Keith Richards on The Beatles

A few harsh words for John Lennon and "the Fab Four" from the legendary Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards. This was in 1973.

‘The Star Wars That I Used To Know’ – Gotye ‘Somebody That I Used To Know’ Parody

Our spoof of the Gotye hit "Somebody That I Used To Know"-Star Wars style. "The Star Wars That I Used To Know" NOW AVAILABLE ON ITUNES: bit.ly Please Subscribe: www.youtube.com Its a story of heartbreak to which Star Wars fans everywhere can relate. And even with all that heart ache, its still a better love story than Twilight. This is a parody song. We recorded our own music and wrote new lyrics to create this. facebook.comteddiefilms twitter.comteddiefilms www.teddiefilms.com ****************************************************** CREDITS DARTH GOTYE: Tyson Apostol GEORGE L: Mike Loveland (www.ollibird.com) MUSIC ARRANGED BY Israel Curtis, Somakat.com ADDITIONAL INSTRUMENTS Josh Aker, Somakat.com DARTH VOCALS BY Israel Curtis GEORGE VOCALS BY: Ryan Richardson LYRICS BY: Eddie King Jeremy Warner, jeremywarnerclassic.com Joseph Winter CREATED AND PRODUCED BY: Teddie Films WRITTEN BY: Eddie king CINEMATOGRAPHY BY: Tyler Marshall PRODUCTION MANAGEMENT: Vanessa Winter ART: Mike and Alma Loveland, www.ollibird.com Vanessa Winter Emily Jacobson MAKEUP AND COSTUME Emily Jacobson PRODUCTION ASSISTANTS Joseph Winter Bree King Kumari Marshall ************************************************ LYRICS [DARTH:] Now and then I think of when I was in power Like choking people with the Force until they died But then you told them all my history And took away my masculinity And had my character portrayed by subpar actors. You are now addicted to an overuse of graphics And making Greedo <b>…<b>

Nick Martellaro – 19th Nervous Breakdown (Rolling Stones Live Ed Sullivan version cover)

Hi everyone! This is my cover of the Rolling Stones song, "19th Nervous Breakdown"…more specifically, their live arrangement, which they played on the 1965 Ed Sullivan show. I personally like this arrangement better, because it has an extended intro, more interesting breaks, its more raw, and has a non-fadeout ending. Overall, I think its more dynamic than the studio version…unfortunately, YouTube has taken down all the videos of the 1965 Ed Sullivan performance, so youll have to seek it elsewhere. My goal for this one was the same as my last Stones cover ("The Last Time"), which got a good response. Basically, I think the Stones songs sound best raw and unpolished. This one has no overdubs, its just exactly what wouldve been played live – two guitars, one bass, drums, and two vocals. I tried to capture the "first take" energy of this live performance. Let me just say, this song is RIDICULOUSLY fun to play. This is a great example of the Rolling Stones signature "weaving guitars" sound. Keiths part is a great rhythm, with some cool fills along the way. Brians part is a hypnotic riff that he took directly from Bo Diddleys song, "Diddley Daddy." Bill Wymans bass part is also ridiculous in the way he played it. Instead of playing lower on the neck, this bass line goes all the way up to the 12th fret, along with some crazy divebombing during the outro. Anyways, I hope you like it! I apologize if the video is slightly out of sync. This one was a huge file on my <b>…<b>

Tell Me / The Rolling Stones