dave wanted to make a record with as many genres as would fit,’ he says.

‘It sounded like a good idea, but I never thought it would happen. We didn’t know if it would be any good, but we hoped we’d have fun. Then, as soon as we started playing together, it gelled.’


According to Jagger, SuperHeavy embarked on the recording with no preconceptions


In terms of creating a coherent sound, Marley is the key. Jagger and Stewart have worked with reggae singers before, and six of the 12 new songs here have strong reggae leanings.

With Marley’s rhythm section providing a lilting bedrock throughout, tracks such as Miracle Worker and Beautiful People are upbeat and accessible.

Stones fans will be eager to hear more familiar reference points, and Jagger - although he emerges as a team player - rekindles old glories on One Day One Night (a bluesy monologue) and Never Gonna Change (a ballad with a passing resemblance to You Can’t Always Get What You Want).

Given the uncertainty surrounding the Stones in the aftermath of Keith Richards’ candid autobiography, the change of scenery seems to have done Old Rubber Lips the world of good: he pulls out all the stops on the Stonesy rocker I Can’t Take It No More.

With all five musicians rotating lead roles, Joss Stone - at 24, the youngest member - could easily have been intimidated.

But the singer, whose career has been a stop-start affair since she burst on to the scene as a 16-year-old, rises to the occasion.

Best known for her soulful phrasing, she shows versatility by mutating into an irresistible reggae princess on Miracle Worker and dueting confidently with Jagger on I Don’t Mind.

With Stewart playing plenty of guitar, the only member whose presence is under-utilised is Oscar-winning composer Rahman.

His role revolves around building an eerie musical mood on pieces such as the title track, which opens the album by showcasing each member’s abilities.

As such, it is one of the strongest tracks here: Stewart’s reverb-soaked guitars blend seamlessly with Rahman’s Eastern-tinged atmospherics to provide a chugging, mid-tempo backdrop for Stone, Marley and Jagger’s familiar drawl.

An unorthodox mix, yes. But, in this instance, a heavyweight combination that delivers a knockout blow.


Daily Mail

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 16th, 2011 at 7:51am

Mick talks SH, Stones, and "tensions":

http://goo.gl/fbwfL


Sir Mick Jagger gets SuperHeavy with new supergroup
___

"Perhaps"? Cue hand-wringing and teeth-gnashing...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Nellcote on Sep 16th, 2011 at 9:22am
Thanks for that vid.  
Just the way we want it-drama, intrigue.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by LadyJane on Sep 16th, 2011 at 9:52am

Nellcote wrote on Sep 16th, 2011 at 9:22am:
Thanks for that vid.  
Just the way we want it-drama, intrigue.


100% correct my friend.
More drama equals "Oh thank God they've mended fences, I'll gladly
pay 500.00 for a nosebleed seat".
And I likely WILL!!!!!  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Sep 16th, 2011 at 9:52am
...and harmony!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 16th, 2011 at 10:31am

Speaking of harmony, lyrics for 'Satyameva Jayathe' are posted @ SuperHeavyOfficial:

http://goo.gl/fYWCt

Gotta work on my Sanskrit...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Sep 16th, 2011 at 11:07am

left shoe shuffle wrote on Sep 16th, 2011 at 10:31am:
Speaking of harmony, lyrics for 'Satyameva Jayathe' are posted @ SuperHeavyOfficial:

http://goo.gl/fYWCt

Gotta work on my Sanskrit...

Catchy lyrics....they just roll right off the tongue.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Sep 16th, 2011 at 1:44pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on Sep 16th, 2011 at 7:51am:
Mick talks SH, Stones, and "tensions":

http://goo.gl/fbwfL


Sir Mick Jagger gets SuperHeavy with new supergroup
___

"Perhaps"? Cue hand-wringing and teeth-gnashing...


Thanks for posting this clip.  I didn't detect any attempt at coyness in his answer about a Stones tour.  Tension doesn't make anyone healthier or happier.  I'll be shocked out of my socks if a tour takes place.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by The Wick on Sep 16th, 2011 at 2:55pm
Keith can be such a wanker. Well done Keith, you've pissed off your oldest friend and shafted the fans so that you could sell millions of copies of your book. Let's be honest, without that todger nonsense, it wouldn't have got half the publicity. He's a real warrior for the Stones legacy isn't he? Mick is right, tension does very little good but Keith needs to flog copies of his book.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Tumbling Dijs on Sep 16th, 2011 at 3:25pm

The Wick wrote on Sep 16th, 2011 at 2:55pm:
Keith can be such a wanker. Well done Keith, you've pissed off your oldest friend and shafted the fans so that you could sell millions of copies of your book. Let's be honest, without that todger nonsense, it wouldn't have got half the publicity. He's a real warrior for the Stones legacy isn't he? Mick is right, tension does very little good but Keith needs to flog copies of his book.


I agree, and I am a little shocked I must say, Mick seems really in pain talking about these tensions with we all know who, and he seems really sincere and honest saying he's not sure about a tour. I have never seen him react this way regarding his conflicts with Keith. It puts everything in a whole new perspective imo. Kudos Keith!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 16th, 2011 at 3:40pm

Full interview with Charlie Stayt of "BBC Breakfast":

http://goo.gl/6Q6i6

Charlie speaks to Sir Mick Jagger
___

The pink suit, Lennon...and more Stones talk.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Sep 16th, 2011 at 4:07pm
Thanks for the new link.


Tumbling Dijs wrote on Sep 16th, 2011 at 3:25pm:

The Wick wrote on Sep 16th, 2011 at 2:55pm:
Keith can be such a wanker. Well done Keith, you've pissed off your oldest friend and shafted the fans so that you could sell millions of copies of your book. Let's be honest, without that todger nonsense, it wouldn't have got half the publicity. He's a real warrior for the Stones legacy isn't he? Mick is right, tension does very little good but Keith needs to flog copies of his book.


I agree, and I am a little shocked I must say, Mick seems really in pain talking about these tensions with we all know who, and he seems really sincere and honest saying he's not sure about a tour. I have never seen him react this way regarding his conflicts with Keith. It puts everything in a whole new perspective imo. Kudos Keith!


I think Keith's problem is that he's dead jealous and bitter : he's completely washed up creatively and can barely play his guitar anymore, while Mick seems ageless, sings as well as ever, plays a mean rythm guitar and is involved in a great musical project with talented people...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Sep 16th, 2011 at 4:40pm
Dave Stewart is BriLLianT he has been makin Lottsa Lottsa Music

and I like Blackbird Diaries.

Ona 1 way ticket to Norad LOL

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by corgi37 on Sep 17th, 2011 at 6:47am
Dave Stewart tours Aussieville next month with Stevie Nicks, so thats it for Superheavy for the time being.

But oh my, aint Joss Stone hot??!?!?!?!?!?!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Sep 18th, 2011 at 7:56am
I believe they're in New York doing promotional work for SH this week.

Mick will be interviewed on 'Good Morning America' on Wednesday.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 18th, 2011 at 8:21am

Mick's in NYC. Video that he shot Thursday at L'Wren's show is posted @ mickjagger.com
Coupla SH tracks were used in the show.

Dave Stewart posted on twitter yesterday - "off to NYC for Superheavy Launch Party"

Wonder if all the SuperHeavies will be there...and if that party just might include a live performance.    

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 18th, 2011 at 8:25am

SuperHeavy mixes up Jagger rock, Marley rhythms and more

Dave Stewart and Mick Jagger reel in Joss Stone, A.R. Rahman and Damian Marley for a musical 'meeting of minds' that crosses genres.



MIXED AND MATCHED: Damian Marley, left, Joss Stone, Dave Stewart and Mick Jagger on the L.A. set
of the video for "Miracle Worker," the act's first single. (Kristin Burns)

By Randall Roberts
September 18, 2011


On a recent summer day at the Paramount lot, the five members of the group SuperHeavy played along to a recording of their first single, "Miracle Worker," as a camera crane swooped over an assembled crowd of a few hundred and the music boomed. Onstage in the middle of the lot's faux urban streetscape, Mick Jagger lipped the words and moved like himself while the big crowd bounced along to an upbeat, dance hall-inspired pop song.

Budgets being what they are, it's not often that a music video in 2011 features a few hundred extras. But, then, it's not often that Mick Jagger is part of a new band.

It's only happened once before, and that was half a century ago when he teamed with Keith Richards to form a group called the Rolling Stones. Since then the Glimmer Twin has either worked with the Stones as a solo artist, or as part of some one-off duet with Peter Tosh, the Jacksons or David Bowie.

Onstage at the video shoot alongside Jagger, 68, were his fellow bandmates in a quintet seemingly mixed and matched at random: songwriter, producer and Eurythmics co-founder Dave Stewart, 59, who hatched this idea with Jagger; British soul vocalist Joss Stone, 24; Indian film composer ("Slumdog Millionaire," "127 Hours") A.R. Rahman, 45; and 33-year-old Jamaican toaster Damian Marley, son of reggae singer Bob Marley and best known in America for the 2010 collaboration with rapper Nas, "Distant Relative." The five and a backing band moved through the song over and over again while the cameras rolled.

This is SuperHeavy, whose self-titled debut comes out Tuesday on A&M/Interscope Records and features something for fans not only of Jagger's full-time band, but those with an appreciation for genre-mashing beats and rhythms. It's a project that Stone explained best one afternoon at Henson Studios in Hollywood, where the album was recorded during two different 10-day sessions in 2009. The Los Angeles-based Stewart, she said, phoned her with a proposition. "He calls me up and says, 'Hey, I have this really fun plan: Mick, me, you. We'll find some other people. It'll be a laugh. You want to come?' 'Hell yeah.' 'Cool, I'll give you a call in a couple days.' And that was it."

Jagger gave his version of the story during a casual conversation in a suite at the Four Seasons in Beverly Hills a few days earlier. The idea to make some music was hatched at Stewart's place in Jamaica, with the producer and longtime friend and collaborator working on doing "something a little bit different," said Jagger.

"Not just Anglo American kind of music or genre. We should bring in a few different ideas and have a few different vocalists. He said that would be easier. I said, 'That's not going to make it easier, Dave. It'd be easier if it were you and me.'"

But they started brainstorming, and after getting a commitment from Stone, who burst into the public eye in 2003 when she was 16, they continued down their list of potential collaborators. "The idea was to throw together a group of people that were willing to experiment a bit," said Jagger, "doing this kind of crossover genre, and see what came out. We'll just take a chance on it." A few unnamed musicians were busy and declined, while others, in Jagger's words, "had their egos." Entourages were prohibited.

Marley and Rahman committed, and the five converged at Henson Studios (a compound that in past years served as home to Charlie Chaplin's studios and, coincidentally, A&M Records) to merge the ideas of a superstar rock 'n' roll vocalist, a synth-pop pioneer, a composer of Bollywood film scores, a blue-eyed soul belter and Jamaican reggae royalty.

Sounds like a recipe for disaster, especially considering that some of the five were strangers to each other.

Marley, for example, going in only knew one Rolling Stones song, "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction." Rahman appreciated Bob Marley's work, but was unfamiliar with both Damian and Stone's work. The Indian composer's training is in the classical realm.

Jagger hadn't met Damian, but the Stones singer and Bob Marley were London neighbors in the 1970s and used to record at the same Kingston studio. "That's where I met Bob," Jagger said. "He was in a studio recording 'Catch a Fire' and we were doing the overdubs of something — 'Black & Blue' maybe.'" (Note: it was, in fact, "Goat's Head Soup," recorded, like "Catch a Fire," at Dynamic Sound Studio in Jamaica.)

This unfamiliarity didn't worry Jagger or Stewart. "The idea was to get them into a room and see what you get cooperating as writing and playing," said Jagger. Augmented with a backing band that mostly featured a Jamaican rhythm section, the five felt free to, according to Jagger, "put whatever we wanted on top of it."

A few weeks later in a sound room at his Hollywood studio, Stewart sat in front of a mixing board and started booming tracks from the sessions, some of which extended to nearly an hour, with the five riffing, rhyming and toying with ideas. "I thought that was important to catch the meeting of these people," Stewart said. He described the process as "kind of an impressionistic patchwork of songs, lots of them, or jams, that we then put into focus.'"

Stewart, who said that so far there weren't plans for any SuperHeavy performances, moved from the sound room to a video studio, where footage of the sessions was being edited for a future project. It showed Jagger and Stone singing while Stewart, with ever-present beard and sunglasses, strummed along on guitar. "It was a very natural and organic meeting of minds and musicality that got refined as we got to know each other while playing with each other," Stewart said. "It got more complex."

The result is a dozen songs that move from swaggering Stones style rock ("Superheavy") to the groove-oriented "One Day." At times the product of this culture clash borders on pastiche, and pushes dangerously close to Komar and Melamid's 1997 project, "The World's Most Wanted Song," which created musical ideas and instrumentation based on a poll of musical preferences. "Satyameva Jayathe," for example, features Rahman's chanted opening, then moves into an urgent dance hall rhythm and Jagger screaming something in Hindi. As the music world has gotten smaller, though, these kinds of border-jumping creations have increased.

But then, "Never Gonna Change" is a sweet ballad that sounds like a "Beggars Banquet" outtake, and features one of Jagger's strongest vocal turns in years. "Energy" is a Marley-propelled banger with a tag-team vocal hook from Jagger and Stone, who display a magnetic rapport throughout the 12-song album.

"Yeah, he makes me laugh," said Stone of Jagger. "The great thing about Mick is that he's got so much knowledge, and he's always sharing. And I'm always listening. Whenever he thinks I'm not, I am, and I take it all on board." Jagger, in fact, bought her a Shakespeare book during the sessions.

And at one point, Jagger recalled, he had an interaction with Rahman that showcased another side of that knowledge. Rahman had brought in a curious Middle Eastern stringed instrument and started playing it. The Stones singer smiled broadly as he recounted being able to identify the instrument. "I was very pleased with myself. I said, 'Nice santur part, A.R.' He said, 'How do you know this?'"

Jagger replied that the instrument was popular among his peers in the 1960s. "It was a very hippy thing to have this Persian classical instrument. Of course, I hadn't heard it since 1967."


Los Angeles Times

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 18th, 2011 at 8:38am

The master's endless satisfaction

By Stephen Jewell
Sunday Sep 18, 2011

Nearly 50 years after founding the Rolling Stones, Mick Jagger is at it again. He's formed SuperHeavy, a new band of heavyweight singers and musicians and is having the time of his life. Stephen Jewell catches up with him in London.


Damian Marley, Joss Stone, Mick Jagger, A.R. Rahman and Dave Stewart of the
new supergroup 'SuperHeavy'. Photo: Frank Ockenfels



Mick Jagger thinks there's nothing wrong with growing old disgracefully. At 68, the man with the famously creased face has no intention of fading into the sunset. Instead, go on to YouTube and there he is cavorting about in a hot-pink suit in the video of Miracle Worker, the infectious first single off the band's debut album SuperHeavy.

And that's his point. Why would he retire when he's still having fun?

Jagger is sitting in an exclusive London hotel room with fellow band member Eurythmic's Dave Stewart. The pair, with English diva Joss Stone, Bob Marley's youngest son, Damian Marley, and Slumdog Millionaire composer A.R. Rahman, form the new band SuperHeavy.

"I don't know anyone my age, who is actually retired," says Jagger with a wry smile. "People don't do that anymore. It wouldn't even occur to me. Maybe I would if I wasn't able to do it anymore, if I wasn't able to sing or if the keys were too high. If everyone stayed up too late and Dave drank too many martinis, perhaps I'd go 'I can't do this anymore' but it's not really like that. It's just the same as it always was really, although there's less drugs than there used to be."

While the Stones were originally drawn together by their mutual love of rhythm and blues, SuperHeavy's numerous influences include reggae, soul and Bollywood soundtracks.

Described as "a mad alchemist type experiment", SuperHeavy grew out of Jagger and Stewart's desire to work with musicians from different cultures and genres. They had both worked previously with Stone on the soundtrack of 2004's forgettable Alfie remake. Marley came on board after impressing with his 2010 album Distant Relatives with American rapper Nas while Rahman was recruited after they crossed paths with the Oscar winner in Los Angeles. Getting all five together at the same time proved to be a logistical nightmare. But while recording took place in Los Angeles, Miami, the South of France, Cyprus, Turkey, the Caribbean and India, Jagger insists it was an organic process.

"It was all done in the same room with amplifiers, a rhythm section, two extra keyboard players and a violinist," Jagger says. "We did it all live and, afterwards, we did lots of posts, which you always have to do, filling in the gaps, writing things that are missing and adding other instruments. That took awhile. The first two weeks were pretty incredible, especially considering that it could have been rubbish, nothing at all or just mediocre. There was a lot of high-energy stuff. It was fast and furious."

Jagger is fizzing, full of energy despite a long day talking to the world's press. He and Stewart make a formidable tag team, frequently finishing each other's sentences, cracking jokes and branching off on long tangents. Jagger looks impeccable in a turquoise shirt, white T-shirt and jeans, a more reserved look than the fluorescent pink suit and sneakers he wears in the video for Miracle Worker.

"I felt pretty good in that," he laughs. "The set was so dark, I thought it would be nice to have some pizzazz."

Stewart says: "The five of us are all relatively well known but Mick is much more well known. I was wondering what he was going to wear for the shoot and then he turns up in bright pink. It was brilliant. It was important to come out and say 'f*** you, here I am'."

Stewart agrees Jagger, and his voice, are in good form.

"Having five different people working together and watching Mick hone his sections and work out where exactly he was going to come in was like watching a master painter or film director when they get older."

As Stewart points out, even the younger members of SuperHeavy have pretty extensive track records. "Joss is only 24 but has actually been doing it since she was 13," he says. "AR comes from the film composing side of things. He'd sit and watch this mad group of Western people make music and he wouldn't say anything for awhile. Then he'd come in and play something and you'd think what the hell's that? It's like something from outer space but it fits on top."

Although SuperHeavy cover more stylistic bases than the Rolling Stones, Jagger believes all but the most stubborn of his old band's followers will warm to his new album. "I'm sure that the Stones fans who like us in a very wide way will like this as well," he says. "The Stones have always been a band that has done a lot of different kinds of music; we've never been stuck in any way. Even though the Stones started off as a blues band, we expanded our horizons and have done a lot of other things. So if you like the Rolling Stones expanding, you'll like this. But if you only like one kind of Stones music - if you only like Honky Tonk Women - maybe you won't like it."

Growing up in Dartford, Kent, Jagger first bonded with Keith Richards over their mutual love of American blues pioneers like Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf. "We thought they were really ancient when we went to see them but they weren't really that old," recalls Jagger. "I remember thinking 'how can a poor old guy like John Lee Hooker play like that? I must go over and speak to him.' But he was only about 40, which I thought was really old at the time. You just do what you can and if you feel like you're more or less still at the top of your game then you just keep doing it, you don't think about how old you are."

Even Jagger's harshest critic Richards approves of SuperHeavy despite claiming in his autobiography last year that Jagger should never have gone solo. "Keith likes it a lot because he likes Damian," says Jagger, who has also played the album to his fellow Stones Ronnie Wood and Charlie Watts. "Charlie really liked it because of the rhythmic nature of it."

While Jagger insists SuperHeavy would only play live "if we could create some kind of special event", he and Stewart are keen to make a follow-up record.

"We actually talked about this before we even started and I said 'wait a minute, let's make the first album before we make this second one'. But if we did another one, it would have to be completely different to the first album."

SuperHeavy will be released tomorrow.

New Zealand Herald

First mention of Keith hearing - and liking - SH.

Don't know how "keen" Mick is about a second album...previous comments indicated the project was a one-off.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Sep 18th, 2011 at 12:13pm
"I don't know anyone my age, who is actually retired," says Jagger with a wry smile. "People don't do that anymore. It wouldn't even occur to me. Maybe I would if I wasn't able to do it anymore, if I wasn't able to sing or if the keys were too high. If everyone stayed up too late and Dave drank too many martinis, perhaps I'd go 'I can't do this anymore' but it's not really like that. It's just the same as it always was really, although there's less drugs than there used to be."

Interesting caveat.  I believe that would apply to performing with the Stones as well.  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gorda on Sep 18th, 2011 at 1:19pm
"I don't know anyone my age, who is actually retired."

Hmmm . . .

No, they are not retired, but they sure do take some loooooooooooong VACATIONS!

I want a Rolling Stones Tour NOW!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by crawdaddy on Sep 19th, 2011 at 3:11am

gorda wrote on Sep 18th, 2011 at 1:19pm:
"I don't know anyone my age, who is actually retired."

Hmmm . . .

No, they are not retired, but they sure do take some loooooooooooong VACATIONS!

I want a Rolling Stones Tour NOW!



I do Mick. Keith Richards.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Sep 19th, 2011 at 9:37am
Mick Jagger: there won’t be an autobiography

Paul Sexton

Last updated September 19 2011 12:01AM



The 50th anniversary of the Rolling Stones is not the time to be going over the past, the band’s frontman says A year is a long time in rock’n’roll. It’s been almost 12 months since The Times serialised Keith Richards’s autobiography Life, in which he described Mick Jagger, his friend and collaborator of 50 years as “unbearable”, scorned his decision to accept a knighthood and suggested that the singer’s manhood was on the modest side of manly.

As the slanging match extended to their respective friends and family, one of the greatest creative partnerships in the history of British rock music was reduced to a jibe about the dimensions of Sir Mick’s allegedly “tiny todger”.

Jagger’s former wife Jerry Hall put Richards’ dig down to sheer jealousy. Richards himself, talking to me at that time at his house in Connecticut, explained that he was writing not about their current relationship but the famous breach of the 1980s, when Jagger chose to make a solo record rather than tour with the Stones. Richards told me of his pride in overcoming their differences, it made them a “real band”, he insisted, but the damage was done. Still, Jagger, the gentleman rock star, would not be drawn. Those close to him disclosed that he was deeply upset by the book, but he kept his counsel, refused an offer from this paper to put across his side of the story, and continued working.

Today, in one of the more modest suites in the Dorchester Hotel in central London, he breaks his silence. Looking healthy and relaxed in a sharp, pink jacket and crisp shirt, he talks enthusiastically about SuperHeavy, his new “supergroup”, but also dissects his relationship with “’im indoors”, the one who calls Jagger “Brenda,” among other rather less affectionate names. Keef.

Have the events of the past year made Jagger consider restarting his own autobiography, which he abandoned with claims it was “too boring”? “No,” he says decisively. “I don’t particularly want to rummage through my past, it’s bad enough rummaging through Some Girls,” he laughs. “I think it’s a damaging psychological exercise, to be honest.

“It’s very long and involved, and I’d rather be living more in the present. You can’t really do both at the same time. I mean, I enjoy some people’s memoirs, I enjoyed Dirk Bogarde’s. I thought they were rather wonderful, and done with such a light touch, and rather literary. And,” he adds pointedly, “obviously written by himself without a ghost writer.” Richards co-wrote Life with the writer James Fox.

He continues. “But the celebrity bio thing is not a genre that particularly takes my interest. Some people have a talent for literature. I’m attracted to literature rather than scuttlebutt.” For those still unclear about Jagger’s thoughts on Richards’ publishing opus, “scuttlebutt” is slang for rumor or gossip. Sailors would chat and gossip around the scuttlebutt, a cask of water, much as you might nowadays around a water cooler. Job done, he moves on.

“When you do fresh things like this, it’s a lot easier,” he says of the SuperHeavy project, clearly happy to have shaken off the shackles of fronting the most famous band in the world. “People, outsiders, might say ‘Oh, I wish he’d go and do this!’, which is more or less a repetition of what you’ve done before. But for the artist, it’s always good to do something fresh.”

Jagger had arrived back in the UK three days earlier from the house in the Loire Valley where he spends most of his time living quietly with his girlfriend, the American fashion designer L’Wren Scott. The day before our meeting, all four Stones had been photographed leaving a London office, giving rise to a new round of enthusiastic scuttlebutt about reunions and rapprochements.

Is there a glimmer of reconciliation between the Glimmer Twins? “Well, I really don’t see much of him,” says Jagger of Richards. “The rest of us are all here [in London] quite a lot, and although he comes here occasionally in the summer, I don’t think any of us see him much. He lives in suburban Connecticut.”

The summit was inconclusive: “We were talking about the 50th anniversary. There’s lots of things to do on the anniversary. My worry is there’s going to be too much stuff.”

Plans are afoot to mark the band’s first gig as the Rolling Stones, on July 12, 1962. Can we expect a tour, or gigs, at least? “Well, we’re talking about it, but I don’t know if it’s going to happen,” Jagger says. “Listen, you could do anything you want if you put your mind to it. I don’t know what’s going to happen next year. We’ll see.”

He’s had no financial need to work for decades, but the father of seven has an enduring work ethic and races from one deadline to the next with an energy that would exhaust even his youngest child — 12-year-old Lucas. But he knows that forming a new, and probably temporary, band of fellow millionaires is a soft target for critics.

SuperHeavy vocalist Joss Stone knows it too, as do co-producer Dave Stewart, Jamaican Grammy-winner Damian Marley and the Indian composer and musician, A. R. Rahman.

Miracle Worker, the first track to be aired, may invite accusations of cod-reggaeness, but it’s a catchy tune, and Jagger’s and Stone’s voices work well together on this and Energy. The latter also sports one of the skilled harmonica solos that Richards is always encouraging Jagger to do more of.

Jagger seems sanguine about the responses to it because it was fun.

“It could have gone either way,” says Jagger. “You might have come to the end of ten days and gone, ‘Well, really, we’ve got two things, this is going to take forever.’ But then we had so much, you realised after five days it was going to work, and it was very exciting.

“There is something to be said against the weight of history, I think,” he muses, assessing the inevitable comparisons between SuperHeavy and the band he’s been with for 49 years.

One can appreciate Jagger’s refusal to be defined by the Stones, especially, considering he hasn’t recorded a new album with them for six years.

Having interviewed Jagger a dozen times, the patterns emerge: when the Stones’ touring juggernaut parks up after two years or so of touring, he tends to launch into solo projects — largely derided by critics. But this time, the chance to be in a new band was too alluring to miss — and he had someone there to share the burden of being out front. “Dave said that was going to be the case. I didn’t really think about it but it was, even though the production stuff was a lot of work, and the people management thing. But the actual performing part of it wasn’t as much work as doing a Stones record. It just wasn’t as much singing. So it was a good project for me, in that way.

“I feel very comfortable being around her [Joss], and about being around Dave. Then with [the] other people, it’s not quite so easy, everyone’s got to have their space in the studio. There’s some parts of this record that are everyone all together and some parts that are more solo corners, if you want.”

Stone has said that she would love SuperHeavy to become a touring band. “I know, but she would,” says Jagger. “She does want to do it, but I don’t know if I see it like that. I kind of never thought we would do any gigs, I always thought it was a record.

“It would be difficult to do a tour like that, with an album that no one knows. How would you fill out the set? I wouldn’t be averse to doing a gig, I really wouldn’t, but a long tour . . .”

At 68, Jagger is as much a part of our collective consciousness as he’s ever been. I ask how he feels about being namechecked on not one but two recent No 1 songs, The X-Factor Cher Lloyd’s Swagger Jagger and Maroon 5’s US chart-topper, Moves Like Jagger, featuring Christina Aguilera.

“Oh yes! It’s kind of odd. Moves Like Jagger is seriously catchy. I can sing it for you if you want, but I’ll spare you that. I knew all about it, it wasn’t like a surprise to me. I know the band, I know Christina, I know the video director, and they kept sending me the video cuts with me in it. There was far too much of me in it in the first one, I was going ‘What about the rest of the band!’ So I cut out a bit of it.


“Then Maroon 5 asked me to come and do this show with them! What am I going to do? Sing it?” He laughs. “I don’t think I’m going to be there.”

Whatever next year brings, Jagger certainly appears to address the Stones’ past with more enthusiasm than their future. Last year’s deluxe reissue of Exile On Main St, for which he excavated various unfinished tracks and added new vocals for others, took the classic 1972 album back to No 1 here, and he’s just repeated the process for the November dusting-down of another cherished Stones album, 1978’s Some Girls.

“There’s 12 unreleased ‘bits’ from that year,” he says. “Some were finished and some I put little bits on, like guitar and harmonica. Most of the rest of the band had done their parts, at the time, it’s just that my things were not finished, or they were little ideas I’d had while the track was being run.

“So I wrote lyrics to those and sung them in the spirit of ’78.” Even he laughs at the idea of mimicking his former self. “It’s easy, really. I’m very fortunate because my voice sounds almost exactly the same.”

Around the time of the Stones’ last studio record in 2005, A Bigger Bang, Jagger told me of his concerns that the album as a start-to-finish art form might be on the way out, a perceptive notion that has gained much more ground with the growth of the digital music market. So it’s all the more interesting to note his enthusiasm for the SuperHeavy album, especially as it’s unlikely to be supported by a tour. “That probably is still true. The golden period of the album probably went ages ago, it’s almost a memory,” he says. “But nevertheless, this SuperHeavy project is interesting as an album.”

So is the quest for fresh challenges making him less keen on the idea of new Stones recordings? “Yeah ... yes . . .” he starts, then, after a slight pause: “Though, I have been writing a lot for the Stones.” He catches my eye. Cats. Bags. “I mean, when I write, I go ‘Yeah, that could be a good Stones tune’ or ‘That’s not really going to work for that.’ I did some sessions with Charlie quite recently where I just played some songs I’d written, and of course I wrote more when he was there. I’d start making them up, so that was good fun, so we had a really good time doing that.”

Celebrity of an almost unequalled magnitude obscures the fact that Mick Jagger is, first and foremost, a musician, one who still wants to create things and have a good time doing so. “Once you’re in the control room going ‘Yeah!’ and having a drink at the end of the session, that’s when the cameraderie comes very quickly, when you get a result,” he says. “And it can dissolve very quickly when you don’t.”

SuperHeavy is released by Universal on September 19. The Some Girls album will be reissued in November

http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/arts/music/article3166619.ece

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Sep 19th, 2011 at 11:15am
Celebrity of an almost unequalled magnitude obscures the fact that Mick Jagger is, first and foremost, a musician, one who still wants to create things and have a good time doing so.

That says it all for me.  I also appreciated his attitude about an autobiography.  Good for him for taking the high road. [smiley=thumbup.gif]

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 19th, 2011 at 11:28am

http://goo.gl/5DEpF
UMG


Well the day has arrived! RELEASE DATE!!

We can't wait to hear your feedback on our album! We know some of you already have your paws on yours!

Today is officially SuperHeavy Day!! Thanks for joining us on the ride - we love hearing what you think!

SuperHeavy

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 19th, 2011 at 11:38am

http://goo.gl/s90cA
http://goo.gl/76XLY
___

Rolling Stone article originally quoted by Monsters & Critics, stolen by The Sun, and currently making the interweb rounds as a Jagger "interview" with the tabloid.

Not quite as sensational when read in context...and with complete quotes.

http://goo.gl/mss6u

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by riffkeither on Sep 19th, 2011 at 11:40am
It's a fact that Keith makes money , and Mick makes music .

What music has done Keith since 6 years ?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Sep 19th, 2011 at 2:55pm
Bought it today having previously only heard 2-3 songs in full and snippets of most of the rest and I'm listening to it now.

Have to say my initial impressions that I'd like it still hold up. Musically, its really good, and Joss Stone in particular shines throughout. Have never really appreciated her before, but she has great pipes.

I had some misgivings about Mick's singing style and some of those are still valid. There are some when he sounds really good however (he blends with Stone really well - especially on songs like 'Energy', where his harmonica playing is absolutely stellar), but I'd love to hear what the Mick of a few years ago could do with this stuff. He can put 2011 vocals on 1978 recordings - pity he cant do it the other way round. Still, its a minor quibble.  

Will I still be regularly listening to this in 3 or 6 months time? Not sure, to be honest, but hats off to him for challenging himself musically at this stage in his career when the easy choice to make would be to put his feet up and do nothing or just repeat himself over and over.


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Tumbling Dijs on Sep 19th, 2011 at 3:53pm
but hats off to him for challenging himself musically at this stage in his career when the easy choice to make would be to put his feet up and do nothing or just repeat himself over and over.

Agree 100% with this, but after trying for 4 days, I just can't get to like SH. Often an album grows on me, but that's not gonna happen with this one, I'm sure. It's the same feeling I always had with George Harisson going Indian. Nice try, but it ain't no "While my guitar gently weeps" or "Isn't it a pitty", to name just a few. I guess I never really liked reggea that much, and Indian music? Well, I'll never be a fan of that.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Sep 19th, 2011 at 4:46pm
:-/ I purchased my SuperHeavy CD from London Amazon  :(

Now I must wait patiently !

So when do you think it will Arrive ???

Not Soon Enough.

I thought it was released in England sooner then the US

WRONG
 :Youmakeagrownmancrylikejoey

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Sep 19th, 2011 at 5:15pm


One thinks they don't need anything'
an understatement  of sorts.

So Keep on- Keep On honing your many talents :)
,
AaaaanD

You have Sung with many-- SWEET--- ya probably could make a video/CD

A Men-agerie of sorts

When I read that last paragraph of the article above,

I thought of Ringo Starr and the All Starr Revue

Dave Stewart likes Doing Things...

What Fun
...
8-)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Heart Of Stone on Sep 19th, 2011 at 5:22pm
Dave Stewart will probably be long remembered as a Ringo look-like!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Sep 19th, 2011 at 5:45pm

lavendar wrote on Sep 19th, 2011 at 4:46pm:
:-/ I purchased my SuperHeavy CD from London Amazon  :(

Now I must wait patiently !

So when do you think it will Arrive ???

Not Soon Enough.

I thought it was released in England sooner then the US

WRONG
 :Youmakeagrownmancrylikejoey



It is. By one day.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 20th, 2011 at 7:02am

Mick Jagger Would Like You to Meet His Supergroup (His New One)

The legendary Rolling Stones frontman has a new team: SuperHeavy. GQ chatted with the human swiveling hip and new bandmate Dave Stewart about their new album, hanging with Bob Marley, and getting tattoos


by Will Welch September 2011

http://goo.gl/o5iqK
Andy Friedman


So here's the deal: Mick Jagger has a new supergroup, called SuperHeavy, with Dave Stewart (the Eurythmics), Joss Stone (a blonde Beyoncé), A. R. Rahman (the Slumdog Millionaire Oscar winner), and Bob Marley's most talented son, Damian "Jr. Gong" Marley (because Bob's ghost had a scheduling conflict). It's music-by-committee-and-the-kitchen-sink, and while it can be a little cheesy, it also totally rules. The tunes have a reggae pulse and a pop soul, and they're going to win a thousand trillion Grammys. We talked to SuperHeavy's producers, Jagger and Stewart, about martinis, Marleys, and, um, Shepard Fairey.

GQ: Whose crazy-ass idea was this record, anyway?
Mick Jagger: I had nothing to do with it. I just went along for the ride.
Dave Stewart: It started up with me ringing Mick. I was in Jamaica and there was all this music playing from different sound systems, and I imagined it would be great to make some kind of fusion of Jamaican music with South Asian music and a sexy rock element as well. When you go to the "world music" department in a record shop, there's always this wishy-washy feeling. I didn't want it to have any aspect of that.

GQ: Mick, when did you first meet Dave?
Mick Jagger: I don't remember, really. But Dave always makes me finish what I've started which is not always what I do when I'm left on my own.

GQ: Mick, did you know Damian's father, Bob?
Mick Jagger: Yeah, of course! I first met him at Island Records' studio in Notting Hill Gate. They were doing Catch A Fire. I can't remember what I was doing, Black And Blue, maybe. And then he lived around the corner from me in Chelsea.

GQ: What was it like to connect to and collaborate with his kid?
Mick Jagger: To be honest, it wasn't something I thought about much when we were in the room together. When you bring it up it's like, "Well, yeah..." but at the time it didn't really occur to me.

GQ: I can't imagine the scheduling Rubix Cube to get this together. Where did y'all record?
Mick Jagger: We did it primarily in two sessions in Los Angeles.
Dave Stewart: Yeah, I have a studio that we mess around in. At one point George Harrison was living in it, and Bob Dylan and people used to come around. They started Traveling Wilburys in the back garden. So the bulk of it was done in these big group sessions in L.A. It was a difficult thing. If you wanted to have a smoke, there were ten people in the room.

GQ: What all were you guys smoking?
Mick Jagger: We can't reveal what was smoked.
GQ: What about drinks? Surely you had some elixirs to ease the tension?
Mick Jagger: Dave likes a martini at a very precise time of day, and I'd have the odd martini with Dave, depending on how much work I had to do later. Because one martini turns into two, you know. That would happen around 7:30 and begin the party sequence of the day. Everyone in the control room dancing.

GQ: Mick, did you find the free-flowing group writing process rewarding or stressful?
Mick Jagger: Dave and I didn't write any songs for this at all, which is so stupid. We went in there and I was looking at Dave, going, "I can't believe we've been talking about this for three years and now we're in the room with these people and there's no songs."
Dave Stewart: I think we subconsciously did that on purpose.
Mick Jagger: We came out with songs on the spur of the moment. It was just a fake that we'd written these songs, just a fake. Dave started playing and I started singing, both completely extemporizing, and they were done in one or two takes. I'm sure everyone in the room thought they were written.

GQ: Mick, obviously money and success haven't been an issue for a long time, but your singing is still so soulful. What keeps the fires burning at this point?
Mick Jagger: Well thank you. Listen, I've done a few odd things in my life and this is one of the odder ones. It's good for you—keeps you on your feet and your chops in shape. And on some of these songs, I have only little bits of time to create my characters. The Stones is a more bluesy thing, so here I had to wind myself up in a different way to how I would normally sing.
Dave Stewart: What was great was watching Mick go through the stages to find his voice for each song, like an actor becoming a character. It was like watching Robert De Niro find Taxi Driver.

GQ: Dave, I heard you got a SuperHeavy tattoo. What's the deal?
Mick Jagger: [laughs]
Dave Stewart: It's the tiger that Shepard Fairey designed for the album cover.

GQ: In the video for "Miracle Worker" you appear to be getting it inked. Was that happening live?
Dave Stewart: It was mainly inked beforehand and then during the video—to tell you the truth, it was still healing, so that scene wasn't doing it much good.
Mick Jagger: The tattoo looks nice there on your bum though, Dave. I must say.

GQ: Mick, no SuperHeavy tattoos for you?
Mick Jagger: I've managed to avoid tattoos so far.


http://goo.gl/enZHE

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 20th, 2011 at 7:23am

Mick Jagger's SuperHeavy: A supergroup like no other

By Edna Gundersen, USA TODAY, LOS ANGELES

http://goo.gl/xiIiu
Kristin Burns


Five disparate stars from seemingly incompatible genres convene to make an album on the fly without a blueprint. What could possibly go wrong besides ego clashes, artistic gridlock, fruitless exertion and humiliating failure?

SuperHeavy, an intercontinental supergroup formed by longtime pals Mick Jagger and Dave Stewart, managed to dodge those traps and emerge with an impressive self-titled debut, out today. File it under — well, there's no established classification for the band's crazy quilt of rock, soul, reggae, blues, pop and Indian music.

"It doesn't fit a particular genre, even individual songs, nevermind the whole album," says Jagger, 68. "It wasn't our goal to surprise people. We did this to have fun and be creative. When I think about it, it is rather surprising, and in music, that's a good thing.

"Much as we love buying an album of rap tunes with this guest and that guest, we know it's all rap. This record goes in other areas."

Slim and dapper in a gray jacket, slacks, sneakers and piano-patterned socks, the Rolling Stones singer is waiting in his hotel suite to be whisked to the video shoot for widely praised first single Miracle Worker, a rootsy, soulful reggae-pop tune with a fiddle twang.

It's one of a dozen tracks pared from 35 hours of spontaneous jamming in early 2009 at Henson Recording Studios in Los Angeles, where British soul diva Joss Stone, reggae singer Damian Marley and Indian film composer A.R. Rahman joined co-producers Jagger and Stewart.

"We all sort of chipped in our bits," Jagger says of the unorthodox process, adding dryly, "It was very, very interesting. I never worked with Dave where we haven't written songs first. I asked him, 'Why are we going to sessions with no songs? It's really dangerous.' There was nothing to lose apart from some studio time that we were willing to gamble.

"It was full-on creativity in the moment. That was the fun thing, thinking on the spot. After a few days, we got a good idea of how everyone functioned. It was a creative bonanza for like 10 days."

The resulting 29 compositions, some of them an hour-plus, served as the source material. Fine-tuning continued sporadically around the globe: off the coast of Cyprus, in France, Turkey, Miami, the Caribbean and India.

'Melting pot came to mind'

"It's been a crazy trip," says Stewart, 59, studying SuperHeavy's Shepard Fairey cover artwork on a desk at his Weapons of Mass Entertainment headquarters in Hollywood. The Eurythmics founder conjured his "mad, alchemist-type experiment" while listening to musical crosscurrents blasting from big sound systems in various villages miles from his hillside home in Saint Ann, Jamaica.

"It all started to merge," he says. "It sounded like Indian music laying on top of reggae, and it was bluesy. A melting pot came to mind, and I thought it would make an amazing fusion."

Jagger, his close friend and collaborator for 28 years, seemed a natural ally.

"We've written loads of songs that we never put on a record," Stewart says. "We just enjoy the process. We've been on holiday together. We've been through all sorts of family issues. We have a strong relationship and we don't have that competitive thing.

"Mick's nuts about blues, and we're both endlessly listening to Jamaican and Caribbean music," he says. "So we started seriously talking about this record."

The duo, fans of Marley's Grammy-winning Welcome to Jamrock, favored enlisting icon Bob Marley's youngest son. And they immediately gravitated to Stone, who collaborated with the pair on 2004's Alfie soundtrack.

"Joss can wail like Mick," Stewart says. "Smokey Robinson calls her Aretha Joplin." Stewart, dazzled by Rahman's movie scores and grasp of Western music, proposed that he round out the multicultural quintet.

It's 'not world music'

On the first day of recording, "everyone was interested in knowing what it would sound like," Stewart says. "A.R. would come out of the blue with a wild sound that fit. Or Damian was suddenly toasting on top of a blues thing. The drummer was playing a dancehall beat. We were looking at each other going, 'Uh, this is really good.'"

Early this year, he and Jagger chiseled the flab into an eclectic yet accessible batch of songs that Stewart calls "not world music."

"Even though I understand all that stuff, and I love loads of artists from different countries, the name 'world music' gives me the feeling of Knitting Yakuts Records," Stewart says. "This is, like, sexy. It's got a different energy."

While his bandmates regarded SuperHeavy as an exotic busman's holiday, Stewart had a serious agenda, beyond just hatching an intangible genre.

"My intention was to create more than a group," he says. "It's more like an attitude and a movement toward a new way, the idea of crossing over cultural barriers. We should create our own festival and invite other disparate artists."

On the Miracle video set at Paramount Pictures, Rahman is holed up barefoot in his trailer, while Stone is being primped for photos. He admits he had doubts about the viability of SuperHeavy until Stewart briefed him.

"Then I knew were going to make some great music," says Rahman, whose Slumdog Millionaire score and Jai Ho song won Oscars. "I never worked like that before. Normally, I work very alone with my headphones and compose. This was all very spontaneous. We'd play and Dave would say, 'Sing something!' It was strange in the beginning, but we got used to it."

Rahman, 45, had met only Stewart before and had little familiarity with the others' catalogs.

"I'm not a religious follower of rock music," he says. "I've listened to Queen, Peter Gabriel, Pink Floyd, The Carpenters, but not The Beatles, not the Stones. Even without knowing about Mick Jagger, I could see he has a magic in his voice and lyrics. It was such a treat watching him play harmonica."

While a solo project allows more control, Rahman enjoyed the camaraderie and artistic give-and-take.

"Usually, I'm zero social," he says.

Jagger begs to differ.

"While we were doing the first sessions, A.R. was so swept up in the whole Oscar thing with Slumdog, he had to keep going to parties all the time," he cracks.

Jagger was confident Rahman's Indian strains on keyboard would mesh, but "I didn't know how his singing was going to work," he says. "He found it a little tricky in the beginning. He's a very talented keyboard player, and as a vocalist, he has tremendous range. We had to encourage him: 'Float in!' It was much easier for us to absorb him than for him to absorb us."

Joss Stone finds her groove

Stone, the troupe's youngest and only female member, felt relaxed in SuperHeavy's free-for-all.

"I decided to follow the leader, the way I was brought up to do with older people," says Stone, 24, who released her debut album at 16. "To stop, learn and listen. I feel really comfortable with people like Mick. You're constantly learning."

The shambolic sessions "made me feel comfortable," she says. "I'm used to chucking along doing what feels right, never in an organized manner. Dave is the same. We made noises for two weeks. It was as chill as that. Whoever was brave enough started first."

Exhausted after working on 2009's Colour Me Free! and battling to be released from her EMI contract, Stone had vowed to lay low until Stewart changed her mind.

"After this whole big drama, I decided, I'm done, stick a fork in me," she says. "Then Dave calls me up! This came at a perfect time."

Stone was inspired by her SuperHeavy cohorts. Marley, 33, was "one clever bugger with a lovely deep, gorgeous, sexy voice," she says. "A.R. is so soft and so sweet. He had funny little instruments with hundreds of strings. He'd take what we'd done, go away and put something amazing on it."

SuperHeavy wasn't entirely a lighthearted affair.

"Because we make different styles of music, now and then we had a musical argument," Stone says. "It made me feel like I was in a real band. There aren't any songs I hate, but there are a couple I question. I love 80%. I usually like the songs that aren't poppy. I like weird odd things."

"Because we make different styles of music, now and then we had a musical argument," Stone says. "It made me feel like I was in a real band. There aren't any songs I hate, but there are a couple I question. I love 80%. I usually like the songs that aren't poppy. I like weird odd things."

Stewart notes diplomatically, "There were classic creative discussions. We ran everything past the others, every single thing. There were five cooks."

A ragged glee club of four vocalists meant sharing the microphone, a welcome change.

"I enjoyed that the whole thing isn't on me," Stone says. "I knew my voice wasn't going to die."

Jagger concurs. "It makes my life easier. I didn't have to carry all the weight."

'The songs are universal'

Since SuperHeavy's kaleidoscopic tunes don't easily fit radio formats or genre slots, will fans shy away?

"No, the world is opening," Rahman says. "It's not like before, where something new was intimidating to people. Most of the songs are universal."

Creative marketing is key, Jagger says. "One problem is there are so many channels of communication, and new ones open all the time. The promotion is more complex, whether you're a very big artist or a new artist.

"In some countries, iTunes doesn't mean anything. Some countries have phone-only delivery. In others, it means a lot to have your song on a particular television show. It's very unwieldy."

Given sufficient boosts, SuperHeavy could enjoy an extended shelf life and shouldn't be judged by the usual opening-week performance, says Phil Gallo, Billboard senior correspondent/film and TV music.

"It would be a very compelling live attraction, especially on television," he says. "If ever there was a band that needed to play on Saturday Night Live, this is it. They don't need to do a whole lot, but they need to show it's got musical heft, that they didn't phone it in.

"It's good enough that they could try a few things and let an audience find it. Everything sounds really good. It feels organic, the rhythms are unique and one acoustic song is early classic Stones-y."

Gallo predicts strong overseas sales and interest among devotees of British reggae and Rahman's Indian dance styles. The composer (approaching 5.9 million "likes" on Facebook) has a "staggering" fan base, Gallo says. "And his tracks are the most exciting. His personality really comes out."

Stewart is eager for SuperHeavy sequels, which may entail a rotating cast of global players.

"If the music is liked, the future is bright," Rahman says. "We are just scratching the surface."

Stone also relishes a reunion: "It's the most amazing thing I've been a part of. I'm so flattered they asked me to do it."

Jagger, who has a considerably bigger band's future to consider, is less certain.

"I'm happy with the results," he says. "Whether we'll do it ever again, I have no idea."


MORE: Will the Rolling Stones launch a tour in 2012?

Rumors of a Rolling Stones 50th anniversary tour resurfaced yet again after all four band members were spotted leaving a London office this month.

But Mick Jagger recently told USA TODAY a 2012 tour is "not on the table," and the singer is fully engaged in promoting SuperHeavy, the multicultural supergroup he and longtime pal Dave Stewart have formed with Joss Stone, Damian Marley and Slumdog Millionaire composer A.R. Rahman.

And he's in no hurry to reclaim the record of highest-grossing tour, which the Stones had held since 2007 after grossing $554 million for the band's A Bigger Bang tour. This year, U2's 360 tour handily eclipsed that with a gross of $736 million.

"Records are made to be broken," Jagger says. "I'm sure maybe Beyoncé will break that."

Lingering tensions between Jagger and bandmate Keith Richards, fueled in part by the guitarist's unflattering cracks in his autobiography, Life, probably are delaying any Stones projects. But Jagger feels no compunction to retaliate with his own tell-all.

"The thing about writing books is you have to live through your whole life and dredge up all this stuff," he says. "To my mind, it's rather a dull experience. When people get to a certain age, they tend to live in the past. They get ossified. 'I remember when' is how it usually starts. 'I remember when the Internet didn't exist.' I think it's more fun to write fiction. At least it gets your imagination going, instead of dredging up these ancient histories distorted through the lens of years."

By the way, Jagger does remember life before the Internet, and it was less frivolous.

"I spend way too much time on the computer and not enough time playing the guitar," he says. "There's an underlying problem of this screen life taking over all of your life. It's easy to keep in touch with people, some of whom I wish I'd never kept in touch with. But there they are on Facebook! You can spend a lot of time on that when you should be doing something else."

Yes, he's on Twitter. But does he send those tweets himself?

"No!" he says. "But, really, who does?"


USA Today

Startling admission by Mick that he doesn't tweet...at least he updates his Facebook page.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 20th, 2011 at 7:33am

A New Album by Mick Jagger and Friends

http://goo.gl/47JFH
Kristin Burns/SuperHeavy LLC


By BEN RATLIFF and NATE CHINEN
Published: September 19, 2011

"SuperHeavy" (A&M)

SuperHeavy seems less an artistic collaboration than a temporary marketing partnership of a product called Middle-Aged Pop Music L.L.C.  Mick Jagger, Joss Stone and Damian Marley are the primary singers. They wrote the self-titled album’s songs, together with Dave Stewart, formerly of the Eurythmics, and A. R. Rahman, the film composer and producer. Mr. Jagger and Mr. Stewart produced the album, and Mr. Jagger is the sun around which this thing spins: the spirit of much of the album — roots-reggae and R&B and arena rock and ballads — seems to descend from his duet collaborations in the 1970s and ’80s with Peter Tosh and Tina Turner. A few tracks, thanks to Mr. Rahman, come with tinctures of Indian pop. What could go wrong with all that?

If you have to ask you’ll never know. An almost total lack of good songs constitutes the album’s basic problem. Once that’s understood, the record becomes sort of entertaining: gaudy, vacuous, densely mannered. (Parts of the album were recorded off the coasts of Greece and Turkey on the Octopus, a boat owned by the Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen that Wikipedia calls “the fifth largest superyacht not owned by a head of state.”) It is a credible soundtrack for someone’s gold-plated midwinter Caribbean vacation — someone who doesn’t really listen to music per se — and it could be a pretty heavy comedy album if its intent were moved a few inches.

Mr. Marley croaks and toasts his parts; Ms. Stone does her canned soul histrionics. Mr. Rahman sings a few lines in a few tracks and is otherwise most noticeable when playing some goopy synthesizer passages. But Mr. Jagger is the source of the record’s best unintentional humor. He throws effort into this record, whining, yammering, imprecating, imitating himself fabulously. In the ludicrous “Energy” (chorus: “I said hey! I need your crazy energy!”), you can hear him rapping, sort of, in the second verse and playing a “Midnight Rambler”-style harmonica solo, distorted so you know it’s done with feeling. There’s a “political” song called “I Can’t Take It No More”: it has a horn section and a party vibe. This is a polyglot record whose best song, the ballad “Never Gonna Change,” sounds the least like the rest of the tracks; it sounds as if it belongs on an early-’70s Stones record.

But you might want to jump straight to “One Day One Night,” in which Mr. Jagger — and Mr. Marley too, though not so memorably — pretends to be alone, heartbroken and cranky. He sings:

Where the hell is the bellman

Did I call downstairs?

Does anybody care?

Send me a packet of cigarettes please

Make that two

One bottle of vodka

One glass

The television doesn’t seem to work so well

What a situation.

What a situation.


The New York Times


http://goo.gl/YJiVF

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Sep 20th, 2011 at 8:40am
uh-oh.  hope that doesnt shatter one's fragile ego...(just loved that Living Color show, or was it In Living Color?--those "critics" made me cry with laughter)

there's some SuperHeavy facebook thing asking for fans to pipe in with a "yea" to live some shows.

come on folks, share the love...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 20th, 2011 at 12:31pm

'SuperHeavy'

'SuperHeavy' review: Mega group made up of Mick Jagger, Damian Marley, Joss Stone, Dave Stewart

http://goo.gl/igxk3

Jim Farber
Tuesday, September 20th 2011


Kristin Burns


You've heard the phrase "too many cooks"?

Apply it generously to the deeply inexplicable new project known as "SuperHeavy."

As you may have heard, SuperHeavy is a "supergroup" that corrals faux soul singer Joss Stone, dance hall/reggae scion Damian Marley, pan-pop producer Dave Stewart, Bollywood soundtrack god A.R. Rahman and someone named Mick Jagger.

If all that adds up to a real "huh?" on paper, it's even more baffling in practice.

SuperHeavy's debut (and, one hopes, final work) wants to find some new mean between reggae, soul, rock, pop and the various stringed musics from the Asian subcontinent — an admirably open-minded goal.

But instead of sifting those sounds into something that coheres, we get a cacophony of styles, egos and intentions. The singers fare particularly poorly.

Together they suggest a vocal hydra, every tortured head writhing in its own crazed direction.

Reggae serves as the CD's organizing principle, so it's no wonder Marley suffers the fewest scars. His husky, scratchy voice sits most comfortably on the undulating rhythms. But he's got no chemistry with Stone, and she's got even less with Jagger. They don't just sound like they're coming from different genres but from distinct species.

Jagger seems particularly off the mark. He so exaggerates his already rubbery style, it's like he's handing "SNL" his own satire of himself. His one swing at a Stones-like song ("Never Gonna Change") sounds like a bar-band version of something off "Beggar's Banquet."

Rahman's hand doesn't even come into play until seven tracks in, when the disk escalates from being just a tacky pop album into a history-making mess.

Over melodies that seem corny enough to have been concocted for a charity record, Rahman inserts Bollywood strings that function like implants the body has to reject. At that point, the lyrics begin literalizing the implicit message of the whole CD. It's a series of one-world bromides that, like SuperHeavy itself, only boldface the daunting differences between us.


NY Daily News

Another NY paper that's got no love for SH.

Maybe they weren't invited to the launch party...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 20th, 2011 at 12:48pm

Jagger lifts ‘Heavy’ hitters

Dan Aquilante
September 19, 2011

http://goo.gl/mg1Jm
Kristin Burns


What happens when you put Mick Jagger, ex-Eurythmic Dave Stewart, “Slumdog Millionaire” composer A.R. Rahman, reggae’s Damian Marley and Brit soul singer Joss Stone in the studio together? You get “SuperHeavy,” the single best album of 2011.

This all-star collaboration created a collection of brilliant songs in an incredible stylistic mash-up of reggae-inflected pop-rock, with the group’s vocalists taking the lead in round-robin vocal turns.

Jagger gives his best performance in more than a decade -- in or outside of the Rolling Stones. He actually sounds “Sticky Fingers” dangerous and degenerate again. This disc also gives Marley a proper platform to claim his father’s crown as the king of reggae, and Joss Stone sings with pipes that sound like a young Aretha Franklin.

Jagger and Marley dominate the vocals on the dozen-song disc, but even so the record is never far from collaboration. The song “One Day One Night” is a great example written by the entire ensemble. It opens with Jagger singing about being in a “rotten cheap hotel with a stale old smell” drinking himself into a stupor. He then yields the mike to Marley, who sings in clipped reggae vocals about the personal hell of getting stuck in a dark room with “one spliff and an empty box of matches.” Mick rocks, Damian skanks and Joss Stone caps the tune off with a frenzy of feral soul.

If you’re looking for Jagger wearing his Rolling Stone colors that’s easiest to hear on the song “Never Gonna Change” co-written with Stewart. It has the same country rock ballad vibe as “Wild Horses.” The current single from the record “Miracle Worker” is a gritty reggae piece, but even better is the bright ’n’ breezy reggae of “Beautiful People” that places Stone in lead vocal position with Jagger and Marley testing their upper registers with backup.

This is the one, must-have, no-risk disc of 2011, even if it’s just to hear Jagger sing a few lines of Rahman’s song “Satyameva Jayate” in Sanskrit.


New York Post

Betcha a copy of the Post found it's way to Mr. Jagger's suite today...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Bitch on Sep 20th, 2011 at 5:45pm
Best Buy has 4 versions of Superheavy available.
1. The regular version in stores now for $13.99
2. Deluxe version for $16.99
3. Vinyl for $19.98
4. Japan version with extra tracks for $49.99 not released yet.

I see MICK using his influence here by marketing different products of the same 'thing'. It's a MICK trick!


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Sep 20th, 2011 at 6:37pm
I love Super Heavy.   It has a total lack of brutality that really speaks to the still peace-loving person inside of me.  Sure, there are places where Jagger's over-mastication of lyrics (beautiful peep-aaaallll) almost hurts my jaws, but I like the spirit of 5 thoughtful people coming together in a seemingly thoughtless world.

Now everyone knows (except Mick) that his voice is not the same as it was in 1978 and he enunciates as if he thinks some of us are lip readers, but his heart is in the right place.  Same with the other Super Heavy contributors.  Joss Stone is a treasure.

There are some real meanies in NYC...and some write reviews.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Sep 21st, 2011 at 7:21am
Thanks for the reviews, as usual, anyone can spin it the way they want...with the Stones these "critics" are more cautious...

Always funny to read the "Mr." in the NYT reviews, these guys are so formatted!

Been listening to it a lot and I must say I really like it, good melodies, good singing, good production (except maybe the track that has this 90s Dance music feel - sorry can't be bothered to look up its name). Thanks Mick!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 21st, 2011 at 7:27am

Mick on Absolute Radio's "Geoff Lloyd's Hometime Show":

http://goo.gl/Rrstf

SuperHeavy: Interview

Sir Mick Jagger speaks to Geoff Lloyd about his new supergroup, SuperHeavy. The band's line-up includes Dave Stewart, Joss Stone, Damian Marley, and A.R. Rahman. Mick tells us how the band got together and the various personalities in the band.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 21st, 2011 at 7:33am

'SuperHeavy' on Talent: Mick Jagger's Supergroup Talks About Meshing Beats for Debut Album

http://goo.gl/gcHfe
Lou Rocco/ABC

By EDWARD LOVETT
Sept. 21, 2011


"Common Ground," the song on the self-titled debut album from SuperHeavy -- a supergroup that includes Mike Jagger, Joss Stone, Dave Stewart and other -- grew naturally out of the group's improvisational approach to recording.

"In the middle of the first session, we couldn't find it for a second. So that made us call the idea, 'Oh, common ground. We're searching for common ground.' And it all came back again," said Eurythmics founder Dave Stewart in an interview with "Good Morning America" anchor Robin Roberts.

The story captures the essence of SuperHeavy, which in addition to Stewart, Jagger and Stone, features reggae artist Damian Marley (son of Bob Marley), and A.R. Rahman, the Indian musician who won an Oscar for his soundtrack to "Slumdog Millionaire." The artists, except for Marley, sat down with Roberts to talk about their collaboration on their debut album, which was released on Sept. 20.

Starting in 2009, the group gathered in a large studio in Los Angeles and simply played and sang. At the time, they were practically strangers.

"It was a lot of creative making up moments," Stone said. "We made songs, but they lasted for 45 minutes. The [eventual] song appeared at 37 minutes and three seconds. And we'd go back in the control room and go, Ah, that's good. And then we'd have to edit it down," said Stewart. Then they might do it again, focusing on that distilled idea.

"You have to let everybody take the idea that they have as far as it possibly can go," said Jagger. "Even though in your heart you might think, This is never going to work.... Then the other part of you goes, Let it go, because it may work. ... You have to help it build. You take it to the extreme, and you go, You see, I told you it wouldn't work. Or, Wow, that's fantastic."

The group came together as organically as its sound.

"We didn't say, 'Hey, do you want to make a record? It was, Hey, do you want to get together and see what happens when these different music and cultural influences come together?'" Stewart said.

Beyond the clear difference in background and generational influences -- three Brits, two of whose careers are based on American black genres, a Jamaican dancehall reggae artist, a South Indian who blends Indian music with heavy technology -- the members of SuperHeavy bring their individual musical tastes together.

The lone woman of the group, Stone burst onto the music scene at the age of 16. While working in the studio, her fellow SuperHeavy bandmates said the now energetic 24-year-old would spontaneously sing mundane statements such as, "I want a salad."

"I'm a little chatty," Stone said. "I get excited and I can't help it. It's just what -- I've got a lot to say."

"Joss is very quick," Jagger said. "I try to be quick, too. I don't like messing around."

As for a possible tour, Jagger said they'd "been offered two funny shows in India," but there were no plans yet. "We want to see if there's something fun that we can do as a show differently, not just a straight-up show."

But when asked if the Rolling Stones might tour next year to celebrate their 50th anniversary, Jagger said, "There'd be a very big cake, and I'm gonna jump out of it dressed as a woman, in a nice dress. That's what we're gonna do."

"Earrings?" asked Stone.

"Yeah, big earrings," Jagger said. "And everyone will cheer."

While a new Rolling Stones album is a rare sight these days, a Jagger-tribute track popped up on Maroon 5's album, "Hands All Over," released last year. The song is called "Moves Like Jagger," and the music video is a montage of Jagger concert antics.

"Oh, yes. Their song about me, my moves. That's very flattering," Jagger told Roberts.

During the interview, the musicians joked with Roberts about getting up early every day to do the upbeat morning show, "Good Morning America."

When Roberts mentioned she had been up since 3:45 a.m., Jagger said, "I can get the 'don't go to bed till 3:45.' I was doing that the other night. But getting up [at 3:45] is..."

"That's rough," Stone agreed.

"It's funny," Stewart said. "Because, you know, 'Good Morning America' strikes the fear of dread into musicians, because the first thing they think is --"

"It's the early morning," Stone said.

"No," Stewart continued, "Because it's so alien to do music and singing and performing at the same time."

What's amazing about 68-year-old Jagger, Stewart added, is his rigorous adherence to exercise and healthy eating, "yet he still goes wild."

"He manages to do it all," he said.


ABC News

Can just see those "Jagger is a cross dresser" headlines already...

http://goo.gl/Rmt5L

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Nellcote on Sep 21st, 2011 at 7:51am
Interview was good this am on GMA.
Tease for Nightline tonight @ 1130P Eastern ABC

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Edith Grove on Sep 21st, 2011 at 9:10am
Mick's got a big head!  :forfucksake



Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Teiz on Sep 21st, 2011 at 9:16am
I think its clear what the artist is trying to say: the other band members are musical midgets compared to Mick.


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 21st, 2011 at 9:21am

http://goo.gl/cdlQZ

SuperHeavy On "Good Morning America"

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Nellcote on Sep 21st, 2011 at 2:35pm
It's growing on me.
Even my 16 yr old likes it.
Course, she always liked Stones.
I wonder why?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by wiseblood on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 8:24am
What is Keith's excuse now that he is sober and able to make (mostly) clear headed decisions?

You know the Exile and Some Girls deluxe packages had NOTHING to do with Keith and it was all Mick behind the scenes.  Mick really is keeping the Stones thing out there just short of a new album and tour.  

This is a swift change of position on my part as I was always in Keith's corner.  

With the book, Keith fucked this one up pretty good.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 8:28am

SuperHeavy Launch Party - The Double Seven, NYC 9/21

http://goo.gl/4xwNA   http://goo.gl/nVNAe

http://goo.gl/o6e5e
Getty Images

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 8:36am

http://goo.gl/BRgJ7

http://goo.gl/IRltU

http://goo.gl/btrxx

http://goo.gl/5YnlY
Getty Images

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 9:39am
Thought I heard nbc saying Superheavy will be on Dateline?

Meanwhile, I was still thinking...

NEW YORK — Mick Jagger and Eurythmics founder Dave Stewart acknowledge that they took a gamble when they decided to form their all-star band, SuperHeavy. They had no idea if all the group's members, which include soulful singer-songwriter Joss Stone, Oscar-winning composer A.R. Rahman and reggae singer Damian Marley, would even have chemistry.

"We were just making music and if we didn't like it, we wouldn't use it," Stewart said. "We just did it because we wanted to do an experiment, and that got developed and more and more developed until in the end, this record appeared."

The result is a 12-track, self-titled album with a sound the group's members say cannot be placed into any specific genre. Jagger's legend was formed with the Rolling Stones and other successful musical collaborations, but he says none of that can be compared to his experience with SuperHeavy.

"Every time you get into a room even with the same people, it is different because people come up with different things. It was a really interesting collaboration. To be honest it was easy. It was really easy because we got things straight away. You are very soon encouraged," he said.
 
Jagger, Stewart, Stone and Rahman recently sat down for an interview with The Associated Press, where they discussed everything from writing together to egos and joked about sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll.

AP: What were you looking for in picking members of this group?

Jagger: One thing serious that we did think about, we didn't want people with loads of entourages and that would have too big of egos. ... It is very quickly how human beings sort of adjust to each other's temperaments and creativity. It is just like being in a cocktail party with a group of people. Either the cocktail party is going to go well or it doesn't. It depends on the vibe.

Rahman: I don't know why they called me, first of all. I thought maybe they wanted my piano playing or my keyboard, or a string arrangement.

AP: Musically, you were all pushed, working outside of your usual genres. Mick, you rapped?

Jagger: I was just copying Damian. I do a little bit. I went toasting, we call it, but it is the same thing (as rap). Damian was doing this really good toasting, West Indian rapping, so I thought, "I could do that. It can't be that difficult." It actually was quite difficult. With a bit of practice, it is all right. It is a laugh.

Stone: It is funny. Sometimes listening to Damian talk would give me a melody. ... It helped when I couldn't come up with anything, I would just listen to Damian and have a little chat in the corner.

AP: What was that first recording session like, getting all of these people together with different sounds from different backgrounds?

Jagger: The night before I said to Dave ... "Is this really stupid?" We always have songs going into projects. We make up songs when we are there. That is great, but we always have songs finished going in. I said, "We are going into this thing we have talked about for the last three months or whatever, and we don't have any finished songs." Dave said, "I know. It is really worrying." But then Dave created this whole raison d'etre why we didn't have songs. The raison d'etre for why we didn't have songs was because if we had songs ... people would feel that it wasn't their project as much. People wouldn't participate and give as much, which is true. So we were all thrown in the deep end.

Stewart: What is unusual is having five writers who are songwriters, known for songwriting, all writing in the same room together at the same time. Writers are often known to be on their own, looking at the sea, out the window, with a pen or playing piano on their own. Then you have five people all staring at each other that are all used to writing songs, but that have to do it in front of each other now.

AP: With all of these people writing, where there any divas? Who wins out?

Jagger: Joss and I did quite a lot of duets, so Joss would have a verse and then we would sing the chorus together and Damian would have a rap and we would come back together for the chorus. This is quite conventional so we followed those — in some places we followed those conventions, or we made up our own conventions.

AP: All these musicians working together — was there sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll?

Jagger: For Joss there was lots of sex (laughs). She is the only woman so she has her pick. That is the sex part. Rock 'n' roll, yes. There was definitely rock 'n' roll and drugs. I leave that mostly to Dave and A.R. I think.

Stone: A.R. was big on the drugs. Damian was tame. He was in there doing yoga and drinking wheatgrass or whatever it is called (laughs).

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 9:46am
AP: All these musicians working together — was there sex, drugs and rock 'W' roll?
 
Jagger: For Joss there was lots of sex (laughs). She is the only woman so she has her pick. That is the sex part. Rock 'W' roll, yes. There was definitely rock 'W' roll and drugs. I leave that mostly to Dave and A.R. I think.
 
Stone: A.R. was big on the drugs. Damian was tame. He was in there doing yoga and drinking wheatgrass or whatever it is called (laughs).



- wait until contactmusic gets hold of all of this!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 11:25am
More pictures from the SuperHeavy Launch Party at The Double Seven in NYC on September 21, 2011 © Kevin Mazur & Stephen Lovekin with thanks to moy










Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 11:25am




Steve Martin & friend



Questlove dJ's




Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 11:26am
Dave with girlfriends  :charlieperv



Ali Hilfiger, Steve Hash (not that one Joey), Tommy and Lee Hilfiger



Steve Martin



David Saltz & friend




Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 11:27am


Socialité Daphne Guiness


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Bitch on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 3:00pm
Fantastic pics, and MICK looks quite pleased with himself! SO if MICK's happy, I'm happy too. I bought the Deluxe Superheavy CD at Best Buy for $16.99 plus tax, it has 4 "bonus" tracks. :-/

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 3:30pm
 
Well, wading through the high muddy water for this album which is mostly all rap/r&b.

Tonight I’ll close my eyes and I'll wonder, if this album is as hollow as it seems.

Mick is much better than this.

Note to Mick; work with people your own age.  :wtf1


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 5:08pm

The "full" SH segment with ABC's Robin Roberts:

http://goo.gl/BDBw7

SuperHeavy On "Nightline"

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 5:21pm

Video from the interview with AP's Alicia Quarles:

http://goo.gl/mT4YI

Mick Jagger Takes A Chance With SuperHeavy

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 5:26pm
Thanks for the interviews.  The spoken puts the written in perspective - not that it will make any difference to the tabloids.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 6:42pm

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 7:14pm
steve martin looks like he snuck out for the evening, no?

and jesus christ, Lwrens make up appears flawless, but no one seemed to finish blending in Mick's...I thought she was a damn stylist

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Sep 23rd, 2011 at 5:52pm
Daphne Devil ;)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 24th, 2011 at 11:06am

Mick Jagger on his SuperHeavy Project

By Alun Palmer 23/09/2011

http://goo.gl/CQvVh


Sitting in his suite at London's Dorchester Hotel, Mick Jagger looks a good decade younger than his 68 years. Whippet thin and constantly restless as he crosses and uncrosses his legs, he is the ultimate rock & roll icon.

Jagger is engaging, articulate company and, despite being a household name for almost his entire adult life, is surprisingly down to earth.

The Rolling Stones have been making music for almost half a century, but the snakehipped singer shows no sign of slowing down. The band may be on an extended hiatus after their last mammoth world tour, but workaholic Sir Mick has pitched in with an impressive project in SuperHeavy, which also features ex-Eurythmic Dave Stewart, singer Joss Stone, Bob Marley's son Damian and award-winning Indian composer AR Rahman.

So how does he manage to defy the years, despite pushing 70? "I'm lucky," he grins. "I have very good genes and I don't put on weight. I still have a drink. I am not a fanatic about being in the gym for hours or pounding the pavements as that's detrimental.

"If you are not doing shows then you have to keep up a certain level of fitness or there's no going back. Five times a week you have to do half an hour biking or in the gym. But dancing is really good and more fun than being in a gym. I go out clubbing. If you can't and you are in the country with nowhere to go, you just clear the furniture away and have a dance.

"That's as good for you as going to the gym and working out on a bike. You put the music on, blast out a few of your favourite tunes and have half an hour dancing. But no stopping! You do have to take the missus out as well, of course."

The lady in question is stunning 6ft 3ins model L'Wren Scott, 44, whom Jagger has been dating since 2001. The father of seven children - aged 12 to 40 - with four different women, and a granddad four times over, he isn't contemplating retirement just yet, but he does admit that the clock is ticking.

"Slowing down must happen," Mick concedes, "so you have to take advantage when you can to keep doing things."

Next year marks a milestone for the Stones as they clock up their 50th anniversary. On July 12, 1962 they played their first ever gig, at London's Marquee Club.

"I don't know what form the anniversary will take," Mick says. "I am sure you will be partially sick of the Stones by the end of next year. We have a lot of stuff to go for. People want to do exhibitions, TV and documentaries, so we have to look at these and see.

"I got used to our longevity in decades. After 10 years I was impressed. We made a documentary after 25 years and thought that was a really long time."

Jagger is amazed they made it this far. "It is quite an achievement I suppose still being around at all," he muses. "I guess you should be pleased with it but, you know, I think it will be interesting to see how people react to the 50th year thing."

Given the huge logistical undertaking that a Rolling Stones tour represents, it's seeming increasingly unlikely that the celebrations will be marked by the world's greatest rock & roll band hitting the road.

They last toured for two long years from August 2005 to August 2007, at the time the highest grossing tour in history, raking in a mammoth £356,000,000.

But the chances of the Stones touring any time soon have been dented by rumours of tension between Jagger and Keith Richards following the publication of Keef's acclaimed autobiography, Life.

"Todgergate", as it became known, saw Richards paint an unflattering portrait of the singer saying he was "unbearable", nicknaming him "that bitch Brenda" and saying "Marianne Faithfull had no fun with his tiny todger".

Jagger remains circumspect.

"There may be a tour, who knows... maybe," he shrugs.

"At the moment nothing is fixed."

What is occupying his mind today, though, is not the Stones but SuperHeavy.

Stewart and Jagger came up with the idea of bringing together musicians with vastly different backgrounds to see what they created.

The eponymously titled album was recorded under conditions of extreme secrecy in a multitude of locations across three continents, and even included sessions on a super yacht loaned by Microsoft billionaire Paul Allen.

"I thought, 'It is only 10 days' work. What have I got to lose?'" Mick explains. "You knew if you didn't like it, you could say, 'It's not for me'. You have to throw yourself into these things, contribute as much as you can and listen to other people. You have to let the others have their head and then you go, 'Oh wow, that's really amazing'.

"It was a good experience on that level. I enjoyed singing with all these people - four singers. It was fun to take turns. Even though it was a group effort you had freedom to do your own styles.

"You don't know what's going to happen.

We didn't have any songs so it was a creative cauldron. We didn't know whether it was going to work or not. That's what made it exciting."

The cultural mix saw Jagger step well outside his comfort zone when AR Rahman got him to sing lyrics that weren't in English.

"I do one line in Urdu and the others in Sanskrit," Mick smiles. "That was good fun. I would have done more of that. I was quite happy in the Indian sections and I got to play guitar as well."

The SuperHeavy album sees Jagger railing against politicians on the track I Can't Take It No More. But despite his estimated £180m fortune and homes around the world, he is not one to criticise his homeland.

"It's been a lot worse here in my lifetime," he says. "A lot worse. Whether it has been a lot better, I don't know.

"I was in London for the riots. I was kind of surprised that people were shocked it happened. There's no warning, but it's a regular feature of English urban life if you think about it. Every 10 years you get some riots.

"Is David Cameron overreacting when he calls into question the morality of what is after all a small percentage of people living in an urban environment? "Riots like that have been a feature of Britain for 200 years or so and we like to congratulate ourselves that it has gone away. But the reality is that they haven't, have they? "I am a bit down on politicians as a class. Even Obama, whom I admire a lot. He promised to close Guantanamo Bay and there it is, still open. You make promises but when you get into power those promises are much harder to keep. The reality is that you can't do all the things you wanted to do."

With no plans for retirement, Jagger is happy to roll back the carpet and carry on dancing. Indeed, it seems hard to stop him.

"I feel happy with things," he admits.

"Ronnie [Wood] and I went out last night to see Charlie Watts playing jazz in the rough end of Chelsea.

"It was fun, but there was no dancing. There wasn't any room to move around to what was essentially dance music.

"This stuff was created to dance to and there were girls who wanted to. It was a bit of a shame because I would have liked to have had a bop to that music."

SuperHeavy is out now


MEET MICK'S HEAVY FRIENDS..

Jagger Gives His Personal Rundown On SuperHeavy's Diverse Talents


Dave Stewart - The former Eurythmics star, 59, is now an award-winning producer and composer of the musical Ghost. "Dave wanted to make a record that was different and not the usual kind of thing he makes. The idea was to get disparate people who were open-minded enough to take a few chances.

Dave is a great one for getting things finished and not hanging around.

That's a really good trait because you can put things off.

So it was quick in that way."

Joss Stone - The 24-year-old, Devon-born singer has sold has sold 11m records and is one of the best-selling British artists of the past decade. "I've worked with Joss before. She is a very mature singer for her years.

I found her really easy to work with.

She tells me what to do and bosses me about, and I boss her about too.

There was very good give and take with Joss. We would sit together and try and write the tune and vocal."

Damian Marley - Son of reggae legend Bob Marley, Damian, 33, is a three-time Grammy award winning musician.

"We were thinking about different rappers but Damian isn't a rapper in the traditional sense.

His rhymes are very humorous, so I thought he was a good choice for that.

Damian had his toasting corner in the studio which I daren't interrupt. I just left him to it!"

AR Rahman - Indian composer and songwriter, 45, who won an Oscar for his Slumdog Millionaire soundtrack. "AR was the last member to be recruited.

We wanted something that was much more left-field, more than our Western tradition of music.

AR was the one least experienced in this kind of thing. He was very much his own boss. He has never been in a group, while everyone else had been in groups or had been used to doing these sort of projects.

He added a very different twist."


The Daily Mirror

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Sep 24th, 2011 at 11:50am
What a fantastic shot.  Mick continues to impress verbally and visually.  Thanks for posting this.  Nice that he and Ronnie went to see Charlie.  He's right - that music cries out for dancing.  I would have been moving tables.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by KMC on Sep 24th, 2011 at 4:27pm
Why does the Japan deluxe CD get 17 cuts, while the US and UK only get 16?
WTF!

Title: jagger radio interview
Post by jaxx o diamonds on Sep 22nd, 2011 at 8:55am
need the professor!!!!mi'm so confused! is this new topic worthy or super heavy thread or mick news thread?

mick was interviewed by my boulder radio station this a.m. here is the podcast of the complete interview. he sounded great. check it out here:

http://www.kbco.com/cc-common/podcast/single_page.html?podcast=bcomorningshow_podcast

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Honky Tonk Man on Sep 25th, 2011 at 5:34am

KMC wrote on Sep 24th, 2011 at 4:27pm:
Why does the Japan deluxe CD get 17 cuts, while the US and UK only get 16?
WTF!


This always seems to be the way. The Japanese nearly always seem to get some additional bonus tracks - whether it be SuperHeavy, The Rolling Stones or Beyoncé. Perhaps it's because groups and artists tour there less than they do in North America, Europe and the UK? Perhaps it's just a little extra 'something' for the Japanese buying public.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 25th, 2011 at 8:53am

KMC wrote on Sep 24th, 2011 at 4:27pm:
Why does the Japan deluxe CD get 17 cuts, while the US and UK only get 16?
WTF!

Japanese SHM-CD's are expensive. Bonus tracks are added to encourage the consumer to buy the domestic CD rather than an import, which often costs much less.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 25th, 2011 at 8:59am

SuperHeavy freebie from AmEx:

http://goo.gl/ZiWqA

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 25th, 2011 at 10:11pm

Looks like 'Energy' will be the next single...Dave Stewart posted on twitter that he and Mick were working on the radio edit yesterday.

Track features Questlove of The Roots on drums.


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Honky Tonk Man on Sep 26th, 2011 at 3:47am

left shoe shuffle wrote on Sep 25th, 2011 at 8:53am:
Japanese SHM-CD's are expensive. Bonus tracks are added to encourage the consumer to buy the domestic CD rather than an import, which often costs much less.


Ahh, I see. Interesting  :)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 26th, 2011 at 7:20am

SH debuts at #13 on the UK albums chart - theofficialcharts.com 

Moved 11,000 copies...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Nellcote on Sep 26th, 2011 at 7:22am

left shoe shuffle wrote on Sep 25th, 2011 at 10:11pm:
Looks like 'Energy' will be the next single...Dave Stewart posted on twitter that he and Mick were working on the radio edit yesterday.

Track features Questlove of The Roots on drums.

Jagger's vocalizing on this track is nuts.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 26th, 2011 at 11:05am

Deluxe 17 track edition's on Spotify:

http://goo.gl/x37lq

Acoustic version of 'Never Gonna Change' is mighty nice...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 26th, 2011 at 5:20pm

Dave Stewart dropping some hints about SH activity in LA...video shoot for 'Energy'?

yeah gonna be an interesting day today for @superheavy  : )

Hey @theroxy looking forward to playing on your legendary stage ; )




Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Bitch on Sep 26th, 2011 at 6:01pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on Sep 25th, 2011 at 10:11pm:
Looks like 'Energy' will be the next single...Dave Stewart posted on twitter that he and Mick were working on the radio edit yesterday.

Track features Questlove of The Roots on drums.

My half ass review: Some parts are good, but it's not brilliant. None of the songs ROCK, and I like ROCK & ROLL!

ENERGY, too much going on there, it's not sweet at all, but it's OK.

I CAN'T TAKE IT NO MORE sounds like another Sweet Neocon ~ it's a political commentary about corruption. I can't take this song, ugh.

BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE is about smoking weed I think, spark it up, live it up, the song has a nice feel and I like the raggae influence.

ONE DAY ONE NIGHT, I distinctly hear a line from Almost Hear You Sigh, MICK uses the exact same line. I'm feeling sorry for myself so this is upsets me for one reason ~ copying from the Stones is a NO-NO!

HEY CAPTAIN ~ This song that makes me want to get up and shake my booty, a bonus track, it's a catchy tune and I like it alot.

ROCK ME GENTLY is my favorite song, it's sweet and beautiful with a jazzy sexy feel to it and very cool.

MIRACLE WORKER is a good song, it amuses me.

I DON'T MIND reminds me of LAUGH I NEARLY DIED, the same sound of desperation in MICK's voice, yet MICK's voice sound best in this song, it's lower and softer, and I love it, but it seems like it could of been a Stones song, my favorite line of the album is in this song ~ I want to wrap around you like a necklace that is a nice image!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Joey on Sep 26th, 2011 at 6:18pm
" MIRACLE WORKER is a good song, it amuses me.  "

Miracle Worker is a fabulous track  .... BITCH !!!!!!!!!!


In fact , Superheavy is literally GROWING on your young Joey .


" Joey LIKE  , .................. Ronnie !!!!! "


The Joey , Surgeon of LOVE !!!!! ®





Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Sep 26th, 2011 at 6:30pm
I Like Micks voice.  A R Rahmans hummin sounds really good and Damian Marley can talk very very fast.
Joss is Wonderful, Dave Stewart ?  I related to some songs more then others.
I've only listened once.

I like growing into music too.


:)  SUPERHEAVVY IS GEEEEERRRRRRRRR8888888888888  ;)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Sep 27th, 2011 at 9:22am

left shoe shuffle wrote on Sep 26th, 2011 at 11:05am:
Deluxe 17 track edition's on Spotify:

http://goo.gl/x37lq

Acoustic version of 'Never Gonna Change' is mighty nice...

Can't get track #17 here, has the track surfaced? A sample can be found here : http://www.cdjapan.co.jp/detailview.html?KEY=UICA-1060

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 28th, 2011 at 4:26pm

Posted today @ SuperHeavy:

Joss is in Brazil will play Rock in Rio Sept.29th , Mick and I are in Los Angeles preparing a Video for "Energy" we both spoke to Damian yesterday (he's in Miami) and went through the concept . A.R. Rahman is back in India doing a Superheavy remix , soon we will be filming something very special : )
___


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Soldatti on Sep 28th, 2011 at 6:07pm
SuperHeavy's self-titled first album debuts at No. 26 on U.S. chart


SuperHeavy's eponymous debut album landed with a commercial thud on the U.S. chart, as it entered the Billboard 200 album chart at No. 26, which is likely to be the album's highest position on the chart. (The album was released in the U.S. on September 20, 2011. The Billboard 200 album chart with SuperHeavy's debut position was published on September 28, 2011.)

For most new acts, it would be impressive to have a first album debut in the Top 30 of the Billboard 200 chart. But given that the members of SuperHeavy are stars who have had big hits with other albums, the No. 26 debut is far below what most people had expected for a group with this caliber of talent.

The members of SuperHeavy are Rolling Stones lead singer Mick Jagger, Eurythmics co-founder Dave Stewart (who co-produced the "SuperHeavy" album with Jagger), Joss Stone, Damian Marley and Oscar-winning "Slumdog Millionaire" songwriter/composert A.R. Rahman.

The "SuperHeavy" album's chart performance in the U.K. was much better, having bowed on the UK chart at No. 13, as previously reported. Sales for the album were no doubt helped in the UK by radio airplay for "Miracle Worker," the album's first single. By contrast, commercial radio stations in the U.S. essentially ignored "Miracle Worker."

Billboard magazine had predicted that SuperHeavy's album would be a hard sell in the U.S., mainly because the album's blend of multicultural music (with reggae and Indian influences) is not very popular in the U.S., when it comes to album sales.

And in the United States, where touring and commercial radio airplay have major influences on how well an act's music sells, SuperHeavy had neither enough commercial radio airplay nor a tour to help promote the album. The band has not done any public performances. SuperHeavy also has no plans to tour on the forseeable future.

Publicity for the "SuperHeavy" album was limited to Internet marketing (mostly through Facebook) and select interviews by the band members. As previously reported, Jagger, Stewart and Rahman attended a SuperHeavy album release party in New York City on September 21, 2011. The event got some publicity.

SuperHeavy did a music video for "Miracle Worker," and as of this writing, it has gotten 2.7 million views on the band's Vevo channel on YouTube. By contrast, the music video for Maroon 5's "Moves Like Jagger" (featuring Christina Aguilera), the current No. 1 song in the United States, as of this writing has 29.3 million views on Maroon 5's official YouTube channel and 25.7 million views on Maroon 5's Vevo channel on YouTube.

The "SuperHeavy" album got mostly mixed-to-negative reviews from critics, which may or may not have had an impact on word of mouth for the album.

Other albums released in the U.S. on September 20, 2011 that outsold the "SuperHeavy" album included:

Tony Bennett's "Duets II" (No. 1 on the chart; 179,000 copies sold in its first week, according to Nielsen SoundScan)
Demi Lovato's "Unbroken (No. 4 on the chart; 96,000 copies sold in its first week)
NeedToBreathe's "The Recokoning (No. 6 on the chart; 49,000 copies sold in its first week)
Mindless Behavior's "#1 Girl" (No. 7 on the chart; 36,000 copies sold in its first week)
Gavin DeGraw's "Sweeter" (No. 8 on the chart; 34,000 copies sold in its first week)
Pearl Jam's "Pearl Jam Twenty" soundtrack (No. 10 on the chart; 27,000 copies sold in its first week)

As previously reported, Stewart was directing footage for a possible SuperHeavy documentary, but it is unknown if any of that documentary will ever be released. Although Stewart told Billboard that he hopes to have the documentary released in movie cinemas, it will most likely be released directly to DVD and Blu-ray, if it is released at all.

http://www.examiner.com/rolling-stones-in-national/superheavy-s-self-titled-first-album-debuts-at-no-26-on-u-s-chart#ixzz1ZI7UFcms

:forfucksake

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Pdog on Sep 28th, 2011 at 6:10pm
I wish I would listen to this, but I'm to busy listening to Pink Floyd re-issues... Never thought I'd say that... I hope I get around to listening to SH, and don't shelf it!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Sep 28th, 2011 at 6:14pm
In case anyone bothers to read the above, "U.L." = "U.K.", odd typo.

hum...the board software is changin K (that's the letter between J and L, "ca") to L, what gives? Let's see with OK...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Joey on Sep 28th, 2011 at 9:44pm
" ... I hope I get around to listening to SH............... "



Poi Dog   ...... please listen to " Miracle Worker " and thank your young Joey " The Surgeon Of Love " later .


!!!!!


Heavy  ' kins ! ®

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Sep 29th, 2011 at 9:43am
Looking forward to the Energy video.  The acoustic version of Never Gonna Change is really nice - it's a better fitting accompaniment for the lyrics.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by mojoman on Sep 29th, 2011 at 9:57am

Pdog wrote on Sep 28th, 2011 at 6:10pm:
I wish I would listen to this, but I'm to busy listening to Pink Floyd re-issues... Never thought I'd say that... I hope I get around to listening to SH, and don't shelf it!



i want to caress your kneecaps, just got my expanded DSOTM with bonus live from Wembley and Meddle in the mail!!!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 29th, 2011 at 12:54pm

No doubt SH and UMG hoped for better US numbers. But imo UMG could've done a better job getting the word out.

One opportunity missed was the lack of an "exclusive" common with bricks and mortar music retailers like Best Buy and Target.
Not only were there no such deals, SuperHeavy wasn't even a featured new release in either of their weekly sales flyers.

Besides the de rigueur print, radio and TV interviews, SH needs to seriously consider live performance - SNL, Letterman, Fallon, a theatre/club date or two...something to generate real buzz.

On a less US-centric note, SH has done well elsewhere. It was iTune's top selling rock album in Japan and several European countries last week.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Sep 29th, 2011 at 1:19pm

Nice interview with longtime NY radio man Jim Kerr aired today on Q104.3:

http://goo.gl/zFoQx

Mick speaks about his SuperHeavy project

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Sep 29th, 2011 at 3:43pm
even tho Mick & Co. didnt "put much thought into it"  I Dont Mind is one of my favorite tracks.  Looking forward to the video for Energy.  Damian taught Mick well...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by uncleson on Sep 29th, 2011 at 4:19pm
MW is a good song. I like it.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by uncleson on Sep 29th, 2011 at 4:21pm

Bitch wrote on Sep 26th, 2011 at 6:01pm:

left shoe shuffle wrote on Sep 25th, 2011 at 10:11pm:
Looks like 'Energy' will be the next single...Dave Stewart posted on twitter that he and Mick were working on the radio edit yesterday.

Track features Questlove of The Roots on drums.

My half ass review: Some parts are good, but it's not brilliant. None of the songs ROCK, and I like ROCK & ROLL!

ENERGY, too much going on there, it's not sweet at all, but it's OK.

I CAN'T TAKE IT NO MORE sounds like another Sweet Neocon ~ it's a political commentary about corruption. I can't take this song, ugh.

BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE is about smoking weed I think, spark it up, live it up, the song has a nice feel and I like the raggae influence.

ONE DAY ONE NIGHT, I distinctly hear a line from Almost Hear You Sigh, MICK uses the exact same line. I'm feeling sorry for myself so this is upsets me for one reason ~ copying from the Stones is a NO-NO!

HEY CAPTAIN ~ This song that makes me want to get up and shake my booty, a bonus track, it's a catchy tune and I like it alot.

ROCK ME GENTLY is my favorite song, it's sweet and beautiful with a jazzy sexy feel to it and very cool.

MIRACLE WORKER is a good song, it amuses me.

I DON'T MIND reminds me of LAUGH I NEARLY DIED, the same sound of desperation in MICK's voice, yet MICK's voice sound best in this song, it's lower and softer, and I love it, but it seems like it could of been a Stones song, my favorite line of the album is in this song ~ I want to wrap around you like a necklace that is a nice image!


Great review.  Thanks for posting it.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Joey on Sep 29th, 2011 at 5:44pm
" MW is a good song. I like it  "


I would like to bite and kiss you .

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Sep 29th, 2011 at 9:34pm
Once again - interesting and articulate.  He was also realistic in his assessment of one over-the-top review as "effusive."  I was surprised to hear him mention Marianne Faithfull.  He seems far more open than in times past.  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Oct 1st, 2011 at 7:58am

http://goo.gl/JwgCp


SuperCostly...


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Oct 1st, 2011 at 8:00am
:(

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Oct 1st, 2011 at 11:07am
I received my Japanese SuperHeavy today, it is a very nice gatefold cover CD with the CD HMCD format with an extra track a very nice acoustic version of “Never Gonna Change” with only Mick Jagger and Dave Stewart, the album comes with a booklet very similar to other versions but it also has a booklet in Japanese with the lyrics in both, English and Japanese.

Here some images










Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Oct 1st, 2011 at 11:08am
LOL as you can see it's Jaggar and not Jagger the one who co-wrote the extra track

:blankfriggingstare1

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by GotToRollMe on Oct 1st, 2011 at 11:24am

Sorry, but I wouldn't even pay bargain-bin prices for this platter. What a crappy record. When I think of some of the sublime music that the Stones have made (see: Let It Loose, Loving Cup, Moonlight Mile...the list is endless) it just makes me want to cry to hear this dreck. Even "Following The River" had some kind of heart to it, but this is just pure, unmitigated shit. If Jagger's name wasn't on it, I doubt it would get even an iota of attention.  :(

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Oct 1st, 2011 at 11:29am
That reaction is because you're waiting for a Rolling Stones music and no, it's not the Stones and 60% of the stuff is great, in fact I like the whole thing but I listen all kind of music and I mean it, all kind of music


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Oct 1st, 2011 at 1:53pm
I agree Voodoo, 60% of the stuff is really good.  I find the music rather uplifting, and often I have one of the tracks playing in my head upon waking.  And I'm almost certain I would like it even without Mick's involvement.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Oct 1st, 2011 at 2:16pm
My main problem with it after a couple of listens is that it just seems to be all over the place. Great, they arfe blending different musical styles. Even being the old rocker that I am,I don't mind different types of music. But this stuff just doesn't seem to blend well. It's kind of a mess and all over the place with no focus. Not to mention the fact that most of Mick's vocals are just awful. So way over the top affected,it seems like a parody of himself. Makes me a tad worried about new vocals he might put on the new Some Girls material.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Oct 1st, 2011 at 2:42pm

luxury wrote on Oct 1st, 2011 at 1:53pm:
I agree Voodoo, 60% of the stuff is really good.  I find the music rather uplifting, and often I have one of the tracks playing in my head upon waking.  And I'm almost certain I would like it even without Mick's involvement.


I'm with both of you - although I like the entire album.  It has an honest feeling about it and that's something I haven't heard in quite a while.   Bravo Super Heavy.   And Luxury - I too have awakened more than once with one of the songs in my head.  Not a bad way to begin the day.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Tumbling Dijs on Oct 1st, 2011 at 4:40pm
I really like "Never Gonna Change", that japanese bonustrack, and that's simply because it has nothing to do with Super Heavy. It could be a track from a new Jagger solo or a new Stones album. I'm glad this album brings at least one good song imo. (LOL)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Bitch on Oct 1st, 2011 at 4:52pm
OK, SUPERHEAVY has some good music, but the big thing that is lacking is some SMOKING GUITAR RIFFS! There is not one single solid guitar lick on the entire CD! Does Dave Stewart play guitar? I dont hear it anywhere, man!  So being a 'rock chick' from way back, this CD isnt thrilling me much, but I will play it just because it's some new MICK but it's not going to be in my steady rotation of music.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Tumbling Dijs on Oct 1st, 2011 at 5:07pm

Bitch wrote on Oct 1st, 2011 at 4:52pm:
OK, SUPERHEAVY has some good music, but the big thing that is lacking is some SMOKING GUITAR RIFFS! There is not one single solid guitar lick on the entire CD! Does Dave Stewart play guitar? I dont hear it anywhere, man!  So being a 'rock chick' from way back, this CD isnt thrilling me much, but I will play it just because it's some new MICK but it's not going to be in my steady rotation of music.


I thinks you are right Bitch. Being an old rocker myself I want to hear guitars. Otherwise I would be on the A.R. Rahman messageboard! But I'm glad this project of Mick brought me one good song. (Still in doubt about Miracle Worker though)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Oct 1st, 2011 at 7:07pm

Tumbling Dijs wrote on Oct 1st, 2011 at 4:40pm:
I really like "Never Gonna Change", that japanese bonustrack, and that's simply because it has nothing to do with Super Heavy. It could be a track from a new Jagger solo or a new Stones album. I'm glad this album brings at least one good song imo. (LOL)

Yeah I do like that one. It's got a little bit of a No Expectations kind of sound to it.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Oct 2nd, 2011 at 5:44am
I'm such a douche I bought a SH t-shirt...you down for one Ginda??

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Oct 2nd, 2011 at 6:32am

Quote:
" I too have awakened more than once with one of the songs in my head.  Not a bad way to begin the day." Ginda

I found myself waking to different tunes from SuperHeavy also !!   8-)

  Elysian :)  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Oct 2nd, 2011 at 7:45am

20 + minutes with MJ and friends:

http://goo.gl/17Fah

YouTube Presents: SuperHeavy
__

Mick says the different voices he used were "characters"...  

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lotsajizz on Oct 2nd, 2011 at 7:51am
I like it.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Joey on Oct 2nd, 2011 at 10:17am
"    Bravo Super Heavy.   And Luxury - I too have awakened more than once with one of the songs in my head.  Not a bad way to begin the day. "


Amen me Stonesian Sister .

Listening to Superheavy in the morning gives one a nice streak of Rin Tin Tin  .


Heavy 'kins ®

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Oct 2nd, 2011 at 9:38pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on Oct 2nd, 2011 at 7:45am:
20 + minutes with MJ and friends:

http://goo.gl/17Fah

YouTube Presents: SuperHeavy
__

Mick says the different voices he used were "characters"...  

I wish he would use the character that actually sings well. :tongui

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by GotToRollMe on Oct 2nd, 2011 at 10:35pm

Voodoo Chile in Wonderland wrote on Oct 1st, 2011 at 11:29am:
That reaction is because you're waiting for a Rolling Stones music and no, it's not the Stones and 60% of the stuff is great, in fact I like the whole thing but I listen all kind of music and I mean it, all kind of music


I'm with you there, Voo. I appreciate all kinds of music too - opera, classical, jazz, rock & roll - you name it. SuperHeavy just leaves me cold though. It's just an opinion - and you know what they say about opinions!  ;D

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by MrPleasant on Oct 2nd, 2011 at 10:56pm
Is this album bad?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Oct 3rd, 2011 at 7:30pm

luxury wrote on Oct 2nd, 2011 at 5:44am:
I'm such a douche I bought a SH t-shirt...you down for one Ginda??


Funny!  Sure, count me in.  I can prowl my hamlet secure in the knowledge no one else will show up in the same t-shirt.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by The Wick on Oct 4th, 2011 at 11:08am
I'm a huge Mick fan and I even like a lot of his solo stuff but this is utter crap. I liked Miracle Worker and thought the rest would be as good, but it's a huge disappointment. I like all kinds of music and even a good dance track, but I find this difficult to listen to. Without Mick the Stones would never be as interesting and inventive but I think he goes too far sometimes in trying to be daring. On the other hand, I'm beginning to wonder now if this is simply what his tastes are. Warring People sounds like something that could easily have been on Primitive Cool (no coincidence that that was done with Dave Stewart largely too). He likes rubbish like Beyonce and for a while I thought it was an attempt to stay hip but maybe that is just what he likes and for us die hards, it's hard to accept that he likes that type of crap. His attempt to be ground breaking ends up with a record that sounds like a lame attempt. If you're going to go that route, do it properly like he did on Sweet Thing, not this wimpy  weak song collection. That said, I still admire him for still pushing against conventional wisdom and trying something different. If he didn't, he wouldn't be Mick and we wouldn't enjoy great songs like Emotional Rescue. Oh and toasting is a load of shite.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Oct 4th, 2011 at 3:25pm
A video of the Yatch in which SuperHeavy was recorded HERE

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Oct 4th, 2011 at 3:37pm

The Wick wrote on Oct 4th, 2011 at 11:08am:
I'm a huge Mick fan and I even like a lot of his solo stuff but this is utter crap. I liked Miracle Worker and thought the rest would be as good, but it's a huge disappointment. I like all kinds of music and even a good dance track, but I find this difficult to listen to. Without Mick the Stones would never be as interesting and inventive but I think he goes too far sometimes in trying to be daring. On the other hand, I'm beginning to wonder now if this is simply what his tastes are. Warring People sounds like something that could easily have been on Primitive Cool (no coincidence that that was done with Dave Stewart largely too). He likes rubbish like Beyonce and for a while I thought it was an attempt to stay hip but maybe that is just what he likes and for us die hards, it's hard to accept that he likes that type of crap. His attempt to be ground breaking ends up with a record that sounds like a lame attempt. If you're going to go that route, do it properly like he did on Sweet Thing, not this wimpy  weak song collection. That said, I still admire him for still pushing against conventional wisdom and trying something different. If he didn't, he wouldn't be Mick and we would enjoy great songs like Emotional Rescue. Oh and toasting is a load of shite.

:willya :willya :willya

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Bitch on Oct 4th, 2011 at 8:41pm

Voodoo Chile in Wonderland wrote on Oct 4th, 2011 at 3:25pm:
A video of the Yatch in which SuperHeavy was recorded HERE

YACHT translation please, not every word just the important stuff, like whos yacht is it, and where was it located?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Oct 5th, 2011 at 5:35pm
The yacht is Paul Allen, co-founder of microsoft,hes a philantropist and He has a book out Idea Man'.

I'm enjoying the SuperHeavy Cd along with Dave Stewarts Blackbird Diaries,
,my only qualm is they gypped us on songs,

SuperHeavy shame on You.


I Like Damian Marley  :)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Oct 5th, 2011 at 5:48pm

lavendar wrote on Oct 5th, 2011 at 5:35pm:
The yacht is some Allen dudes'

Paul Allen. Co-founder of Microsoft. Bazillionaire.

He and 'Octopus' have been mentioned in many of the recent SH pieces.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by luxury on Oct 6th, 2011 at 3:37pm
I bet I am the first one on the block with a SH shirt...

It's pretty nice.  I am liking it muchly

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Oct 6th, 2011 at 5:19pm
Cool. 8-)

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Oct 7th, 2011 at 7:15am
Where is our pal Soldatti with the bad news....sales ranking too low to find?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Oct 7th, 2011 at 8:31am
Don't really car about sales but I thought I saw in their FB feed that they were #1 in many countries ? Luxemburg, San Marin, Lichtenstein ?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by BILL PERKS on Oct 10th, 2011 at 9:20am
I REALLY DIG THE RECORD,EXCEPT THE OPENING TRACK.
HOPE MICK IS HAVING FUN WITH THIS,HE'S EARNED THE RIGHT TO DO WHAT HE WANTS.
DUDE IS OLD.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Oct 11th, 2011 at 8:47am

Clips from the recent NYC event:

http://goo.gl/24PQP

SuperHeavy Launch Party

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Oct 11th, 2011 at 8:53am

SuperHeavy X Shepard Fairey Limited edition poster

I am a big fan of The Eurythmics & The Rolling Stones, so I was excited when I heard that Dave Stewart and Mick Jagger wanted me to work on the art direction for their new band; SuperHeavy, which also includes the musical talents of Joss Stone, Damian Marley and A.R. Rahman. The project is an epic line up that blends a lot of music styles and perspectives. Check out the new album and their limited edition poster, signed by Mick Jagger, Dave Stewart and me. – Shepard



http://goo.gl/fZbO7

obeygiant.com

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Oct 11th, 2011 at 12:50pm

left shoe shuffle wrote on Oct 11th, 2011 at 8:47am:
Clips from the recent NYC event:

http://goo.gl/24PQP

SuperHeavy Launch Party


Interesting.  I think that's the first time I've heard L'Wren actually speak.  I also liked what Dave Stewart had to say about the beauty of jamming and how the world would be a smoother place if that feeling could carry over into daily interactions.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Oct 12th, 2011 at 8:07pm
HEAVY SUPERHEAVY

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Oct 15th, 2011 at 7:55am

Bob Lefsetz's take on SH:

Superheavy

96. Superheavy

Sales this week: 7,399
Cume: 29,710
Weeks on chart: 3
Percentage drop: -40.1


1. Mick Jagger doesn't know who his audience is.

I'm not saying he doesn't have an idea who might buy this album, it's just that he doesn't have a personal relationship with them, he has no line of communication, HE DOESN'T HAVE THEIR E-MAIL ADDRESSES!

That's your number one promotion job, finding out exactly who your audience is. So you can make them aware of your new work and infect them and get them to spread the word. This is the most efficient marketing system. It's direct to fan. And it's incumbent upon all acts to do this.


2. If you want sales make Top Forty music.

You can get around this if you're the Dave Matthews Band, if you know who your audience is as per #1 above. If not, you're gonna sell bupkes.


3. If you're gonna make Top Forty music, work with Dr. Luke or Max Martin, the producer/writer du jour.

You might think the Top Forty game is simple, but it's not. The winners in the field have not only worked in it for years, they've studied it, they know what works, they've put in the time. Respect them for it.


4. If you don't make Top Forty music, you must go on the road.

That's where you build careers today, that's where you maintain them. But if you're doing something new, you've got to break all the rules. People don't expect the solo band member to replicate the group hits, they expect to be disappointed. So they don't want to go, they certainly don't want to overpay. So you've got to underplay and undercharge as an investment in your career. And you've got to over-deliver, so when you come back again, soon, patrons will bring their friends, so you can build. It's a lot of hard work, something that's anathema to the superstars going solo.


5. TV can sell music.

If you're on the show and the track is perceived to be good. Ergo the success of "Moves Like Jagger" and the failure of the Steven Tyler track.

A guest shot is almost meaningless. What you're selling here is your connection with the viewer, who sees you every week. They feel like they know you. They'll buy the track in solidarity if they believe it's great. Tyler's track was a joke, a boring, perfunctory exercise. Today you've got to be better than great to succeed. J. Lo delivered a track better than what she'd done in years, so her fans bought it, but no one else did, because J. Lo's a great dancer, can be a good actress, but she's a no-talent musical artist.


6. You have to ask yourself if you're a musician or a star.

Mick Jagger is certainly a star. But no one thinks he's a musician. Most people believe he hasn't done anything great since the sixties. You can no longer coast, unless you're going on the road and playing those ancient hits. You've got to prove it every day.


7. Mainstream publicity reaches the mainstream.

And the mainstream is last, they're the followers, not the chance-takers. The movers and shakers, the early adopters who'll spread the word, ignore the mainstream press. Better to reach a few fanatical bloggers than the "New York Times".


8. Everything above is known to everybody under thirty. But it's all a secret to everybody over thirty, especially those who've had success in the past.


Artists don't realize that today your past history gives you a foot in the door and nothing more. Youngsters know it's all about the grass roots, building community online, or playing the overly-promoted Top Forty game.

It's fine if you want to give up. But if you want to make new music and have it get traction today you must obey the above rules. And the music must be great. But that's no guarantee everybody's going to pay attention. This is where your history hurts you, people expect your new material to be crap. If it's great, you have to wait for the hype to die down and for the music to percolate in society. Traction will be slow and small. This album may not ever blow up. It may be the one after or the one after that.

You're starting all over.

Believe it.


The Lefsetz Letter

Pretty solid assessment, imo. Wonder if numbers 4 and 5 are getting serious consideration.

And whither goest the next single?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Oct 15th, 2011 at 11:52am
Wow, this thing is bombing big time...I don't find that fair, he took some chances and produced some decent music.

It seems to me the marketing around it was not that bad. FB, emails, interviews, etc...

I doubt he's going to take the risk to tour on top of it. I'm guessing that after this fiasco, UMG are going to be thinking twice about encouraging the Stones to record new material

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Oct 15th, 2011 at 12:19pm
Really?  Do most people think Mick hasn't done anything great since the 60's?  That sounds like blasphemy.  I guess we all live in a bubble around here. Lefsetz is probably right - he knows about what it takes to market music today.  

#1 -  I (naively perhaps) took SuperHeavy as a labor of love.  A creative outlet.  I like it.  Mick is welcome to my e-mail.
#8 -  I'm in that well over 30 age group that often times just doesn't get it.  Happily so...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Oct 18th, 2011 at 7:03am

Dave Stewart's broken radio silence...posted @ SuperHeavy:

wow what a crazy 10 days just back from Devon UK with Joss, Mick just back from S.America A.R, In India and Damian Jamaica and Miami,now we are re-fueled and ready to work on Energy !
___

http://goo.gl/Nka3m

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Oct 18th, 2011 at 10:26am

left shoe shuffle wrote on Oct 18th, 2011 at 7:03am:
Dave Stewart's broken radio silence...posted @ SuperHeavy:

wow what a crazy 10 days just back from Devon UK with Joss, Mick just back from S.America A.R, In India and Damian Jamaica and Miami,now we are re-fueled and ready to work on Energy !
___

http://goo.gl/Nka3m


Good news.  I was starting to get a little worried that the SH project had lost steam.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by BILL PERKS on Oct 18th, 2011 at 12:53pm
MICK'S CONTROL FREAK NATURE IS EVIDENT ON THIS RECORD."NEVER GONNA CHANGE " HAS NO PLACE ON THIS RECORD,ITS MICK ON HIS OWN AND BELONGS ON GODDESS PT II.
ON OTHER TRACKS HE FORCES HIMSELF INTO SONGS THAT MARLEY AND JOSS STONE ARE DUETING BEAUTIFULLY.
IT'S LIKE A VOYEURISTIC OLD MAN UNCLE WATCHING A YOUNG COUPLE FUCK.

JOSS STONE AND DAMIEN MARLEY SHOULD MAKE THEIR OWN RECORD WITH DAVE STEWART PRODUCING AND LEAVE UNCLE MICK AT HOME.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Oct 18th, 2011 at 3:11pm

Andrew Loog Oldham's e-mail to Bob Lefsetz:

From: Andrew Oldham
Subject: Re: Superheavy

bob;

after your slurge on mick it's impossible to resist....
i know you have a number of managers who follow the thing you do, no doubt including the tom hanks character in "that thing you you do".
when act and manager part it does not stop those of us who enjoyed a life-changing exchange with their artist from, upon occasion, still managing the acts in our minds.
first, mick jagger is the greatest surviving interpreter from the 60's. he was, he is and he always can be.
i do not care if he needs to strap on a guitar to move himself, that is not the point, the point is that as recent as last years grammys honoring our mentor solomon burke, he just thrashed those half and twice as young with his astute ability of bringing what he does to a defining moment - every time he bothers to do so.
his work with the stones has recently been a little less assured for all the reasons we have alas been all too privy to.
i got bored the last time the stones toured - they have not ignited my life on stage since STEEL WHEELS nor in their recorded work since 95's STRIPPED.
i wish they would tour in trains and boats and no planes so that bill wyman would reunite with charlie watts and turn the stones away from brand and back into band.
i wish they'd tour the albums that defined them, EXILE ON MAIN STREET; STICKY FINGERS; LET IT BLEED (they can do my and mister jimmy's singles as an encore) in small venues.
ten days in atlanta; ten in chicago... you get the drift.
not too many cities; make america come to them.
get rid of that worn out horn section the keyboard player.
they have nothing to contribute except on a vaudeville level.
get mick taylor in mindspace so he can become a long distance runner once more.
keith; ronnie and taylor.
if you need a keyboard player get ian mclagan or chris stainton.
bring out chris jagger in the middle. have him do "HEY MR DJ" with brother mick. it's killer.
hologram in brian jones and ian stewart and you have the band.
plz allow that i don't do economics - i do dreams.
and that's my don & phil to you.

best, andrew loog oldham


The Lefsetz Letter
__

ALO's dreaming the same dreams as LOTS of other folks...


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Oct 18th, 2011 at 8:35pm
[smiley=thumbsup.gif]Right on, ALO. [smiley=thumbsup.gif]

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Oct 19th, 2011 at 4:13am
Interesting, but wow...I don't want the drugs he had!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Oct 22nd, 2011 at 10:05am

SuperHeavy's hit the digital cutout bin - $3.99 @ amazon.com

http://goo.gl/hLKOe

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Oct 22nd, 2011 at 11:55am
How sad...

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Oct 22nd, 2011 at 4:05pm
SuperHeavy is a VERY Good CD

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Egon on Oct 28th, 2011 at 6:08am
really? anywhere i can listen to it before eventually wasting my money...?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by MrPleasant on Oct 29th, 2011 at 7:54am

Egon wrote on Oct 28th, 2011 at 6:08am:
really? anywhere i can listen to it before eventually wasting my money...?



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jfFbCKLi1V4&feature=list_related&playnext=1&list=SP52F1890FAD3C4874

Don't say I didn't warn ya

Give your money to charity, please

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Oct 29th, 2011 at 8:16am
It's very good, Egon.  Your $ will not be wasted.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by MrPleasant on Oct 29th, 2011 at 8:35am
I'm sorry, but it blows.

Everytime you need a headache, there's SuperHeavy.

And it fucking sucks.

Buy Tom Waits' Bad As Me instead.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Ginda on Oct 29th, 2011 at 8:53am
Not so fast there, Mr P.  I'd suggest buying both.  When there is the need to feel hopeful listen to SH.  When feeling the need for something considerably more intense listen to Bad As Me.  

SH does not blow in any way, shape or form.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by steel driving hammer on Oct 29th, 2011 at 9:27am
So this Superheavy band is now kind of Superover? (to focus on a more important band...)

Red Rover?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Nov 7th, 2011 at 4:42am
A review from RollingStone mag-

the cd recieved 4stars
I believe its a 5star deal, well at least 4 and3/4s
"...terrifically fun..." YES !!!

Good read- LOL  

By Will Hermes
September 20, 2011

At this point, it would seem that Mick Jagger's only burden is having to be Mick Jagger all the time. The terrifically fun SuperHeavy solves that problem. Jagger passes frontman duties around like a spliff, with a spectacularly motley crew: reggae royalty Damian Marley, son of Bob; New Wave survivor Dave Stewart; also-ran U.K. soul diva Joss Stone; and Bollywood singer and composer A.R. Rahman.  Imagine an awards-show-scale revue on the floor of the U.N. General Assembly with musical direction by M.I.A., and you've got some idea of the glitzy craziness here.  On "Satyameva Jayathe," Jagger and Rahman trade Hindi verses over Celtic-Indian fiddle. On "Energy," a U2-style synth-pop jam with a leadoff by Marley, Jagger raps – raps! – and sounds positively hot-wired. On "One Day One Night," Jagger comes on like a broken hearted drunk in a Bukowski novel, smearing vocal vibrato all over.  If the songs sometimes feel a bit undercooked, the spirit is dazzling. On "I Can’t Take It No More," Stone yells, "Whatthe fuck is going on?" which pretty much sums the album up.  That song – where Jagger shouts, "I can’t fake it no more!"- may or may not be an answer to Keith's shit-talking memoir.  One thing's for sure: SuperHeavy is the wildest thing he's ever done outside of the Stones.



Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/superheavy-20110920#ixzz1d0xh6Ymp

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by left shoe shuffle on Nov 7th, 2011 at 9:50am

New single's out...in Italy.

http://goo.gl/oBTEP


In all radio Friday, November 4: SuperHeavy - "Energy," the new single

After dominating the summer with the SMASH HIT "MIRACLE WORKER", SUPERHEAVY return to radio with a driving new single.

ENERGY is the powerful new single from SUPERHEAVY,  the album of great public and critical success from the SUPERBAND formed by Mick Jagger, Dave Stewart, Damian Marley, Joss Stone and AR Rahman.

The amazing new SUPERHEAVY video is coming soon.


earone.it

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Egon on Dec 7th, 2011 at 6:31am
After dominating the summer... which summer was that & where...?

Anyway, i finally managed to listen to it. It's not so bad, but i wouldn't spend any money on it...
but a bit of bandwith... why not..

But like was sad by other here: jagger often seems to disturb the song/harmony, rather than adding something to it..

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Zack on Dec 7th, 2011 at 8:36am
Sank like a stone, didn't it?   :forfucksake

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by mojoman on Dec 7th, 2011 at 9:24am
cutout bin..............

:stinkypost

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Paranoid Android on Dec 7th, 2011 at 10:07am
It probably a pretty good album, though not my thing...simply because
it is all over the place. I listen to Bollywood when i want to listen to Bollywood.
I listen to synth-pop when I want to listen to synth-pop, etc etc

I don't think there will be a SH II.

Like it was said here or another thread by Sir Gazza...it's just a "vanity project"
The thing I can't believe is  this was 3 years in the making...

It will be interesting though if they do shows in Mexico this spring as hinted by Damien a few weeks ago.


Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Dec 7th, 2011 at 11:05am

mojoman wrote on Dec 7th, 2011 at 9:24am:
cutout bin..............

:stinkypost

Makes a nice coaster. :wtf1

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Dec 7th, 2011 at 11:45am
Really goes to show how lost they are at UMG...no clue at all as to what the market will take.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Holden on Dec 7th, 2011 at 8:07pm
Didn't they film a video for "Energy?" I wonder when that's gonna be released. Energy, Miracle Worker, and Rock me gently are the only songs I remember off the album. Rock me gently is great.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by moy on Feb 17th, 2012 at 10:19am
Dave Stewart opens up about Mick Jagger and the future of SuperHeavy
Carla Hay
Rolling Stones Examiner
http://www.examiner.com

SuperHeavy, whose members include Mick Jagger and Dave Stewart, still has a documentary in the works, and Jagger wants "Energy" to be SuperHeavy's second music video. These are some of the things that Stewart told me when I did an exclusive interview with him on February 15, 2012, while he was in Los Angeles for his tour with Joss Stone, one of the other members of SuperHeavy. The other members of the group are Damian Marley and A.R. Rahman. As of now, all of SuperHeavy's members are pursuing multiple projects. For Stewart, he has been touring (with Stone in 2012 and Stevie Nicks in 2011), promoting his solo music, and preparing for the Broadway opening of "Ghost The Musical," whose songs he co-wrote with Glen Ballard.

SuperHeavy has no plans to tour and has yet to do any official live public performances for the group's self-titled album, which was released in September 2011. (SuperHeavy's music video for "Miracle Worker," which Stewart directed, has footage of the band performing, but that was on a music-video set with an audience that consisted mostly of hired extras.) One place where SuperHeavy won't be performing is at the 2012 Olympics, since Stewart revealed during our conversation that SuperHeavy turned down an invitation to do an Olympics performance. My full interview with Stewart will be in my Celebrity Q&A column around the time that "Ghost The Musical" officially opens on Broadway in April 2012. In the meantime, here is what Stewart said when we talked about SuperHeavy.

You’ve been directing and producing a SuperHeavy documentary, which has had some footage officially released on the Internet. What is the latest status on the full-length documentary?

My little company has been making documentaries — it’s a company called Weapons of Mass Entertainment — we made a feature-film-length documentary on Stevie Nicks and Joss Stone. I just signed a six-picture deal with CineDine — a six-documentary film deal.

With SuperHeavy, I just made a documentary, which was an amazing thing to capture. I’ve probably got an hour-and-15-minute-long film. I think it’s interesting, but because things keep happening, I keep filming that.

Mick wants to make a video for [SuperHeavy song] “Energy.” It’s one of his favorites. I started to feed some of [the documentary footage] on Facebook, some little teasers. We have amazing stuff.

I know you’ve been asked this question almost every time you’ve done an interview talking about SuperHeavy, but do you think SuperHeavy will ever do a live public performance?

We would all like to, but the thing is with having a band like that, Joss and I have just been playing live. A.R. [Rahman] is busy rehearsing for the Academy Awards show. Everybody’s busy doing things, but we can all regroup at one point. It’s a mixture of five managers.

Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood said in a recent interview that the Rolling Stones have been invited to perform at the 2012 Olympics in London. Do you think the Stones are going to do it?

I’m not sure. They might. I think the Olympics committee has been asking a few people, hedging their bets. Why not? It would be a hell of a thing. It’s London, and it’s where the Stones are from. The funny thing is, SuperHeavy was also approached [to perform at the 2012 Olympics], because SuperHeavy is mixed culturally: Indian, Jamaican, British. It’s all very interesting.

Mick Jagger and Martin Scorsese are producing a TV drama series about the music business, and Terence Winter (of “The Sopranos” and “Boardwalk Empire” fame) reportedly wrote the screenplay for the show’s pilot episode. Would you be interested in doing the soundtrack or score music for that TV series if it gets picked up by a network?

Oh yeah! I created the music for the TV series "Malibu Country” [starring Reba McEntire]. We’re making the pilot in April [2012]. So I’ve done stuff like that. Yeah, I’d work anytime with Mick and Scorsese. Obviously, it would be amazing. Mick and I have got so many great songs and experiments that nobody’s heard. Anything with Mick and Scorsese would be incredible to work on.

You mentioned earlier that SuperHeavy was asked to perform at the 2012 Olympics. It sounds like that’s not going to happen. So what would be the band’s ideal place for the first SuperHeavy live public performance?

SuperHeavy, when people realized what it was, we were asked to do everything: the Grammys, the Olympics, the opening of a balloon in Bangkok. There’s a wall of invitations.

We always talk about making it … not a secret gig, but just a small place in New York or something like that. We haven’t set anything. We went through a million different ramifications. We did the [documentary] film.

We can decide anything at any point. We’re always free to do something. Everybody wants to do something. It’s not like we have to find something to do.

Since you've been collaborating with Mick Jagger for several years, what do you think the two of you will work on next?

I have no idea. Maybe another SuperHeavy thing. I don’t know

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Feb 17th, 2012 at 10:59am
You'd think everyone involved would want to forget about SH at this point...Mick's been on record many times saying that sales had an impact on how he viewed an album...so he can't be too happy with this one, any final numbers available? 5000, 15000, less ?

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Feb 17th, 2012 at 11:04am
Note to Dave Stewart. Give it up. The Stones will drop their ticket prices and play a creative setlist before SuperHeavy does anything again...In other words. It ain't gonna happen. :solongsucker

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gimmekeef on Feb 17th, 2012 at 12:55pm
Stewart can now go back to what he does best.....not much of anything.....Superheavy asked to play at the Olympics?......yeah sure......Time for Mick to get back to his regular job.......

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Feb 20th, 2012 at 10:55pm
Mick Jagger's SuperHeavy want low-key first gig
Published Monday, Feb 20 2012, 15:19 GMT | By Lewis Corner | 1 comment

SuperHeavy have revealed that they want to play their first gig in a small venue.

The supergroup - formed by Mick Jagger and also consisting of Eurythmics' Dave Stewart, Joss Stone, Damian Marley and AR Rahman - were asked to perform at the London 2012 Olympics.

However, the band declined the opportunity as they would prefer to make their live debut in a more intimate setting.

Stewart told Examiner.com: "We always talk about making it, well, not a secret gig, but just a small place in New York or something like that.

"We haven't set anything. We went through a million different ramifications. Everybody wants to do something. Everybody's busy doing things, but we can all regroup at one point. It's a mixture of five managers."

He added: "The funny thing is, SuperHeavy was approached to perform at the 2012 Olympics, because we are mixed culturally - Indian, Jamaican, British. It's all very interesting.

"SuperHeavy, when people realised what it was, we were asked to do everything - The Grammys, the Olympics, the opening of a balloon in Bangkok. There's a wall of invitations."

SuperHeavy's self-titled debut album reached number 13 in the UK and 26 in the US upon its release last September.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Oct 2nd, 2012 at 10:47am
Off topic replies have been moved to This Thread

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Oct 5th, 2012 at 2:13am
Link doesn't work, here it is : http://rocksoff.org/messageboard/YaBB.pl?num=1349410666

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Voodoo Chile In Wonderland on Oct 5th, 2012 at 6:40am
Thank you, it happened because first step is to split into a new thread and then splice it onto the one I created, when I did that the SuperHeavy thread got buried some pages after this. The link is fixed, thank you

Now let's talk about "SuperHeavy"  :forfucksake :aimama :whydontcha :nooslajaleisk :nanker

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by gotdablouse on Oct 5th, 2012 at 7:23am
Good idea!

What's scary with SH is that I got quite excited about this new project Mick was involved in, looked forward to hearing it and actually quite liked it at first...and haven't listened to it for ages, like pretty much everything the Stones have put out apart from WS and B2B. Scary because I lack any critical/common sense at first!

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by mojoman on Mar 18th, 2013 at 1:22pm
Joss Stone 'targeted in murder plot over links to Royals'

A gang plotted to rob and murder Joss Stone, the pop star, because of her connections to the Royal family, a court heard today


By Sam Marsden
5:56PM GMT 18 Mar 2013
Equipping themselves with a samurai sword, body bags, balaclavas and gaffer tape, two men drove 230 miles to Devon to search for the wealthy young soul singer’s home.

Handwritten notes found in the pair’s possession referred to Stone as “a she-devil” and outlined a plan to decapitate her before dumping her body in a river, Exeter Crown Court was told.

However, they were arrested near the star’s house before they could execute their plot after first crashing their small Fiat Punto on the way to Devon and then arousing suspicion among “eagle-eyed” locals when they got lost.

Kevin Liverpool, left, and Junior Bradshaw in the dock at Exeter Crown Court (PA)

Kevin Liverpool, 35, and Junior Bradshaw, 32, allegedly targeted Stone, 25, in 2011 after she performed at charity concerts attended by the Duke of Cambridge and was a guest at his wedding to the then-Kate Middleton.


The notes found by police expressed “disapproval” of the Queen and other Royals, the court heard.

Simon Morgan, prosecuting, said: "Joss Stone associates with members of the Royal family.

“Her concerts have been attended by members of it and she was invited to the Royal wedding at the very end of April that year. Hence she became a target.”

The pair researched Stone by watching a programme she made about her previous home in Devon for a series on the MTV channel called Cribs, in which celebrities invite a camera crew to look around their palatial houses, the court heard.

Mr Liverpool also used a computer in his local library to Google information about her and other stars.

The prosecutor said: "The notebook deals with music artists. Perhaps he wasn't sure whom to choose but he settled on Joss Stone.

“He found out quite a bit about her. He knew she had made money. He obviously decided to concentrate on her."

In 2008 Stone moved to a house in Ashill, near Cullompton in Devon. Her worldwide touring schedule meant she was often away, but she was at home when Mr Liverpool and Mr Bradshaw allegedly sought to carry out their murderous plot.

Stone, whose hits include Fell In Love With A Boy and Super Duper Love, first came to fame in 2003 as a small-town teenager with a big, soulful voice, showcased on her bestselling debut album "The Soul Sessions".

Her fortune was estimated at £10 million in last year’s Sunday Times Rich List.

Mr Liverpool and Mr Bradshaw deny charges of conspiracy to murder, conspiracy to cause grievous bodily harm and conspiracy to rob between January and June 2011.

The trial continues.

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by Gazza on Mar 18th, 2013 at 5:30pm
Keith still taking that 'paltry honour' thing of Jagger's a bit badly, it seems.....

Title: Re: The SuperHeavy Thread
Post by lavendar on Mar 20th, 2013 at 10:42am
Idiots Abound- I hope they catch the rest.

HELP!

PITBULL n Christina A have a "NEW" song,
A video was dated November of 2012!?

??????????? Something about a Moment (Giggle)

SUPERHEAVYs' "ENERGY" is similar to that genre of Music !

Lost #
:nooslajaleisk Hmmmm

:noslajaleisk

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