The Rolling Stones - Sympathy For The Devil (Official Video) [4K]
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Published 2020-10-29
Music video by The Rolling Stones performing “Sympathy For The Devil”
Director: Michael Lindsay-Hogg
Executive Producer: Sandy Lieberson
Producer: Robin Klein
The Rolling Stones performing "Sympathy For The Devil" from The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus
Recorded before a live audience in London in 1968, The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus was originally conceived as a BBC-TV special. Directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg, it centers on the original line up of The Rolling Stones -- Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Brian Jones, Charlie Watts, Bill Wyman (with Nicky Hopkins and Rocky Dijon) -- who serves as both the show’s hosts and featured attraction. For the first time in front of an audience, “The World’s Greatest Rock and Roll Band” performs six Stones classics. The program also includes extraordinary performances by The Who, Jethro Tull, Taj Mahal, Marianne Faithfull, Yoko Ono, and The Dirty Mac. A ‘supergroup’ before the term had even been coined, the band was comprised of Eric Clapton (lead guitar), Keith Richards (bass), Mitch Mitchell of The Jimi Hendrix Experience (drums), and John Lennon on guitar and vocals.
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All Comments (21)
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I hope these guys make it big. They have a lot of potential.
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The real hero is the guy who has to play the exact same conga pattern for ten minutes
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This man is now 80 and still strutting his stuff, marvellous.
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"The Circus" has to be the best live recording of The Rolling Stones ever... please prove me wrong
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When you see John Lennon rocking out to Mick Jagger you start to understand what the 60s were all about
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No auto-tune, no looping, no backing track, hell even the the 3 hits of acid John Lennon dropped before the set was analog. F'n brilliant.
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56 YEARS AGO!!! It's 2024 ~Does anyone else remember when these brilliant lyrics finally made sense?!
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I am Robertt Charpentier, age 76, a Nam U.S. Army combat veteran from the 1st Infantry Division. After getting out of the army in 1969, I moved to Honolulu and saw the Stones in concert in 1970. At one point, Jagger was wagging his ass at me, while is was in the 2nd row, and I blurted out loudly, "Jagger you're insane!" and in an instant retort Mick looked directly at me and in a Cockney accent he said, "I know I am!"
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I always loved how Charlie never really showed any emotion but pounded the crap out of those drums like it was just another day at work.
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My sister is a huge Stones fan. She told me this song sounded like nothing else when it was released. Imagine being 15 years old and hearing this for the first time - in 1968?
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The clarity of this is fantastic considering it is 56 years old. Superb.
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One of the best bands around. I'm 71 and still listening from way back.
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John Lennon, Yoko Ono, and Pete Townshend in the audience. Love these people! Written in 1969 after Kennedy brothers were killed. I shoplifted this album when I was 15. Oops, I owe Mick $10.
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The thing that’s made The Rolling Stones so great is that their music is timeless. It sounded modern in 1969 and it sounds modern in 2021. True artists!
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This has to be the best live performance by the Stones ever...no auto tune, no pitch corrector, - todays musicians may as well not bother!
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One of the finest live performances I've seen. Flawless. The sound engineer gets my kudos. Every instrument is heard perfectly.
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Rest in peace Charlie Watts, and thank you for the music.
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You know your band is getting somewhere when John Lennon is grooving in the audience!
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One of the greatest songs ever written
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Also.... Mick has to be one of the best frontman ever!