BBC Radio 2 are broadcasting a documentary on December 5 - CDr
Huey Morgan tells the story of the Rolling Stones'
1969 Let It Bleed tour, a milestone in rock history that defined an
era, and its tragic finale at the Altamont Speedway.
The band's previous tours had been brief, incandescent
sets played to mostly screaming teenage girls. But as the 60s grew to
a close, the Stones' music had evolved. They played longer sets,
which charted their influences by including tracks by their blues
heroes, and as Bill Wyman said; "for the first time the
audiences were actually listening to what we playing".
1969 was the year of the free rock festival. The
Stones' Hyde Park concert in London in July was followed a month
later by Woodstock and, as their Let It Bleed tour rolled
triumphantly across America, the Rolling Stones decided to end the
decade with a massive free concert to thank their US fans for their
continuing support.
The concert, held at Altamont Speedway in the
scrublands of Northern California on 6th December, was meant to be
the West Coast's answer to Woodstock but the event turned out so
differently, some believe it signalled the end of the peace and love
era. It was badly organised, Hell's Angels were providing security,
and trouble started early on. Four people died including a young
black man who was stabbed and kicked to death, at the front of the
stage, as the Rolling Stones played Under My Thumb.
The programme features contributions from those who
were on the road with the Stones on this groundbreaking tour
including Mick Jagger's personal assistant, Georgia Bergman; the
tour's business manager Ron Schneider; production manager Chip Monck;
tour manager Sam Cutler; journalist Michael Lydon; photographer Ethan
Russell; director Albert Maysles; and the Guardian's Eamonn McCabe.
Shedding Hippie Blood provides a fascinating insight
into what Rolling Stone magazine at the time called "the biggest
rock tour music has seen". It was a tour that defined an era
with The Stones basically inventing stadium rock as their ground
breaking journey unfolded. But it also represented the dark side that
had emerged from a counterculture without control, conscience or conviction.
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Total time: 56:36 |
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Altamont Radio report 7.12 1969 |
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Total time: 18'57 |
Comment: ( artwork )
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