BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS - Child Is Father To The Man.
THE BEATLES - The Beatles (aka White Album).
DOOBIE BROTHERS - What Were Once Vices, Are Now Ha.
by request: DOOBIE BROTHERS - Toulouse Street.
WISHBONE ASH - Wishbone Ash + Pilgrimage + Argus.
by request: WISHBONE ASH - Wishbone Four.
by request: IGGY & THE STOOGES - Raw Power.
by request: LOGGINS & MESSINA - Loggins & Messina.
Next on RockAnthology - Fly Away Weekend.
It is Friday, 9 pm and I would like to show you a.
MK FIBRA - SPLIT "From Dusk `Till Down".
by request: PIERRE MOERLEN`S GONG - Second Wind.
MASTER'S APPRENTICES- A Toast To Panama Red.
by request: GILA - Bury My Heart At Wounded Kneee.
BLUES CREATION - Blues Creation + Carmen Maki.
by request: BLOOMFIELD, COOPER, STILLS - Supersession.
The Live Adventures Of Mike Bloomfield And Al Kooper.
by request: PEARLS BEFORE SWINE - Balaklava.
THE ROLLING STONES - 5 Albums (Mick Taylor Years).
THE ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND - The Fillmore Concerts.
ATOMSKO SKLONISTE - Ne cvikaj generacijo + Infarkt.
BIJELO DUGME - Kad bi bio bijelo dugme + Koncert k.
I’ve really been thinking about the possibility of doing it, because it’s so wrong. I was thinking of getting a couple of heavies and going down there and just ripping it off, and getting back on the train back to London. “It’s so wrong, and I hate stuff like that, where people try to rewrite history for themselves,” he said. He felt it glossed over the fact that Brian Jones started the group and invited Mick and Keith into it. No regrets, we’re still great friends.”Ī couple years later, however, Wyman tested that friendship when he spoke to Clash Music and complained about a plaque that went up at Dartford Rail Station where a chance encounter between Mick Jagger and Keith Richards led to their partnership in the Rolling Stones. Mick Taylor stayed on the road with them throughout 20 and they slowly allowed him to come out for a few more songs a night, including “Sway,” “Can’t You Hear Me Knocking” and the nightly finale of “Satisfaction.” Bill Wyman, however, has not made a single appearance since those two London shows and likely never will again. It was fun to do, but it was short and sweet.” “I said, ‘Two songs? No thanks.’ It’s very difficult to go back and re-live something. “It would have been a two week trip,” he told the BBC in 2013. Mick Taylor was only allowed to come out for “Midnight Rambler,” but when they went to America for the New York and New Jersey shows, he was willing to come with them. I said, ‘I haven’t done a soundcheck or anything.’ They were like, ‘You know ’em. They said, ‘We only want two numbers.’ They wouldn’t even tell me what songs they were to the last minute. “I think maybe they were punishing me for leaving. “They wouldn’t let me do any more,” he told the BBC in 2013. “I was under the impression I was going to get really involved,” he told the Huffington Post in 2013, “but when it came to it, they only wanted me to do two songs, which was very disappointing.” He came out for the first time on November 25th, 2012 at the 02 Arena in London for “It’s Only Rock ‘n Roll (but I Like It)” and “Honky Tonk Women.” Four nights later, he did the same two songs with them at the same venue. Wyman was initially very excited about the chance to play with his old buddies, but reality set in when he got to rehearsals. Meet the Beatle: A Guide to Ringo Starr's Solo Career in 20 Songs Taylor played with the group at a 1981 show in Kansas City, but they hadn’t shared a stage with Wyman since his final gig with the band in 1990. It was either a rare moment of sentimentality or an attempt to justify their exorbitant ticket prices, but either way this was a very big deal for Stones fans. The group was celebrating its 50th anniversary and decided to invite former guitarist Mick Taylor and former bassist Bill Wyman to guest with them. Their comeback began very tentatively in October of 2012 with a pair of warmup shows in France followed by two concerts at London’s 02 Arena, one gig in Brooklyn and another in Newark. The Stones have hit the road every year since coming back together in 2012 after a five-year break. When your drummer is going to celebrate his 78th birthday on the road, it’s best to not push things too hard. Unlike the marathon tours of the past, this one is hitting a mere 13 markets. The news followed months of rumors, fueled in no small part by the Stones themselves plastering their iconic tongue logo at stadiums all over America.