-
40 days 40 nights (take 1) - Mick Jagger & The Red Devils - The Famous Blues Sessions
published: 23 Oct 2011
-
Mick Jagger - Forty Days And Forty Nights (Muddy Waters Cover), Outtake 1993
published: 06 Apr 2012
-
40 days 40 nights (take 2) - Mick Jagger & The Red Devils - The Famous Blues Sessions
published: 13 Feb 2011
-
MICK JAGGER & THE RED DEVILS - THE FULL 1992 BLUES SESSIONS DEFINITIVE EDITION 2021
Also watch https://youtu.be/j4VOT0EPTnE Please subscribe to the channel! Support for more vids!
MICK JAGGER & THE RED DEVILS - THE FULL 1992 BLUES SESSIONS DEFINITIVE EDITION 2021
01. Don't Go No Farther (Willie Dixon)
02. One Way Out I (Marshall Sehorn/Elmore James) -take 1
03. Shake 'Em On Down (Bukka White) -take 1
04. That Ain't Your Business (James Moore/Jay D. Miller) (Take 3)
05. Blues With A Feeling
06. I Got My Eyes On You
07. Still A Fool
08. Checkin' Up On My Baby
09. One Way Out
10. Talk To Me Baby
11. Evil
12. Ain't Your Business
13. Shake 'm On Down
14. Somebody Loves Me
15. Dream Girl Blues
16. 40 Days, 40 Nights
17. Mean Old World (Bonus Track)
18. Blues With A Feeling (Take 2)
19. Blues With A Feeling (Take 4)
20. Blues With A Feeling (Take 5)
21. I Got My Eyes On You...
published: 15 Feb 2018
-
Mick Jagger & The Red Devils - One Way Out I (Marshall Sehorn/Elmore James) -take 1
Studio recordings on early and mid May 1992 in Los Angeles (location unknown).
Lester Butler - vocals, harp
Mick Jagger - vocals
Dave Lee Bartel - guitar
Paul Size - guitar
Johnny Ray Bartel- bass
Bill Bateman - drums
By unheard78.blogspot.com :
The Red Devils were a blues-rock band from LA featuring members of The Blasters (Bill Bateman, drums) and The Knitters (Johnny Ray Bartel, bass) but the majority of the focus fell on the band's vocalist and harmonica player, Lester Butler. Not to ignore the other band members (Dave Lee Bartel and Paul Size, both guitarists), but Lester got a lot of hype for his presence and the band got signed to Rick Rubin's American Recordings where they released one album, King King in 1992, and an EP in 1994. The album is considered a classic and Rubin gets pr...
published: 17 Sep 2011
-
Forty Days & Forty Nights - Muddy Waters
The Great Muddy
published: 15 Feb 2016
-
Mick Jagger & The Red Devils - Dream Girl Blues (Take 1)
Recorded at Ocean Way Recording in Hollywood, a remarkable session, in particular, lasting 13 hours, produced thirteen songs. The label Rabbit Records, Mick Jagger and The Red Devils bootleg issue - The Famous Blues Sessions, contains 21 tracks, including alternate takes. "Dream Girl Blues" is decadently slow, and Jagger's delivery is sultry, with the band laying down a spectacularly slow, grinding groove.
Mick Jagger - vocals
Lester Butler - harp and voice
Dave Lee Bartel - guitar
Paul Size - Guitar
Johnny Ray Bartel - bass
Bill Bateman - drums
Label: Rabbit Records
Year of release: 1992
━━━━━━━ •♬• ━━━━━━━
I do not own any copyrights over this artist, song or album, demonstration purposes only.
If you like it, please buy it.
...
published: 11 Aug 2014
-
still a fool (take 4 ) - Mick Jagger & The Red Devils - The Famous Blues Sessions
Well, now, there's two, there's two trains running
Well, they ain't never, no, going my way
Well, now, one run at midnight and the other one,
running just 'fore day,
it's running just 'fore day,
it's running just 'fore day
Oh Lord. sure 'nough they is
Oh well
Mm mm, ho ho ho, somebody help me, ho, with these blues
Well, now, she's the one I'm loving, she's the one
I do hate to lose,
I do hate to lose,
I do hate to lose
Oh Lord, sure 'nough I do
Oh well
I been crazy; yes, I been a fool, I been crazy, oh, all of my life
Well I done fell in love with a,
with another man's wife,
with another man's wife,
with another man's wife
Oh Lord, sure 'nough I done
Oh well
Lord, she's so long and tall, till she weep like a willow tree
Well, now, they say she's no good, but she's all right,
she's all righ...
published: 09 Jun 2011
-
Wayne's World: Aerosmith - SNL
Wayne Campbell (Mike Myers) and Garth Algar (Dana Carvey) welcome Aerosmith to "Wayne's World," thanks to Garth's cousin Barry (Tom Hanks), Aerosmith's roadie. They are not worthy. [Season 15, 1990]
Saturday Night Live. Stream now on Peacock: https://pck.tv/3uQxh4q
Subscribe to SNL: https://goo.gl/tUsXwM
Stream Current Full Episodes: http://www.nbc.com/saturday-night-live
WATCH PAST SNL SEASONS
Google Play - http://bit.ly/SNLGooglePlay
iTunes - http://bit.ly/SNLiTunes
SNL ON SOCIAL
SNL Instagram: http://instagram.com/nbcsnl
SNL Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/snl
SNL Twitter: https://twitter.com/nbcsnl
SNL TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@nbcsnl
GET MORE NBC
Like NBC: http://Facebook.com/NBC
Follow NBC: http://Twitter.com/NBC
NBC Tumblr: http://NBCtv.tumblr.com/
YouTube: http://w...
published: 24 Sep 2013
1:57:11
MICK JAGGER & THE RED DEVILS - THE FULL 1992 BLUES SESSIONS DEFINITIVE EDITION 2021
Also watch https://youtu.be/j4VOT0EPTnE Please subscribe to the channel! Support for more vids!
MICK JAGGER & THE RED DEVILS - THE FULL 1992 BLUES SESSIONS DEF...
Also watch https://youtu.be/j4VOT0EPTnE Please subscribe to the channel! Support for more vids!
MICK JAGGER & THE RED DEVILS - THE FULL 1992 BLUES SESSIONS DEFINITIVE EDITION 2021
01. Don't Go No Farther (Willie Dixon)
02. One Way Out I (Marshall Sehorn/Elmore James) -take 1
03. Shake 'Em On Down (Bukka White) -take 1
04. That Ain't Your Business (James Moore/Jay D. Miller) (Take 3)
05. Blues With A Feeling
06. I Got My Eyes On You
07. Still A Fool
08. Checkin' Up On My Baby
09. One Way Out
10. Talk To Me Baby
11. Evil
12. Ain't Your Business
13. Shake 'm On Down
14. Somebody Loves Me
15. Dream Girl Blues
16. 40 Days, 40 Nights
17. Mean Old World (Bonus Track)
18. Blues With A Feeling (Take 2)
19. Blues With A Feeling (Take 4)
20. Blues With A Feeling (Take 5)
21. I Got My Eyes On You (Take 2)
22. Still A Fool (Take 3)
23. Still A Fool (Take 4)
24. Checking Up On My Baby (Take 3)
25. One Way Out (Take 1)
26. One way Out (Take 2)
27. Talk To Me Baby (Take 2)
28. Evil (Take 2)
29. Evil (Take 3)
30. Evil (Take 4)
31. Ain't Your Business (Take 3)
32. Shake 'M On Down (Take 1)
33. Somebody Loves Me (Take 3)
34. Dream Girl Blues (Take 1)
35. Dream Girl Blues (Take 3)
36. 40 Days 40 Nights (Take 1)
37. 40 days 40 Nights (Take 2)
Studio recordings on early and mid May 1992 in Los Angeles
Lester Butler - vocals, harp
Mick Jagger - vocals
Dave Lee Bartel - guitar
Paul Size - guitar
Johnny Ray Bartel- bass
Bill Bateman - drums
If the process of recording blues classics with the Rolling Stones for their 2016 album Blue & Lonesome LP felt familiar for Mick Jagger, it wasn't just because he knew all the songs by heart — he'd also done this kind of thing before.
Jagger's previous brush with an album of blues standards took place in 1992, while he was working with producer Rick Rubin on the solo LP that ultimately morphed into Wandering Spirit the following year. Rubin was also working with a Los Angeles band called the Red Devils, who he'd signed to his Def American imprint — and whose standing gig at the city's King King club had drawn attention from a growing list of famous rockers. Tipped off to the band, Jagger turned up at the King King in May 1992 and sat in for a performance that included Bo Diddley's "Who Do You Love?" and Little Walter's take on "Blues With a Feeling."
For Jagger, who'd been toying with the idea of a blues record since the Stones finished their Steel Wheels tour, the show was just the spark he needed to actually get down to work. Using Rubin as a middleman, he summoned the band to Hollywood's Ocean Way Recording studio in June, pausing the Wandering Spirit sessions for a day of running through some of the singer's favorite numbers. According to Dan LeRoy's book The Greatest Music Never Sold: Secrets of Legendary Lost Albums by David Bowie, Seal, Beastie Boys, Chicago, Mick Jagger and More, the Devils were paid a flat fee of $750 for the session, which Jagger called to order by plunking down a pile of records.
"He said, 'Okay, guys, these are my favorite records," recalled bassist Johnny Ray Bartel. "I'm gonna play 'em once for you, and then we're all gonna jam along to the original versions. And then we're gonna record it.' Basically what he wanted was the ultimate spontaneity and not a whole lot of rehearsing at all, and just nail it down really quick and let's see what we get."
What they got was a 13-hour blues marathon that produced more than a dozen songs — most of which were tracked in a few takes. Although it wasn't enough to derail Wandering Spirit, Rubin publicly predicted the Red Devils sessions would be released "someday" — though in the meantime, the Devils were left without any real assurances, or even a copy of the tapes. They continued to build a reputation through their live shows, and Rubin would later hook them up with Johnny Cash in the fall of 1993, but Jagger was already on to the next thing.
Even though the Red Devils sessions remain officially unreleased — with the exception of the track "Checkin' Up on My Baby," which worked its way onto 2007's The Very Best of Mick Jagger compilation — tapes eventually found their way into circulation. In LeRoy's book, Bartel speculates that singer Lester Butler got his hands on a cassette that he "sold to some Italian guys" who turned it into a bootleg, while drummer Bill Bateman recounts the night a member of Jagger's entourage "hoodwinked" Rubin's "right-hand gal" and made off with a CD burned from the DAT masters.
However they made their way out into the world, the songs Jagger cut during his day with the Red Devils are readily available to anyone interested in seeking them out — and as you can hear above, they offer an interesting window into Jagger's lifelong fondness for the blues as well as an entertaining appetizer for Blue & Lonesome.
https://wn.com/Mick_Jagger_The_Red_Devils_The_Full_1992_Blues_Sessions_Definitive_Edition_2021
Also watch https://youtu.be/j4VOT0EPTnE Please subscribe to the channel! Support for more vids!
MICK JAGGER & THE RED DEVILS - THE FULL 1992 BLUES SESSIONS DEFINITIVE EDITION 2021
01. Don't Go No Farther (Willie Dixon)
02. One Way Out I (Marshall Sehorn/Elmore James) -take 1
03. Shake 'Em On Down (Bukka White) -take 1
04. That Ain't Your Business (James Moore/Jay D. Miller) (Take 3)
05. Blues With A Feeling
06. I Got My Eyes On You
07. Still A Fool
08. Checkin' Up On My Baby
09. One Way Out
10. Talk To Me Baby
11. Evil
12. Ain't Your Business
13. Shake 'm On Down
14. Somebody Loves Me
15. Dream Girl Blues
16. 40 Days, 40 Nights
17. Mean Old World (Bonus Track)
18. Blues With A Feeling (Take 2)
19. Blues With A Feeling (Take 4)
20. Blues With A Feeling (Take 5)
21. I Got My Eyes On You (Take 2)
22. Still A Fool (Take 3)
23. Still A Fool (Take 4)
24. Checking Up On My Baby (Take 3)
25. One Way Out (Take 1)
26. One way Out (Take 2)
27. Talk To Me Baby (Take 2)
28. Evil (Take 2)
29. Evil (Take 3)
30. Evil (Take 4)
31. Ain't Your Business (Take 3)
32. Shake 'M On Down (Take 1)
33. Somebody Loves Me (Take 3)
34. Dream Girl Blues (Take 1)
35. Dream Girl Blues (Take 3)
36. 40 Days 40 Nights (Take 1)
37. 40 days 40 Nights (Take 2)
Studio recordings on early and mid May 1992 in Los Angeles
Lester Butler - vocals, harp
Mick Jagger - vocals
Dave Lee Bartel - guitar
Paul Size - guitar
Johnny Ray Bartel- bass
Bill Bateman - drums
If the process of recording blues classics with the Rolling Stones for their 2016 album Blue & Lonesome LP felt familiar for Mick Jagger, it wasn't just because he knew all the songs by heart — he'd also done this kind of thing before.
Jagger's previous brush with an album of blues standards took place in 1992, while he was working with producer Rick Rubin on the solo LP that ultimately morphed into Wandering Spirit the following year. Rubin was also working with a Los Angeles band called the Red Devils, who he'd signed to his Def American imprint — and whose standing gig at the city's King King club had drawn attention from a growing list of famous rockers. Tipped off to the band, Jagger turned up at the King King in May 1992 and sat in for a performance that included Bo Diddley's "Who Do You Love?" and Little Walter's take on "Blues With a Feeling."
For Jagger, who'd been toying with the idea of a blues record since the Stones finished their Steel Wheels tour, the show was just the spark he needed to actually get down to work. Using Rubin as a middleman, he summoned the band to Hollywood's Ocean Way Recording studio in June, pausing the Wandering Spirit sessions for a day of running through some of the singer's favorite numbers. According to Dan LeRoy's book The Greatest Music Never Sold: Secrets of Legendary Lost Albums by David Bowie, Seal, Beastie Boys, Chicago, Mick Jagger and More, the Devils were paid a flat fee of $750 for the session, which Jagger called to order by plunking down a pile of records.
"He said, 'Okay, guys, these are my favorite records," recalled bassist Johnny Ray Bartel. "I'm gonna play 'em once for you, and then we're all gonna jam along to the original versions. And then we're gonna record it.' Basically what he wanted was the ultimate spontaneity and not a whole lot of rehearsing at all, and just nail it down really quick and let's see what we get."
What they got was a 13-hour blues marathon that produced more than a dozen songs — most of which were tracked in a few takes. Although it wasn't enough to derail Wandering Spirit, Rubin publicly predicted the Red Devils sessions would be released "someday" — though in the meantime, the Devils were left without any real assurances, or even a copy of the tapes. They continued to build a reputation through their live shows, and Rubin would later hook them up with Johnny Cash in the fall of 1993, but Jagger was already on to the next thing.
Even though the Red Devils sessions remain officially unreleased — with the exception of the track "Checkin' Up on My Baby," which worked its way onto 2007's The Very Best of Mick Jagger compilation — tapes eventually found their way into circulation. In LeRoy's book, Bartel speculates that singer Lester Butler got his hands on a cassette that he "sold to some Italian guys" who turned it into a bootleg, while drummer Bill Bateman recounts the night a member of Jagger's entourage "hoodwinked" Rubin's "right-hand gal" and made off with a CD burned from the DAT masters.
However they made their way out into the world, the songs Jagger cut during his day with the Red Devils are readily available to anyone interested in seeking them out — and as you can hear above, they offer an interesting window into Jagger's lifelong fondness for the blues as well as an entertaining appetizer for Blue & Lonesome.
- published: 15 Feb 2018
- views: 75739
2:18
Mick Jagger & The Red Devils - One Way Out I (Marshall Sehorn/Elmore James) -take 1
Studio recordings on early and mid May 1992 in Los Angeles (location unknown).
Lester Butler - vocals, harp
Mick Jagger - vocals
Dave Lee Bartel - guitar
Paul S...
Studio recordings on early and mid May 1992 in Los Angeles (location unknown).
Lester Butler - vocals, harp
Mick Jagger - vocals
Dave Lee Bartel - guitar
Paul Size - guitar
Johnny Ray Bartel- bass
Bill Bateman - drums
By unheard78.blogspot.com :
The Red Devils were a blues-rock band from LA featuring members of The Blasters (Bill Bateman, drums) and The Knitters (Johnny Ray Bartel, bass) but the majority of the focus fell on the band's vocalist and harmonica player, Lester Butler. Not to ignore the other band members (Dave Lee Bartel and Paul Size, both guitarists), but Lester got a lot of hype for his presence and the band got signed to Rick Rubin's American Recordings where they released one album, King King in 1992, and an EP in 1994. The album is considered a classic and Rubin gets props for recording the band live without overdubs to capture their vibe, but he had bigger things in store for the band.
While producing Mick Jagger's Wandering Spirit, it was decided that the Devils would back Mick on a collection of classic blues covers. What followed was described by the band as Mick, whom they had just met, essentially becoming one of the guys and they all fell in love with him. An album's worth of songs were recorded but sat in the vault with no promise of release. Mick had said he loved the recordings and might release them as an album unto itself, but his relationship with the band became strained when he stopped communicating with them regularly. A few shows were performed in the UK with the Devils as his backing band but, apart from that, zilch.
The Red Devils were still working with Rick Rubin, but that became short lived as well. They did some sessions with Johnny Cash, played live with Bruce Willis at Planet Hollywood events and recorded a second album with Rubin on production, but that album remains unreleased and tracks from the Cash sessions wouldn't be released until after his death. Lester Butler began showing signs of drug addiction and his relationship with the group became strained. Rubin, a notoriously anti-drug individual, probably used this as his excuse to stop working with the band, and it was one of many factors that lead to their downfall.
Lester went on to play in the band 13 and continued performing sporadically until his death at the age of 38. In 1998 he suffered an overdose and the two individuals he was with decided to inject him with cocaine rather than perform any lifesaving measures or call 911.
The band has reformed a few times since Lester's death but they openly acknowledge that it will never be the same without him.
As for the recordings with Jagger, the Devils themselves couldn't even get a copy of the tapes, at least not by any direct methods. A few stories circulate about how a tape was acquired, one involving Lester somehow receiving a very poor quality cassette and selling it to bootleggers, but other members of the band have insinuated that a copy was dubbed for them by a secretary at American Recordings, leading to far superior copies circulating. Regardless, apart from one track having been released on a 2007 compilation of Mick Jagger recordings, the sessions remain shamefully unreleased, at least officially.
So, it is with great pleasure that I present to you a copy of these infamous sessions from, of all places, an actual "silver" bootleg CD. Yeah, the quality isn't the greatest, but that's to be expected. I've seen the sessions around elsewhere but I don't recall having heard a superior copy, so I'll be posting these goodies from that silver disc for your listening pleasure. Maybe someday Rick and Mick (a supergroup begging to be formed folks!) will come to some kind of agreement and these recordings could be given an official release, but until then, we'll just have to settle for second hand copies of these great tracks.
https://wn.com/Mick_Jagger_The_Red_Devils_One_Way_Out_I_(Marshall_Sehorn_Elmore_James)_Take_1
Studio recordings on early and mid May 1992 in Los Angeles (location unknown).
Lester Butler - vocals, harp
Mick Jagger - vocals
Dave Lee Bartel - guitar
Paul Size - guitar
Johnny Ray Bartel- bass
Bill Bateman - drums
By unheard78.blogspot.com :
The Red Devils were a blues-rock band from LA featuring members of The Blasters (Bill Bateman, drums) and The Knitters (Johnny Ray Bartel, bass) but the majority of the focus fell on the band's vocalist and harmonica player, Lester Butler. Not to ignore the other band members (Dave Lee Bartel and Paul Size, both guitarists), but Lester got a lot of hype for his presence and the band got signed to Rick Rubin's American Recordings where they released one album, King King in 1992, and an EP in 1994. The album is considered a classic and Rubin gets props for recording the band live without overdubs to capture their vibe, but he had bigger things in store for the band.
While producing Mick Jagger's Wandering Spirit, it was decided that the Devils would back Mick on a collection of classic blues covers. What followed was described by the band as Mick, whom they had just met, essentially becoming one of the guys and they all fell in love with him. An album's worth of songs were recorded but sat in the vault with no promise of release. Mick had said he loved the recordings and might release them as an album unto itself, but his relationship with the band became strained when he stopped communicating with them regularly. A few shows were performed in the UK with the Devils as his backing band but, apart from that, zilch.
The Red Devils were still working with Rick Rubin, but that became short lived as well. They did some sessions with Johnny Cash, played live with Bruce Willis at Planet Hollywood events and recorded a second album with Rubin on production, but that album remains unreleased and tracks from the Cash sessions wouldn't be released until after his death. Lester Butler began showing signs of drug addiction and his relationship with the group became strained. Rubin, a notoriously anti-drug individual, probably used this as his excuse to stop working with the band, and it was one of many factors that lead to their downfall.
Lester went on to play in the band 13 and continued performing sporadically until his death at the age of 38. In 1998 he suffered an overdose and the two individuals he was with decided to inject him with cocaine rather than perform any lifesaving measures or call 911.
The band has reformed a few times since Lester's death but they openly acknowledge that it will never be the same without him.
As for the recordings with Jagger, the Devils themselves couldn't even get a copy of the tapes, at least not by any direct methods. A few stories circulate about how a tape was acquired, one involving Lester somehow receiving a very poor quality cassette and selling it to bootleggers, but other members of the band have insinuated that a copy was dubbed for them by a secretary at American Recordings, leading to far superior copies circulating. Regardless, apart from one track having been released on a 2007 compilation of Mick Jagger recordings, the sessions remain shamefully unreleased, at least officially.
So, it is with great pleasure that I present to you a copy of these infamous sessions from, of all places, an actual "silver" bootleg CD. Yeah, the quality isn't the greatest, but that's to be expected. I've seen the sessions around elsewhere but I don't recall having heard a superior copy, so I'll be posting these goodies from that silver disc for your listening pleasure. Maybe someday Rick and Mick (a supergroup begging to be formed folks!) will come to some kind of agreement and these recordings could be given an official release, but until then, we'll just have to settle for second hand copies of these great tracks.
- published: 17 Sep 2011
- views: 12986
5:50
Mick Jagger & The Red Devils - Dream Girl Blues (Take 1)
Recorded at Ocean Way Recording in Hollywood, a remarkable session, in particular, lasting 13 hours, produced thirteen songs. The label Rabbit Records, Mick Jag...
Recorded at Ocean Way Recording in Hollywood, a remarkable session, in particular, lasting 13 hours, produced thirteen songs. The label Rabbit Records, Mick Jagger and The Red Devils bootleg issue - The Famous Blues Sessions, contains 21 tracks, including alternate takes. "Dream Girl Blues" is decadently slow, and Jagger's delivery is sultry, with the band laying down a spectacularly slow, grinding groove.
Mick Jagger - vocals
Lester Butler - harp and voice
Dave Lee Bartel - guitar
Paul Size - Guitar
Johnny Ray Bartel - bass
Bill Bateman - drums
Label: Rabbit Records
Year of release: 1992
━━━━━━━ •♬• ━━━━━━━
I do not own any copyrights over this artist, song or album, demonstration purposes only.
If you like it, please buy it.
━━━━━━━ •♬• ━━━━━━━
https://wn.com/Mick_Jagger_The_Red_Devils_Dream_Girl_Blues_(Take_1)
Recorded at Ocean Way Recording in Hollywood, a remarkable session, in particular, lasting 13 hours, produced thirteen songs. The label Rabbit Records, Mick Jagger and The Red Devils bootleg issue - The Famous Blues Sessions, contains 21 tracks, including alternate takes. "Dream Girl Blues" is decadently slow, and Jagger's delivery is sultry, with the band laying down a spectacularly slow, grinding groove.
Mick Jagger - vocals
Lester Butler - harp and voice
Dave Lee Bartel - guitar
Paul Size - Guitar
Johnny Ray Bartel - bass
Bill Bateman - drums
Label: Rabbit Records
Year of release: 1992
━━━━━━━ •♬• ━━━━━━━
I do not own any copyrights over this artist, song or album, demonstration purposes only.
If you like it, please buy it.
━━━━━━━ •♬• ━━━━━━━
- published: 11 Aug 2014
- views: 3597
3:54
still a fool (take 4 ) - Mick Jagger & The Red Devils - The Famous Blues Sessions
Well, now, there's two, there's two trains running
Well, they ain't never, no, going my way
Well, now, one run at midnight and the other one,
running just 'fore...
Well, now, there's two, there's two trains running
Well, they ain't never, no, going my way
Well, now, one run at midnight and the other one,
running just 'fore day,
it's running just 'fore day,
it's running just 'fore day
Oh Lord. sure 'nough they is
Oh well
Mm mm, ho ho ho, somebody help me, ho, with these blues
Well, now, she's the one I'm loving, she's the one
I do hate to lose,
I do hate to lose,
I do hate to lose
Oh Lord, sure 'nough I do
Oh well
I been crazy; yes, I been a fool, I been crazy, oh, all of my life
Well I done fell in love with a,
with another man's wife,
with another man's wife,
with another man's wife
Oh Lord, sure 'nough I done
Oh well
Lord, she's so long and tall, till she weep like a willow tree
Well, now, they say she's no good, but she's all right,
she's all right with me,
she's all right, she's all right,
she's all right, she's all right
https://wn.com/Still_A_Fool_(Take_4_)_Mick_Jagger_The_Red_Devils_The_Famous_Blues_Sessions
Well, now, there's two, there's two trains running
Well, they ain't never, no, going my way
Well, now, one run at midnight and the other one,
running just 'fore day,
it's running just 'fore day,
it's running just 'fore day
Oh Lord. sure 'nough they is
Oh well
Mm mm, ho ho ho, somebody help me, ho, with these blues
Well, now, she's the one I'm loving, she's the one
I do hate to lose,
I do hate to lose,
I do hate to lose
Oh Lord, sure 'nough I do
Oh well
I been crazy; yes, I been a fool, I been crazy, oh, all of my life
Well I done fell in love with a,
with another man's wife,
with another man's wife,
with another man's wife
Oh Lord, sure 'nough I done
Oh well
Lord, she's so long and tall, till she weep like a willow tree
Well, now, they say she's no good, but she's all right,
she's all right with me,
she's all right, she's all right,
she's all right, she's all right
- published: 09 Jun 2011
- views: 14566
9:51
Wayne's World: Aerosmith - SNL
Wayne Campbell (Mike Myers) and Garth Algar (Dana Carvey) welcome Aerosmith to "Wayne's World," thanks to Garth's cousin Barry (Tom Hanks), Aerosmith's roadie. ...
Wayne Campbell (Mike Myers) and Garth Algar (Dana Carvey) welcome Aerosmith to "Wayne's World," thanks to Garth's cousin Barry (Tom Hanks), Aerosmith's roadie. They are not worthy. [Season 15, 1990]
Saturday Night Live. Stream now on Peacock: https://pck.tv/3uQxh4q
Subscribe to SNL: https://goo.gl/tUsXwM
Stream Current Full Episodes: http://www.nbc.com/saturday-night-live
WATCH PAST SNL SEASONS
Google Play - http://bit.ly/SNLGooglePlay
iTunes - http://bit.ly/SNLiTunes
SNL ON SOCIAL
SNL Instagram: http://instagram.com/nbcsnl
SNL Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/snl
SNL Twitter: https://twitter.com/nbcsnl
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#SNL
https://wn.com/Wayne's_World_Aerosmith_Snl
Wayne Campbell (Mike Myers) and Garth Algar (Dana Carvey) welcome Aerosmith to "Wayne's World," thanks to Garth's cousin Barry (Tom Hanks), Aerosmith's roadie. They are not worthy. [Season 15, 1990]
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- published: 24 Sep 2013
- views: 4553560