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Message started by Edith Grove on May 12th, 2015 at 12:33pm

Title: The hidden history of how the Rolling Stones pulled off their legendary secret El Mocambo show
Post by Edith Grove on May 12th, 2015 at 12:33pm
The hidden history of how the Rolling Stones pulled off their legendary secret El Mocambo show

Dave Bidini | May 12, 2015




This summer, the Rolling Stones will play selected dates in the U.S. and Canada, but long before they were a touring colossus grinding from stadium to stadium, they were nimble enough to surprise. In 1977 in Toronto they recorded a live album at the El Mocambo. They could have bolted the doors, drawn the curtains and mixed in the wild cries later. They could have played it, faked it, then left before anyone knew. But instead, they kept the event secret until right before it happened: the biggest rock and roll band on the planet playing a small club and recording a live album; shows unannounced, yet filled with fans who deserved to be there.

Mick Jagger and his manager, Peter Rudge, did some scouting, looking at this club here, that club there. Then, one afternoon in fall, 1976, they settled at a table in the Windsor Arms. Duff Roman happened to be there, too.

“I saw Mick and Peter Rudge walk in,” remembers Roman, the visionary behind CHUM FM, Canada’s first AOR (album-oriented rock) station. (Roman also has the distinction of producing the first ever sessions by Levon and the Hawks, who soon became The Band.) “I tried to play it cool, and wrote a message on my CHUM FM business card that said, ‘I’m here if you need anything.’ I called the waiter over and had him take it to Mick and Peter’s table. Rudge looked at it first and then Mick wanted to see. After awhile, they looked over and I nodded, smiled and pointed. Then they left. It was months before I heard from them again.”


https://youtu.be/MCqYWDsklVk



Rudge called CHUM FM and told Roman what he was thinking: a secret, two-night engagement at the El Mocambo filled with diehard fans who would have to be directed there via ruse so that the club not become overrun by thousands.


“He asked me, ‘Do you think you can pull it off?’ ” remembers Roman. “I told him that we could and then started thinking about how we could actually do it without anyone knowing.” The Stones hadn’t performed in six months — the notorious, ragged, bloated spectacle of their 1975 tour (as well as some shows in ’76) had been finally been ashed — and the pop music world debated the band’s next move. Altamont, “Cocksucker Blues” and riots in Vancouver had rolled under them, and Keith Richards, the band’s main guitarist, had been dogged by rumours of near-fatal drug abuse.

Dave “Blue” Bluestein was the El Mo’s booker. He staged a plan to book April Wine for March 4-5, 1977, as a smokescreen. “We had natural cover,” he says, “because if anything got out, we could say, ‘No, look, April Wine is playing. That’s the gig. It says so right here,’ ” he says, pointing to an imaginary calendar. “Another band was added to the April Wine shows called ‘The Cockroaches,’ which was The Stones’ alias. On the day of the first show, the band rehearsed upstairs and soundchecked for the live recording.”

People who passed by on Spadina Avenue outside thought they were hearing a Stones cover band rehearsing their repertoire. It was preposterous to think it would be the actual band, in Toronto, playing in the middle of the day.

“The plan that we constructed,” says Roman, “was to have a contest: ‘What would you do to see the Rolling Stones play live?’ This way we could select the 300 top entries and guarantee that real fans would be there for the event. The prize would be a chance to see April Wine at the El Mocambo. People wrote in and we cherry-picked the best ones. As you might expect, there were lots of nude Polaroids. When the band came in to judge the winners, they slipped the photos into their pockets and took them home.”

After the winners were selected, CHUM FM hired a dozen TTC buses and instructed fans to meet at the radio station on Yonge Street, where they’d be shipped to the show. “I got on the mic on one of the buses and said, ‘I have some bad news. There’s a change to the show tonight.’ People were disappointed and started to boo. I continued: ‘Along with April Wine, you’ll also be seeing a band called the Rolling … yes, the Rolling … the Rolling Stones!’ For a moment, people sat in utter bewilderment. Then there was a lot of cheering and shouting when they realized where they’d be going.”

The Stones had been in town for most of the week staying at the Harbour Castle Hilton, a residency not without its own drama or complications. In his superb new e-book about the event, Before They Make Me Run, music writer Jason Schneider tells how Keith Richards was busted for 26 grams of heroin in his hotel room. Schneider says: “In his statement, Keith disclosed he had been a heavy heroin user for four years and that he purchased the large quantity to maintain his habit for the five to six weeks he expected to be in Toronto. He also stated he’d tried to kick his habit several times, but could never complete treatment programs due to the Stones’ touring commitments. He concluded by claiming [girlfriend Anita] Pallenberg had no knowledge of his heroin stash, saying: ‘This is supposed to be daddy’s little secret.’ ”

Duff Roman remembers how “at about 7:30 p.m., all of the buses rolled down Avenue Street, came across College and, somehow, navigated behind the El Mo, in the alleyway, so no one would notice, and we could just spirit the fans in through the back door without creating a commotion or scene of any kind.” (The hulking Fedco mobile recording truck, operated by producer Eddie Kramer, was also parked there and that it was unreported is another organizational dint of luck.) “It was remarkable that it was all kept under wraps. No one knew about the show until after it ended, and fans started calling their friends.”

Blue had been told to keep the whole first floor of the club as the band’s dressing room. “When people say, ‘Margaret Trudeau was in the dressing room’ — which she was — you get the wrong impression, because there were a hundred other people there, too. It was a zoo,” he says.


https://youtu.be/Tnp292tpp3U



Perhaps Blue understates the impact Trudeau’s appearance had on international tabloids: the Prime Minister’s estranged wife partying with the most notorious of rock bands. When Pierre Trudeau was told about Maggie’s adventures, and how she’d emerged from the limo prior to the show alongside Mick Jagger, the PM sighed, “I hope that she doesn’t [also] start to see the Beatles.”

Roman and Blue remember that the shows were great, the band tight and the crowded excited, if respectful in the most Canadian way possible. But the legacy of the evening, and the next night, was how the city’s tastemakers, radio promo types, deejays, groupies, drug dealers, writers and fans who went to the show resisted telling others until the event had played itself out, a nearly unfathomable notion against our modern social media times, where first-mention and being on the inside is everything.

“There’s no way we could have pulled this off now,” says Roman. “But back then, there was almost a shared sense of being together, witnessing what people were witnessing — a concert by a stadium band to 300 people in a club — without having to share it, or tell others. History was happening, but that it was happening was enough. It didn’t have to be all immediately announced. It could just be lived and experienced, and, look, it’s an unbelievable thing that happened. In our city. In our time.”


http://news.nationalpost.com/arts/music/the-hidden-history-of-how-the-rolling-stones-pulled-of-their-legendary-secret-el-mocambo-show

Title: Re: The hidden history of how the Rolling Stones pulled off their legendary secret El Mocambo show
Post by nankerphelge on May 12th, 2015 at 9:29pm
That's awesome.

Cant even imagine.

Title: Re: The hidden history of how the Rolling Stones pulled off their legendary secret El Mocambo show
Post by gypsymofo60 on May 13th, 2015 at 1:04am
I've got a supposed complete boot (very good quality), I love the interaction between Jagger and the audience. " "Lil' Margaret 'ow are Ya?" " Got plenty ta drink?" "Where's  Billy?" "Billy's very open for offers. I wouldn't say 'e was up for grabs; just open for offers." "Ollie Brown is dead open!"

Sorry folks, couldn't help myself.

Title: Re: The hidden history of how the Rolling Stones pulled off their legendary secret El Mocambo show
Post by WaiteringOnAFiend on May 13th, 2015 at 1:30am
The 'Stroke Me, Darling' Days

Title: Re: The hidden history of how the Rolling Stones pulled off their legendary secret El Mocambo show
Post by LadyJane on May 13th, 2015 at 4:52am
Great read EG.

I remember all of this going down and me following it via my transistor radio. I could get CHUM FM if I stood in the attic with antenna pointed towards Canada!!!!

Title: Re: The hidden history of how the Rolling Stones pulled off their legendary secret El Mocambo show
Post by nankerphelge on May 13th, 2015 at 7:00am
Didn't your parents wonder what the fuck you were doing in the attic?

It's a mystery!!



Title: Re: The hidden history of how the Rolling Stones pulled off their legendary secret El Mocambo show
Post by LadyJane on May 13th, 2015 at 7:09am
Howe did you know I have the entire Nancy Drew collection?
Dad was clueless.
Mom, however, may have been onto "The Mysterious Sweet Smell Blowing Out The Attic Window" :smoking

Title: Re: The hidden history of how the Rolling Stones pulled off their legendary secret El Mocambo show
Post by nankerphelge on May 13th, 2015 at 7:39am
I was more an Encyclopedia Jones type.

I knew that smoke as an aerosol, tended not to disperse rapidly in confined environs. 

If we use X' as the speed of smell, and 3/4R(x2x y2 x z2) as the differential of dissipation of aerosols where R is the "weed coefficient" that takes into account the thickness or "sweetness" if you will of the particular strain, and x and y and z are the measurements of the attic, then the speed if dissipation can be determined.

I was unwilling to do that with R 12 weed and an attic that wa roughly 1000 cubic feet, and a father that was an ex-Marine.

That's just good math.

Title: Re: The hidden history of how the Rolling Stones pulled off their legendary secret El Mocambo show
Post by LadyJane on May 13th, 2015 at 7:57am
Oh Nanky; once a geek......................... :aimama

Title: Re: The hidden history of how the Rolling Stones pulled off their legendary secret El Mocambo show
Post by Edith Grove on May 13th, 2015 at 9:25am
R 12 weed ??

Doesn't that shit fuck with the ozone layer ?

Title: Re: The hidden history of how the Rolling Stones pulled off their legendary secret El Mocambo show
Post by nankerphelge on May 13th, 2015 at 2:53pm
Yes.

Yes it does.

Title: Re: The hidden history of how the Rolling Stones pulled off their legendary secret El Mocambo show
Post by gypsymofo60 on May 13th, 2015 at 5:06pm

WaiteringOnAFiend wrote on May 13th, 2015 at 1:30am:
The 'Stroke Me, Darling' Days

"Ronnie Wood's gay." "And ol' Bum's rush Jagger 'ere."

Title: Re: The hidden history of how the Rolling Stones pulled off their legendary secret El Mocambo show
Post by Pdog on May 14th, 2015 at 12:11am
I really hope they officially release the full show.

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