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Temas - DADOS TIRADOS

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106
Rolling Stones / Toshiba ESR-20560
« on: Abril 18, 2008, 07:13:50 pm »
Un clasico de los singles japoneses por su rara portada es el de Richards llamado THE HARDER THEY COME (Stereo),donde tambien venia como lado B el tema RUN RUDOLPH RUN (Mono),esta edición es de 1979 un año despues que saliera la edicion original norteamericana,esta traía como lado A - RUN RUDOLPH RUN,es decir  en la edicion japonesa, a parte de la portada, solo cambia el orden,sin embargo el  prefijo de matriz se mantiene a pesar de la variación,fijarse en las etiquetas.

Version U.S.A



12 December de 1978 : KEITH RICHARDS.
7" single (Rolling Stones Records RS 19311, -US). Producer: KR.
A: Run Rudolph Run (Marvin Brodie/Johnny Marks)
B: The Harder They Come (Jimmy Cliff)
Line-up side A: KR (gtr, voc, bass)/STU (p)/Mike Driscoll (dr)
Line-up side B: KR (gtr, voc, bass)/RW (p, maybe some drums)/CW (dr)



************************************************************
************************************************************




KEITH RICHARDS
THE HARDER THEY COME

A-THE HARDER THEY COME
B-RUN RUDOLPH RUN

Toshiba ESR-20560
Made in Japan. 1979










Cover del:

KEITH RICHARDS
THE HARDER THEY COME

Toshiba ESR-20560
Made in Japan. 1979



Back Cover con letras en japonés e ingles de:

KEITH RICHARDS
THE HARDER THEY COME

Toshiba ESR-20560
Made in Japan. 1979




Sin lopita


Etiqueta  A - THE HARDER THEY COME (RSR-102-B) -  STEREO del:

KEITH RICHARDS
THE HARDER THEY COME

Toshiba ESR-20560
Made in Japan. 1979



Etiqueta B - RUN RUDOLPH RUN  (RSR-102-A)  -  MONO  del :

KEITH RICHARDS
THE HARDER THEY COME

Toshiba ESR-20560
Made in Japan. 1979



El cantante y musico.

La misma edicion pero sin el inner está en Youtube
http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=xhgvwWE912k


Saludos !!!

107
Otros temas / Un parentesis
« on: Abril 02, 2008, 10:25:45 am »
Hago este parentesis para dar a conocer más mi País a ver si algun dia se animan a visitarnos .Es innevitable mostrarles los paradisiacos paisajes del lugar en que me encuentro desde Marzo del 2007,la Isla de Chiloe,esta es una milesima parte de los exoticos paisajes de esta isla que he recorrido como:Quemchi,Dalcahue,Ancud,Chonchi,Achao,Curaco de Velez,Quielen y un sin fin de pueblos e iglesias .



Calle Blanco Encalada .Castro







































Saludos!!!

108
Rolling Stones / Fiesta 1980
« on: Marzo 28, 2008, 11:46:20 am »
Los Stones en una fiesta, en 1980 en Manhattan.

http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=mUZNssMDf4g&feature=related


SALUDOS !!!

109
Rolling Stones / Dificil tarea.
« on: Marzo 26, 2008, 12:35:11 pm »
Ya que se escribió sobre las 5 de Keith ,dejo algunas canciones de Ronnie para destacar,dificil ponerle numeros a la lista o escogerlas de su brillante discografia.

I Can Feel The Fire
Far East Man
Big Bayou (El comienzo lleno de slides)
I Can Say She's Allright
If You Don't Want My Love (demuestra la capacidad de Ronnie en diferente estilo ,en este caso el Soul.)
Buried Alive (potencia)
Come To Realise  :D  :D  :D  :D  (temazo ,me gustan las voces de Wood en coros y el acompañamiento de piano)
Seven Days (temazo junto al otro Mick)
 
Wind Howlin' Through (se escucha como un cascabel ,como una serpiente en desierto)

Priceless (bateria y bajo potentes)

She Never Told (me gustn los golpes de Charlie contrastando con el piano,tambien los afiados punteos de Ronnie)
 
Somebody Else Might (me parece que tiene una base electronica,si fuera asi, el merito seria como se logro complementar con el slide)
Testify
Josephine (El comienzo es muy Richard ,buenisimo,un riff seco)
Show Me
Rock & Roll Star
Whaddaya Think (como para estar en la chimenea)
Hypershine
Lost And Lonely
Breathe On Me :D  :D  :D  :D (hermoso tema ,me gustan las voces desgarradas y desafinadas de Keith)

Mystifies Me
Act Together (Junto a Richards gran tema romantico)
Am I Groovin' You

Saludos

110
Rolling Stones / Un gesto familiar para compartir.
« on: Marzo 07, 2008, 11:41:31 am »
Quiero compartir este presente familiar que me hizo mi hermana "Sole",la misma de la foto con Fito Paez ¿recuerdan? .Es una foto que tomó en su viaje a Europa el año pasado.La imagen la captó en una feria de la ciudad de Florencia, Italia.

Bueno,como ya saben mi nombre es Alonso Octavio,pero desde niño ,mi familia,amigos de barrio,colegio, Universidad me han conocido como "Tallo".Palabra que inventó mi hermano mayor al no poder pronunciar mi nombre cuando él tenia 5 años de edad ,







Dice:

Tallo:

Cuando viaje a Europa y en esos hermosos lugares que conoci, en Florencia una ciudad preciosa, estaba una feria, donde estaba un puesto lleno de caricaturas,cuando vi esta me acorde de ti, de tu grupo fovorito.

Con cariño
Tu hermanita que te quiere mucho

Sole

Pd: Llevala siempre contigo.



Las imagenes me hacen recordar las caricaturas de Raúl  Perrone.

Saludos!!!

111
Rolling Stones / Uno de color y un blanco sobre una blanca.
« on: Marzo 03, 2008, 03:04:03 pm »
Hoy le toca el turno al de color Peter Tosh ,y al blanco Mick Jagger ,que aparecen sobre una blanca  y escasa etiqueta promocional del año 1978.Como dato les cuento que este single promocional trae la misma version en ambos lados pero, con distinto tipo de sonido , o sea Mono y Stereo, con las etiquetas blanca y celeste respectivamente.

Este single fue editado por Rolling Stones Records y distribuido por Atlantic Records U.S.A, por lo tanto forma parte del catalogo Atlantic de los Rolling Stones .El disco en el cual venia este single se llamaba Bush Doctor cuyo numero de catalogo era COC 39109,mismo prefijo que el catalogo Stones del 71 al 82.En este catalogo a  Bush Doctor  lo antecede Some Girls con el numero y prefijo COC 39108 .




PETER TOSH & MICK JAGGER
(YOU GOT TO WALK AND) DONT´LOOK BACK

ROLLING STONES RECORDS RS 19308
MADE IN U.S.A
PROMOTIONAL COPY










Portada del single:

PETER TOSH
(YOU GOT TO WALK AND) DONT´LOOK BACK

ROLLING STONES RECORDS RS 19308
PROMOTIONAL COPY
MADE IN U.S.A



Back Cover del single:

PETER TOSH
(YOU GOT TO WALK AND) DONT´LOOK BACK

ROLLING STONES RECORDS RS 19308
PROMOTIONAL COPY
MADE IN U.S.A



Etiqueta Mono del single :
PETER TOSH
(YOU GOT TO WALK AND) DONT´LOOK BACK

ROLLING STONES RECORDS RS 19308
PROMOTIONAL COPY
MADE IN U.S.A



Etiqueta Blanca sonido Mono




Etiqueta Stereo del single:

PETER TOSH
(YOU GOT TO WALK AND) DONT´LOOK BACK
(William Robinson - Ronald White)

ROLLING STONES RECORDS RS 19308
PROMOTIONAL COPY
MADE IN U.S.A



Etiqueta celeste sonido Stereo


No se confundan por el Bajo, no es Paul Mc Cartney si no que es el gran Robbie Shakespeare (Feel on Baby ,bass) quien tambien fue uno de los productores de Bush Doctor.


SALUDOS !!!

112
Rolling Stones / XDR 34216 - XDRF 34216 , XDR 34215 XDRF 34215
« on: Febrero 27, 2008, 10:37:36 am »
Continuando con las joyas 7" .Hoy le corresponde el turno a:




THE ROLLING STONES

LITTLE RED ROOSTER   -    OFF THE HOOK

DECCA F.12014
XDR 34216      XDRF 34216
XDR 34215      XDRF 34215

PRIMERA PUBLICACION 1964
ENGLAND.


Lanzado el 13 de Noviembre de 1964






El alma de la cancion.

 




THE ROLLING STONES

LITTLE RED ROOSTER   -    OFF THE HOOK
DECCA .12014 ENGLAND
PRIMERA PUBLICACION 1964

Junto a THE ROLLING STONES -NOW!
London LL-3420  Mono
Edicion U.S.A .



LITTLE RED ROOSTER (Willie Dixon)
XDR 34216      XDRF 34216
DECCA .12014 ENGLAND
PRIMERA PUBLICACION 1964

MJ (voc, harm)/KR (gtr)/BJ (gtr)/BW (bass)/CW (dr)



OFF THE HOOK (MJ/KR)
XDR 34215      XDRF 34215
DECCA .12014 ENGLAND
PRIMERA PUBLICACION 1964

MJ (voc)/KR (gtr, bvoc)/BJ (gtr)/BW (bass)/CW (dr)




 La frase "Recording First Published  ...." ,indica que el disco corresponde a la primerisima primera edicion ,correspondiente a Junio del 1963 (F.11675) a Noviembre del 1964. (F.12014)  

Saludos!!!
[/b]

113
Rolling Stones / Una perla negra
« on: Febrero 22, 2008, 08:33:31 pm »


Amigos les presento esta joya .

Semanas antes de salir a la venta el glorioso Exile on Main St en 1972 ,la revista New Musical Express del 29 de Abril de ese mismo año lanzo en Inglaterra un disco en formato Flexi ,para los que no saben lo que es un flexi,es un disco delgado y blando lo que permite poder ser incluido facilmente en una revista por ejemplo.

En este disco venia una cancion interpretada por Mick Jagger con un acompañamiento de piano,el titulo de la cancion:Exile on Main St ,tambien es conocida como Exile on Main St Blues.En ella Jagger hace un repaso o muestra de los temas que sran hits del disco.Tales como All Down The Line,Tumbling Dice,Shine a Light y Happy.

Este disco pertenece al catalogo Rolling Stones Records




EXILE ON MAIN ST FLEXI DISC
NEW MUSICAL EXPRESS (NME) 29th April 1972
ROLLING STONES RECORDS SFI-107  A-Z









Acercamiento a la "etiqueta" del:

EXILE ON MAIN ST FLEXI DISC
NEW MUSICAL EXPRESS (NME) 29th April 1972
ROLLING STONES RECORDS SFI-107  A-Z










La etiqueta Lado B corresponde a dos grupos que no tienen nada que ver con la musica de los Stones.

Si quieres ver girar y escuchar esta joya pulsa aca:



Y la puedes cantar...

http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=IbMY2QKf4_8


Exile On Mainstreet Blues                                                                                                                          (Jagger/Richards)



Exile on Mainstreet, it's a strange street to walk down
Exile on Mainstreet, it's a strange street to walk down

[All down the Line]
Mmm heard the diesel drumming all down the line
Mmm heard the wires a-humming all down the line
Oh, yeah heard the women sighing all down the line
Oh, yeah heard the children crying all down the line

All down the line we'll be watching out for trouble, yeah

[Tumbling Dice]
Women think I'm tasty
But they're always trying to waste me
And make me burn the candle right down
But baby, baby I don't need no jewels in my frown
'Cause all you women is low down gamblers
Cheating like I don't know how
But baby there's a fever in the funk house now
This low down bitchings got my poor feet a-itching
Do you know the deuce is still wild
Baby can't stay, you got to roll me
And call me the tumbling dice

[Intro]
Exile on Mainstreet, it's a strange street to walk down
Now let it loose, now come on, let it all hang down
Eh round up those people, move them out of town
Gimmie little drink from your loving cup
Now shake your hip mama, keep me all shook up
Feeling so doggone happy like a natural child
Oh help me do the boogie all down the line
Come on Virginia, let's shoot some dice
My sweet black angel, shine a light

[Shine A Light]
Saw you stretched out in room ten o nine
With a smile on your face and a tear right in your eye
Couldn't see to get a line on you, my sweet honey love
Berber, jewelry jangling down the street
making bloodshot eyes at every woman that you meet
Come out baby to get a high on you, my sweet honey love

May the good Lord shine a light on you
Make every song you sing your favorite tune
May the good Lord shine a light on you
Warm like the evening sun.
Well you're drunk in the alley baby...

[Happy]
Never kept a dollar past sunset
It always burned a hole in my pants
Never made a school mama happy,
never blew a second chance

I need a love to keep me happy,
I need a love to keep me happy
Baby baby keep me happy,
Baby keep me happy

Always took candy from strangers,
Didn't want to get me no trade
Never want to be like papa,
Working for the boss every night and day

I need a love to keep me happy,
I need a love to keep me happy
Baby baby keep me happy,
Baby baby keep me happy

[Outro]
Exile on Mainstreet, it's a strange street to walk down
Exile on Mainstreet, it's a low down dirty ground.


SALUDOS !!!

114
Rolling Stones / Gracias por siempre
« on: Enero 09, 2008, 07:45:46 pm »

115
Rolling Stones / En el dia de los que ya partieron a la eternidad
« on: Noviembre 01, 2007, 01:23:38 pm »
En el dia de los Santos difuntos quiero saludar a familiares y amigos que han partido de este mundo y hacerlo extensivo a  la gente cercana de los amigos de este Foro .Tambien rendir un homenaje en agradecimiento a personas que formaron en vida y seguiran formando parte de la familia Stone. La lista de personas que han contribuido con los STONES  y que ya no estan debe ser interminable.


JAMES W. ALEXANDER  (1916-1996)

Mississippi-born Alexander was an all-around session musician (bassist, guitarist, singer, drummer and percussionist) and producer who recorded extensively with 1960s and '70s soul artists, such as Sam Cooke, the Bar-Kays, the Soul Stirrers, Mavis Staples and Isaac Hayes. He contributed percussion on I'm Free during the Stones' September 1965 L.A. recordings.
 

LEE ALLEN  (1926-1994)

Born in Tennessee, Allen was a saxophonist who was an integral part of the classic Louisiana R&B recordings of the 1950s by artists such as Fats Domino and Little Richard. He went on to perform with artists like Dr. John, Professor Longhair and the Stray Cats.

The Stones hired Allen for a few of their dates in early October during their 1981 U.S. Tour, to replace Ernie Watts.



Ahmet Ertegün (31 de julio de 1923 - 14 de diciembre de 2006).

Ahmet Ertegün Músico y empresario estadounidense de origen turco, fundador de la compañía discográfica Atlantic Records.

Hijo de un diplomático turco en Estados Unidos, cuando creó el sello Atlantic Records en 1947 abrió un espacio a la producción de la música afroamericana, en especial el soul y el jazz, que se encontraban marginados de las grandes líneas comerciales. Su decisión de entrar en el mundo de la producción nació a raíz de asistir a distintos conciertos de Louis Armstrong y Duke Ellington en Washington. Entre los artistas que acogieron esta oportunidad de darse a conocer y que Ertegün impulso se encontraron, entre otros, Ray Charles, Aretha Franklin, Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Charlie Mingus, John Coltrane y Ornette Coleman.

Algunas otras figuras de la música pop y rock estadounidense que promovió bajo su sello Ertegün fueron Led Zeppelin, Phil Collins, Nash & Young y hasta el grupo sueco Abba. Atlantic fue absorbido en 1984 por Warner Music.

Falleció como consecuencia de una caída mientras escuchaba un concierto de los Rolling Stones (otro de los míticos grupos que había producido) en Nueva York mes y medio antes.



RIK GRECH (1946-1990)

Born in France, Grech was a violinist and bassist who was a member of the band Family during the 1960s. That's when he met the Stones and they brought him to record fiddle on Factory Girl. Grech went on to play with Ginger Baker, Blind Faith, Eric Clapton, Traffic, Steve Winwood and many other similarly styled artists. He also played on Gram Parsons's solo albums in the early 1970s. He appears on Ron Wood and Ronnie Lane's 1976 Mahoney's Last Stand project.


KEITH HARWOOD  (d. 1977)

Olympic Studios engineer Keith Harwood formed a team with Andy Johns to engineer the Stones in 1974 for their It's Only Rock 'n' Roll album. He then teamed up with Andy's older brother, Glyn, to engineer the next album, Black and Blue. Harwood was a much-in-demand engineer in the mid-1970s, primarily working with British rock acts such as David Bowie, Led Zeppelin, the Pretty Things and Ron Wood. (He had also worked with the Wyman-produced Tucky Buzzard before engineering the Stones.) His last work was engineering the mixing sessions in New York for Love You Live in the spring of 1977. He died soon after and the album was dedicated to his memory.



JOHN LEE HOOKER  (1917-2001)

The Mississippi-born, Detroit-recording giant of the blues of the 1950s and '60s, one of the Stones' many heroes, was invited onstage by the Stones at their Atlantic City shows in 1989 to jam on his classic Boogie Chillen. Keith recorded some tracks for a new Hooker album in 1991. Hooker died in June 2001.




NICKY HOPKINS  (1944-1994)

Apart from Ian Stewart, if there's one outside artist whose contributions have been the most significant to the Stones' recordings, it's been pianist and keyboardist Nicky Hopkins. Born in London, Hopkins was hanging around the Alexis Korner scene at the same time as the Stones and other musicians. He joined Screaming Lord Sutch's Savages, before winding up as part of the Cyril Davies R&B All-Stars, a short-lived but exciting R&B band. In 1964, Hopkins was then enlisted by groups such as the Who and the Kinks to play on their early albums. By 1967, he had graduated to the Stones, who employed him for his services first on Between the Buttons, and then more substantially on Their Satanic Majesties Request. It was the beginning of a long and fruitful relationship. Already on the following album, Hopkins was gracing Stones songs like No Expectations with delicate, gorgeous piano playing.

Hopkins remained an integral part of the Stones' albums for all their subsequent albums until Black and Blue in 1976. For most of that period, the Stones used Ian Stewart, Billy Preston and Hopkins on keyboards. Although the roles were by no means non-negotiable, usually Preston was employed on soulful, gospelly numbers where an organ was required, Stu played boogie-woogie on fast rock and roll numbers, and Hopkins played on the ballads. His playing graced songs like She's a Rainbow, You Got the Silver, Sway, Loving Cup and Time Waits for No One among many others. Hopkins also often played onstage with the Stones for the period from 1968 to 1973, starting with the Stones' rock and roll circus event, and then joining them for the 1970 European tour.

Though the Stones were the peak of Hopkins' career, he played with other artists as well during that span of time, including most notably the Beatles, Jeff Beck, the Jefferson Airplane, Quicksilver Messenger Service, the Steve Miller Band, Carly Simon, Joe Cocker, John Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr. Significantly, he was also a member of the Jeff Beck Group starting in 1968, along with Rod Stewart and Ron Wood, though the group broke up in 1969. Mick Taylor played on a 1973 Nicky Hopkins solo album.

Hopkins' health problems were the reason for his not wanting to tour with the Stones anymore after the 1973 Australian tour and for the lessening of his work with them in general after 1974. Hopkins did not work on Some Girls. He did work in the late '70s recording with Rod Stewart, Eddie Money, Badfinger, as well as with Bill Wyman. He also appeared as a guest onstage with the Stones at an Anaheim show in 1978, with Bobby Keys.

The Stones rehired Hopkins for parts of Emotional Rescue, and it is likely that some of his playing appears on Tattoo You (possibly the piano on Waiting on a Friend, which was started in 1972). He also worked on Ron Wood's 1 2 3 4 solo album during that period. That marked the end of Hopkins's association with the Stones, however. Afterwards, he went on to play with artists as varied as Meat Loaf, Julio Iglesias, Belinda Carlisle, Paul McCartney, Graham Parker and Izzy Stradlin. He died of a stomach ailment and heart condition.
 

EVA JAGGER (Fallecida en el año 2000)
JOE JAGGER(Fallecido el  12 de noviembre de 2006 a los 93 años de edad
)


JOHNNIE JOHNSON  (1924-2005)

Chuck Berry's pianist, who is often credited as a founder of rock and roll because Berry basically transcripted his boogie-woogie playing to the guitar, had his career rehabilitated when Keith enlisted him for his 1986 Chuck Berry Hail! Hail! Rock and Roll project. Keith went on to use him again on his first solo album, and in 1989 he joined the Stones onstage for a show in St. Louis. Keith went on to contribute to a solo album by Johnson in 1991. Johnson joined the Stones onstage again in Houston in 2003.

Johnnie had amazing simpatico. He had a way of slipping into a song, an innate feel for complementing the guitar... I was fascinated by those huge hands, doing such incredibly precise, delicate work. I always compared them to a bunch of overripe bananas. But he could do amazing things with those bananas... In a way, Johnnie reminded me a lot of Ian Stewart. It was Ian who pointed Johnnie out to me, because he was a Johnnie Johnson freak. So it all comes around.

                                                   - Keith Richards, 2005



BRIAN JONES (1942-1969)

The Rolling Stones (1964)
England Newest Hitmakers (1964)
12 x 5 (1964)
The Rolling Stones No.2(1965)
The Rolling Stones, Now! (1965)
Out Of Our Heads (1965)
December's Children (And Everybody's) (1965)
Aftermath (1966)
Big Hits (High Tide & Green Grass) (1966)
Got LIVE If You Want It! (1966)
Between The Buttons (1967)
Flowers (1967)
Their Satanic Majesties Request (1967)
Beggars Banquet (1968)
Let It Bleed (1969)


   "si alguna vez un hombre vivió genuinamente la vida del rock and roll y caracterizó a los Rolling Stones en todos sus aspectos, mucho antes de que los cinco asumiéramos un estilo, ese fue Brian Jones".

                                                                            -  Bill Wyman
RONNIE LANE   (1946-1997)

London-born Ronnie Lane was bassist for the classic British bands the Small Faces and then the Faces in the 1960s and 1970s, both of which he formed, and both of which featured future Rolling Stone Ron Wood (starting in 1969). The Small Faces became clients of Andrew Oldham's in 1967 and during the recording of Their Satanic Majesties Request, Lane and fellow Small Face Steve Marriott sang and contributed to In Another Land, although whether their contributions were kept is not sure. If so, that was Lane's one and only collaboration with the Stones. But his friendship with Bill and Woody in particular ensured that he often collaborated with them.

Lane quit the Faces in 1973 and started a solo career. He then worked with Ron Wood and Pete Townshend but contracted multiple sclerosis in the late '70s. In 1983, a band of musicians came together to form a multiple sclerosis charity called ARMS and toured to acquire money for the cause. They included Joe Cocker, legendary guitarists Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page, as well as Bill, Charlie and Ron Wood. In 1985, Bill released the Willie and the Poor Boys project, on which Charlie also participated, whose profits were directed towards the ARMS charity.
 



MIKE LEANDER  (1941-1996)

England born Mike Leander was a producer for Decca in the 1960s and helped Marianne Faithfull's early recording career. In late 1963, early 1964 he was also working with the Andrew Oldham Orchestra, as musical director for demos and recordings of Jagger/Richards songs. Leander was a master of orchestration and when the Stones decided to do their own version of their song As Tears Go By in 1965, which they had given to Marianne to do a year earlier, they re-hired Leander to arrange the strings for it. A year later, they hired Leander again to arrange the horns for the Have You Seen Your Mother Baby? single.

Leander also later wrote the score for the Beatles' She's Leaving Home. In the 1970s, in a big change of direction, Leander launched the career of Gary Glitter, playing a vital role in creating his image and co-writing his songs.



CARLO LITTLE   (1938-2005)

Like Mike Avory, Carlo Little was another occasional drummer for the Stones in their drummerless period of 1962/early 1963. Brian favored him, but the others did not think much of him. He went on to become part of Cyril Davies' R&B All Stars and also played in the later 1960s with Screaming Lord Sutch.

Brian was quite enthralled with Carlo. He'd never heard anything like it before. Brian wanted someone flash like Carlo Little because by then Brian was starting to see dollar signs.

                                                   - Ian Stewart



KIRSTY MACCOLL  (1959-2000)

Singer/songwriter MacColl achieved some level of success as a pop singer in England in the early 1980s before marrying producer Steve Lillywhite. Lillywhite's work with the Stones in 1985 led to MacColl singing backup vocals on the Dirty Work album. Afterwards she resumed her solo career in 1989. She and Lillywhite separated in 1994. She's also sung with artists like Billy Bragg, Talking Heads, Van Morrison, Elvis Costello, the Smiths and the Pogues. She released her last solo album in 2000. She died in December 2000 after being run over by a speedboat while swimming with her family in Mexico.


RON MALO  (d. 1992)

Malo was an engineer for Chicago's Chess Studios. He was the engineer for the first sessions the Stones did in the USA, in Chicago in June 1964, recording songs (It's All Over Now, I Can't Be Satisfied, Time Is On My Side, Look What You've Done, Around and Around, Down the Road Apiece, etc.) that wound up appearing on the albums 12 X 5, The Rolling Stones Now! and December's Children. He was also the engineer at Chess when they returned in November 1964 to do more sessions there, and when they came back a third time in May 1965 (resulting in Out of Our Heads songs like Mercy Mercy and That's How Strong My Love Is).

The Stones must have admired Malo because he had worked with many of the blues and R&B greats, such as Bo Diddley, Etta James, Sonny Boy Williamson and Chuck Berry, as well as some jazz greats like Cannonball Adderley. He went on to work with Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Buddy Guy and John Lee Hooker. In the 1970s, he worked with Billy Joel among others.
 


STEVE MARRIOTT  (1947-1990)

London born singer/guitarist Steve Marriott formed the Small Faces with Ronnie Lane in the mid-1960s. Andrew Oldham eventually signed the Small Faces on, and Marriott and Lane contributed to the recording of his song In Another Land in 1967 because he was too shy to sing for himself and Mick and Keith weren't there. Marriott went on to form Humble Pie with Peter Frampton. Keith played with him when they recorded a remake of Get Off of My Cloud in 1975 with Alexis Korner. Marriott lost his life in a house fire.



JIMMY MILLER  (1942-1994)

An American, Miller first started working in music with British musician Steve Winwood in the mid-1960s, mixing songs for the Spencer Davis Group, and then producing the first albums by Winwood's new group, Traffic, Mr. Fantasy (1967) and Traffic (1968). Miller had made a reputation for himself as someone who knew how to get a good drum sound, amongst other things. It was in early 1968 that the Stones hired Miller as a producer, who is credited as such on the Stones' next five albums, Beggars Banquet, Let It Bleed, Sticky Fingers, Exile on Main Street and Goats Head Soup, certainly one of the high periods in the band's output. Miller occasionally also played percussion and drums on Stones' records, for example on Happy. (He also plays the cowbell on Honky Tonk Women.) Miller and the Twins, Mick and Keith, no longer saw eye-to-eye during the making of Goats Head Soup (1972-73) and that's when their association ended.

Although he continued to work with other groups after his separation from the Stones, he never regained the same success. He worked with acts that included Motorhead, the Plasmatics and Johnny Thunders. He died of liver failure.

Jimmy was a drummer... (and) was really into the beat and the percussion and all that, and it shows on some of those records.

                                                   - Mick Jagger, 1994

 There isn't one producer who can handle the whole thing. You run through them like you run through gas in your car. Jimmy Miller went in a lion and came out a lamb. We wore him out completely... Jimmy was great, but the more successful he became the more he got like Brian... (He) ended up carving swastikas into the wooden console at Island Studios.

                                                   - Keith Richards, 1975

 


JACK NITZSCHE  (1937-2000)

Chicago born Jack Nitzsche staked an incredible career as a behind-the-scenes player, producer and arranger for many rock artists, most notably the Rolling Stones.

A keyboardist and percussionist in his own right, Nitzsche moved to Los Angeles in the 1950s where he became a fixture of the musical scene there. After teaming up with Sonny Bono, he started a fruitful association in the early-to-mid 1960s with Phil Spector as an arranger, helping him build the famous Wall of Sound on recordings by the Ronettes, the Crystals, the Righteous Brothers and other artists. Because Andrew Oldham forged a friendship with Phil Spector in early 1964, when the Stones started recording in Los Angeles at the end of the same year, they were inevitably introduced to Jack Nitzsche as well, who became an important collaborator with the Stones for the next few years and occasionally beyond. He worked with them as an arranger and occasional musical contributor, playing keyboards and percussion (e.g. Down Home Girl, Heart of Stone, Play with Fire, Satisfaction and many Aftermath tracks) on the albums The Rolling Stones Now!, Out of Our Heads, December's Children and Aftermath (the albums they recorded primarily in L.A.). His last work of this period with the Stones was in the early sessions for Between the Buttons in August 1966, when he contributed to songs like Let's Spend the Night Together and Yesterday's Papers.

When the Stones started recording in London again (late 1966), their association with Nitzsche ended for the moment, while Nitzsche worked with Buffalo Springfield among others (which led to a long career working with Neil Young). Nitzsche and the Stones met up again in 1968, when Nitzsche was called on to handle the soundtrack for the movie Performance. That led to Nitzsche working with the Stones again, handling the choral arrangements for You Can't Always Get What You Want and playing piano on Sister Morphine in early 1969.

Thereafter Nitzsche specialized in making film soundtracks, but he did team up again with the Stones for the It's Only Rock and Roll album in 1974, contributing keyboards and percussion. His last stint with the Stones was for Emotional Rescue, when they hired him to arrange horns for that album. Jack Nitzsche died of cardiac arrest in August 2000.

The first time I met (the Stones) was when they walked into RCA Studios and the session just stopped because no one had ever seen anyone who looked like that. I'd never met British people before so they had these funny accents. I'd heard their records, which hadn't impressed me, but THEY did. The Rolling Stones were the first rock and roll band I met that were intelligent. They can make conversation with anyone, which on top of all that superstardom must freak people out. Up until then all the rock and rollers I met seemed to be assholes. The Stones were the first ones I saw say fuck you to everybody.

                                                   - Jack Nitzsche


Jack Nitzsche was Phil (Spector)'s arranger and a very important part of that whole sound. It was Jack's idea of harmonies and spacing. But it's nice he's singing with Crazy Horse now. He couldn't stand to... to even get him to play the piano you used to have to do a whole Jack number. It's great he's doing it.

                                                   - Keith Richards, 1971





GRAM PARSONS  (1946-1973)

Though a contemporary and a friend, country rock founder Gram Parsons was greater as an influence on the Stones than as an actual collaborator (see here). Born in Florida, guitarist and vocalist Parsons formed the International Submarine Band in 1966 in his brief university days, before quitting and joining the Byrds in early 1968 and redirecting their sound and helping create the seminal country rock album Sweetheart of the Rodeo. Later in 1968, Parsons met the Stones at the same time as he quit the Byrds, and struck up a friendship with Keith in particular, living at his home in Redlands and singing and exchanging country and country-flavored songs with him.

Parsons never contributed to an actual Stones recording, but he was a major presence over the following years. In early 1969, he formed the first full-fledged country rock outfit called the Flying Burrito Brothers, who recorded and released Wild Horses before the Stones did. By the end of the year, after having recorded two albums, Parsons quit the Burritos and started hanging out with the Stones again, at their tour rehearsals in Los Angeles in the fall of 1969 especially (see Stanley Booth's book The True Adventures of the Rolling Stones for an eyewitness account of this period). Though he didn't record with them, the Stones' country explorations on albums like Let It Bleed, Sticky Fingers and Exile on Main Street were definitely influenced by Parsons' presence. Throughout 1970 and 1971 he hung out with them on tour and during recording sessions. In the summer of 1971, particularly, he lived with Keith at his home in the South of France during the recording of Exile.

In late 1971, early 1972, as the Stones (Mick and Keith particularly) spent time in L.A. overdubbing and mixing Exile, Parsons was there as well, taking the time to write songs for a solo album. Afterwards his path with the Stones diverged. He spent the last year and a half of his life recording two influential solo albums and touring behind one of them, before meeting his death in California after a tequila and morphine overdose. He is now revered as the father of country rock.


JOHN PHILLIPS  (1935-2001)

The leader of 1960s folk rockers the Mamas and the Papas never contributed to a Stones recording, but he warrants mention because of his friendship and association with Mick and Keith in 1976-77. Mick produced the recordings for a future John Phillips solo album in the fall of 1976, on which both Keith, Ronnie and Mick Taylor all played heavily. A year later, in the summer of 1977, Keith produced more sessions for Phillips, on which Mick also played again. The album was released as Pay, Pack and Follow in 2001. Philipps died of heart failure in March 2001.
 
 


BILLY PRESTON  (1946-2006)

Texas born Preston has made a career out of being an excellent session keyboardist (piano, organ, synthesizer), but also enjoyed relative success on his own in the 1970s with a string of mid-sized hits. Preston was a child prodigy who got in the business very young, playing with Ray Charles and Sam Cooke among other people. His biggest break, however, was playing with the Beatles in 1969, recording their ill-fated album and movie Let It Be with them (he also plays on I Want You, featured on Abbey Road), and playing with them on their final rooftop concert in London. That allowed Preston to start his own career with Apple Records at the same time as he started making the rounds in the musical circles, bringing his soul and gospel influences with him to bands like Delaney & Bonnie.

Through most of the 1970s (1970-76), Preston was a player onstage and on record with the Stones, and he appears on all their albums from Sticky Fingers to Black And Blue. He became most visible during the Stones' 1975-76 tour (documented on the 1977 album Love You Live), where the Stones regularly allowed him to play a few of his own songs during their set. One of his stand-outs is certainly his duet with Mick on Melody, featured on 1976's Black and Blue. (His material was slightly later also used, credited or uncredited, on Tattoo You.) During this same period, Preston played with a number of other groups and artists that tended to share the same sessions musician, including Aretha Franklin, Bob Dylan, Stephen Stills, and the three ex-Beatles Lennon, Harrison and Starr.

Preston's career slowed down in the 1980s and 90s, but he has continued to contribute to people's records, including in more recent years people like Joe Cocker, Rod Stewart, Yoko Ono and Me'Shell Ndegeocello. In 1992, Mick recorded his third solo album Wandering Spirit in Los Angeles and hired Billy Preston again, after all these years. Many of the Wandering Spirit players appeared again on the Stones' Bridges to Babylon 5 years later, since the band recorded in Los Angeles. Preston was no exception and his keyboards can be heard on Saint of Me.

Billy Preston died of illness in 2006.


BERT RICHARDS (d. 2002)

DORIS RICHARDS (d. 21-Apr-2007)




IAN STEWART  (1938-1985)

In all fairness, Ian should not be merely included among all these other contributors, since he enjoyed a privileged relationship with the Stones' throughout their history until his death. His is definitely the "Sixth Stone".

Born in Pittenham, Scotland, Ian was a figure surrounding the London Alexis Korner scene before Mick and Keith showed up. He was a pianist who specialized in boogie-woogie and R&B from the 1930s and '40s. He had answered an ad Brian had put up to form an R&B band and so had teamed up with him and with another guitarist called Geoff Bradford and a singer called Paul Jones. It was Brian who introduced Ian to electric Chicago blues.

When Mick, Keith and Dick Taylor joined (and Bradford and Jones left), Ian was the one who would often organize the rehearsals. The Stones have often been fond of calling the Stones "Stu's band" because of this fact, and because of his down-to-earth, take-no-bullshit, tell-it-like-it-is personality.

Ian was integral as any other member in the shaping of the Stones' original style and sound. However, when manager Andrew Oldham came along the scene, he kicked out Stu on the grounds that "5 Stones were enough". He nevertheless remained on as pianist for the Stones throughout their entire career until the time of his death, playing on most of their albums and accompanying them on their tours. He was also their undesignated road manager for much of their career, continuing to handle the equipment and carry the others in his van from gig to gig in the early years, and later still also participating in various functions.

The Stones used Stu on record mostly, but not exclusively, for their fast-paced, rock and roll tunes, where his boogie-woogie playing was an integral element to that magic Stones sound. His contributions can be heard from Around and Around (1964) to She Was Hot (1983). Ian contributed to other bands in the 1970s, including Led Zeppelin, and also formed his own outfit with Charlie, Alexis Korner and Jack Bruce in the late 1970s and early 1980s called Rocket 88, playing boogie-woogie R&B. He also played with the Stray Cats.

Ian died suddenly and without warning of a heart attack in December 1985, just after the completion of the Dirty Work album, leaving his fellow Stones quite broken-hearted, and adding to the pessimism regarding the band's future during that time. The Stones played their only concert in a 7-year period at a London club in February 1986 as a tribute to Stu.  The Dirty Work album is dedicated to him, and an excerpt of his piano playing closes the album. When the Stones were inducted into the Hall of Fame in January 1989, Mick honored in his acceptance speech 2 people who were not presently with the band, namely Brian Jones and Ian Stewart.

I'm going to miss him a lot. He really helped this band swing, on numbers like Honky Tonk Women and loads of others. Stu was the one guy we tried to please. We wanted his approval when we were writing or rehearsing a song. We'd want him to like it.

                                                   - Mick Jagger, 1985




PETER TOSH  (1944-1987)

Born in Jamaica, legendary reggae guitarist and vocalist Peter Tosh joined Bob Marley's original Wailers as early as 1962, even though they only started to cut world-wide released records in 1972. He was an integral part of the Wailers sound and attitude, composing and singing as well as playing guitar, and a key component to the quality of the first two (and best) Wailers albums. He left in 1973 to pursue a solo career, his outspoken records pushing for the legalization of marijuana among other things.

Keith had befriended Tosh while living in Jamaica and this led to the Twins deciding to give a record contract to Tosh with Rolling Stones Records and producing his album Bush Doctor in 1978. Both Keith and Mick played on it. This led to Tosh opening for the Stones on tour in 1978, and Mick joined him onstage for the duet on Don't Look Back which they had recorded together.

Tosh continued making many albums, although he never achieved the success of fellow musician Bob Marley. His outspokenness against political oppression in Jamaica led to his getting frequently beaten by Jamaican police and finally assassinated in 1987.



MUDDY WATERS   (1915-1983)

The Stones first met their idol Muddy Waters in June 1964 when they recorded at Chicago's Chess Studios. He jammed with them on 2120 South Michigan Avenue, although his guitar doesn't appear on the released version. Both Bill and Charlie recorded Muddy in 1974. The Stones jammed now and then with Waters through the years, notably in July 1978 and November 1981 during their tour stops in Chicago.



ART WOOD (1937-2006)



Un abrazo.

116
Rolling Stones / Un grande al ritmo de los grandes.
« on: Octubre 16, 2007, 12:57:39 pm »
Siempre he admirado a este personaje ,un gran atleta con una velocidad increible,genio estratega...Asi fue el gran Johan Cruyff,que al ritmo de los STONES nos muestra algunos lujitos.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yIUTwHwim-g


Saludos!!!

117
Rolling Stones / Una nota mil recuerdos
« on: Septiembre 20, 2007, 05:30:58 pm »
Es increible como una cancion te puede transportar en el tiempo,en este caso al pasado y retrocedermas de 20 años ,recordando gratos momentos.

Al escuchar esta cancion se me vienen a la memoria aquellos infaltables viajes a la costa que hacia con mi familia todos los fines de semana.El viaje comenzaba en Reñaca,luego playa amarilla,Con-Con ,Quintero ,Horcon para terminar en Maitencillo.Durante el viaje mi viejo ponia la Radio Concierto que en esa epoca era la mas avanzada en cuanto a musica,tantos temas que se me vienen a la memoria y que permanecen en mi inconciente como este.

Gracias a estos viajes semanales se me inculco el amor por el mar,las dunas,la costa,la playa y el sol,que hasta el dia de hoy disfruto (ahora poco chiloe es friiiiooo).

Esta cancion pertenece al guitarrista genio ,sensible,Lindssay Buckinham integrante de los Fleetwood Mac.En el vdeo aparece con Mick Fleetwood en una especie de remedo o rivalidad por el amor que tenian en comun Stevie Nicks ,aqui va


http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=6d1guIZZNbM

En vivo, en Saturday Night Live   (con Mick Fleetwwood)

http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=f6u-3CX5fWM

Vean esto por favor que musicazo!!!

http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=f6u-3CX5fWM

Una de los Stones
I am Waiting


http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=MRt3jJAT-NQ


Saludos!!!

118
Rolling Stones / El unico de mi tierra
« on: Agosto 30, 2007, 10:21:03 pm »
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=os9AQAXP_Rg

Buscando por You tube me encontre con esta joya ,una entrevista que andaba buscando por muchos años ya que fue hecha por un gran Chileno Alfredo Lewin ,el unico periodista nacional que ha tenidio la suerte ,mas que suerte el merito de entrevistar a los Stones.Tengo ententendido que en 1994 entrevisto a los cuatro Stones por separado,tremendo lujazo.Aunque en la entrevista solo salen Jagger y Richard.Alfredo Lewin es un tipo que se maneja en la musica su pasion el Rock es su fuerte,un conocedor ,con un bagaje de entrevista a bandas mundiales consagradas im-pre-sio-nante,la lista debe ser interminable .Lo comenze a escuchar por alla en el año 1994,recuerdo que en esa fecha reconocio que venia conociendo a los STONES desde muy poco tiempo,es mas era fan Beatle en especial de Lennon.Por lo que nunca se ha catalogado  super-conocedor de la banda,el mismo reconocio no ser un experto. Stone

Otro merito que al ser musico (voz y guitarra) sus comentarios son sumamante tecnicos ,ya sea del aspecto vocal como instrumental y jamas le he leido o escuchado estupideces o preguntas fuera de lugar que avergonzarian a cualquiera y mas aun ,a un Pais entero.

Un tipo que desde muy joven ha pasado por duros trances como la droga pero ha sabido salir adelante.El angel que tiene tatuado en uno de sus brazos es un testimonio de que se puede salir de los malos momentos.

Lo que mas me llama la tencion de este muchacho es su humildad y honestidad ,con toda la experiencia personal que tiene con sus entrevistados podria sacar de primera fuente un libro sin tener que colgarse de entrevistas ajenas tal como lo hacen algunos periodistas plagiadores, pelafustanes ,incultos,en pocas palabras sinverguenzas.

En fin este Alfredo es un buen representante de los Chilenos en el extranjero con sus entrevistados,un tipo culto,alguien que nos hace ponernos orgullosos.Y no como periodistas que dentro de su propio pais son tildados de ignorantes,incultos o mala clase,¿que triste no?,que cuando los leo o escucho me acuerdo de la suerte de tener a Lewin   de los nuestros.



Realmenbte fue un placer hablar de este muchacho

http://www.jumbofestival.cl/noticias/89
http://www.radio.uchile.cl/notas.aspx?idnota=15942



Saludos!!!

119
Rolling Stones / Otro de la familia (Slide Area)
« on: Agosto 28, 2007, 02:22:55 pm »
Y bien pues otro de la familia Stone (Let It Bleed,Sticky Fingers) y bien cercano es Ry Cooder,el muchacho que enseño al otro muchacho ,aquella muchacha Sol. .El disco me gusto mucho bien cargadito al Rock,para destacar una version del tema de Elvis Blue Suede Shoes,otro que me llamo la atencion fue I'm Drinking Again ,del que el grupo los Rodriguez o Calamaro  les debe bastante,el tema es muy parececido a ¿¿¿no se puede vivir con amor??? algo asi pero el esquema es re parecido.

Otro de la familia Stone que participa en este trabajo es Jim Keltner,que percusiono en 1.2.3.4 del otro gran Slide.


RY COODER
THE SLIDE AREA
K 56976
Warner Bros .Music Ltd.
Made in UK.(P) 1982




Cover del:

RY COODER
THE SLIDE AREA
K 56976
Warner Bros .Music Ltd.
Made in UK.(P) 1982



Back Cover con letras del:

RY COODER
THE SLIDE AREA
K 56976
Warner Bros .Music Ltd.
Made in UK.(P) 1982




Ya,ya,ya....


Etiqueta Side 1 del:
RY COODER
THE SLIDE AREA
K 56976
Warner Bros .Music Ltd.
Made in UK.(P) 1982

Contiene:

1. UFO Has Landed in the Ghetto  
2. I Need a Woman  
3. Gypsy Woman  
4. Blue Suede Shoes  





Etiqueta Side 2 del:
RY COODER
THE SLIDE AREA
K 56976
Warner Bros .Music Ltd.
Made in UK.(P) 1982

Contiene:

5. Mama, Don't Treat Your Daughter Mean    
6. I'm Drinking Again    
7. Which Came First  
8. That's the Way Love Turned Out for Me  





El sticker de Virgin


SALUDOS !!!

120
Rolling Stones / Satisfecho
« on: Agosto 27, 2007, 01:05:14 pm »
Tanto tiempo sin subir imagenes.Llevo una semana en mi zona.Quiero mostrar algo que me llena de orgullo y decirles lo satisfecho que me encuentro con un disco muy codiciado en el extranjero El Banquete de Los Mendigos Chile.Les cuento que jamas pense que tendria tantas copias,lo digo humildemente ya que esta edicion esta practicamente extinta en Chile.

Recuerdo que conoci esta edicion el año 1992 me lo habia prestado el amigo de un amigo (yo le preste el disco verde venezolano),recuerdo que lo tuve como una semana,no le di importancia.Pasaron los años y volvi a tenerla esta vez una amigo me habia dejado sus discos Stones en los que estaba una copia ajada y destruida del  Banquete Chileno,dos años tuve esos discos en mi poder y al banquete no le di importancia.Pasaron mas años y me entero de lo codiciado de este disco ,no lo podia creer,lo habia tenido en dos oportunidades y no lo valorado.Mas tiempo corrio hasta un dia encontre mi primer Banquete Chileno,tuve la tremenda suerte de encontrarlo nuevo ,de verdad nuevo, portada como vinilo en perfecto estado,pero lo mas valioso era su etiqueta color verde,que correspondia a una etiqueta promocional ,que solo recibian las radio emisoras,esa copia la primera que tuve me costo 10000 pesos chilenos.Luego vino la segunda esta vez" la clasica y comun etiqueta amarilla" que me costo nuevamente 10000 pesos chilenos ,su portada estaba excelente ,pero una etiqueta estaba rayada o escrita con nombres de sus antiguos dueños.Dias antes de la Navidad del  2006 encuentro mi tercera copia,nuevamente la suerte me golpeo era una edicion de etiqueta amarilla ,ambas etiquetas estaban limpias su portada excelente mas aun con el plastico original y lo mejor es que entre la portada y el cobertor plastico estaba el precio del Lp , 1100 Escudos moneda de los años 60 y 70 ,anterior al actual Peso Chileno.En pocas palabras la tercera copia era una pieza arqueologica desde todo punto de vista.Valor de esta copia 5000 Pesos Chilenos
La cuarta copia la compre hace unos meses en el sur de Chile ,nuevamente la suerte me daba duro,y llego a mis manos una edicion con la etiqueta verde,por ambos lados la etiqueta estaba limpia,su portada en muy buen estado,eso si sin su plastico original,el valor de esa pieza 5000 Pesos Chilenos.

Cuando pensaba que ya se me habia dado todo en el banquete el dia Viernes compre la quinta copia ,vinilo y portadas con su plastico origianal en excelente estado y sus etiquetas limpias o sanas,esta ultima pieza o copia me costo 5500 Pesos Chilenos.

Lo anecdotico es que al llegar la tecera copia (etiqueta amarilla),en el Verano puse a la venta la segunda copia(etiqueta amarilla), que llego a mi poder.La puse a la venta porque como lo dije una de sus etiqueta estaba sobreescrita con nombres o firmada.En el mes de Mayo de este año me llego la orden de pedido de un Frances que me compraba el disco por 90 Euros,lamentablente me encontraba a mas de 1100 kilometros de casa asi que la venta quedo paralizada.Ahora como estoy en casa ,retomare la venta de este disco,y lo dejare embalado listo para despacharlo.

En fin que mas puedo pedir de esta edicion,no se si sera suerte,pero creo que mas que eso es perseverancia y calle, esa es la formula para encontrar lo inubicable.

Espero que les haya gustado la historia ,cualquier consulta sobre acercamientos ediciones y matricies estoy a vuestra disposicion.

Saludos!!!

Mi primer banquete se los mostre el siguiente post:

http://rocksoff.org/phpBB/viewtopic.php?t=4763&highlight=chileno+mas+buscado+del+mundo

Mi segunda copia la presente junto a la primera en el siguiente post:

http://rocksoff.org/phpBB/viewtopic.php?t=6231&highlight=chileno+mas+buscado+del+mundo


Portadas de las 5 copias del Banquete de los Mendigos Chile pertenecientes a mi coleccion.
Las dos primeras corresponden a la promocional, con etiqueta verde
Las tres restantes a la etiqueta amarilla




Las ediciones semi-desnudas
Las dos primeras ,etiqueta verde ambas numero de matriz:
XARL-8476-6A
XARL-8477-2A
Las tres restantes,etiqueta amarilla ambas numero de matriz:
XARL-8476-6A
XARL-8477-2A





Las cinco copias al desnudo.

Una imagen para la posteridad las ediciones:
 Decca SKL 4955,London U.S.A PS 539 y London Canada PS 539,junto a la ediciones Chilenas, London LLC-38574




Saludoss!!!

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