Peter Rowan is one of the greatest musicians in the world, and few people's music have ever inspired me as much as his. Thank you, Peter Rowan & Friends.
What a great version. Peter is the finest singer.songwriter of my life. He is the most soulful singer/writer/performer. He has played with so many different folks. Evrything he does is unique, one of a kind and memorable. Mike Marshall rocks too. Thanks for this shot. Peter, please come to San Diego to do a concert. Thnaks...
Mike Marshall's solo is unreal... breath-taking. Sharon Gilchrist's is so perfectly tasteful... and she is drop dead gorgeous in those tight jeans... ooohhhhhh man!
This is so awesome! It's very seldom that I see a video that has been uploaded to You Tube that has this amount of quality in the sound and in the actual picture--WOW!
It was officially written by Jagger / Richards, surely under the influence of Gram Parsons. Anyway, the Flying Burrito Bros recorded "Wild Horses" before the Stones and released it on their album "Burrito Deluxe". Both versions are great, and different. Old & In The Way with Peter Rowan added a bluegrass dimension later... A great song, enough said...
You gentlemen did an awesome job in putting this one together--Peter's vocals and guitar are just gorgeous, as well as his harmony singing with the girls. I miss those gals of his, I must say. I really think he had something with them, both in the Quartet with Mr. Rice (Tony) and in his "Trio" format. (Both have pretty much stopped working with him as of late, although Miss Bryn was able to back him up for a set at MagnoliaFest.) Thanks for sharing! Gorgeous!!! Really!
The Stones LOVE country music so I'm sure they would love this one (even if they don't love each other as Keith Richards recently states). I've worked this up as an acoustic version with a dobro doing the background fills and solo and it is great.
I dragged my CD thru 2 trucks and an SUV listening to Peter's "Pure White Sail" and "Shirt Off My Back" along with many others. Now, after listening to this and not finding the previous mentioned songs I reckon I'll be ordering a couple CDs tomorrow. Seeing Del and the boys last week didn't dampen my bluegrass spirit any - not that I was figuring it to. I like the Stones 'country' influenced stuff tremendously as well.
this is a beautiful version of great song......love the stones' original effort too, btw.........and make no mistake about it, as some of those commenting note below, the great GP's hands are all over this tune........may he RIP.
Isn't that's what great about music? You have have several different versions of a song, and each appeal to different folks. I certainly respect your opinion. :-)
Hey Midnight.... that has to be among the funniest of responses I've ever seen... a close second, well, maybe it even tops George Clooney's "dumber than a bag of hammers" in O Brother Where art thou.... Thanks for the back handed lift and keep up the good work!!!!
Marianne Faithfull claims "Wild horses couldn't drag me away" was the first thing she said to Mick after she pulled out of a drug-induced coma in 1969. This was first released by Gram Parsons' Flying Burrito Brothers in 1970. The Stones' version was written in 1969, but had to wait for Sticky Fingers in 1971. Anyways, this is an excellent version! :-D
I thought this was Keith and Gram Parsons who wrote this together. Gram has a great version. He and Keith were close friends and he had a huge influence on their sound as they headed towards 1970.
Pretty kewl...I didn't realize they were the first to record it. Here's some additional info I found on it: This started as a song for Keith Richard's newborn son Marlon. It was 1969 and Keith regretted that he had to leave his son to go on tour. Mick Jagger rewrote Keith's lyrics, keeping only the line "Wild horses couldn't drag me away." His rewrite was based on his relationship with Marianne Faithfull, which was disintegrating.
Um, i seem to recall this song was written by Graham Parsons, who was palling around with Keith Richards at the time and Richards liked it, so the Stones performed it and popularized it...
Naaaaaah! This is just beautiful; Mick n Keith just wrote a great song, that's all. There's possibly a bit more 'heart' in this version; certainly better mandolin playing?
pete always has the best talent on stage with him and still shines no matter how old he gets
Peter Rowan is one of the greatest musicians in the world, and few people's music have ever inspired me as much as his. Thank you, Peter Rowan & Friends.
Peter Rowan is the real deal. And the band it not too shabby - both Mike Marshall and Sharon Gilchrist on mandolin!!!
What a great version. Peter is the finest singer.songwriter of my life. He is the most soulful singer/writer/performer. He has played with so many different folks. Evrything he does is unique, one of a kind and memorable. Mike Marshall rocks too. Thanks for this shot. Peter, please come to San Diego to do a concert. Thnaks...
Mike Marshall's solo is unreal... breath-taking. Sharon Gilchrist's is so perfectly tasteful... and she is drop dead gorgeous in those tight jeans... ooohhhhhh man!
Peter Rowan, Mike Marshall and Sharon Gilchrist on one stage...that's a very good band! Three of my favorites musicians!
And Bryn Davies, the bass-dancer..
This is so awesome! It's very seldom that I see a video that has been uploaded to You Tube that has this amount of quality in the sound and in the actual picture--WOW!
It was officially written by Jagger / Richards, surely under the influence of Gram Parsons. Anyway, the Flying Burrito Bros recorded "Wild Horses" before the Stones and released it on their album "Burrito Deluxe". Both versions are great, and different. Old & In The Way with Peter Rowan added a bluegrass dimension later... A great song, enough said...
Awesome 💕 rendition 🙏
WoW !!!!- - tAKE note Mick- -whadda great version*****
You gentlemen did an awesome job in putting this one together--Peter's vocals and guitar are just gorgeous, as well as his harmony singing with the girls. I miss those
gals of his, I must say. I really think he had something with them, both in the Quartet with Mr. Rice (Tony) and in his "Trio" format. (Both have pretty much stopped working with him as of late, although Miss Bryn was able to back him up for a set at MagnoliaFest.)
Thanks for sharing! Gorgeous!!! Really!
This is beyond "Excellant"....the Stones wish they could play this as good.
Bill Wyman ain't no Bryn Davies...
The playing in this is really good.. a great rendition and an expert version musically!
I love how loud the bass is in the mix . You usually can't hear it in a bluegrass set .
Especially because it's the Great Bryn Davies.. Goddamn, that woman is a bass-dancer!!
The Stones LOVE country music so I'm sure they would love this one (even if they don't love each other as Keith Richards recently states). I've worked this up as an acoustic version with a dobro doing the background fills and solo and it is great.
the echo of the mando haunting .thanks thanks alot!!!
I dragged my CD thru 2 trucks and an SUV listening to Peter's "Pure White Sail" and "Shirt Off My Back" along with many others. Now, after listening to this and not finding the previous mentioned songs I reckon I'll be ordering a couple CDs tomorrow. Seeing Del and the boys last week didn't dampen my bluegrass spirit any - not that I was figuring it to. I like the Stones 'country' influenced stuff tremendously as well.
this is a beautiful version of great song......love the stones' original effort too, btw.........and make no mistake about it, as some of those commenting note below, the great GP's hands are all over this tune........may he RIP.
thank you so much for this ..it has become one of my all time favs......could hug ye for it
Isn't that's what great about music? You have have several different versions of a song, and each appeal to different folks. I certainly respect your opinion. :-)
Hey Midnight.... that has to be among the funniest of responses I've ever seen... a close second, well, maybe it even tops George Clooney's "dumber than a bag of hammers" in O Brother Where art thou.... Thanks for the back handed lift and keep up the good work!!!!
Yes!
Marianne Faithfull claims "Wild horses couldn't drag me away" was the first thing she said to Mick after she pulled out of a drug-induced coma in 1969. This was first released by Gram Parsons' Flying Burrito Brothers in 1970. The Stones' version was written in 1969, but had to wait for Sticky Fingers in 1971. Anyways, this is an excellent version! :-D
thanks!
I thought this was Keith and Gram Parsons who wrote this together. Gram has a great version. He and Keith were close friends and he had a huge influence on their sound as they headed towards 1970.
We cant forget to give some credit to Mike Marshal. Props mandoman!
What can I say?
Bryn Davies dancing with her bass...
Pretty kewl...I didn't realize they were the first to record it. Here's some additional info I found on it: This started as a song for Keith Richard's newborn son Marlon. It was 1969 and Keith regretted that he had to leave his son to go on tour. Mick Jagger rewrote Keith's lyrics, keeping only the line "Wild horses couldn't drag me away." His rewrite was based on his relationship with Marianne Faithfull, which was disintegrating.
yeah right, The stones do this better than anyone has, does and will ever. You cant be someone on there own material because they set the standard
Hi, great song in the best design I've heard. I ask you, will you allow me to publish your video on my Facebook page?
Um, i seem to recall this song was written by Graham Parsons, who was palling around with Keith Richards at the time and Richards liked it, so the Stones performed it and popularized it...
Originally recorded before the Rolling Stones did, I think.
Where's Tony?
Bryn's so hot.
Rolling Stones o Gram Parsons?
where's tony
Naaaaaah! This is just beautiful; Mick n Keith just wrote a great song, that's all. There's possibly a bit more 'heart' in this version; certainly better mandolin playing?
Actually, Keith wrote this one.
Nice but it would suited the range of his voice better if they'd dropped it a key, so he didn't have to strain so much for the higher notes.
Too much internet copy-paste trivia.
What if I say baroque composer Buxtehude wrote the song and let it float through ages?
A tribute to Vassar,Should at least have the correct spelling of his name , it's, Vassar Clements RIP
That COULD be better than the original, just sayin.
what? im called peter rowan as well and i play the violin, haha hes copying off me with the musicianship ;)