Thursday, October 17, 2024

The Rolling Stones - BBC Sessions, Volume 5: In Concert, Earl's Court, London, Britain, 5-22-1976

I mentioned about a week ago that I recently discovered a few BBC albums that I had missed, which is resulting in some renumbering. This is another case of that. I had previously posted a "BBC Sessions, Volume 5" for a 1990 Rolling Stones concert. But now that I've stumbled upon this concert, from 1976, I'm renaming that one "Volume 6." Here's the download link if you want to get the updated version:

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2024/08/the-rolling-stones-bbc-sessions-volume.html

I'm happy I came across this concert, though I'm a bit bummed it's from 1976. I consider that the low point for the band in the 1970s, as I don't like much of their 1976 album "Black and Blue." That said, pretty much any Rolling Stones concert is solid, and that's the case here. 

It's also nice that the keyboardist the band was using at the time was none other than Billy Preston, who was a big star in his own right. So he was rewarded with the spotlight for two songs in the middle of the concert. Both of his songs were huge hits (and actually bigger than recent Stones hits.) "Outa-Space" went to Number Two in the U.S. singles chart in 1972, and "Nothing from Nothing" was a Number One hit in 1974. Apparently, during "Outa-Space," Stones lead singer Mick Jagger was sent on wires way up above the crowd to make it look like he was flying, which is why Preston can be heard mentioning something to the crowd about Jagger flying.

Perhaps the reason I didn't find this bootleg concert sooner is because it had a very big flaw: it seems the BBC only broadcast part of it, and a few songs they didn't broadcast were filled in with an audio bootleg that sounded terrible. I specifically refer to the first song, plus the last three songs. I decided it was better to use versions from another concert instead. For the first song and two of the last three, I found a soundboard bootleg of a concert in Paris, France, two weeks later that sounds about as good. However, for the very last song, "Sympathy for the Devil," I couldn't find anything with similar sound quality in 1976. So I had to resort to a recording from 1975. You can find all the details in the mp3 tags.

This album is an hour and 45 minutes long.

01 Honky Tonk Women (Rolling Stones)
02 If You Can't Rock Me - Get Off of My Cloud (Rolling Stones)
03 talk (Rolling Stones)
04 Hand of Fate (Rolling Stones)
05 talk (Rolling Stones)
06 Hey Negrita (Rolling Stones)
07 talk (Rolling Stones)
08 Ain't Too Proud to Beg (Rolling Stones)
09 talk (Rolling Stones)
10 Fool to Cry (Rolling Stones)
11 talk (Rolling Stones)
12 Hot Stuff (Rolling Stones)
13 Starfucker (Rolling Stones)
14 You Gotta Move (Rolling Stones)
15 You Can't Always Get What You Want (Rolling Stones)
16 talk (Rolling Stones)
17 Happy (Rolling Stones)
18 talk (Rolling Stones)
19 Tumbling Dice (Rolling Stones)
20 talk (Rolling Stones)
21 Nothing from Nothing (Billy Preston & the Rolling Stones)
22 Outa-Space [Instrumental] (Billy Preston & the Rolling Stones)
23 talk (Rolling Stones)
24 Midnight Rambler (Rolling Stones)
25 talk (Rolling Stones)
26 It's Only Rock 'n Roll [But I Like It] (Rolling Stones)
27 Brown Sugar (Rolling Stones)
28 talk (Rolling Stones)
29 Jumping Jack Flash (Rolling Stones)
30 Street Fighting Man (Rolling Stones)
31 Sympathy for the Devil (Rolling Stones)

https://www.imagenetz.de/a8tXN

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/1tVajsJa

Luckily, the cover photo is from this exact concert. However, it only shows the band's two most famous members, Mick Jagger (left) and Keith Richards (right).

11 comments:

  1. Thanks for this - apparantly "If you can't rock me/Get off my cloud" on 'Love You Live" is from Earls Court but from a show on the 27th.

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  2. None of this was ever broadcast on the BBC, it's a widely available Sounboard bootleg. If you're including and patching in tracks from different venues in different countries and different years, then it clearly isn't 'Earl's Court 22nd May 1976'.

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    1. I came across info that it was broadcast by the BBC. Sorry if you disagree. And if you have problems with the songs from different sources, just remove the first song and the last three. That still leaves a nice long concert.

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  3. Thanks for this - - much better than the existing version of it I have. A question tho on other groups on the BBC - - have you found anything by The Vapors? They were much more than just 'Turning Japanese.'

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    1. The Vapors appeared on the 'BBC Radio One In Concert' series in 1981 performing a 1 hour gig from their hometown of Guildford in Surrey, England.

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    2. I'm one of those people who only know them through their big hit. I just looked, and I can only find this show at 192 kbps mp3. I would want a better source than that. Do you have one?

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    3. Just prior to that, they also did another 30-minute 'BBC In Concert' from the Paris Theatre. It was a double-header show with a now defunct band called Private Lives. Weirdly in this earlier show, 'Turning Japanese' wasn't broadcast even though they must surely have played it in their set. Also, the earlier show was never pressed to BBC Transcription Disc. The Vapors are stil active and have gigs lined up in late 2024 and early 2025.

      I do have the two shows, both in Broadcast quality.

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    4. Can you pass them on to me then? I'd be interested in hearing them and possibly posting them.

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  4. I'll send the 30 minute show. To where am I sending?

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    Replies
    1. Why not send both? I'd be more interested in the longer one anyway. My email address is: thompson22 @ runbox.com (remove the spaces) Thanks.

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