Muddy Waters & The Rolling Stones – Mannish Boy (Live At Checkerboard Lounge)

On 22 November 1981, in the middle of their mammoth American tour, the Rolling Stones arrived in Chicago prior to playing 3 nights at the Rosemont Horizon. Long influenced by the Chicago blues, the band paid a visit to Buddy Guys club the Checkerboard Lounge to see the legendary bluesman perform.store.eagle-rock.com It didnt take long before Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and Ian Stewart were joining in on stage and later Buddy Guy and Lefty Dizz also played their part. It was a unique occasion that was fortunately captured on camera. Now, restored from the original footage and with sound mixed and mastered by Bob Clearmountain, this amazing blues night is being made available in an official release for the first time.

Muddy Waters & The Rolling Stones – Hoochie Coochie Man (Live At Checkerboard Lounge)

On 22 November 1981, in the middle of their mammoth American tour, the Rolling Stones arrived in Chicago prior to playing 3 nights at the Rosemont Horizon. store.eagle-rock.com Long influenced by the Chicago blues, the band paid a visit to Buddy Guys club the Checkerboard Lounge to see the legendary bluesman perform. It didnt take long before Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and Ian Stewart were joining in on stage and later Buddy Guy and Lefty Dizz also played their part. It was a unique occasion that was fortunately captured on camera. Now, restored from the original footage and with sound mixed and mastered by Bob Clearmountain, this amazing blues night is being made available in an official release for the first time.

NY STEVE MILLER CHOIR UNREAL DANCE LIKE DAVID FAT MIKE & JIMMY MILLER gypsy church christian

please visit Devlesko Swato gypsy christian web site devleskoswato.webs.com we are going city to city street preaching and talking to the churches about mark 16 the Great Commission New York 91409 .Tags: rapture safka power ministry grcc ggcc rapture movie steve miller gypsy church ny…

Muddy Waters & The Rolling Stones – Baby Please Don’t Go (Live At Checkerboard Lounge)

On 22 November 1981, in the middle of their mammoth American tour, the Rolling Stones arrived in Chicago prior to playing 3 nights at the Rosemont Horizon. store.eagle-rock.com Long influenced by the Chicago blues, the band paid a visit to Buddy Guys club the Checkerboard Lounge to see the legendary bluesman perform. It didnt take long before Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and Ian Stewart were joining in on stage and later Buddy Guy and Lefty Dizz also played their part. It was a unique occasion that was fortunately captured on camera. Now, restored from the original footage and with sound mixed and mastered by Bob Clearmountain, this amazing blues night is being made available in an official release for the first time.

Tributosaurus Bobby Keys Can’t You Hear Me Knockin’ Live Martyrs Show 1.MTS

Legendary Saxman of The Rolling Stones, the one and only, Bobby Keys, plays with Chicagos Tributosaurus, 1st show, Martyrs, "Cant you hear me knockin " . David Blamires (Pat Metheny Group fame) singing, with Tributosaurus core, Matt Spiegel, Chris Neville, Curt Morrison, Jon Paul, Dan Leali, with Kalyan Johnny Bongo Pathak on Congas and Percussion and Greg Suran, Mike Cicowicz, Nic Meyers

Muddy Waters & The Rolling Stones – Mannish Boy – Live At Checkerboard Lounge

On 22 November 1981, in the middle of their mammoth American tour, the Rolling Stones arrived in Chicago prior to playing 3 nights at the Rosemont Horizon. Long influenced by the Chicago blues, the band paid a visit to Buddy Guys club the Checkerboard Lounge to see the legendary bluesman perform.store.eagle-rock.com It didnt take long before Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and Ian Stewart were joining in on stage and later Buddy Guy and Lefty Dizz also played their part. It was a unique occasion that was fortunately captured on camera. Now, restored from the original footage and with sound mixed and mastered by Bob Clearmountain, this amazing blues night is being made available in an official release for the first time.

The Wedding Present – (The Rolling Stones) 19th Nervous Breakdown

The Wedding Present formed 25 years ago in the north of England, and its safe to say that the band was more influenced by The Buzzcocks and The Fall than by The Rolling Stones. Still, it sounds pretty spectacular when The Wedding Present–in the middle of a tour celebrating the 21st anniversary of its excellent album Bizarro–brings the noise to The Rolling Stones 1966 classic "19th Nervous Breakdown." The Wedding Present is the only band (so far–is that a hint?) to have a song on the Undercover list and to perform a cover for us: "My Favourite Dress" will rear its head later this summer. www.avclub.com

Muddy Waters & The Rolling Stones – Baby Please Don’t Go – Live At Checkerboard Lounge

On 22 November 1981, in the middle of their mammoth American tour, the Rolling Stones arrived in Chicago prior to playing 3 nights at the Rosemont Horizon. Long influenced by the Chicago blues, the band paid a visit to Muddy Waters club the Checkerboard Lounge to see the legendary bluesman perform.smarturl.it It didnt take long before Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and Ian Stewart were joining in on stage and later Buddy Guy and Lefty Dizz also played their part. It was a unique occasion that was fortunately captured on camera. Now, restored from the original footage and with sound mixed and mastered by Bob Clearmountain, this amazing blues night is being made available in an official release for the first time.

Obama jams blues with BB King, Mick Jagger and Buddy Guy!

Presdient Barack Obama jamming out the blues number Sweet Home Chicago with BB King, Mick Jagger and Buddy Guy. See another video here – www.youtube.com (Reuters) – Bill Clinton had his saxophone, but President Barack Obama can sing the blues. Obama lent his voice to a White House jam featuring Mick Jagger, BB King, Jeff Beck and Buddy Guy on Tuesday during a celebration of blues and its influence on modern pop culture. After wowing crowds in January by singing a line from Al Greens classic hit "Lets Stay Together" at a Harlem fundraiser, the President sang a verse of "Sweet Home Chicago" in the all-star finale of a TV special taped at the White House. "We were trying to get you to help us sing. I heard you singing Al Green," blues guitar legend Guy hollered to Obama on Tuesday. "So you started something. You got to keep it up now. You can do it." Taking a microphone handed to him by Rolling Stones frontman Jagger, a smiling Obama sang a solo verse of "Sweet Home Chicago" before handing back to the band. The performance was part of a PBS television special marking Black History month that will be broadcast on February 27 as "In Performance at the White House: Red, White and Blues," the public broadcaster said. Obamas blues solo recalled Clintons saxophone playing appearance in 1992 on the "The Arsenio Hall Show", which was credited with boosting his presidential campaign. Obamas brief rendition of "Lets Stay Together" in January helped increase sales of the 1971 Al <b>…<b>