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The Rolling Stones Concert

Foret Nationale (Brussels, Belgium)

The Rolling Stones concert at Foret Nationale on Oct 17, 1973

Concert Details

  • Date:
    10.17.1973
  • Tracks:
    10
  • Total Time:
    1:04:10
  • Catalog:
    King Biscuit
  • Avg Rating:

Concert Summary

In May of 1969, the joyously decadent single, "Honky Tonk Woman," signaled the beginning of the second and arguably greatest era of the Rolling Stones. Featuring a 21-year-old Mick Taylor on lead guitar, this song and the subsequent tour to follow would certify The Stones as the most compelling, if not greatest rock and roll band in the world. Over the course of Taylor's live performing tenure with the band (1969-1973), Mick Jagger and Kieth Richards were at the pinnacle of their songwriting powers, writing many of the classics that have come to define the band. As much as Jagger and…entire summary

  • Anonymous | Thursday, November 12, 2009 | 10:15 am

    I remember when this was on King Busquit years ago. Have it on reel to reel (that's old). This is awesome. The stones at their best. I am still a huge fan but the Mick Taylor era is my favorite. Brian was a master musician who simply got caught up in the excesses of fame and Ron Wood is a great guitarist as well. Mick Taylor was smooth and the music flowed from him. Still love the Stones!

  • mecormany | Wednesday, November 11, 2009 | 6:58 pm

    To add to the growing sentiment here, I've probably heard less than a third of anything the Stones put out after Taylor left and what I have heard hasn't made me think I've missed a thing. This night may well have been the pinnacle of rock music, and the last 3 songs the greatest 11 minutes in rock history; and the main reason for both is Taylor. And this from a guy who when Taylor replaced Jones said. "how in the hell is that baby face going to replace Brian?' He proceeded to show me in spades and I've never been the same since- I play a little or a lot of Mick Taylor every day -- unfortunately for me and them, the Stones have never come close to anything they did in the early 70s. I'd like to say that's just my opinion, but it's fact. I don't know that any band ever combined the garage band swagger and danger with the virtuosity of perhaps the finest guitar player of his generation. And while they've descended into corporate rock and trends -- years ago; he's still playing like an all-time great, performing incredible shows in small clubs, many of them where the blues heroes of his youth played 30 and 40 years ago.Keith once famously snarled, "Mick Taylor is a great guitar player, but he found out thats all he is." Well, Keith it's a band, what more did he have to be? He is for the ages. Thanks for making this available.

  • erl | Wednesday, November 11, 2009 | 12:45 pm

    lite rullande stenar fr?n l?nge sedan Mick Taylor k?r lead-guitarr, lite annorlunda! Finns hur mycket som helst bra livespelningar h?r p? concert vault, v?rt ett bes?k! /Mango

  • Spaceguy | Saturday, November 07, 2009 | 12:16 am

    They made it up as they went along. No matter how much practice you never knew what would go down at showtime. That's real rock and roll. Not knowing what the next note will be until it's almost too late is Rolling Stones live during this ture. \as fortunate to catch this in Bern Switerland either 2 days before this or 2 days after this show. Almost frantic insanity and and a version of Midnight Rambler they invented while doing it. Infreaking credible. And I'm from SF and seen it all. These guys at this time reached some chemical mix that blurred all the lines. Yep. That's what I said.......all the lines were blurred

  • steveo | Friday, November 06, 2009 | 11:17 pm

    Ahhhhh...what a treat reading the point/ counterpoint! And they said rock-n-roll was "just a fad." Critiques of the Stones, era by era, lead guitarist by lead guitarist, echo critiques of far more challenging and serious classical music, jazz and fusion back in the day. True fans can elevate any musical style to a "serious" art form. What a fantastic musical journey we've had from the 50's-today with rock-n-roll. My vote for "Best Stones Ever" is with Taylor. However, in 1994, when they dusted off "Monkey Man" at Giants Stadium, New Jersey, I cheered Ron Wood just as hard. I just got a few Ron Wood solo albums and the Barbarians CD's with Keef - Mick is paint, Ron is mud, and Keith is the glue. It's all good, so long as you mix it right.

  • tycobrahe1 | Friday, November 06, 2009 | 6:48 pm

    Yes, there was indeed a July 26, 1972 mixing board tape of the show you describe. I remember delivering it to their lawyer and still have the receipt to show for it. How it went from there to bootlegville, I don't know. We did the sound for all the Exile shows and it was one hell of a life changing experience.

  • markschlesinger | Wednesday, November 04, 2009 | 6:59 pm

    Only two things wrong with today's Stones:Taylor & Wyman. This show rules! Check out some of Wolfgang's blues concerts. Stones fans should enjoy Freddie King,Albert Collins, and Taj Mahal among others. s g Mark Schlesinger former Secretary, Columbus, OH Blues Alliance

  • Anonymous | Saturday, October 31, 2009 | 8:58 pm

    Why the Stones do not release this material is a total mystery. The Dead, Allman's and others have shown how to do it and the money is there to be made. To keep this stuff off the market is almost criminal for the fans. So many great shows - what an opportunity lost.

  • MJ1981 | Monday, October 26, 2009 | 11:39 pm

    if taylor would of stayed,he would be considered a gutiar great.him and richards would of went down as the best duo ever.the stones would of been better off,not that they are not the best anyway.

  • mgiuseffi | Saturday, October 24, 2009 | 12:29 am

    Mr. Wolfgang - as a veteran Stones fanatic since my days seeing them at New York's Madison Square Garden in the 1970's, this concert brings back more memories than I care to think about. Thanks for providing this free of charge. Now, one thing--- back in the day I had a bootleg album of a MSG concert from 1972 (Jagger's Birthday). It sounded like it was recorded from the mixing board or something. I have long ago lost that prize vinyl but if you could find that evening's concert for availabilty, my fellow Stones freaks would be eternally grateful. Trust this old bastard ---the recording from '72 makes even this concert pale in comparison. And lastly - no matter how much I tried to convince myself that the post-Taylor Stones were as good or better than during Taylor's tenure, upon reflection it just wasn't so. God bless Mick Taylort where ever he is and God Bless The Rolling Stones and God Bless the Queen of course! Mike Giuseffi New York City Oct 23 2009

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