Saturday, 10 December 2011

Sympathy For The Devil (Live) by The Rolling Stones



Uploaded by on Aug 31, 2010
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The vastly superior "Get Your Ya Ya's Out" live version featuring the stunning twin guitar interplay between Keith Richards and Mick Taylor




  • This should read the two best guitar solos. The first guitar solo is Keith Richards; with the second, and third guitar solos being played by Mick Taylor.
    I love Ron Wood, and never missed a FACES concert, but hands down… Ron Wood could never match Mick Taylor. Keith Richards, and Mick Taylor, are in their prime, and the well-oiled engine chugging along behind them is phenomenal.
    The Keith Richards, and Mick Taylor combo, was and still is the high water mark for The Rolling Stones.
  • @zincChameleon This song is not on Exile, but on Beggars Banquet, recorded with already "departing' Brian Jones. The solo on that record is by Keith Richards, and it was done under Hendrix influence. You can check out the movie "One + One'" by Jean-Luc Godard, later renamed: "Sympathy for the Devil (Documentary).
  • kpzrocks.....when Mick Taylor was with them....don"'t know about Richards......
  • Do you know the story behind the incredibly scratchy solo on the Exile on Main Street album? Mick Taylor played a smooth bluesy solo, and Mick Jagger said that's all wrong, this song is about the Devil, after all, He then picked up one of Keith's telecasters, and scratched out that amateurish solo, the one that *perfectly* fit the song. Truth!
  • I am in love with Mick Taylor's playing. His stint was short with the Stones, but the music that was played, when he played with them, was better than any other era of the Stones.......
  • The first solo is by Keith Richards, the second (including 'fake' start) is by Mick Taylor. These heights Stones have never achieved afterwards. The Mick Taylor era was the best for Stones, as Richard row, and Taylor melodic/fluid/bluesy style was the perfect mix. The highlight here is Charlie drumming too.
    "Sympathy for the Devil" is arguably the best r'n'r song ever recorded.