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(LA Times) Cool Rolling Stones' "Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out" box set released, celebrating 40th anniversary. Ewwwww, 40-year-old ya-yas, put those away   (latimesblogs.latimes.com) divider line 30
More: Cool, Rolling Stones, Ya-Ya, box sets, Stones', pop music, Jonas Brothers, Keith Richards, Kenny Chesney  
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638 clicks; posted to Cool on 04 Nov 2009 at 3:27 PM   |  Favorite    |   share:  Share on Twitter share via Email Share on Facebook   more»   |    Get this fabulous T-Shirt and impress the methane out of your friends! shirt it!



30 Comments   (+0 »)
   

Archived thread
 
2009-11-04 12:14:54 PM
John YaYa unavailable for comment... from acros the eighth dimension!
 
2009-11-04 01:13:23 PM
i162.photobucket.com

What 40 year old ya yas might look like, Subby. Actually, she's 47.
 
2009-11-04 02:45:36 PM
CruiserTwelve: What 40 year old ya yas might look like, Subby. Actually, she's 47.
i162.photobucket.com

But her Ya Yas are only 7
 
2009-11-04 03:42:41 PM
Submitard is.
 
2009-11-04 03:49:32 PM
those would be Ta Tas
 
2009-11-04 03:53:49 PM
I have that record somewhere, it holds up alright.

I really liked the older MONO live stuff where they cover shouters like "It's Alright" and "She Said Yeah" - the stuff where one speaker/track had screaming girls and the other had the band.
 
2009-11-04 04:18:23 PM
brap: I have that record somewhere, it holds up alright.

I really liked the older MONO live stuff where they cover shouters like "It's Alright" and "She Said Yeah" - the stuff where one speaker/track had screaming girls and the other had the band.



Wouldn't that be stereo then, if there were two separate channels? The music might have been reduction mixed onto one track, but once it is added to another channel that would be stereo.

Just sayin'....
And I agree that the older stuff is great (like the old Live Kinks album from the mid-/late 60's.
 
2009-11-04 04:38:18 PM
I always thought it was a great album. It is what got me interested in the Stones. They were a great live band. I like to think of it as the time when the Stones were Musicians first not Celebrities first.
 
2009-11-04 04:46:47 PM
There are plenty of hittable 40 yr old women, with 40 yr old ya-yas that I'd like to see.
 
2009-11-04 05:07:09 PM
makjr33: brap: I have that record somewhere, it holds up alright.

I really liked the older MONO live stuff where they cover shouters like "It's Alright" and "She Said Yeah" - the stuff where one speaker/track had screaming girls and the other had the band.


Wouldn't that be stereo then, if there were two separate channels? The music might have been reduction mixed onto one track, but once it is added to another channel that would be stereo.

Just sayin'....
And I agree that the older stuff is great (like the old Live Kinks album from the mid-/late 60's.


Maybe. More like two monos. Bi-mono. I dunno, it's probably plain old vanilla mono, and the hearing loss in one ear only
allows me to hear certain frequencies. Maybe I need a new Victrola.
 
2009-11-04 05:17:30 PM
40-year-old BIE thread?
 
2009-11-04 05:32:59 PM
"Paint it Black.....Paint it Black...Paint it Black you devil"
 
2009-11-04 06:14:45 PM
Were Mick's ya yas also stung by bees, or just his tiny peener?
 
2009-11-04 07:04:33 PM
suomimeister: "Paint it Black.....Paint it Black...Paint it Black you devil"

"Fark Jesus!"

/most random fan comment ever
 
2009-11-04 07:07:10 PM
one of the very best live albums of the 60's fo' sho'.

but how much 'live' it really was is arguable/dabate-able...
[i've heard that much of it was over-dubbed or re-done]

that being said, the 2nd guitar solo on "sympathy for the devil" [that solo by the other guitarist guy who isn't Keith Richards... who was it in 1969? Ronnie Wood? Mick Taylor?] rocks my socks off. every time. just when guitar long-ish rock guitar solos were starting off / coming into the fore, that guy hits it out of park! [i can't think of too many epic classic guitar solos before 1969, besides Cream's "sunshine of your love", and that live version of "crossroads".... then again i'm not 60's rock historian, so can someone clue me in about other great rock guitar solos, pre-1969?]
 
2009-11-04 08:10:26 PM
Third_Uncle_Eno 2009-11-04 07:07:10 PM
one of the very best live albums of the 60's fo' sho'.

but how much 'live' it really was is arguable/dabate-able...
[i've heard that much of it was over-dubbed or re-done]


Been a fan since 'LIB' and have NEVER heard/read this anywhere;
'Citation needed' indeed.

Got a disc after disc of Stones late 60s to mid 70s outtakes and they were one fine band back then.
 
2009-11-04 08:23:07 PM
Third_Uncle_Eno: one of the very best live albums of the 60's fo' sho'.

but how much 'live' it really was is arguable/dabate-able...
[i've heard that much of it was over-dubbed or re-done]

that being said, the 2nd guitar solo on "sympathy for the devil" [that solo by the other guitarist guy who isn't Keith Richards... who was it in 1969? Ronnie Wood? Mick Taylor?] rocks my socks off. every time. just when guitar long-ish rock guitar solos were starting off / coming into the fore, that guy hits it out of park! [i can't think of too many epic classic guitar solos before 1969, besides Cream's "sunshine of your love", and that live version of "crossroads".... then again i'm not 60's rock historian, so can someone clue me in about other great rock guitar solos, pre-1969?]


If you want to hear a great early guitar solo, listen to George Harrison's solo on Good Morning, Good Morning from Sgt Pepper. I have been thinking about it lately -- what with the recent box set releases -- but I can't remember an earlier solo as loud and aggressive as this before Sgt Pepper's release. It is short but it is mighty fine. Maybe Hendrix, maybe Clapton, but I can't think of any others that early in time....
 
2009-11-04 09:30:56 PM
"... Charlie's gud tanite inne...?"
 
2009-11-04 09:50:59 PM
One of my favorite live albums. Broke down & picked it up on CD a year or so ago to have with my aged vinyl copy. Love in Vain is probably the song that I like the most.
 
2009-11-04 10:01:57 PM
makjr33: If you want to hear a great early guitar solo, listen to George Harrison's solo on Good Morning, Good Morning from Sgt Pepper. I have been thinking about it lately -- what with the recent box set releases -- but I can't remember an earlier solo as loud and aggressive as this before Sgt Pepper's release. It is short but it is mighty fine. Maybe Hendrix, maybe Clapton, but I can't think of any others that early in time....

I was listening to Good Morning, Good Morning this morning (new re-master). The transition to the SPLHCB reprise still holds up after 40 years. And god bless muthafarkin Ringo; no slop, just the beats.
 
2009-11-04 10:04:51 PM
Third_Uncle_Eno: [that solo by the other guitarist guy who isn't Keith Richards... who was it in 1969? Ronnie Wood? Mick Taylor?]

Mick Taylor. That whole album is basically Taylor's greatest moment.
 
2009-11-04 10:18:11 PM
The gals who would've gotten their yayas out when the album was first released would be about 60 or so y.o. now.

Heather Locklear will still look fab when she reaches that age.
 
2009-11-04 10:56:59 PM
douchebag/hater
Been a fan since 'LIB' and have NEVER heard/read this anywhere;
'Citation needed' indeed.


i can see where you're coming from, and i respect your opinion / findings, but....

well... i hate to break it to you, but I've read that fact [Get yer Ya ya's out was overdubbed or re-done] in at least three or even four different places [books and on the net].
[yes, one of them was wikipedia *hangs head down in shame*]

I remember reading that they re-recorded some of Mick's Vocals, and some of the guitars.
But evidentally not the bass, because I hear some mistakes/wrong notes in one or two songs. and it'd be pretty hard to re-record the drums in the studio on a live album, because of all the "bleeding" of the drums into the vocal and guitar mics on stage. stuff just wouldn't match up.

I think i remember reading that on one song [forget which one] one of the few "originally REALLY LIVE" thing on it was Mick's vocals.
 
2009-11-04 11:00:02 PM
makjr33
If you want to hear a great early guitar solo, listen to George Harrison's solo on Good Morning, Good Morning from Sgt Pepper. I have been thinking about it lately -- what with the recent box set releases -- but I can't remember an earlier solo as loud and aggressive as this before Sgt Pepper's release. It is short but it is mighty fine. Maybe Hendrix, maybe Clapton, but I can't think of any others that early in time....

that's a good one. forgot about it. oddly reminds me of a trumpet solo, like the one in "penny lane".
I like george's guitar work and solos on the late 60's beatles recordings. [wait... did paul do any lead guitar solos on late 60's Beatles recordings besides the 'take turns solos' on "the end" ??]

holy crap! how could i forget Hendrix?!
He was in 67 for sure.... gotta have had some great guitar solos...
 
2009-11-04 11:02:11 PM
spammuncher
I was listening to Good Morning, Good Morning this morning (new re-master). The transition to the SPLHCB reprise still holds up after 40 years. And god bless muthafarkin Ringo; no slop, just the beats.

which version? mono or stereo?

/the transition is different from "good morning" to "SPLHCB reprise" from stereo version to mono version
[slightly different / longer guitar, with more voices]
 
2009-11-05 12:12:25 AM
I'm in my 40's so I'm getting a kick out of these....

Wait. No I am not. Need more 40 year old ta tas in the thread.

/off to bed to hang with some 40 year old ta tas
//ok, not really, but A MAN CAN DREAM, CAN'T HE?
 
2009-11-05 12:59:07 AM
makjr33: Third_Uncle_Eno: one of the very best live albums of the 60's fo' sho'.

but how much 'live' it really was is arguable/dabate-able...
[i've heard that much of it was over-dubbed or re-done]

that being said, the 2nd guitar solo on "sympathy for the devil" [that solo by the other guitarist guy who isn't Keith Richards... who was it in 1969? Ronnie Wood? Mick Taylor?] rocks my socks off. every time. just when guitar long-ish rock guitar solos were starting off / coming into the fore, that guy hits it out of park! [i can't think of too many epic classic guitar solos before 1969, besides Cream's "sunshine of your love", and that live version of "crossroads".... then again i'm not 60's rock historian, so can someone clue me in about other great rock guitar solos, pre-1969?]

If you want to hear a great early guitar solo, listen to George Harrison's solo on Good Morning, Good Morning from Sgt Pepper. I have been thinking about it lately -- what with the recent box set releases -- but I can't remember an earlier solo as loud and aggressive as this before Sgt Pepper's release. It is short but it is mighty fine. Maybe Hendrix, maybe Clapton, but I can't think of any others that early in time....


Hate to burst your bubble, but the guitar solo on "Good Morning, Good Morning" was played by Paul, not George. Link (new window)
 
2009-11-05 01:29:49 AM
Original disc was not overdubbed. The only thing added was Nicky Hopkins' piano.
But hell yeah, lets rake it in, add a 2nd disc with 5 tracks not worthy of being included on the original LP, and a 3rd with some biatchen tracks by supporting acts on that tour, like BB King and The Ike and Tina Turner Revue
There was a whole slew of mid-60s Brit-blooz that predates Crossroads on Wheels of Fire; check out Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac, The Yardbirds, Procol Harum (with Trower) Spooky Tooth, Keef Hartley Band, Chicken Shack, Aynsley Dunbar Retaliation, Jeff Beck Group, and Clapton's work with Mayall. Sadly, very little of this was ever recorded live and commercially released.
 
2009-11-05 01:39:02 AM
Third_Uncle_Eno: spammuncher: I was listening to Good Morning, Good Morning this morning (new re-master). The transition to the SPLHCB reprise still holds up after 40 years. And god bless muthafarkin Ringo; no slop, just the beats.

which version? mono or stereo?

/the transition is different from "good morning" to "SPLHCB reprise" from stereo version to mono version [slightly different / longer guitar, with more voices]


Stereo, so it sounds like I have to get the mono box set...
 
2009-11-05 11:47:45 AM
I think the live track of "Midnight Rambler" is their peak as a band. The last Mick Taylor solo is (for me) right up there with Mike Bloomfield's last chorus on "Tombstone Blues".
 
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