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Temas - rogerriffin

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616
Rolling Stones / Listo para los 70 Bill??? Feliz Cumpleaños!!!!!!!!!!
« on: Octubre 23, 2005, 08:38:36 pm »
El sabado 24 de octubre de 1936 nació William Perks Wyman, el proximo año cumple 70 años!!!! es un stones y es eterno!!!!

Aunque los pendejos de Virgin ya lo quieran fuera :cry:  :cry:  :cry:

¡¡¡HAPPY B-DAY BILL WYMAN!!!


617
Rolling Stones / 19/10/2005 Tampa Fl, St.Pete Times Forum
« on: Octubre 20, 2005, 12:17:20 am »
1 Start Me Up
2 It´s Only Rock´n Roll
3 She's So Cold
4 Tumbling Dice
5 Rough Justice
6 Back of My Hand
7 Dead Flowers
8 Bitch
9 Night Time
10 The Worst
11 Infamy
12 Miss You
13 Oh No Not You Again
14 You Got Me Rocking
15 Honky Tonk Woman
16 Out of Control
17 Sympathy For the Devil
18 Brown Sugar
19 Jumping Jack Flash
20 Satisfaction

Solo 20 canciones, algo pasó ya que hoy aquí en México los Scorpions también tocaron menos que el año pasado, y con menos energias.... o será que no me llenaron porque hace 3 semanas vi a los Rolling? :roll:  :roll:  :roll:

618
Rolling Stones / War Soldiers Show en 2006!!!!
« on: Octubre 15, 2005, 05:21:40 pm »
Nuestro amigo Moy de Rocksoff posteó una nota de la revista Globo, la cual habla de que los Stones tienen un aparato para revivir el corazón en caso de infarto, la polémica esta en que lo niegan, pero lo que en verdad me pusó a pensar fue que Mick dijo que los Rolling pueden organizar un concierto en Irak para levantar la moral de los soldados americanos y britanicos, pero que lo hacen solo si se lo piden los jefes de ambas tropas...

Se imaginan que se hiciera eso??? todo mundo estaría con los pelos de punta, sería como meter la cabeza en la boca del cocodrilo! :roll:  :wink:  :shock:  :roll:  :wink:

aqui el post: http://www.novogate.com/board/968/216897-1.html

619
Rolling Stones / dinámica 1: Me recomiendas un disco???
« on: Octubre 13, 2005, 10:55:00 am »
Empezemos con una buena dinámica para todos los banqueteros, que les parece si nos recomendamos algun disco y platicamos de él, no necesariamente debe ser Rolling, empezemos...

Yo les recomiendo:

Let it Bleed - Rolling Stones 1969, para mí, todos los temas son éxito, la mejor época, anuque Brian ya no haya contribuido en mucho.

Cual nos recomiendan ustedes?

620
Rolling Stones / Expo Ron Wood in Toronto.
« on: Octubre 09, 2005, 11:46:57 pm »
Al dia siguiente del show, me dirigí a la exhibición de pinturas de Ron Wood, les comparto algunas fotos, que me dejaron tomar, pero ssshhhh es nuestro secreto eh :lol:













Por cierto, no me compré ninguna porque no me sobraban 3000 dolares en la cartera, que es el precio promedio de cada cuadrito :wink:

621
Rolling Stones / 3/10/2005 MCI CENTER WASHINGTON DC
« on: Octubre 04, 2005, 10:31:29 am »
SI QUE ESTAN CAMBIANDO, AHORA LE TOCO A BEAST OF BURDEN...

1. START ME UP
2. YOU GOT ME ROCKING
3. SHE'S SO COLD
4. TUMBLIN' DICE
5. ROUGH JUSTICE
6. BACK OF MY HAND
7. BEAST OF BURDEN
8. BITCH
9. MR. PITIFULL
10. THE WORST
11. INFAMY
12. MISS YOU
13. OH NO, NOT YOU AGAIN
14. SHATTERED
15. HONKY TONK WOMEN
16. SYMPATHY FOR THE DEVIL
17. IT'S ONLY ROCK N ROLL
18. BROWN SUGAR
19. SATISFACTION
20. YOU CAN´T ALWAYS GET WHAT YOU WANT
21. JUMPING JACK FLASH

From Shidoobee.

622
Rolling Stones / ROLLING STONE MEXICANA OCTUBRE/2005
« on: Septiembre 30, 2005, 12:58:15 pm »
Hasta que estos hijos de la chingada se dignaron a hablar de los stones, y eso es lo mismo que la americana, habrá que tenerla para ver que tanto le cortaron...



Jagger y yo somos como hermanos rivales, sin necesidad de tener los mismos padres
Keith Richards



El álbum A Bigger Bang es el primero de estudio de The Rolling Stones en ocho años (Jagger, de 62 años; Richards, de 61; Watts, de 64, y Wood, de 58). Es lo mejor que han hecho desde Tattoo You. Jagger y Richards compusieron y retocaron muchas de las canciones, literalmente uno al lado del otro, y los Stones las grabaron sin ostentaciones ni invitados especiales; desde la lascivia retozona de “Rouge Justice” y “Oh No, Not You Again”, hasta el sucio y reptante blues de “Back of My Hand” y el mojón político de “Sweet Neo Con”, éstas dos últimas a cargo de un trío contundente en su directa sencillez, conformado por Jagger, Richards y Watts.

623
Tour 2005 - 2007 / 17/09/2005 Albany NY
« on: Septiembre 17, 2005, 09:18:58 pm »
1 Start Me Up
2 You Got Me Rocking
3 Live with Me
4 Shattered
5 Rough Justice
6 Back of My Hand
7 You Can´t Always Get...
8 Midnight Rambler
9 Night time
10 The Worst
11 Infamy
12 Miss You
13 Oh No Not You Again
14 She´s So Cold
15 Honky Tonk Women
16 Sympathy For The Devil
17 Paint It, Black
18 Jumping Jack Flash
19 It´s Only Rock´n´Roll
20 Satisfaction
21 Brown Sugar


Regresó MIDNIGHT RAMBLER!!!!!! LA QUIERO PARA EL LUNES!!!!!!!!!!!!!


Thanx to Shidoobeans...

624
Rolling Stones / Salieron en TV Mexicana!!!!!
« on: Septiembre 16, 2005, 12:37:03 am »
Esta noche de desmadre, esta noche de Independencia, esta noche Salieron los Rolling Stones en la TV!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

En la casa se escucho el fuerte grito de mi madre: Rogeeeeerrrrrrrrrrr!!!!!
Me dirijí a la tv y estaban!!! eran los Rolling Stones!!!!

Yo no queria ver ni escuchar nada en vivo de esta gira (no he intentado conseguir bootlegs) queria que el 26 de septiembre todo me pareciera sorpresa! inevitablemente corri a grabarlo en VHS, sin embargo la señal para grabar no era buena, pero en la TV se veian clarito y por supuesto le subí a todo lo que daba!!!

Se ve de pocamadre!!!!! son los Rolling!!! No sabia que en el escenario también habia pantallas a lo largo!!! En Start Me Up pasaron las imagenes de juegos de la NFL y cuando dice: "You Make A Grown Man Cry" pasan imagenes de los jugadores llorando!!!

Yo queria que todo fuera sorpresa el 26 en Toronto, sin embargo fue justo que me dieran una pequeña probadita, estoy super emocionado, hasta mi mama se sacó de onda!!!!

10 dias!!! 10 Dias!!! y estaré en frente de ellos!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

625
Tour 2005 - 2007 / 13/09/05: Nueva York, MSG
« on: Septiembre 13, 2005, 06:17:36 pm »
Hoy es el bueno, hoy tocan en el legendario Madison Square Garden ...

Ya temdremos el Setlist y yo creo que esta vez si tocan algunas raritas, ya ven en el 2002 Keith estrenò Thru And Thru...

626
Rolling Stones / Go ALEX Go, Go!!!!!!!!!
« on: Agosto 31, 2005, 06:43:00 pm »
Hoy fue un dia dificil o un poco acelerado para tí Hermano, te mando un abrazo muy fuerte desde la ciudad de las tranzas y el smog, espero que tu operacion haya sido un éxito y que ya estes escuchando a los viejitos en tu casa, lo hago publicamente porque te mereces el reconocimiento de todos los stones que por aqui andamos compartiendo, disfrutando, alegando, aprendiendo, conociendo, ALEXSTONE QUE TODO HAYA SALIDO MUY BIEN Y RECUPERATE PRONTO CABRÓN!!!...

Gracias por compartir tu pasión en este foro, hermano algun dia estos dos personajes estaran en una sola foto... mi palabra de stones!




Pd:sorry por la mala calidad de imagen.

627
Rolling Stones / YA ESTAN LOS BOLETOS "ON STAGE"!!!
« on: Agosto 17, 2005, 12:09:51 am »
Ya puedes entrarle al sorteo pa´los boletos on stage!!!

Tienes que dar tu nombre completo, fecha de naciemiento y la fecha del concierto al que vas!!!

Haber quienes salen afortunados!

628
Rolling Stones / LAS PRE-ORDERS "A Bigger Bang"
« on: Agosto 11, 2005, 12:03:38 pm »
En la pagina oficial esta la preorden del cd con una playera a solo 40 dolaritos, tambièn pueden elegir el LP por 42...



Aca en Mèxico las tiendas Mixup ya tienen un stand grande con la lengua y la portada, en la luz tiene iluminacion real, y un contador de tiempo, ayer lo vi y decia: faltan 26 dias, no se cuantas horas, minutos y segundos para el lanzamiento mundial...

629
Rolling Stones / A LA VENTA la Newsweek!!!
« on: Agosto 07, 2005, 02:06:55 pm »
Hay que estar pendientes con la revista newsweek del 15 de agosto que trae un articulo de los stones con entrevistas...a la oficina me llega gratis!!!

Satisfaction Guaranteed
They're not exactly a boy band, but there's no denying the bad-boy appeal of the Rolling Stones. Now they're back—again—with a new CD and tour.

By Lorraine Ali
Newsweek
Aug. 15, 2005 issue - For a month now, the world's greatest rock- and-roll band has been holed up in this private school in Toronto—putting itself back together again for yet another tour—and it's made itself right at home in typical fashion. In the room Mick Jagger has appropriated, white curtains are pulled wide open for maximum sunlight, fluffy white rugs cover the floor and a humidifier blasts 24/7 to protect his 62-year-old voice from the arctic AC. In fact, he's shivering: like the other Stones, he has zero body fat. (He works out daily with a dance instructor—"not exactly a choreographer; he just helps me plot out my stage moves.") He's wearing loose white cotton pants, a pink, pin-striped dress shirt, black and red Adidas. He points to a full-length gray and white fur coat. "I was wearing that because it's so cold in here," he says, "but I thought I'd better take it off before you came in, or it could look a little... well, too much."

Keith Richards, meanwhile, has converted a classroom into a candlelit den, with blackout curtains, dozens of blood-red roses and a skull he uses for a candy dish. Cigarette smoke hangs in the air. "It's comfy, innit?" he says, gesturing around with a clawlike hand. Richards, 61, wears a tattered scarf around his head, and random charms—an eagle head, a cross, a Chinese coin—hanging from his matted quasi dreads. He says he has no idea what-all is in his hair: his kids and his friends like to decorate him while he's passed out. Richards has no trainer, no regimen, and plots out exactly nothing. "Mick has to get up in the morning with a plan," Richards says. "Who he's going to call, what he's going to eat, where he's going to go. Me, I wake up, praise the Lord, then make sure all the phones are turned off. If we were a mum-and-pop operation, then he'd be Mum."

This mum-and-pop operation called the Rolling Stones has been in business now for 43 years. Just three of the original five—Jagger, Richards and drummer Charlie Watts—are still running the shop; guitarist Brian Jones died in 1969 and bassist Bill Wyman retired in 1993. They haven't had a No. 1 album since "Tattoo You" in 1981. But while most of their peers have either died, dropped into obscurity or taken to limping periodically through sad "reunion" tours, the Stones remain one of the world's top concert attractions. Want a ticket for this year's tour, which kicks off in Boston on Aug. 21? Hurry, it's almost sold out. The question is, when they step onstage, do they still feel it? The answer is, why else would they bother? "I could see why some people may think we're phoning it in after all this time," says Richards. "But playing the music we do, and playing it with these guys, 'Jumpin' Jack Flash' can be a new song to me every night. I mean, we don't need to do it to feed our families. We don't need to do it to prove anything. And nobody wants to be the first one to get off a moving bus. You end up in the dust—'Uh, excuse me, where's my suitcase?' "

In recent years, the Stones' tours have gotten more praise than the new albums they write and record before hitting the road. Their last album, the double-CD "Forty Licks," was mostly repackaged material. "There's no harm in doing that occasionally," says Jagger, "but we didn't want to do it again so soon. You become like an oldies band." The Stones' latest, "A Bigger Bang," which comes out in early September, is a welcome throwback to their scrappy beginnings. This time all the songs are new—a raw, "Little Red Rooster"-style blues number, a couple of Richards's endearingly bedraggled ballads and the usual raunchy, swaggering club anthems. Jagger is clearly proud of it. "We put new stuff out because we still can," he says. "We have lots of it—it's not like we're just eking it out. Rock fans tend to be conservative. 'Ah, I much prefer "Brown Sugar".' Yeah, well, but listen to this, c—t."

Producer Don Was, says Jagger, "is always worried the songs won't sound like the Rolling Stones. I don't care if it sounds like them—us. It would be an achievement if it didn't." But "A Bigger Bang" is classic Stones all the way. It's their longest record in 33 years and is sequenced to sound like two sides of an old vinyl album. "The record company felt it was too long," says Jagger. "But I said, 'What's the favorite Rolling Stones album of all time?' 'Well, "Exile on Main Street".' 'There, you see? "Exile." And how long is that?' 'It's over an hour.' 'And the problem is?' 'Uh, nothing'."

Jagger and Richards say they worked together more closely on "A Bigger Bang" than they have in years, partly because Watts, the only other original Stone, was battling throat cancer. "We were sitting across the table looking at each other," says Richards, "like, 'You. Me. That's all there is.' It was all built on two acoustic guitars, and in such a sparse and stripped-down way that if you tried to elaborate on it later you'd lose the whole essence of it." The Stones' new music sounds more spontaneous than most of their recent efforts, and Jagger sounds angrier than he has in years. Since the band's last studio album, Jagger has ended his 23-year relationship with wife Jerry Hall, and was taken to court over an illegitimate child he fathered with a Brazilian model, which may explain such lyrics as "Oh no! Not you again, f—-ing up my life/It was bad the first time around/Better take my own advice." But the most searing moment, on a song called "Sweet Neo Con," isn't personal but political. "You call yourself a Christian, I call you a hypocrite/You call yourself a patriot, well I think you're full of s—t." "It is direct," Jagger says with a laugh. "Keith said [he breaks into a dead-on Keith imitation], 'It's not really metaphorical.' I think he's a bit worried because he lives in the U.S." Jagger smiles. "But I don't."

The tension between Jagger and Richards—primarily, but not exclusively, creative—has always been at the heart of the Stones. Jagger the arty, natty cosmopolitan, Richards the scruffy blues purist and regular guy; Jagger dancing and prancing, Richards standing there with a cigarette dangling. Over the years, they've quarreled and reconciled, recorded solo albums and reunited, and neither has really thrived without the other. "Many times we wanted to kill each other," Richards says now, "or at least cause some serious damage. But it's always about details, never about fundamentals. An album cover—'You can't do that!' It's quite silly, really. I've known the man since he was 4... and I was 3i [he gives a broad wink]. Our kids have all grown up around each other—the Jaggers and the Richardses. All of that has made us patriarchs." They can both remember when they were teenage amateurs, opening for the real patriarchs: Bo Diddley and Little Richard. "The only blue I knew was the school blazer I'd just shed," says Richards, in a well-rehearsed line. For all Jagger's strutting arrogance and Richards's world-weary decadence, they've hung on to a touch of that innocence. Each keeps the other honest: Richards is there to remind Jagger that he's a musician; Jagger is there to remind Richards that he's a star.

As usual, the Stones' new tour will feature grandiose spectacle that's at odds with their rock-club roots and their musical minimalism. It will have two stages, at least a truckload of props—including some mysterious papier-mache screaming heads that now sit on a table outside Jagger's dressing room—and seats for a few lucky fans that are built right into the stage set. And as usual, the type-A Jagger is all over everything. "What about concert T shirts?" he asks rhetorically, running his hands through his hair until it stands up like a fright wig. "The set? The stages? The videos, onstage and off? There's too much to do, and not enough hours in the day. And then there's the rehearsal. [He puts on a fake cruise-director smile.] 'Is everyone all right, then? Are we all happy?' Nannying."

And—as usual—Richards is sitting back and taking the long view. "It's that fascination with music that is still the core of the band," he says. "Charlie sits around and talks about this fantastic Coltrane solo. Thank God, it's the one thing that hasn't left us. You can get disillusioned with the state of the world, but the music's still OK." He takes another drag of his cigarette. "Maybe we're just a product of our time," he muses. "Would our band translate if we were just starting out now? I'd say we'd probably be able to make a living, but I'd keep the day job." For Jagger, this is the day job—at least until he gets onstage. "Sometimes you might feel 'Here we go again.' Feel a little cynical about it," he says. "But you get out there and it takes over." And here they go again.

© 2005 Newsweek, Inc.

630
Rolling Stones / ahora sí, Chusma Chusma Chusma ppttrrrrrrr
« on: Agosto 03, 2005, 12:30:50 am »
Pinches Rolling ahora si me hicieron encabronar, con razon soldatti no lo posteo aquí sino en rocksoff, y es que ahora se le ocurrió tener de abridores a los mamoncitos esos de METALLICA :wink:

Ahora si Chusma Chusma Chusma ppptttrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr

http://www.novogate.com/board/968/213963-1.html

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