THE LEGACY OF BILL GRAHAM
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The Rolling Stones

Sample this concert
  1. 1Introduction00:21
  2. 2Let It Rock02:22
  3. 3Honky Tonk Woman04:06
  4. 4Miss You07:43
  5. 5Shattered04:59
  6. 6Respectable03:20
  7. 7Beast Of Burden06:31
  8. 8When The Whip Comes Down05:29
  9. 9Tumbling Dice05:31
  10. 10Happy03:17
  11. 11Jumpin' Jack Flash06:30
Liner Notes

Mick Jigger - vocals, guitar, keyboards, harmonica; Keith Richards - guitars, vocals; Charlie Watts - drums; Ron Wood - guitars, vocals; Bill Wyman - bass; Ian McLagen - keyboards, vocals; Ian Stewart - keyboards

What is featured on this recording is about half of what the Stones played that night in Memphis. Classics like "All Down The Line," "Brown Sugar," "Love In Vain," and Chuck Berry's "Sweet Little Sixteen" were cut to allow the show to fit the time restrictions of the King Biscuit Flower Hour radio broadcast. In the meantime, this is what we have to groove on, and it ain't bad. Opening with a raunchy and gritty version of "Let It Rock," the Stones prove at this show (and on this entire tour) why they remain among the most important rock bands of all time.

"Honky Tonk Women" winds them up, and "Miss You" takes them even higher, before Jagger & Co. completely rock out with skintight versions of "Shattered" and "Respectable." The emphasis remains on the tracks from Some Girls, which was their new LP at the time. "Beast Of Burden" moves into "When The Whip Comes Down" and is followed by two numbers heavily featuring Richards on vocals: "Tumbling Dice" and "Happy." The set ends with a rockin' play of "Jumping Jack Flash."

The groundbreaking group from the Richmond area of South London has been together since 1962. Originally formed with Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts, Bill Wyman, and Brian Jones as a blues pub band (with the blessing and guidance of UK blues legend, Alexis Korner), The Rolling Stones quickly moved into the spot of the being the "street-wise and gritty" alternative to the four-headed pop music monster The Beatles had become. They followed the Fab Four into the US during the British Invasion, and quickly established their own musical credibility with a string of brilliant pop singles that included "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction," "Time Is On My Side," "The Last Time," "19th Nervous Breakdown," "Ruby Tuesday," and "Paint It Black." By the late '60s and early '70s, the Stones took over as the premier British rock 'n' roll band, and continued their streak of hits with songs like "Jumpin' Jack Flash," "Brown Sugar," and "Start Me Up."

Although Mick Jagger and Keith Richards have often gotten the most attention, people should never mistake the fact that the Stones are a band in every sense of the word. bassist Bill Wyman (prior to his departure in the early 1990s) and drummer Charlie Watts were just as important to the music as the Glimmer Twins; and Ron Wood, who had been in the band several years at this point, provided a strong counterpoint to the sloppy but soulful guitar licks of Keith Richards.

Despite ups and downs, drug busts, countless sold-out tours, great and poor LP releases, personnel changes, illness, and even deaths, the Stones have endured, decades after their formation. Jagger, Richards, and Watts remain from the original line-up and they continue to record and tour to this day.