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GENERAL >> MAIN BOARD >> Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting for http://rocksoff.org/cgi-bin/messageboard/YaBB.pl?num=1320469435 Message started by moy on Nov 5th, 2011 at 12:03am |
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Title: Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting for Post by moy on Nov 5th, 2011 at 12:03am
November 4, 2011, 10:08 PM
Postcard From Alabama: Playing for the Stones, Rooting for the Tide By MARQUAVIUS BURNETT http://thequad.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/11/04/postcard-from-alabama-playing-for-the-stones-rooting-for-the-tide/ TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Chuck Leavell has traveled the world with the Rolling Stones, but he still calls Tuscaloosa home. And he still counts himself as a die-hard fan of Alabama football. Steve Pope/European Pressphoto Agency Chuck Leavell, the keyboardist for the Rolling Stones, is a lifelong Alabama fan. “You can’t be from Tuscaloosa and not be a Crimson Tide fan,” Leavell said in a telephone interview Friday. As a piano player, Leavell has worked with musicians from the Allman Brothers and George Harrison to John Mayer. For nearly 30 years, he has performed with the Rolling Stones. His position in the group has grown from being a supporting player to helping arrange set lists for concerts. He is sometimes referred to as the fifth Stone. “It’s a circus and it’s so much fun,” Leavell said of life with the band. “It’s a crazy, wacky, weird, almost surreal-like circus to be with these guys.” Leavell says his career makes him “feel like the luckiest guy in the world,” but there is still nothing like an Alabama game in his mind, and he plans to be at Bryant-Denny Stadium on Saturday. Leavell was born in Birmingham, and his family moved to Tuscaloosa when he was 9. They lived across the street from a family that was friendly with Joe Namath, the star Alabama quarterback. Leavell and a friend would often hide in the bushes to catch a glimpse of Namath when he came over for barbecues. Leavell remembers the program’s glory days under Bear Bryant well, and he says he sees a lot of similarities in the way Nick Saban coaches. “I think Saban is brilliant,” he said. “He’s a disciplinarian. He’s very hands-on. I think he instructs players and he works them hard. He does it similar to what the Bear did, hard work with a lot of love.” Marquavius Burnett is a junior at the University of Alabama and an assistant sports editor at The Crimson White, the student newspaper. |
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Title: Re: Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting Post by moy on Nov 5th, 2011 at 12:11am
TRAVELER'S TALENOVEMBER 5, 2011
A Rock 'n' Roll Tour de Forest By CHUCK LEAVELL Illustration by Hadley Hooper for The Wall Street Journal Rolling Stones pianist Chuck Leavell is a tree farmer. As the most recent Rolling Stones tour, "A Bigger Bang," drew to a close in the summer of 2007, I started to ponder what I would do afterwards. We had toured for exactly two years, playing some 147 shows across the world. There'd been the halftime show at Super Bowl XL in Detroit, the concert with more than 1.5 million attendees in Rio de Janeiro. We had filmed "Shine a Light" at the Beacon Theater in New York, with Martin Scorsese directing. Our last three shows, at the O2 Arena in London, the Stones' backyard, were completely sold out. By all accounts, it was a wildly successful tour, and having it come to an end was pretty sad. Over the years we—musicians, technicians, stage hands and the crew—had formed strong bonds; our families had even grown close. Now we would be dispersing to parts unknown and might not be reunited for years. But it was time to move on—and I have to admit that the prospect of not having to pack a bag almost every night was mighty appealing. While I was road-weary, I wasn't, however, quite done with my rambling. I had arranged to do my own short tour of Europe, "Green Leaves and Blue Notes." I was jazzed about shifting to my own groove. The tour would take place mostly in Germany, and I wouldn't just be performing; there would also be a media outreach effort on behalf of local forest landowners. It may seem like an odd fit for a rock 'n' roll piano player, but my wife, Rose Lane, and I are tree farmers. Decades ago, she inherited about 1,000 acres in Georgia from her grandmother. The family has been connected to the land for generations, farming, tending forests and raising cattle, so I took our responsibilities seriously—and discovered a passion for it. Our forests give us so much: materials for homes, schools, books—my piano! In the mid-1980s, between Rolling Stones tours, I found myself studying practical forestry, and we've grown Charlane Plantation into a 2,500-acre family forest. So call me crazy, but I was excited to be talking trees in Germany. I played a concert at Bundestag, the German parliament, meeting afterwards with ministers and politicians to discuss forestry and environmental issues. I visited the property of Mathias Graf von Westphalen, a farmer who was experimenting with growing trees for biofuel and powered his farm equipment with oil made from his own rapeseed. His wind turbines generated enough energy for his needs—plus enough extra to power a small village. The more time I spent in beautiful, carefully tended family forests, the more I thought about the resources we have in America, and of the environmental challenges we all face. I recalled the metropolises I'd visited with the Stones—places like São Paulo and Mexico City—heavily populated, clogged with traffic jams and mostly devoid of green space. In recent years, America has replaced some 2 million acres of natural land annually with buildings and other structures, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Once concrete and asphalt are poured, it's near impossible to go back. We're not going to stop putting up homes and stores and offices. But the Germany trip opened my eyes to the possibility of well-managed growth. I saw homes made from renewable materials, neighborhoods sprinkled with bike trails and green spaces, thoughtfully designed communities. When I returned to Charlane Plantation, my first priority was spending time with family and on my own soil. But my thoughts kept returning to my German epiphany. I started reading books about smart development; I investigated innovative transportation options and green energy sources. I recruited my friend J. Marshall Craig to help me with a book about how we can grow in wiser ways. Then my old pal Joel Babbit reached out to me about starting an environmental website, the Mother Nature Network MNN. I never thought I'd be a tech entrepreneur, but rock 'n' roll can take you on some very unexpected journeys. —Mr. Leavell has played with the Rolling Stones, Eric Clapton, George Harrison, John Mayer and others. He is the author, most recently, of "Growing a Better America." |
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Title: Re: Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting Post by Child of the Moon on Nov 5th, 2011 at 12:50am
He needs to go away.
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Title: Re: Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting Post by glimmertwinfan on Nov 5th, 2011 at 4:38am
5th Stone? Please. Give me a break.
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Title: Re: Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting Post by Paranoid Android on Nov 5th, 2011 at 7:44am
"helping arrange the set lists for concerts.."
:shutthefuckup :shutthefuckup |
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Title: Re: Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting Post by steel driving hammer on Nov 5th, 2011 at 8:30am
He's a good man but has no feeling whatsoever in his playing.
Way too standard of a piano player. |
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Title: Re: Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting Post by Edith Grove on Nov 5th, 2011 at 1:17pm
So, Chuck likes 'Bama ?
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Title: Re: Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting Post by gotdablouse on Nov 5th, 2011 at 8:38pm
Chuck Sux
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Title: Re: Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting Post by corgi37 on Nov 6th, 2011 at 7:56am
The 5th Stone? My ass.
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Title: Re: Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting Post by riffkeither on Nov 6th, 2011 at 8:29am
I'll never forget his counting !
i hope he was pay for this instead of being the 5th Stones .... :kissmyass :kissmyass :kissmyass :kissmyass :kissmyass :kissmyass :kissmyass :kissmyass :kissmyass :kissmyass :kissmyass Remember Nicky NickyHopkins.jpg (Attachment deleted) |
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Title: Re: Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting Post by Gazza on Nov 6th, 2011 at 10:43am
Jesus, get over it, folks. The '5th Stone' was the journalist's quote. Not his.
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Title: Re: Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting Post by corgi37 on Nov 7th, 2011 at 4:02am
You are right. I feel better now.
Now i just think of his little shuffle and bow when Jagger introduces Leavell. Argh, i hate him again! |
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Title: Re: Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting Post by steel driving hammer on Nov 7th, 2011 at 6:28am Gazza wrote on Nov 6th, 2011 at 10:43am:
We don't "Get Over" Stones you bastards. [smiley=vrolijk_26.gif] |
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Title: Re: Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting Post by sweetcharmedlife on Nov 9th, 2011 at 6:49pm Edith Grove wrote on Nov 5th, 2011 at 1:17pm:
That didn't work out too well for him saturday night did it? :retarded |
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Title: Re: Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting Post by Bitch on Nov 10th, 2011 at 11:12pm
I dont know why Chuck gets to do the setlist. It makes no sense. Surely THE STONES are more than capable of completing this important task!! What makes Chuck an expert on this? The Stones cant decide which of their songs to play? That's ridiculous.
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Title: Re: Chuck Leavell Playing for the Stones, Rooting Post by The Wick on Nov 11th, 2011 at 2:20am
He HELPS with the setlist. It doesn't say he picks all the songs. Besides, he probably helps because he gives more of a toss about what songs they do than Mick or Keith.
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