>2Alex GB: >>Концерт 73 года. >скачал, послушал. да... не зря битлы его за клавиши >к себе сажали:) довольно приятный альбомчик. интересно >мыслит человек (в игре)
Так он, с кем только не играл!
Re: Группа Rolling Stones выступит в России... в 2007 году Автор:Alex GBДата: 21.03.07 22:35:25
Mick Jagger will hold a webcast at 4pm tomorrow through the band's website Rollingstones.com.
A press conference to announce the Stones' European leg of their Bigger Bang Tour was to have taken place tomorrow afternoon in Park Lane, but due to scheduling problems, it is now altered to a worldwide webcast by front man Mick Jagger.
The Bigger Bang Tour, which kicked off in August 2005 has been officially labeled the “top-grossing tour in history” by US trade magazine Billboard.
Despite several set-backs and postponements along the worldwide tour route, incidents included Kieth Richards’ fall from a palm tree in Figi and Mick Jagger's double-dose of laryngitis, the tour has been raptously recieved.
The tour has also been the subject of a documentary by Oscar-winning director Martin Scorcese.
The webcast is due to begin at 4pm. Fans will be able to ask Jagger questions as the announcement occurs.
To log on to the online announcement - click here tomorrow for www.rollingstones.com/mick
Вообще завтра, большинство дат будут названы.
Re: Группа Rolling Stones выступит в России... в 2007 году Автор:Alex GBДата: 21.03.07 20:05:10
>Я бы все-таки подождал официального заявления >группы о туре, слишком много вопросов, по Питеру >в том числе. А то пока только слухи чего зря воду толочь.
Ну на счет Питера, у меня тоже некоторые сомнения, но может приедут, хоть куда-нибудь?
Re: Форум: Книга жалоб и предложений Автор:Alex GBДата: 20.03.07 15:26:07
Stones headline IOW (Monday March 19, 2007 01:30 PM)
The Rolling Stones will headline this summer's Isle Of Wight Festival, it has been confirmed.
The rock'n'roll legends are expected to top the bill on the final evening of the event, making their first UK festival appearance in around 30 years.
The Stones are also set to announce plans for a show in St Petersburg this August, marking their first gig in Russia, according to reports emerging today.
Jagger and co will play the Sunday night headline slot at the 50,000 capacity IOW 2007, alongside fellow headliners Snow Patrol and Muse.
Ash, The Feeling, Kasabian, Amy Winehouse, Keane, The Fratellis, James Morrison and Paolo Nutini are also confirmed, claims Music Week.
The Rolling Stones last played a UK festival in August 1976, at the Knebworth Fair, alongside Lynyrd Skynyrd, Todd Rundgren and 10cc.
Я могу слушать это несколько раз, целиком, на одном дыхании! Очень оптимистичная и энергичная музыка! В основном это можно отнести к фанку. Billy Preston выступал перед Rolling Stones тогда в 73-ем, а затем играл с Роллингами. В тоже время, Мик Тейлор играл еще и с Билли Престоном.
Billy Preston Live European Tour (1973 года)
CD Version (Japan): 40.28 1.Day Tripper (John Lennon & Paul McCartney) (2.07) 2.The Bus (Billy Preston-Joe Greene) (10.5 3.Let It Be (John Lennon & Paul McCartney) (2.2 4.Will It Go Round In Circles (Billy Preston-Bruce Fisher) (3.44) 5.Let's Go Get Stoned- (V.Simpson-N.Ashford-J.Armstead) (1.36) 6.Space Race (Billy Preston) (1.57) 7.Amazing Grace (Public Domain) (4.43) 8.That's The Way God Planned It (Billy Preston) (4.05) 9.Outa-Space (Billy Preston-Joe Greene)/Higher (8.05)
Liner notes:
Musicians: Billy Preston - Keyboards, Vocals. Mick Taylor - Lead Guitar. Hubert Heard - Keyboards. Kenneth Lupper - Keyboards Manuel Kellough- Drums.
Engineer: Andy Johns Album Remixed at A&M recording studios, Hollywood California. Direction- Robert Ellis Road Manager- Bruce Wayne Art Direction- Roland Young Design: Junie Osaki
Я могу слушать это несколько раз, целиком, на одном дыхании! Очень оптимистичная и энергичная музыка! В основном это можно отнести к фанку. Billy Preston выступал перед Rolling Stones тогда в 73-ем, а затем играл с Роллингами. В тоже время, Мик Тейлор играл еще и с Билли Престоном.
Billy Preston Live European Tour (1973 года)
CD Version (Japan): 40.28 1.Day Tripper (John Lennon & Paul McCartney) (2.07) 2.The Bus (Billy Preston-Joe Greene) (10.5 3.Let It Be (John Lennon & Paul McCartney) (2.2 4.Will It Go Round In Circles (Billy Preston-Bruce Fisher) (3.44) 5.Let's Go Get Stoned- (V.Simpson-N.Ashford-J.Armstead) (1.36) 6.Space Race (Billy Preston) (1.57) 7.Amazing Grace (Public Domain) (4.43) 8.That's The Way God Planned It (Billy Preston) (4.05) 9.Outa-Space (Billy Preston-Joe Greene)/Higher (8.05)
Liner notes:
Musicians: Billy Preston - Keyboards, Vocals. Mick Taylor - Lead Guitar. Hubert Heard - Keyboards. Kenneth Lupper - Keyboards Manuel Kellough- Drums.
Engineer: Andy Johns Album Remixed at A&M recording studios, Hollywood California. Direction- Robert Ellis Road Manager- Bruce Wayne Art Direction- Roland Young Design: Junie Osaki
"I'm going to take a new pill when I get back to Paris to get off cigarettes. I've just turned 60, I am a singer and I am still smoking. How stupid is that? But I've been very fortunate - I have been given another life to live.
"First I was going to die and then I wasn't. Then I find out how much I am loved. The whole thing has been a lot for me to process."
Marianne also ponders the irony of the reason for her visit to what she describes as 'my favourite place on the planet' - the splendidly languid Jake's Hotel at Treasure Beach on Jamaica's south coast.
She is here to mourn the death, at 70, of the hotel's owner Perry Henzell, who also directed and co-wrote the legendary 1972 Jamaican film The Harder They Come, featuring reggae star Jimmy Cliff.
"I had to be here to mourn Perry, who died in November," she says.
"I came to help his widow Sally and her son Jason get over their bereavement and to come to terms myself with the fact that my very good friend is not here any more.
"Before he died I had a wonderful phone call from Sally and Perry goading me to come here to help my recovery. I told Perry I was fine, but now he's not here and I am very lucky to be alive.
"Perry died like I would like to die - he died in his sleep lying in bed next to Sally.
"He chose his time beautifully. His cancer was about to become unbearably painful and he told me he didn't want to go to the Jamaican premiere of his latest film, No Place Like Home, the following day."
Has her brush with cancer forced her to reassess her own life? "Sure," she says. "The first thing I want to say is that everybody must check, check, check. For men it's to check for prostate cancer and for women breast cancer."
And she admits: "I also now know I would like another ten years to work because I have never saved money. I have been appallingly bad with money and I would like to earn enough to look after myself in my old age."
Marianne reveals that she still gets stage-fright, but says: "I'm really looking forward to performing again. I'm playing at the Pigalle Club in London in two weeks' time and then at the Shepherd's Bush Empire as part of a European and North American tour. I'll release my next single in November. Life's looking great again.
"I'm even going to Budapest, which is nice because I'm half English and half Austro-Hungarian. I've inherited the title Baroness Sacher-Masoch - it comes from one of my great uncles who gave his name to masochism." This is the 19th Century aristocrat Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, infamous for his erotic novel Venus In Furs.
"I might even put it on my passport," she laughs before stopping to take a sip of Cuba Libre. "But there's no one quite like Marianne Faithfull. No one does what I do."
Indeed, even though she remains most famous for being Mick Jagger's girlfriend for five years at the height of the Swinging Sixties, for her chart-topping cover version of the Stones'.
As Tears Go By and for her part in that infamous drugs bust, it is her more recent work as a singer and actress that has brought her most satisfaction and most commercial and critical success.
But it is also clear that the pain of some of the most hurtful episodes of the Sixties is still close to the surface.
Four decades after the police raid at Keith Richards' country estate at Redlands, Surrey, in February 1967, she still seethes over the indignity of being associated with the untrue Mars bar story.
"When a woman loses her reputation at 19 she loses everything," she says angrily. "What people thought of me and the Stones was downright unfair. And I so object to the Mars bar story - it's offensive.
"Even Keith Richards has gone on record as saying it's ridiculous. He said I was too classy for that."
But has she any regrets about her tumultuous life? "Look, it wasn't my intention to hook up with Mick," she says.
"When we were together it all went by so fast. I didn't understand it. I loved this guy and hoped it would be for ever. It didn't work out, but I would not have missed it for anything. I wanted to work and do my own thing and Mick was supportive of that - well, he was of my acting. He laughed at my music, which did get better."
"But it's your job if you are with him to be Mick's consort. That's how life works out. Stuff happens and you have to deal with it.
"Of course I've got regrets," she admits, without revealing what they are. "But now I've been given a second chance. I've been to the brink and come back again.
"And, because of that, I've realised that what is most important to me now is my family and friends and my work."
She confesses that she could not return to live in Britain again. "Too much has happened there," she says. "I prefer my homes in Dublin and Paris. But I do go back to London to see my son Nicholas [from her short-lived 1965 marriage to artist John Dunbar] and my grandchildren.
"I've also realised more than ever how important friends are. When I was recovering from my operation, I really appreciated all those calls and emails and letters from Mick, Keith, Yoko Ono, John Galliano, Roger Waters of Pink Floyd and Chris Blackwell [the founder of Island Records].
"They all came through for me, either to wish me well or to help me.
"And I've come to the conclusion that I can't retire - I'd croak if I did. Look at B.B. King, still on the road at the age of 81. Bob Dylan recently became the oldest man to top the American charts at 65.
"Having cancer has been one of the most terrifying experiences of my life. But life goes on - and it's up to me to make the most of it."
Re: Marianne Faithfull - профессор поэтики Академии Алена Гинзберга Автор:Alex GBДата: 05.03.07 17:00:12
Now dividing her time between homes in Dublin and an apartment just off the Champs-Elysees in Paris - she left England in the early Eighties because she felt unable to escape her notorious past - this convent-educated daughter of an English professor and an Austrian baroness makes no bones about the fact that being diagnosed with cancer is the most frightening thing that has ever happened to her.
She has not spoken about it before but the tropical warmth, the sound of the blue Caribbean sea crashing on the rocks and the occasional sip of a cold Cuba Libre - white rum and cola - might make the experience seem somehow less terrifying.
The operation to remove the tumour six months ago has been pronounced a success, she says.
"Because they caught the cancer very early, I didn't need chemotherapy or radiotherapy. But the operation was one of those things that had to be done immediately - there was no time to wait.
"The first I knew about it was when I felt very unwell last summer. I just felt I had the blues and I couldn't explain it, so I went to see a doctor in Paris and he told me I had to have some checks.
"I was terrified when the results came back. I was told I had breast cancer, and hearing those words for someone of my age is truly frightening. When I grew up, cancer meant only one thing - death.
"A million thoughts went through my mind - I want to keep living my life, I want to see my grandchildren grow up, I want to be there for my friends, I want to be able to love and to work."
She knows that she was lucky. Lucky to seek medical advice so early. And lucky that she happened to live within a few miles of the Institut Gustave-Roussy, the world-renowned private cancer clinic where Kylie Minogue was also treated for breast cancer.
The doctors there who diagnosed Marianne's tumour decided it had been caught early enough to be dealt with by surgery alone.
The urgency of the operation meant that she had to cancel a major tour of Europe and North America last autumn.
The series of acoustic concerts, titled Songs Of Innocence And Experience, has now been rearranged, beginning next week in Budapest.
Pausing to light yet another Marlboro from a battered pack on the table in front of her, she inhales deeply and begins to ponder the sheer self-destructive folly of a cancer survivor continuing to smoke.
"I know we all die sometime, but I would like not to be stupid about it,' says Marianne. "I hardly drink and don't do drugs but I do smoke.
"I've tried everything to give up - hypnotism, acupuncture, patches - and I've read Allen Carr's book on how to stop smoking. But I've been smoking since I was 19, and so far nothing has worked. But I'm determined to kick it.
Re: Marianne Faithfull - профессор поэтики Академии Алена Гинзберга Автор:Alex GBДата: 05.03.07 16:57:27
Marianne Faithfull: 'I've been given another life...' By PAUL HEDERSON in Jamaica - More by this author » Last updated at 21:55pm on 3rd March 2007
Top: Marianne in her hey day. Below: The singer in Jamaica last week.
Marianne Faithfull awoke with a jolt. She was in a hospital bed in a Parisian clinic recovering from emergency surgery to remove a cancerous lump in her right breast.
It was one in the morning, the lights were dim, there were few staff around and the phone beside her bed was ringing.
After taking a few moments to take in all these facts, Marianne picked up the receiver and put it to her ear. The voice on the other end was unmistakable.
Scroll to the bottom of the page to watch Marianne performing in her 1960s prime...
"Ello Marian darling. How are you?' he said in a Thames estuary drawl.
"He didn't say who he was - he didn't need to," Marianne recalls.
"No one else in the world calls me Marian - as in Maid Marian. It could only be Mick Jagger and I knew it was him right away.
"He asked me how I was and I told him I was fine and getting through it.
"We spoke for a while, like musicians do. I knew he was on a world tour and asked him where he was. He said somewhere like Miami.
"I asked how his voice was holding up. He didn't say much but I could feel his famous shoulders shrugging at the other end."
It is clear from her retelling of the story that Marianne was deeply moved to receive the call. "All the time I was thinking, this is so kind. He hadn't called me for 35 years and here he was on the phone, making sure I was OK.
"I didn't expect him to contact me and I was extremely touched that he'd made the effort to call. He's a good man.
"He loves me and I love him. The fact that our relationship ended in 1970 doesn't matter. If you love someone, you love each other for ever - it never stops.
"I found out later that Mick had phoned around agents and all my friends to get my number in the clinic. He went to a lot of trouble. That's a classy guy."
As she sits beneath the shade of a giant palm on a hotel terrace overlooking the rugged southern coast of Jamaica, it is clear that Marianne, now 60, has retained her extraordinary blue-eyed beauty despite the tell-tale wrinkles and lines bequeathed by a life lived to the limits.
Her voice is deep and husky with beautifully modulated middle-class vowels and a raucous throaty laugh - a legacy of a 40-year cigarette habit she has been unable to kick, despite her cancer diagnosis.
Even dressed-down in blue jeans and an old black T-shirt above a feminine lacy top, she has an aura of proud, if somewhat faded, grandeur.
It befits a woman who was one of the quintessential rock starlets of Sixties London before her life went so disastrously off the rails.
And of all the gossip and half-truths written about Mick Jagger over the decades, there can be no doubt that the simple act of seeking out his old girlfriend after so many years to offer a few words of encouragement as she lay in hospital is one of the most touching incidents - a gesture from one of rock's great survivors to a former lover who has led an altogether more complicated and painful life.
She was publicly disgraced after being discovered naked in a rug during an infamous police raid on a Rolling Stones party in 1967, was a pop star at 17, a married mother at 18 and a heroin addict during much of the Seventies.
As such, she endured the unutterable squalor of two years living rough on the streets of Soho before dragging her life back on track and releasing a series of bitter-sweet, commercially successful albums.