Me too! Great explanation and details By Berkin, my life is now extended 20 years! I love all versions of Memo! Reality is that Jack Nitzche co-produced many Stones tunes that were recording in Los Angeles and never gets proper credit. Jack played harpsichord and piano on some too for The Stones. I am sure Sonny Bono attended many Stones LA recording sessions. Jack and Sonny wrote one Stones tune. Sonny and Jack were both from Michigan
Berkin, I can’t believe this, what a SOLUTION of the problem! … never heard Winwood on bass before! 😍 Those steps you describe are a jewelry work by Miller-Winwood-Capaldi … once again 😍… No Master Jones here? Thank you very much, love it!
Can this be considered as the very first rap song ever - way back in 1968? I always loved this song - first time I have heard this particular version I believe.
Rap speaks to the beat. This, which ignores the beat and speaks without attention to the rhythm, is called sprechgesang. In classical music it goes back to the 19th century. I don't think this is the first use of it in rock&roll but it's an early one. I'd check the Velvet Underground catalog for examples. Some of what Bob Dylan did has elements of this. Later artists that used it more extensively include the B-52s and Cake. See the Wikipedia page on sprechgesang.
Oh man, Steve Winwood's piano is so recognizable. Love that they worked together.
Nice to hear Mick with a great band.
Berkin, you just added more years to my life! I love you!
:)
Me too! Great explanation and details By Berkin, my life is now extended 20 years! I love all versions of Memo! Reality is that Jack Nitzche co-produced many Stones tunes that were recording in Los Angeles and never gets proper credit. Jack played harpsichord and piano on some too for The Stones. I am sure Sonny Bono attended many Stones LA recording sessions. Jack and Sonny wrote one Stones tune. Sonny and Jack were both from Michigan
:)
We know how you feel.
Jagger's God. Cocaine saves.
Not Fade Away
@@zenzekezenard4269 Your a legend. Who is playing guitar? Bloomfield?
Good one Berkin! Great to hear Mick’s hard edge vocals with Steve’s romping piano!! 🎶
Wow! This is incredible. Cheers!
Thanks for this BA. Fascinating, had no idea at all.
2 genios cantores.
Awesome! 😎🤘👍🌟🌐☮️💛🎶🚀
Love Mick
❤️❤️❤️ love it
Yeah!
We have a contender! Thanks for sharing.
Into rotation it goes, or it ho's. lol
Berkin, I can’t believe this, what a SOLUTION of the problem! … never heard Winwood on bass before! 😍 Those steps you describe are a jewelry work by Miller-Winwood-Capaldi … once again 😍… No Master Jones here? Thank you very much, love it!
:) www.discogs.com/Amazing-Blondel-Blondel/release/3773388
@@WinwoodCompletist 😯 thank you!
Jus so 😎
Can this be considered as the very first rap song ever - way back in 1968?
I always loved this song - first time I have heard this particular version I believe.
Check the Last Poet's contribution to the Soundtrack
Rap speaks to the beat. This, which ignores the beat and speaks without attention to the rhythm, is called sprechgesang. In classical music it goes back to the 19th century. I don't think this is the first use of it in rock&roll but it's an early one. I'd check the Velvet Underground catalog for examples. Some of what Bob Dylan did has elements of this. Later artists that used it more extensively include the B-52s and Cake. See the Wikipedia page on sprechgesang.
🇲🇽❤️❤️❤️❤️
Who's the lead guitarist? Pretty darn good.
WINWOOD… the write up explains all :)
@@WinwoodCompletist Thank you! I missed that. Pretty good for a piano player! Would've liked to hear him sing the song, too.
I think the Jewelers work was done by Berkin 💎💍
On this picture Mick looks like Jerry Seinfeld & Steve like Conan O'Brien or am I watching too much TV lately?
the "Coke" convention, right...😉