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Everybody got to go
Did you hear about the midnight rambler
The one that shut the kitchen door
He don't give a hoot of warning
Wrapped up in a black cat cloak
He don't go in the light of the morning
He split the time the cock'rel crows
Talkin' about the midnight gambler
The one you never seen before
Talkin' about the midnight gambler
Did you see him jump the garden wall
Sighin' down the wind so sad
Listen and you'll hear him moan
Talkin' about the midnight gambler
Everybody got to go
Did you hear about the midnight rambler
Well, honey, it's no rock 'n' roll show
Well, I'm talkin' about the midnight gambler
Yeah, the one you never seen before
[ad lib]
Well you heard about the Boston...
It's not one of those
Well, talkin' 'bout the midnight...sh...
The one that closed the bedroom door
I'm called the hit-and-run raper in anger
The knife-sharpened tippie-toe...
Or just the shoot 'em dead, brainbell jangler
You know, the one you never seen before
So if you ever meet the midnight rambler
Coming down your marble hall
Well he's pouncing like proud black panther
Well, you can say I, I told you so
Well, don't you listen for the midnight rambler
Play it easy, as you go
I'm gonna smash down all your plate glass windows
Put a fist, put a fist through your steel-plated door
Did you hear about the midnight rambler
He'll leave his footprints up and down your hall
And did you hear about the midnight gambler
And did you see me make my midnight call
And if you ever catch the midnight rambler
I'll steal your mistress from under your nose
I'll go easy with your cold fanged anger
I'll stick my knife right down your throat, baby
And it hurts!
A great live band to be sure, but "Nothing else comes close"?
How about, oh, I don't know, Zeppelin, The Who, Springsteen, The Clash, The Stooges, Pink Floyd, Hendrix, Prince, Bowie, James Brown, The Allman Brothers . . . should I continue?
At least long enough to include Little Feat
As a friend of mine likes to say, when Mick was on board they may have indeed been the world's greatest rock and roll band.
A friend of mine likes to say that they became the Worlds Greatest Rock and Roll Band with "Sympathy For The Devil".
Mick Tayler was INCREDIBLE on that one as well as Paint It Black, Street Fighting Man, Stray Cat Blues, Gimme Shelter, Let It Bleed, Monkey Man, Shattered, Beast Of Burden, Memory Motel, Miss You, Worried About You (needle screeches on record)...
Oh! thats right, he wasn't on those tracks. As he wasn't on the original version of this very song.
1969.
Bootlegs were becoming popular and
the main reason the Stones released 'YA-YAs
-
Have yet to hear The Stones better perform any of the songs that they
played in 1971 (including Midnight Rambler) at the Marquee in England,
which is also the location of their first-ever live performance on
July 12th, 1962.
Link to that FULL 1971 Marquee Show :
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B-fdg_qOW0lAQ3ZNX3Z1aElRM2s/view
Live with Me
Dead Flowers
I got the Blues
Let it Rock
Midnight Rambler
Satisfaction
Bitch
Brown Sugar
Sfyi2001, I went to the Marquee club one night in the early 1970's and I was amazed at how small the venue was inside, how small the stage was and how close you could get to stand in front of the bands. It must have been a great experience for those lucky enough to have seen the Stones that night.
chinaski wrote:
As a friend of mine likes to say, when Mick was on board they may have indeed been the world's greatest rock and roll band.
1969.
Bootlegs were becoming popular and
the main reason the Stones released 'YA-YAs
-
Have yet to hear The Stones better perform any of the songs that they
played in 1971 (including Midnight Rambler) at the Marquee in England,
which is also the location of their first-ever live performance on
July 12th, 1962.
Link to that FULL 1971 Marquee Show :
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B-fdg_qOW0lAQ3ZNX3Z1aElRM2s/view
Live with Me
Dead Flowers
I got the Blues
Let it Rock
Midnight Rambler
Satisfaction
Bitch
Brown Sugar
Saw/heard them many times live play MR over the years. This is good, but they really evolved the song over the years in many better renditions than this one.
It was especially good on the last tour when Mick Taylor sat in on every North American date.
Saw/heard them many times live play MR over the years. This is good, but they really evolved the song over the years in many better renditions than this one.
A great live band to be sure, but "Nothing else comes close"?
How about, oh, I don't know, Zeppelin, The Who, Springsteen, The Clash, The Stooges, Pink Floyd, Hendrix, Prince, Bowie, James Brown, The Allman Brothers . . . should I continue?
No one can stay rooted in 1969 as that moment passed over 4 decades ago. All music has far more stage production than it did in the days with no light shows, video screens, and rudimentary sound. The Stones moved on from it with Sticky Fingers, a year later, and with every album since.
They are still just a great rock and roll band. One that is headed into the studio, once again, to create something new in 2016. People may want to live in and revel in the past but I don't think the Stones do.
You can tell who, musician and audience, is rooted in a time zone. Quite a lot of the stuff on RP fits the formula. Music was something to enjoy singing, playing, and listening to 45 -50 years ago. It's about less commercialism, more fun. I watched some skinny guy (older than me) playing music with a bicycle on TV— Carson (or earlier), or Sulivan. Zappa continued to do his own music. Hendrix was sick of playing guitar with his mouth three years after an explosive introduction to the world.
I hear so many of the sterile clean twits complain about musicians who play their own thing, are "rough"; and have the gall to change, or worse. Someone told me (early) Hot Tuna was primitive and they were finally maturing into an electric R&B band. Huh? When you say "I didn't know they had other good music", pat yourself on the shoulder. You've been listening to the big business, and watching MTV.
Interesting note from Wikipedia:
In his book The Better Angels of Our Nature, Steven Pinker discusses the song at length as an illustration of his thesis that the 1960s counterculture "pushed against" the Civilizing Process (identified by Norbert Elias), which, Pinker argues, had been reducing violence over many centuries, and that the counterculture's "glorification of dissoluteness shaded into indulgence of violence.... Personal violence was sometimes celebrated in song, as if it were just another form of antiestablishment protest." He says that "Midnight Rambler" "acted out a rape-murder by the Boston Strangler..." and he sees this as an example of how in the 1960s counterculture "the control of women's sexuality was seen as a perquisite" of men.
There's a definite difference in their current live shows from the period this track represents. I was at one of their shows in the 1969 tours. The difference is that they were just leaner and meaner in those days. The emphasis was on the songs. There was far less stage production. They weren't being celebrated as surviving rock icons. They were just a great rock and roll band.
No one can stay rooted in 1969 as that moment passed over 4 decades ago. All music has far more stage production than it did in the days with no light shows, video screens, and rudimentary sound. The Stones moved on from it with Sticky Fingers, a year later, and with every album since.
They are still just a great rock and roll band. One that is headed into the studio, once again, to create something new in 2016. People may want to live in and revel in the past but I don't think the Stones do.
You make it sound like the core members of the band now have a backup player for each instrument. In 2015, when the Stones take the stage, no one is backing Keith, Mick, Charlie, and Ron on their respective instruments.
As for rounding out the sound... horns, keys, and backing singers have always been a part of the Stones live show, but I would hardly call them a "gang of back up folks".
There's a definite difference in their current live shows from the period this track represents. I was at one of their shows in the 1969 tours. The difference is that they were just leaner and meaner in those days. The emphasis was on the songs. There was far less stage production. They weren't being celebrated as surviving rock icons. They were just a great rock and roll band.
You make it sound like the core members of the band now have a backup player for each instrument. In 2015, when the Stones take the stage, no one is backing Keith, Mick, Charlie, and Ron on their respective instruments.
As for rounding out the sound... horns, keys, and backing singers have always been a part of the Stones live show, but I would hardly call them a "gang of back up folks".
the 10 of 10s for a Rolling Stones fan
. . . but I like it!
Other than the one on Sympathy from the same great album....
Agree. The version of Sympathy on this album is a blast- the guitars just get it absolutely right. Brings back memories of the first time I heard it, full of smokeables and just in awe of how great the Stones were.
Won't complain about this track, though...
Never gets old !! Best jam ever.......
Other than the one on Sympathy from the same great album....
Thank God
Raw unabridged Rock and Roll at it's best - HOT DAMN
In the movie Gimme Shelter, you see a snippet of a scene where they shoot the cover photo for this album.
I don't think Charlie's jumped that high again in 43 YEARS!!!
Proclivities wrote:
I agree. This is one instance where I find he live version to be better than the studio version.
Never gets old !! Best jam ever.......
hayduke2 wrote:
I agree. I've always thought this version was even better than the studio version.
"...baby, and it HURTS!"
plus, what a fab image of mr. charlie. on the cover R.I.P.