People hate on it, but I love it. It has some real gems on it.
@gypsy777ify8 күн бұрын
I loved it when it came out and still like some of the songs.
@LesAtlas26 күн бұрын
Christmas of 1967 I was a freshman in high school, sitting at my cousin's house in front of their stereo. The songs, especially 2,000 Light Years, had me transfixed. I remember what it was like hearing it for the first time like it just happened yesterday. And I can only say this about a few other albums, like the Beatles White album and Hendrix's Electric Ladyland. Even if it was not the Stone's usual style, the innovation and the production quality were amazing. Along with that lenticular image on the cover. All kinds of later music from others was influenced by this landmark album.
@soarornor26 күн бұрын
Nothing else sounds like it. It was brilliant. People talk such nonsense about it including the current Stones. Charlie’s contributions were stellar. Very unique drumming and percussion. That they were able to create such music under the pressures they were under during that time is amazing in itself. That they had an active roll in producing and mixing it is also a big thing. The Beatles had George Martin to do all that. The Stones did it themselves. Great record that is becoming more known and appreciated as time rolls by.
@johnryan391325 күн бұрын
@@soarornorThe Stones, especially Mick, rarely have anything worth saying about their own work. Rarely has a major artist been so seemingly dismissive about his own work. Of course they never listen to their records once they're finished anyway
@soarornor25 күн бұрын
@@johnryan3913 The Pink Floyd have been similar. Dismissive of some of their greatest work pre Dark Side of the Moon. I remember a long, long time ago reading an interview with Mick talking about Satanic Majesties. It was a bit after its release. He said if it were up to him they’d do more of that kind of thing but their audience didn’t like it much so they let it go. I don’t know about audiences not liking. I seem to recall at the time of its release that people were quite enthusiastic about the record. It was an excellent piece of work and definitely a part of that time. The only similarity to the.Beatles were that both bands and many of that era were into making expansive, unique records. It was like a competition. It was the perfect time for that.
@SonofNun12326 күн бұрын
I bought this album brand new with the 3 D cover when it first came out. It's still one of my favorite Rolling Stones albums too this day.
@thornil223126 күн бұрын
same here
@soarornor25 күн бұрын
@@SonofNun123 Me too. I stopped off at a small drug store and they had a rack of albums. I turned around and saw that album and that was it. Had to buy it. Still a favorite.
@erestube28 күн бұрын
I always thought psychedelic Stones was a refreshing sound. And it probably helped pave the way for Gimme Shelter.
@doctorvortex97927 күн бұрын
2000 light years is an excellent psychedelic track!! One of my faves!!
@tonyfluxman759628 күн бұрын
This in my view is an excellent album. Wide ranging with all kinds of interesting ideas. I prefer it to the much vaunted Exile on Main Street. I think the Stones should have been as experimental in later albums as well.
@johnryan391325 күн бұрын
They were, on Bridges to Babylon
@petemartin29526 күн бұрын
I really believe that if any band not named “The Rolling Stones” had recorded Satanic Majesties, it would’ve been hailed as one of the great albums of this period. Its resemblance to Sgt. Pepper is superficial at best. After this album, they brought in Jimmy Miller to record Beggar’s Banquet and the Stones’ “golden era” began.
@lamper221 күн бұрын
I think the opposite-if it wasn't by the Rolling Stones it would've been ignored & rightly so.
@ricjenner11202 күн бұрын
Interesting hypothetical. I love the album, personally. If it were done by a band like 13th Floor Elevators or some underground psych band , it may have been overlooked at the time, but it would’ve been on a “Nuggets” compilation and hailed as a forgotten classic decades later.
27 күн бұрын
This and Beggars Banquet have always been my favorites.
@CharlesBukowski-m1o27 күн бұрын
"Beggar's Banquet" was their way back from being wannabe Beatles. Yet this album before it was the best misstep ever, maybe! (RIP Brian Jones not too long after this one)
@Alex-lc9vq27 күн бұрын
Fantastic as always!
@fabiannacht178428 күн бұрын
Highly disciplined and great album, despite historical context.
@johnr134827 күн бұрын
I always liked this album!
@henkhor-pi5bmКүн бұрын
Yes I agree because it some verry good songs . In my opinion are the stones in total better composer's in compair to the beatles , woensdag you look to all the years .
@johnr1348Күн бұрын
@@henkhor-pi5bm I agree...there catalog of great tunes is Massive!
@michaelshiflett483526 күн бұрын
It’s absolutely NOT a copy of Sgt. Pepper! Anyone that says that is in need of a musical education. Satanic Majesties is a British psychedelic masterpiece of its own.
@sortof732123 күн бұрын
I agree, well said!
@harveyyoung342322 күн бұрын
I agree its not a Sgt Pepper Rip off, but its not psychedelic either. Its a Critique of all the flower power piece and love stuff, but using the psychedelic motifs and style to Critique it. It is a classical technique or tactic in art. Like parody. But its not just mocking it either. Sgt Pepper is also obviously a Critique of psychedelic flower power stuff. Its in your face if you actually listen to the lyrics. the Beatles and Stones are on the face of it Critiquing the California peace and love but also the vision of a universal world though technology. They knew people from earlier who were at the fore front of computing and so fourth who knew what the future was going to be like: L what now was going to be like: like now. All full the bright shinny fun stuff the whole world on a screen but the catch is a loss of proximity acquaintance. One world but viewed from nowhere. Its in your face in Sgt Pepper. But satanic Majesties Request is much darker. They are using surrealism to say the unsayable. That was a French art thing Mick Jagger was into, but began in post World War Two Germany really. Compare to various writers who write sci fi or surrealism to convey a world that does not really make sense. This began I think, with Leibnitz's 17th 18th Century vision of the enlightenment "Everything has a reason". The 19th century Critique says "no it doesn't". Some artists realised that you could not convey this with a straight narrative. that the form of narrative has to be as weird as the subject its about. Of course this can attract a lot of rubbish fake artists, con artists, pretention, and so on, that might be difficult at first to distinguish from the real McCoy. Like all the dreadful guitarists who tried to represent Jimi Hendrix with out the years and years of work on guitar before them. Difference between a built up habit and a copy of the surface. Like Picasso's "Dove" drawings. There's no short cuts really. No learn it faster than any body else book. No quick 2 days and you've got it or your money back. Satanic Majesty is a flawed masterpiece. Go to Tangier and to the café and hotel they hung out in. I'm not talking about a dr*gs holiday either forget that. Do some historical digging, talk to some people. no one can take your trip for you as Jim Morrison said. Great art demands a lot of time and effort of the audience. not 3 minutes and on to the next thing. Trick is though not to spend years on a piece of "art" to find out that there nothing there to be found. Silence can mean depth or just nothing. I rest my case. Do your own work.
@soarornor22 күн бұрын
@@michaelshiflett4835 Agreed. It’s brilliant. I’ve never understood people saying that. Everyone was trying to do the ultimate psychedelic album. I thought the Stones did a quite admirable job.
@ComradeTrotsky101719 күн бұрын
@@harveyyoung3423 You haven't any idea of what you're talking about. Satanic Majesties is CLICHE psychedelic music. That's how psychedelic the album is. Involving harpsichord (prevalent in the British psychedelic pop scene), Tabla (prevalent in Indian inspired psychedelic rock); mellotron, electric dulcimer, and lyrics about space travel. All things we have come to label psychedelic rock. Every cliche of psychedelic rock is on that record - and it's brilliant. They weren't mocking anything except Sgt. Pepper's album cover. They lived the lifestyle. Dropping acid, traveling to Morocco, wearing beads and hippie-esq fashion (especially Keith). They weren't "peace & love" per se, but where exactly do you get this idea that they were so amused at the idea of peace and love that they mocked it? First you say it isn't psychedelic, and then you say it's using psychedelic music to mock psychedelic music? What a worthless comment and a waste of time. Rubbish word-salad from a Schizophrenic.
@judyweintraub26719 күн бұрын
I thought people were just being creative.
@adamwatson691626 күн бұрын
Its crazy how despite the fact that Brian Hated this album and was in a very bad state of mind and health at the time Brian managed to do some of his greatest work on this record . Brians mellotron Playing on this album was amazing . His Mellotron Playing on We Love You and 2000 light Years was incredible . He had never played the Mellotron prior to Satanic Majesties but he taught himself very quickley which is even more impressive when you consider the Mellotron was a very difficult instrument to master but Brian mastered it seeminlgy in a matter of days and wrote the insanely good Mellotron parts for We love You and 2000 Light Years from Home . Not to mention all the toerh instruments he played on the album .. Yet somehow he gets no writing credits on the album . He should have Gotten writing credits on at least We Love You and 2000 Light Years from home .
@AlanGreene-ko8rl10 күн бұрын
And "Gomper" for sure.
@rjsaid5 күн бұрын
What on earth would lead you to believe the mellotron was a very difficult instrument to play?? To service/maintain, sure. To play? Not quite.
@justinjayaddams908427 күн бұрын
Amazing! Fantastic work on this very critically acclaimed album. 1967 was such a great year for music, so many great albums came out then! Since it was mentioned…any chance that you’ll do Pink Floyd’s debut album, The Piper at the Gates of Dawn? One of my favorite albums, due to Syd Barrett’s invaluable and unique approach to songwriting and guitar playing. He’s one of my favorite/most inspiring musicians and guitarists! Thank you for all that you do!
@CantTellYou26 күн бұрын
I haven’t said it (written it?) out loud yet… but I’ve been praying for him to give that album the Film Retrospective treatment for awhile now lol or even just any Pink Floyd albums at all from that era
@justinjayaddams908423 күн бұрын
@@CantTellYou Here’s hoping that he’ll eventually do it! I’m more than certain that it’s definitely ground-breaking and innovative enough to deserve some attention. Many Floyd fans don’t even know about Syd Barrett and the early years of the Floyd 😪
@familydogg123426 күн бұрын
I dont care what anyone says- I love Their Satanic Majesties Request. Have it on 3D ( lol) cover, Cd, Lp , 8 track. Id love to hear the unreleased stuff from around the time
@soarornor25 күн бұрын
@@familydogg1234 I think it is still up on KZbin. There’s a whole lot of in process recordings at Olympic studios during the making of the album. Very fascinating. Like sitting in the control room with Mick while they were putting the tracks together. It was all released on (of all things) a DVD. Why a DVD is anyone’s guess because there is no video. It’s all the out takes and recording process track by track of that album. It’s great stuff. It might still be available on eBay or discogs. And I agree. It’s a brilliant album unlike any other.
@lamper221 күн бұрын
the unreleased stuff isn't hard to find
@josephtabar49218 күн бұрын
And the God of Heaven will surely judge all those that were involved. 😢😢😢😢😢
@barnabyaprobert515928 күн бұрын
ANOTHER brilliant video! Thank you so much!
@DeElSendero10 күн бұрын
Excellent video! Much appreciated! I liked the album when it came out and have liked it ever since. We Love You has always been a favorite,
@cooperfuller952427 күн бұрын
These videos are always so great. More Stones content please!
@shuroom5724 күн бұрын
The WORST album of the 1960's is a thousand times better than the BEST album of today.
@myname-ss5qm16 күн бұрын
Says the guy who hasn't listened to any new music since 1974.
@michaelreardon395810 күн бұрын
Album is all right. Hey they wanted to be non bluesy.
@MarioBeatle12028 күн бұрын
I never saw it as a Sgt pepper copy. I saw it as it's own thing. There are some great songs here and it's a shame cause all people wanna do is shit on the album due to the pepper comparisons. However, if sing this and it's reprise were replaced with we love you and dandelion the album would be a masterpiece and maybe taken more seriously. Plus I think the stones just became a target for the millions who'd copy pepper or psychedelic music at the time since they were released back to back even though technically the stones recorded theirs first. So yeah underrated and underappreciated if you ask me.
@CantTellYou26 күн бұрын
I do feel like a lot of that “copy” talk often comes more from the album covers than the actual sound lol If anything, it’s more close in sound to Piper At The Gates Of Dawn (but even that comparison doesn’t stick considering most of these songs were recorded before that album release)
@adamwatson691626 күн бұрын
It's very different from Sgt Pepper . It's a much darker record and very unique .
@johnwheeler16294 күн бұрын
Been a stones fan since day one 8 o'clock, and this is my favourite album. Brilliant.
@axxellein25 күн бұрын
TRES Cool/Heavy =The Mellotron of Brian's 200,0000 Light Years from Home! Stellar/Spacey/Capacous/Aviary!
@mnbv99026 күн бұрын
Excellent film as always sir.
@sogggyyy28 күн бұрын
Love listening to your videos! Thank you!!
@psychedelicpsyhcosis28 күн бұрын
Thank you!! We love your videos
@kso8082 күн бұрын
This is one of the most exquisite music documentaries from a most extraordinary period for music IMHO.
@Sunshine1999-b9j28 күн бұрын
Another fantastic documentry.
@Texeq23 күн бұрын
I love the album. Gompers, Citadel, 2000 Light Years..... its like a heavier Incredible String Band. The cover, the maze, the smoke inner sleeve. What a time.
@michaelreardon395810 күн бұрын
Just Gomper, not Gompers. Sorry to correct you.
@ajbianchi8528 күн бұрын
Although this is another unabashed Beatles copy, I absolutely love this album. Citadel is a top 5 stones track
@Agripapost28 күн бұрын
It’s alright since Sgt.Pepper’s is an unabashed Pet Sounds copy anyway.
@overjoyous28 күн бұрын
@@AgripapostThat's so far from true it's laughable. Sgt Pepper sounds nothing like Pet Sounds.
@JustineLaLoba27 күн бұрын
@@Agripapost Nice try. Half the tracks on Pet Sounds the Beatles would have tossed.
@ramsesgoddeeris217527 күн бұрын
This album is much more Psych and experimental if you compare it to Sgt.peppers. It doesn't make it better, but I don't think it's a copy, certaintly because they started the project way before pepper was released.
@coltenk63727 күн бұрын
@@Agripapostand that’s completely fine considering pet sounds is an unabashed copy of Rubber soul
@chandlerdukes179028 күн бұрын
This and all of your other works are phenomenally amazing, I glad you are now touching on the Stones works. I hope you are able to make one about the years before the Beggars Banquet and Let It Bleed sessions, those were also turning points in their careers, I would love to hear your take on it . ❤💯
@garymallett596227 күн бұрын
My favourite Stones album
@waynejensen963426 күн бұрын
10000000000% AGREED
@rockturtleneck28 күн бұрын
This album is to me akin to the Beatles' Let it Be--both albums are routinely referred to as "disastrous" yet each contains 5 or so songs that any other group (say Oasis) would kill for, especially when you consider the non-LP tracks We Love You and Dandelion. Their lesser reputations are really more of a reflection of the astounding quality of the work that precedes and follows it.
@calvinguile131515 күн бұрын
One of my all time favorites!! Check out the unreleased track “SHES DOING HER THING “ was meant for the album, sounding like a power pop, post punk ish, psychedelic vibe. I never heard Mick say it was to be a “concept album”. They explored varied themes, and was, to me, a cut and paste art project. I always fantasized that they would connect with Jimmy Miller, and had proper guidance with the album, instead of trying to do EVERYTHING themselves, even building the set of the album cover….
@christopher915227 күн бұрын
I always felt it was an underrated album.
@waynejensen963426 күн бұрын
All that was going on, consumed, experienced...No Wonder TSMR is their BEST WORK ! BEST LP!
@Vivian-g1h25 күн бұрын
The Mother's of invention LP "We're Only in it for the money"(1967) was the best parody of Sgt Peppers, both musically and in the cover art.
@tacoblend324628 күн бұрын
Love your stones videos man
@richardbanker391028 күн бұрын
This fascinating documentary shows the paradox of Brian disintegrating mentally over the year yet he is pretty active in recording the album though there are occasions when he either doesn’t turn up or turns up in an incapacitated condition. Mick and Keith were pretty high on drugs themselves. Brian plays a variety of instruments to good effect.
@ObiesieMaduegbuna28 күн бұрын
I love this channel
27 күн бұрын
I still say it's a (mostly) great album.
@bullcrap940910 күн бұрын
Nicky Hopkins was like rock’s piano god for years.
@ki4hw23 күн бұрын
It's an interesting record from a profoundly experimental period in rock and roll. Their single, "We Love You" is one of my favourites from the entire period. It's fearsome in its drive, intensity, and creativity. A radical sound collage from a radical period. Great track. Surprised it didn't sell in 1967.
@stevenfunderburg162327 күн бұрын
Wait a second! I am the only guy who liked the Stones psychedelic stuff! I want these other comments removed! This is complete violation of my squater/hipster rights and I demand justice!
@romanlouche370225 күн бұрын
Squater pwr!⚡️
@devendrasinghgautam463817 күн бұрын
❤ Love this album. Highly underrated
@GG-ox3oq27 күн бұрын
PLEASE GO THROUGH THE STONES ALBUMS NOW
@thornil223126 күн бұрын
I am an unconditional fan of the Stones (prior to Ron Woods of course.) And I must say I really liked that album. I have it with the 3 d picture.
@charlesseiderman2926 күн бұрын
My favorite stones album, L.S.D. inspired
@romanlouche370225 күн бұрын
This is my scene and it drymbles thy wedge!!!
@HOZER199078727 күн бұрын
Excellent content 👌👍
@ricjenner11202 күн бұрын
I very fond of the album, but I’m also in the minority that loves the Brian Jones era of the Stones and the Syd Barret Floyd albums. I hadn’t listened to the whole album until I heard the Brian Jonestown Massacre’s Satanic Majesties Second Request, and I got curious about what the non hit songs were like. I dig it all the way through. If you like it and have never listened to old-school BJM, check it out. You’re in for a treat !
@waterwinterwonderland622228 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@filmretrospective533428 күн бұрын
Very much appreciated.
@FriedEggTV14 күн бұрын
informative stuff brought up on the stones
@dianenicolace7683Күн бұрын
Somebody stole the 3D photo right off my album. Bummer. People are strange.
@GavinB42415 күн бұрын
Ever thought of doing a video on the recording of Billy Joel’s “The Stranger” or any content about him?
@efolson27 күн бұрын
It's interesting the mystique around Brian Jones and how people say he was such a musical genius in some ways, but he never wrote a song for the stones and never sang. Bill Wyman even wrote sort of a clunker song on this album, but Brian couldn't muster up anything.
@soarornor25 күн бұрын
@@efolson In Another Land was no clunker. Excellent song that fit perfectly in that album.
@alicerepooc447518 күн бұрын
@@soarornor I am pretty sure Brian sang backup vocals on stones material.
@Jaysamonk28 күн бұрын
12:47 this is where the snoring comes from at the end of In Another Land
@JK..INFX.D....28 күн бұрын
Always Steller Content!! Thanks! This dude is from Allabammy , He's faking this accent..... JK
@lawsonj3926 күн бұрын
At the time, as reported in the vid, Their Satanic Majesties seemed to be an imitation of Sergeant Pepper, which had been released the previous spring. The two parts of Sing This All Together paralleled the two parts of the Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, and the use of sitar echoed Within You Without You, among other "trippy," psychedelic features of the two albums. The voice saying "Where's that joint?" at the start of Sing This All Together part two was reported at the time to be Paul McCartney, not Mick. It sounds like Paul to me. I've always liked the album, especially The Lantern, She's a Rainbow, Citadel, and 2000 Light Years From Home.
@NoCats-on-Guitars26 күн бұрын
The albums have one thing in common: both bands didn't like their own album.
@alanlord309826 күн бұрын
I bought the Satanic Sessions and listened to all 8 CD's - I always loved that album.
@chuckselvage315726 күн бұрын
It's a good album,but the Stones are the blues not psychedelia. One year later they released Beggars Banquet and the single Jumpin Jack Flash,which rocked hard. Thanks for the vid.
@PaulFormentos17 күн бұрын
As per Memoirs of Billy shears 2000Light Years From Home is a PID song
@LannieLord3 күн бұрын
I WISH We Love You and Dandelion made it to the album. My favorite song is One With The Show (weirdly) !!
@AndrewFloydWebber24 күн бұрын
One of their best albums ever!!
@legendarytenseconds25 күн бұрын
It's the best album that they ever recorded.
@Ratelzwatel14 күн бұрын
2:46 What's the source for Syd Barrett having commented?
@ComradeTrotsky101719 күн бұрын
It's incredible to me that Anita would leave Brian (a beautiful man) for Keith (a man).
@customercx32118 күн бұрын
He must have hit her one too many times.
@skyhorseprice659122 күн бұрын
I remember getting _...Satanic Majesties Request_ when i was 15 and thinking it was badass. I STILL think its badass🤟
@abw4826 күн бұрын
I was there in London 1967-68-69-70..Full into the whole scene.. Hyde Park 69 on Acid.
@soarornor25 күн бұрын
@@abw48 Those must have been the most incredible days. The explosion of creativity was unparalleled.
@abw4825 күн бұрын
@@soarornor : I wish I had paid more attention at the time...Many blank spots in my memory.
@soarornor25 күн бұрын
@ It’s funny about that kind of thing. So much goes by but only some of it stays with us. That must have been something to live in London at that time. UFO club. Roundhouse, Middle Earth, Tyrannosaurus Rex, Pink Floyd, The Who, Kinks, Beatles and Stones, King Crimson, and so many more. Must have been the wildest thing ever to have all that creativity emerging from every corner. For me it was the foundation even though I was nowhere near it in the US. An amazing and unique time. 🌸🌸🐸🌸🌸
@abw4823 күн бұрын
@@soarornor : I was never a Club going guy but some of the best music was in the Pubs around London.
@soarornor22 күн бұрын
@ I can believe it. Does this kind of thing exist anymore in England?
@stuartromig957625 күн бұрын
One of the best albums...EVER...!
@alanlord309826 күн бұрын
You state that Jagger took acid for the first time during the summer of 1967, but in 19th Nervous Breakdown - written in late 1965 - he says "On our first trip I tried so hard to rearrange your mind but after a while I realized you were disarranging mine"
@robomaster488223 күн бұрын
Released in 1965 I always wondered how that line got past the censors. They were really strict back then. I don't think they knew what it meant.
@gordonely359114 күн бұрын
13.28 "We Love You ( Goodbye ) No wonder Ian Stewart didn't bother turning up❗️Charley and Bill must have been NONPLUSSED to say the least . Andrew Loog Oldham couldn't hack it , Brian seemed to get stuck on mellotron , Ian played golf , but ( thanks to a dependable supply of psychotropic chemicals at that time in history ) various combos improvised an excellent LP 🙏
@myyootube225 күн бұрын
Great album! The fact that the band rejects this album is what makes them posers, not the reverse. Whatever. They did something no one else could, and they still do! 2000 light years... 'nuff said
@natesaar303427 күн бұрын
Wow a Billy childish name drop? I’ll take it!
@indigohammer573227 күн бұрын
Secretary-Security. Two unique and different new words you may wish to learn to understand.
@harolddburke472617 күн бұрын
When I saw the.cover it did remind me of pepper. So what the Beatles broke up..the Stones played on...
@langstonanderson655822 күн бұрын
Piper is a REAL psychedelic album
@jamesschwartz383727 күн бұрын
When the narrater talks of tilting the album is when we can see John in the lower right surrounded by red. George can be seen on Charlie's sleeve.
@parkergambino902524 күн бұрын
I think all 4 Beatles are hidden away "Where's Waldo" style on the cover
@jamesschwartz383724 күн бұрын
@@parkergambino9025 I haven't checked in years but on my sleeve I could find only John and George and I thought to find Ringo and Paul I might need the 3D. 🤷♂️
@joeodonnell92127 күн бұрын
Am I the only one that kinda likes the title 'cosmic Christmas' lol
@adamwatson691626 күн бұрын
The Acid was called California Sunshine not Sunshine and that Acid is very potent and lasts a long time . 1 hit lasts 16 hours and starts to kick in after to 10 to 15 minutes .
@DanDDirges28 күн бұрын
She`s A Rainbow is a good tune. The problem with booze and drugs with musicians is it tricks you into thinking you are creating something better than it really is.
@BrianRoberson-k7g28 күн бұрын
That is very true with any artist.
@parkergambino902524 күн бұрын
Am I the only person who heard on my album at the very end (after the "final" track) that there was a brief "We wish you a merry Christmas" slowed down and distorted? Not mentioned in this documentary, not acknowledged in any fashion on the album cover. If you've still got the original album, give it another focused listening!
@aaronlarsen744719 күн бұрын
They thought it was progressive to break the last vestiges of family, and commitment, and used the hypocracy of the leadership to drive home their position for complete debauchery. That is what the devil does. I grew up on rock. I get it. I play guitar, and write songs too. Music comes from the radio in our head, and the things we tune into. We can truly be free in Christ. We cannot separate politics and religion. They are joined at the hip. I cannot buy into a secular world view, and be a Christian at the same time. Look at the mess we have made. "Imagine" was a beautiful piece of musical witchcraft. We did Imagine. Now Imagine communism, food shortages, totalitarianism, no private property, private businesses, and private transportation. Imagine showing papers at state lines. Imagine citizens being stripped of all our rights. Totalitarianism is the way of Nimrod. If we read our bibles, we would avoid it. ,
@kenbranaugh825126 күн бұрын
Dude is cracking me up omg
@PatrickDonovan-m5f27 күн бұрын
Does this mean there won’t be a Beatles one this weekend?
@calvinguile131515 күн бұрын
We Love you was a top ten double a side in the U.K. In the States the b side, “Dandelion” barely made the top ten, on a handful of regional charts…
22 күн бұрын
Great record.
@TrevorBarre28 күн бұрын
Amazing what could trigger people back then.
@stuartromig957614 күн бұрын
The best album...!
@BeandipCartography-i3z5 күн бұрын
Andy Partridge's favorite album.
@icm6527 күн бұрын
They played Ed Sullivan again in 1969….
@MrSkeptik-z5r17 күн бұрын
The establishment was and still is the real problem.
@natesaar303424 күн бұрын
A Billy Childish name drop? I’ll take it!
@joaodiegues777428 күн бұрын
lets gooooo
@carl_valentin13 күн бұрын
That were the real Stones. That were the best Stones.
@jamesschwartz383727 күн бұрын
Narrator refers twice to the 4 on the cover when it is obviously 5. Interesting note is at least 2 Beatles are hidden in the album art. George and John. I have read all 4 are there but on my copy which isn't 3D I can only find G & J. Even in this video you can see John's face in red in the lower right.
@donmacquarrie916118 күн бұрын
After the prince andrew scandal - this title makes sense
@markr.devereux338525 күн бұрын
i listened to it a few times and it didnt measure up to previous albums with radio hits. STICKY FINGERS was next album to wake me up . im not a diehard stones fan.
@beaujeste127 күн бұрын
Wyman ‘unleashes on his Ludwig drum kit?’ 🙄🤷♂️🤔
@MouthBreatherGaming2 күн бұрын
To think they went from that spaced out turd to Beggars Banquet and 3 more of the greatest albums ever made in a row.
@michelberandi887019 күн бұрын
Not my favorite Stones LP but yet an excellent and entertaining 60s pop album. I’ve it on an original London Records 4 track reel to reel tape
@tylerthompson184226 күн бұрын
To me they were every bit as good as the Beatles. They just needed to stick to their own musical instincts. Once they got back to doing their thing they wrote some of the greatest songs of all time. Edit: It would be cool if you did a series on The Zombies, leading up to Odessey and Oracle.