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Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year (Read 46,512 times)
Some Guy
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #225 - Sep 4th, 2020 at 5:23pm
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #226 - Sep 4th, 2020 at 5:32pm
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All the Rage is too nasally, it grates
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #227 - Sep 4th, 2020 at 6:15pm
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #228 - Sep 4th, 2020 at 11:30pm
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All the Rage was great. Was expecting to be let down, but it's always great to hear more of this guy  taylor made smile

The bridge seems like what a lot of the 90s alternative/rock Stones influenced bands were going for melodically.

Mick's vocal sounds like he's trying too hard to sound like he did at the time, unlike Plundered My Soul. Still, it sounds wonderful overall and is probably my favorite of the 3.
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #229 - Sep 5th, 2020 at 9:44am
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The remix of Scarlet by The Killers and Jacques Lu Cont is a small revelation.  There really was a missed opportunity here to slow the song down a bit in a re-recording, turning it into an uptempo Soul ballad.  A role reversal of black groups covering a Stones song might have followed.

The same remix let us better imagine how Scarlet might have sounded as recorded with that Brazilian group - coming off a bit like one of Paul Simon's 1970s experiments with SA riddims.  Wouldn't have been a bad thing.

Either way, or in a tweaking of the original recording, this song points more toward the Stones of the IORR album than of GHS.  The production on the original version certainly reminds one of the method of accreting overdubs onto a demo tat was used to build up the title track of IORR.   
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« Last Edit: Sep 5th, 2020 at 9:46am by andrews27 »  

That guy that punched Mick at Altamont...and all the Hell's Angels...all that bad acid let them hear A Bigger Bang!!
 
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #230 - Sep 5th, 2020 at 9:57am
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Mick Jagger on 'Goats Head Soup,' unreleased Rolling Stones songs: 'Some of them should be left alone forever'
Patrick Ryan USA TODAY
Published 3:14 PM EDT Sep 4, 2020

If Mick Jagger had his way, the "Goats Head Soup" album cover would've been a lot more literal.

This week, the Rolling Stones' Twitter account shared alternate artwork for the band's 1973 album, which was re-released Friday. Among the prospective covers: a goat peering out from a simmering pot, nodding to the album's Jamaican origins. (It was mostly recorded in Jamaica, where the soup, known as "mannish water," is a delicacy.)

"The goat's head was my idea and it didn't really work out," Jagger tells USA TODAY. "The record company didn't like it, so we went with the more user-friendly portraits of the band in the end."



"Goats Head Soup" was first released a year after "Exile on Main St.," which is now regarded as one of the Stones' best albums. "Goats" was met with mixed reviews from critics, but still managed to spawn a No. 1 hit in "Angie." The reissue features three lost songs by the rockers: "Criss Cross," "All the Rage" and "Scarlet," featuring Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page.

Jagger, 77, called us up to chat about new music, lockdown and working with Page.


Question: Like 1972's “Exile on Main St.,” critics have started to come around on “Goats Head Soup” in recent years. What does the album mean to you?

Mick Jagger: I think there's some good things on it. It's quite varied. The lead-off track ("Angie") is a very wistful ballad with strings on it, and couldn't have been more different from what had come before on "Exile." The rest of the album is nothing like that – that's the only track that goes in that direction. You've got "Heartbreaker," a social comment that unfortunately is still a bit true these days. There's some Billy Preston-led stuff (like "100 Years Ago") and straight rock riffs like "Dancing with Mr. D." I don't really listen to the Stones albums as albums. I just listen to the songs individually, so I'm not sure where it stands.

Q: So if I'm correct, you recorded "Scarlet" with Jimmy Page in Keith Richards' basement?

Jagger: It was Ronnie (Woods') basement – I don't remember Keith ever having a basement. (Laughs.) I don't remember doing this particular version of it at all, but when I spoke to Jimmy, he remembered the session and talked me through it. And I said, "Yeah, OK. I believe you, Jimmy." So that one got out and dusted, and you know, it sounds good. I like the way Jimmy plays, and Jimmy and Keith play well together on that. I didn't do much to it – I added a little bit of percussion and did some vocals at the end of the track, when it starts to fade out. There's a bit more shouting at the end.

Q: Paul Mescal from Hulu's "Normal People" stars in the "Scarlet" video. Have you watched that show?

Jagger: Oh, yeah, I watched "Normal People." Yeah, yeah. It was good. It was funny and poignant and a very successful show in the U.K. Very enjoyable.


Q: You've talked a lot about "Scarlet" and "Criss Cross" in the lead-up to this release, but what's the story behind "All the Rage?"

Jagger: I think we recorded that in Jamaica. It's lots of Mick Taylor playing some very nice guitar, Keith does his intros, and there weren't really any finished vocals on it. It was just me trying to figure something out. We probably did it a couple times and then never finished, so it was never released. So when the record company said they wanted to release this album, they sent me these three tracks. Because the mixes sounded so horrible, I had to get the master tracks and see what was there really.

When I did the vocals (for the reissue), I tried to get the feel of the period. I listened to some of the other tracks and tried to get a feel for what I was sounding like (back then) because otherwise it doesn't fit in right. But I like ("All the Rage"). The whole band plays really well on it, and Mick is pretty standout.

Q: In the process of putting together this reissue, did you discover more unfinished Stones material that you’d like to get out there at some point?

Jagger: I only listened to stuff pertaining to this album. I didn't listen to any other stuff. Every Stones album has stuff that's not finished or was for some reason left by the wayside. In retrospect, some of them are great, some of them are medium, some of them should be left alone forever. (Laughs.) And there are some good things. I mean, "Criss Cross" was a really good track that was finished. I don't know why it wasn't used on the (original) album. But there's lots of things that were in the vault that are still to come out.

Q: How's the new album coming along?

Jagger: I'm doing a lot of writing and I finished off a lot of tracks that we recorded. We'll see how it goes when we get together. The last (six) months, it's been quite hard to get together and studios aren't really open much. But we hope to get together soon and get on with it. I would really like if it was finished by the end of the year.

Q: You fast-tracked the release of “Living in a Ghost Town” because of its relevance to the pandemic. Are there other new songs inspired by or related to current events?

Jagger: They're all, to some extent, inspired by what's going on. But they're not quite so on the nose as "Ghost Town." I think one like that's enough. What you write reflects the times you're living in, so lyrically, I think they'll all be somewhat influenced without being obvious.

Q: How have you been holding up in lockdown?

Jagger: I've been in the country most of the time, which is pretty unusual for me. I've enjoyed being in nature because I'm really a townie and I haven't been in a town since March 15th. But I've read a lot, done a lot of walking and watched probably a little bit too much TV late at night. But I've been working and writing, too, so I've been quite satisfied with that creatively.

https://eu.usatoday.com/story/entertainment/music/2020/09/03/mick-jagger-talks-g...
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #231 - Sep 5th, 2020 at 9:59am
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Steel Wheels wrote on Sep 3rd, 2020 at 12:46pm:



Could you copy and paste the text? Every time I go to read it, after a few seconds most of it disappears and it asks me to subscribe if I want to read the whole thing. Thanks.
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #232 - Sep 5th, 2020 at 10:13am
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BILL PERKS wrote on Sep 4th, 2020 at 5:32pm:
All the Rage is too nasally, it grates


Is it the re-recorded vocal, or is it the digital mastering?  Because I'm already unhappy with the strident sound on disc 2 of my FLAC download, and can't wait to compare the Japanese version.
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That guy that punched Mick at Altamont...and all the Hell's Angels...all that bad acid let them hear A Bigger Bang!!
 
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #233 - Sep 5th, 2020 at 10:19am
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Gazza wrote on Sep 5th, 2020 at 9:59am:
Steel Wheels wrote on Sep 3rd, 2020 at 12:46pm:



Could you copy and paste the text? Every time I go to read it, after a few seconds most of it disappears and it asks me to subscribe if I want to read the whole thing. Thanks.


Mick Jagger and Keith Richards on ‘Goats Head Soup,’ Life in Lockdown, and Why They’ll Never Quit
The Rolling Stones revisit one of their most misunderstood LPs for an epic reissue – and tell us what it would take for them to get onstage again
By
Patrick Doyle

Mick Jagger got a call from his label recently with some news: While working on a reissue of the Rolling Stones’ 1973 album Goats Head Soup, the crew found some unreleased tracks. “I remember thinking, ‘Oh, no,’” Jagger says. “Unreleased tracks, to me that always means a lot of work. It’s like, ‘Things that you didn’t like and didn’t finish!’”
Jagger’s mind changed when he heard the music. “Actually, it’s not bad at all,” he says. Soon, isolating at his home in the European countryside, he wrote new lyrics to “All the Rage,” a rocker he’d started writing 47 years earlier. “You finish [tracks] like you would if you recorded them last week,” says Jagger. “ ‘Where are my maracas? Surely I must have my maracas around here.’”

Goats Head Soup emerged from a period of deep uncertainty for the Stones. After their successful tour for Exile on Main Street, they’d splintered across the world; a few months later, in late 1972, they reconvened in Kingston, Jamaica, to cut a set of dark grooves that sounded like nothing they’d ever released. There were drony experiments (“Can You Hear the Music?”), strung-out ballads (“Coming Down Again”), and snarling rockers (“Dancing With Mr. D”). Critics didn’t like it at the time, and the Stones quickly dropped many of the songs from their live set. “It’s not an album that’s revered as much as Exile on Main Street in people’s minds,” says Jagger. “I suppose including me.”

Keith Richards remembers exactly where he was when he started writing the album’s biggest hit earlier that year: in the bathroom of a rehab clinic in Switzerland, where he’d gone to kick his heroin addiction. After three of the most painful days of his life, a melody came to him and grew into “Angie,” a tender ballad inspired in part by the name of his newborn daughter with Anita Pallenberg.

Jagger knew “Angie” was a hit as soon as he heard it while visiting Richards in Switzerland, where he’d arrived with his own set of songs. After a decade of close collaboration, Jagger and Richards were living in separate countries. Richards had fled Nellcôte, his home in the South of France, due to a drug bust; the bandmates’ U.S. visas had expired; and they could no longer live in England due to tax issues. “When we cut Exile, we were still in each other’s pockets,” Richards says. “By the time of Goats Head, Mick had married Bianca. Charlie was living in France. In other words, we had become exiles. We were all over the place. Mick and I had to learn to write stuff apart.”

They chose to record in Jamaica in part because “it was one of the few places that would let us in,” Richards says, not entirely kidding. With Billy Preston joining them on piano, the band “worked like maniacs” from midnight to 10 a.m., says Richards. Jagger jokes that the Stones may be the only band to make an album in Jamaica with “not the slightest influence of reggae on any of the tracks.” Instead, he notes the funky combination of Richards’ and Mick Taylor’s guitars with Preston’s electric piano: “The fashion at that time was playing that clavinet with the wah-wah stuff,” he says. “It’s not Herbie Hancock, but it gives it that certain push.”

The Stones knocked out the basic tracks for Goats Head Soup in a week. On the new box set, you can hear them let loose on an instrumental jam for “Dancing With Mr. D,” featuring guitarist Mick Taylor’s piercing slide attack. There’s also an early version of “Heartbreaker,” featuring Preston and pianist Nicky Hopkins pounding away over the song’s hypnotic horn line. “Of course Billy Preston was in there, as well as Nicky Hopkins and Ian Stewart,” Richards says. “We had this funk thing going that hadn’t dawned on me so much until I re-heard it recently.”

The sessions had a spontaneous feel: “A lot of tracks weren’t worked out much before we got in there,” Richards adds. “Some of them are maybe an hour old.” One of his favorite songs is “Winter,” which he calls “a Mick beauty.” Jagger wrote the song about missing a lover while stuck in the countryside. Taylor, who left the band a year later, provides a searing, melodic solo. “I always liked the way Mick picked out those pretty melodies around the tunes,” Jagger says. “He was very good at that sort of thing.”

The next summer, when Goats Head came out, “Angie” went to Number One, putting the Stones back on the charts alongside David Bowie and Elton John. Jagger told Rolling Stone at the time that the new album was more focused than Exile, but he won’t go that far today. “I say stupid things like that when I’m promoting albums,” he says now. “You gotta take that with a pinch of salt.”

Richards sees Goats Head as the beginning to an important chapter in his life, when he fell in love with Jamaica. “That was ’73, the year Marley and the Wailers put out Catch a Fire. That’s also the year the soundtrack of The Harder They Come came out. I remember being in Jamaica, there was a feeling in the air. Jamaica was starting to make a mark on the map. After the sessions, I just moved back and I stayed there for months.” Richards bought a house on the island’s north coast. “And that’s where I met all the guys and eventually turned up on the Wingless Angels,” he continues, mentioning the reggae group he’d go on to release an album with in 1997. “It became my second home, you know.”

When 2020 began, the Stones were looking forward to a big tour. With those dates off due to Covid-19, they’ve been staying busy in other ways. At his home in Europe, Jagger has been working on documentary projects, plus writing new music and keeping in shape. “I’ve been singing quite a lot, and I’ve been exercising quite a lot, so I’m keeping that bit together,” he says. “I’m not in such a bad position. Can’t feel sorry for yourself. But yeah, I miss performing.”

“I really enjoyed that last tour, it was a great trek,” Richards says of the band’s 2019 dates, which came just weeks after Jagger had heart surgery. Still, the singer proved he was in top form, and the band played rarities like “Harlem Shuffle” and “She’s a Rainbow,” ending the tour with a dramatic, rain-drenched gig in Miami. “I was very disappointed in March when we said, ‘Uh oh, this thing’s looking bad,” Richards says. “A week later, they started to say, ‘We’ll cancel the first few gigs.’ And I said, ‘I have a feeling. Nah, this thing’s too big for us. It’s too big for anybody, you know?”

The guitarist has been hunkered down at home in Connecticut this summer. “It’s not very often, we do go drift out and stop by a sidewalk cafe,” he says. He, of course, wears a mask. “Oh yeah, I’m a masked man,” he says. “I mean, it’s what you have to do. I wear mine in bed!” He’s been listening to Bob Dylan’s Rough & Rowdy Ways (“Bless old Bob. I mean, I love his new album, man”) and working on new music himself. In late April, the Stones released “Living in a Ghost Town,” their first original release since 2012. “We had it in the can,” Richards says. “I spoke to Mick around March. I said, ‘Hey man, if there’s a time to put this one out, it’s now, you know.'”

Jagger says that song “was part of a group of songs we’d recorded quite recently. It just seemed to fit the times. When I went back to my lyric book and looked at it, it was a song about being a ghost after a plague. Obviously I threw in a few more current lines, and then redid some of the vocals and I redid bits of my guitar and stuff. Now I’m singing on some of the other ones that we did from that time period, finishing those off, too.”

The band is considering putting those songs out soon. “I think we have five, six, or seven tracks we’ve slowly been putting together,” Richards says. “Right now, seeing if this thing’s going to go on, maybe we should think about putting them out in another way.”

Jagger wonders about future of live music, especially in the U.S. “The larger point, really, is — in the short, medium, and long term — how is everyone that performs live going to function in the future? We don’t know. In Europe, we’ve had small-scale concerts. We’ve had socially-distanced concerts. You can see [concerts] starting in some parts of the world — New Zealand, Australia and so on. But … as far as the U.S. is concerned, we don’t really know what the future holds. So many people are out of work, losing money. Is it ever going to be the same again? Will it be always different? We just don’t know at the moment.”

Jagger says he’s looking forward to stepping onstage with the band again, whenever it happens. “We might be playing to very few people,” he says. “Even though we might be lucky enough to have sold tickets, we might not be able to play to them all at once.” He says he’s open to the Stones playing a socially-distanced concert: “Yeah, I suppose if that was the way of the world, of course.”

Richards has his eyes on the future, too. “I hope, like everybody else, there’s a very good vaccine as soon as possible,” he says. “And a change of regime wouldn’t be bad. Let’s leave it at that, man.”

Retirement is still not an option for the band, he adds. “You might call it a habit,” he says of playing live. “I mean, that’s what we do. And also there’s that thing between us, like, ‘Who’s going to be the first one to get off the bus?’ You have to be kicked off or drop off, right? So it’s like that. I really can’t imagine doing anything else.”

In 2022, the Stones will be celebrating the 60th anniversary of their first shows. Richards hopes it’s an occasion they mark onstage. “I hope we’re all there, man,” he says. “It’s something to look forward to.”
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« Last Edit: Sep 5th, 2020 at 10:24am by andrews27 »  

That guy that punched Mick at Altamont...and all the Hell's Angels...all that bad acid let them hear A Bigger Bang!!
 
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #234 - Sep 5th, 2020 at 10:31am
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Thanks. Patrick Doyle seems to have been the 'go to' source for Stones interviews with Rolling Stone in recent years. Nice guy too.

He telephoned me about a Stones story I'd posted on here a couple of years ago and mentioned that he'd just done a phone interview with Keith - Keith had returned his call while he was driving.  I think I would have been shaking so much I'd have crashed into the nearest lamppost.
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #235 - Sep 5th, 2020 at 10:41am
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Gazza wrote on Sep 5th, 2020 at 10:31am:
Thanks. Patrick Doyle seems to have been the 'go to' source for Stones interviews with Rolling Stone in recent years. Nice guy too.

He telephoned me about a Stones story I'd posted on here a couple of years ago and mentioned that he'd just done a phone interview with Keith - Keith had returned his call while he was driving.  I think I would have been shaking so much I'd have crashed into the nearest lamppost.


Now that Keith brings up the clavinet-and-wah-wah sound of the period in the interview (Billy and Mick T on GHS), you can hear a bit of Stevie Wonder influence - or at least Stevie popularized that keyboard plus processed guitar thing on Superstition.

In its way, GHS is a more focused recording effort than the cross-continental road race that was Exile, but Jagger has to keep apologizing for it because of the slagging GHS took back then.
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That guy that punched Mick at Altamont...and all the Hell's Angels...all that bad acid let them hear A Bigger Bang!!
 
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #236 - Sep 5th, 2020 at 12:49pm
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BILL PERKS wrote on Sep 4th, 2020 at 5:32pm:
All the Rage is too nasally, it grates

WRONG...
PERKS we're all the rage! Take that noise to iorr.
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #237 - Sep 5th, 2020 at 1:00pm
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I once freaked out a religious Jamaican by showing her the graphic LP insert for GHS after she had fed me goat patties.  We were married at the time.
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That guy that punched Mick at Altamont...and all the Hell's Angels...all that bad acid let them hear A Bigger Bang!!
 
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #238 - Sep 7th, 2020 at 5:20am
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All the rage is ok. Bit disappointed at the PC lyrics but it rocks
Scarlet is a good song. The remixes suck

Honestly I’m just glad Criss Cross is officially released as cannon Stones song.  Great song always one of my favourite bootleg tracks!

Criss Cross best new song on the album IMO
(And the chick in the video is hot!)

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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #239 - Sep 8th, 2020 at 3:04am
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How beautiful is this? Vocals do sound like they were done more recently. Even if they were, it's even more impressive. If Mick can still take his voice back like that, I doubt any of his peers can even come close to doing it like this.

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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #240 - Sep 8th, 2020 at 4:31am
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Gazza wrote on Sep 4th, 2020 at 1:19pm:
Pdog wrote on Sep 3rd, 2020 at 11:08pm:
Gazza wrote on Feb 7th, 2020 at 4:52am:
I'm pretty sure that one of the London shows in 1973 was professionally filmed. I'm not sure why - maybe they'd tentatively planned it for TV or something. It was never used.

If so, surely this is the opportunity to release it commercially.

The audience recording from the afternoon show on 8th September is remarkable quality for 1973, and its probably up there as one of the top five Stones gigs I've ever heard.

I'm starting to get my hopes up for this package to ridiculous and probably overly optimistic levels of  expectation :

Cd 1 - remastered GHS
Cd 2 - outtakes
Cd 3 - live show from 1973 European tour
DVD - live show from 1973 European tour.

No pressure, guys....

Gazza wrote on Feb 7th, 2020 at 4:52am:
I'm pretty sure that one of the London shows in 1973 was professionally filmed. I'm not sure why - maybe they'd tentatively planned it for TV or something. It was never used.

If so, surely this is the opportunity to release it commercially.

The audience recording from the afternoon show on 8th September is remarkable quality for 1973, and its probably up there as one of the top five Stones gigs I've ever heard.

I'm starting to get my hopes up for this package to ridiculous and probably overly optimistic levels of  expectation :

Cd 1 - remastered GHS
Cd 2 - outtakes
Cd 3 - live show from 1973 European tour
DVD - live show from 1973 European tour.

No pressure, guys....



I'm tired and stupid, did we get a live show unreleased officially?
DVD/Audio
Goodnight  Tongue


https://therollingstonesshop.co.uk/*/*/Goats-Head-Soup-2020-Super-Deluxe-Box-Set...

Cd 1 - Original album
Cd 2 - outtakes, demos, alternate mixes
Cd 3  - reissue of the Brussels archive download that was first released in 2011
Cd 4 - Bluray audio
Dolby Atmos, 96kHz/24 bit high resolution stereo, and 96 kHz/24 bit DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 of the original album Original Videos: Dancing With Mr D, Silver Train & Angie


The first two discs are available as a regular price. The two extra discs are available as a super deluxe edition retailing for over $100.

The two extra remixes of 'Scarlet' are added to the download and streaming versions of disc 2


so disc 3 already came out a few years ago and i fail to see the need for disc 4 ...?

and you mean to say that after you paid a shitload of money for this you still do not get the remixes ?

does mick need a new car or something ?
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RIP Gary "Gazza" Galbraith - 30 May 1963 / 07 June 2024 - Forever missed.

Let the Good times Rolling Stones! - Proud member of Rocks off since 2001 ...
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #241 - Sep 8th, 2020 at 12:13pm
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The Wick wrote on Sep 8th, 2020 at 3:04am:
How beautiful is this? Vocals do sound like they were done more recently. Even if they were, it's even more impressive. If Mick can still take his voice back like that, I doubt any of his peers can even come close to doing it like this.



Sounds like 1972 vocal to me. Can understand the logic of putting modern day vocals on unfinished songs but it would be incomprehensible and utterly pointless to do so on a track which is marketed as a 'demo'

Its a gorgeous version, indeed.
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #242 - Sep 8th, 2020 at 12:15pm
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Scorching show from this date in 1973. Recorded by our friend Silver Dagger. Excellent sound quality for an audience tape from that era. One of the greatest Stones gigs ever.
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #243 - Sep 8th, 2020 at 12:21pm
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Keith was interviewed on the Zoe Ball Breakfast Show on BBC Radio 2 this morning

You can listen to it from the 2:03:29 mark to 2:23:42

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m000mb7q
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #244 - Sep 8th, 2020 at 4:30pm
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Gazza wrote on Sep 8th, 2020 at 12:13pm:
Sounds like 1972 vocal to me. Can understand the logic of putting modern day vocals on unfinished songs but it would be incomprehensible and utterly pointless to do so on a track which is marketed as a 'demo'


Well, it does give it the veneer of authenticity and more marketable in that sense. Upon further listens though, it does seem like from the time because All the Rage is clearly new and despite his best efforts, it's obviously not from the time. Whereas on the demo, it clearly is.

The fascinating thing about this track for me is that it's very much a song that an English band would write, but you add Billy Preston, and it has that funky overtone. The only band that can do that, sound good, and sound credible are the Stones.
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #245 - Sep 8th, 2020 at 5:41pm
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The Wick wrote on Sep 8th, 2020 at 3:04am:
How beautiful is this? Vocals do sound like they were done more recently. Even if they were, it's even more impressive. If Mick can still take his voice back like that, I doubt any of his peers can even come close to doing it like this.




This is my favorite "new" cut...No reason they cant play this song the way they do, for example, Worried About You or Memory Motel...Mick on the piano...the rest of the band chiming in a bit later on...it can be an easier smoother version than the album...
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #246 - Sep 8th, 2020 at 5:47pm
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Some Guy wrote on Sep 5th, 2020 at 12:49pm:
BILL PERKS wrote on Sep 4th, 2020 at 5:32pm:
All the Rage is too nasally, it grates

WRONG...
PERKS we're all the rage! Take that noise to iorr.


If you posted anything close to this on IORR, you would be banned before 10 of those cretins flamed you out...
Cool Cool Cool
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #247 - Sep 9th, 2020 at 11:51am
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The two Japanese only bonus tracks mixed by Glyn Johns - 100 Years Ago / Can You Hear The Music - are really nice.

Wouldn't mind hearing more of these.
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #248 - Sep 9th, 2020 at 11:55am
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Paranoid Android wrote on Sep 8th, 2020 at 5:47pm:
Some Guy wrote on Sep 5th, 2020 at 12:49pm:
BILL PERKS wrote on Sep 4th, 2020 at 5:32pm:
All the Rage is too nasally, it grates

WRONG...
PERKS we're all the rage! Take that noise to iorr.


If you posted anything close to this on IORR, you would be banned before 10 of those cretins flamed you out...
Cool Cool Cool


it ain't the way it's supposed to be...
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Re: Goats Head Soup reissue to be released later this year
Reply #249 - Sep 9th, 2020 at 11:58am
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The Japan-only Glyn Johns remix of 100 Years ago is really interesting.  The harder-charging original is definitely better for GHS (among other things, it helps set up Heartbreaker).  However, the Jagger vocals in the "Call me lazybones" section are a different take from the GHS version. 

Similarly, the murkier GHS version of Can You Hear The Music fits better, especially coming off of Winter in a one-two trance punch.  But the Glyn version lets you hear the instrumental background better, and has a longer pennywhistle outro.  If only there were a Glyn remix of Winter, or some other variant, for us.

For those debating if those are redone 2020 vocals on the 100 Years Ago demo - note that on the GHS version Jagger seems to sing "You're going to kiss this day goodbye," which better fits the song's temps perdu theme.  On the demo, it's "You're going to kiss this man goodbye."  It could be a 2020 vocal, or it could be an earlier lyric version from the Jamaica sessions.  Maybe Jagger's just improved his forgery skills after The Burnt Orange Heresy.

https://iorr.org/talk/read.php?2,2770866,2770957#msg-2770957
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« Last Edit: Sep 9th, 2020 at 12:00pm by andrews27 »  

That guy that punched Mick at Altamont...and all the Hell's Angels...all that bad acid let them hear A Bigger Bang!!
 
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