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Rolling Stones -Brussels
Affair. Never released footage
European Tour 1973.(NEWLY DISCOVERED 2016).
The Rolling Stones 1973 European Tour was a concert tour of
Great Britain and
Continental Europe in September and
October 1973 by The Rolling Stones.
History[edit]
The tour followed the release of the group's
album Goats Head Soup on 31 August. It began at the
Stadthalle in
Vienna, Austria on
1 September. It then saw, in large halls to mid-sized arenas,
West Germany,
England (including four shows at the
Empire Pool in
London),
Scotland,
Switzerland,
Denmark,
Sweden,
The Netherlands, and
Belgium, finishing on
19 October with the band's fourth entry into and thirteenth show in West Germany, at the Deutschlandhalle in
West Berlin, which would turn out to be
Mick Taylor's last live performance with the
Stones until
14 December 1981 in
Kansas City, Missouri, and then until
Taylor's guest appearance during the
2012,
2013 and 2014 shows.
Altogether 42 shows were played in 22 cities, with two shows in a day a commonplace.
This was the Stones' first trip to
Europe since the European Tour
1970, and was part of parallel three-year cycles of touring the
United States and Europe.
The shows[edit]
Without all the ballyhoo, media attention, and jet set hangers-on of the group's
1972 American Tour, the 1973 European Tour was seen as having less drama — the biggest pending issue was the resolution of
Keith Richards and
Anita Pallenberg's 25 June drugs and weapons bust, which hung over them until a
24 October £205 fine from the
Great Marlborough Street Magistrates Court resolved it — while showcasing consistently good musicianship.
Songs like "
Brown Sugar" and "
Gimme Shelter" were well received and
Billy Preston's organ and clavinet added a contemporary and funky edge to the "classic" Stones sound, although the tour's relatively conventional delineation between rhythm (primarily Richards) and lead guitar (primarily Taylor) parts were later criticised by Richards.[1] By the time of the group's following
Tour of the Americas '75,
Ron Wood would be in the band and Richards' preferred interweaved approach would be restored.
Recordings; No live album was released from the tour, although a recording of the first
17 October show in
Brussels was headed towards official release but pulled back for legal reasons. As
Brussels Affair (and some other names such as "Bedspring
Symphony"), it has been a popular bootleg in superb stereo sound, and is often considered a 'lost classic' of bigger importance than some of the official Stones' live albums.
In
November 2011, the Rolling Stones launched a web enterprise, www.StonesArchive.com and released the second 17 October Brussels show with two tracks from the first Brussels show as "The Brussels Affair" worldwide as a digital download in
FLAC or
MP3 format and as a box set. [2]
- published: 29 Feb 2016
- views: 10