StickyStones wrote on Oct 10
th, 2010 at 6:42am:
Is it just me or was Mick Taylor "underused" while in the Stones? What I mean is, in the studio, he really only shines or is given room to display his talents on ballads like Sway and Time Waits for No One. But live, he seemed to turn the faster, harder, more ''rocky'' songs into just plain awesomeness. Look at how he shined on for example "Street Fighting Man" in the '72 and '73 tours--He totally transformed that song from an experimental psychedelic anthem into a stadium rock climatic anthem full of fury and epic solos. I think had they actually let him play solos over their harder songs it would've been magical. Imagine how Hand of Fate, for example, might've sounded had he stuck around another year, or how Brown Sugar might've sounded with a Mick solo instead of the Sax, or what he could've done with Gimme Shelter.
And I still wish the band had re-recorded Street Fighting Man the way it was played on those tours--To be honest I prefer it to the studio version. It's much more raw and angry live on those tours. It almost comes off as proto-punk rock in the '72 and '73 versions of it..
The guy was like a '70s version of Slash (from Guns N' Roses) and he could've helped the Stones create some really hard rock epics on the scale of Free Bird or Ten Years Gone (by Zeppelin).
Fortunately, they didn't. Taylor was a wonderful musician but thankfully there's a lot more to the Stones' canon than epic-length guitar wankery.
You really think that the studio cuts of 'Brown Sugar' and (especially) 'Gimme Shelter' can be improved upon?
There are a few alternate versions of both tracks in circulation. In the case of 'Brown Sugar', some without the sax.
The Stones picked the best versions for release. No question. Maybe it's a case of over-familiarity breeding contempt, but those two records are perfect as they are. In fact, the studio version of 'Gimme Shelter' is IMO the single greatest thing they've ever done.