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Topic: Real Stones Fans ...... Top 10 List Return to archive
01-04-04 12:28 PM
Ten Thousand Motels 1. Like Bitch
2. Will pay high ticket prices and not bitch.
3. Will not dis Keith Richards
4. Are in it for the long term.
5. Don't hate the beatles at all...but know which side on which the bread is buttered.
6. Spent a little time at the "Crossroads"
7. Have a special place in their hearts for Tina Turner.
8. Still love Stu & Brian, Bill & MT
9. Thank Andrew Oldham
10. Don't take it too seriously...IORR

If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, got webbed feet like a duck, then chances are it's probably a duck.
01-04-04 01:12 PM
stewed & Keefed Not sure about 5 & 7
[Edited by stewed & Keefed]
01-04-04 01:16 PM
Ten Thousand Motels
quote:
stewed & Keefed wrote:
Not sure about 5 & 7
[


She taught Mick how to dance on stage. #5 I was being diplomatic.
01-04-04 01:23 PM
glencar Very good list, Mr. Motels.
01-04-04 01:57 PM
quackenbush Doesn't #10 conflict with #2 through #9?
[Edited by quackenbush]
01-04-04 02:22 PM
SHINE A LIGHT i'm not sure about#5 either. as for #7,well she's good but she did not teach jags how to dance, he got a great deal of that from james brown.
01-04-04 02:39 PM
Ten Thousand Motels
quote:
SHINE A LIGHT wrote:
i'm not sure about#5 either. as for #7,well she's good but she did not teach jags how to dance, he got a great deal of that from james brown.



OK I'm a Beatles fan but I never thought they were up one on the Stones. As far as #7, Tina Turner maybe never taught jags how to dance directly, but she was a Monster. Like I said she belongs right up there in the pantheon with Mick & Elvis. She was THAT good in those days. But it becomes all about power.
01-04-04 03:12 PM
Lambchop Tina lost it without Ike.
01-04-04 05:41 PM
Joey

My Ass Smells !

Jackycake !
01-04-04 09:58 PM
Child of the Moon Guess I'm a "real" fan!
01-04-04 10:06 PM
KeithRichards210 Sounds like a reasonable list to me!

I guess I fit the criteria quite nicely...
01-05-04 10:35 AM
Ten Thousand Motels
quote:
KeithRichards210 wrote:
Sounds like a reasonable list to me!




Yeah. I suppose, I was just being silly. I really don't know what an "unreal" fan is. If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck and quacks like a duck; the chances are it's probably a duck.
[Edited by Ten Thousand Motels]
01-05-04 10:38 AM
egon real stones fans stay up till 6 in the morning trying to find hidden 'gems' on 4 flicks.

and then when the can't find them do the same thing the next night.

01-05-04 10:43 AM
Ten Thousand Motels
quote:
egon wrote:
real stones fans stay up till 6 in the morning trying to find hidden 'gems' on 4 flicks.

and then when the can't find them do the same thing the next night.






Looks like a duck to me.
01-05-04 10:47 AM
egon sounds like it has the brain of a duck as well
01-05-04 12:23 PM
Ten Thousand Motels Ike and Tina Turner

There was a time when the Ike and Tina Turner Revue was one of the hottest, most durable, and potentially most explosive of all R&B ensembles. Fronted by Tina, with one of the rawest, most sensual and impossibly dynamic voices in Black music, the Ike And Tina Revue was an ensemble that dripped musical discipline while manifesting nearly unbearable tension, eventually giving way to wave upon wave of catharsis. The Ike and Tina Turner Revue were rivaled only by James Brown and The Fabulous Flames in terms of musical spectacle.


Ike Turner was born November 5, 1931 in Clarksdale, MS. Starting to play the piano at five, Ike Turner began his musical career at eleven as a piano accompanist to Sonny Boy Williamson and Robert Nighthawk. By 1945 as a teenager he was a disc jockey on radio station WROX in Clarksdale, Mississippi. In 1951, he joined a R&B group The Kings of Rhythm and in that year he made a lasting contribution to the music by playing piano on Jackie Brenston's "Rocket 88," which is often cited as one of the very first rock and roll records. Turner learned guitar shortly afterwards, and backed up other R&B artists at Sun Records in the early '50s. Throughout the decade, the guitarist and piano player was a prolific session player contributing to records by blues legends Elmore James, Howlin' Wolf, and Otis Rush.



Ike also backed a host of obscure R&B artists in his early years, occasionally issuing discs under his name. Not much of a singer, both his own records and the ones he contributed to and/or produced often showcased his stinging, bluesy licks, and the best of his solo outings tended to be his instrumentals



Then Ike became a talent scout and producer for Modern Records, ostensibly "discovering" B.B. King and Howlin' Wolf. Around 1954, he moved to East St. Louis, Missouri where he became a rhythm and blues star with The Rhythm Kings. In 1959 in East St. Louis, he met Anna Mae Bullock. Anna was just eighteen and still in high school when she joined the group as a singer. Later she changed her name to Tina Turner. Ike added Tina to their group's horn section and also added some backup singers in 1957. They recorded a demo of "A Fool in Love" in late 1959; by the autumn of 1960 the record was a number two R&B hit on Sue Records. "I Idolize You," "It's Gonna Work Out Fine," "Poor Fool," and "Tra La La La La" all quickly followed, giving the Turner's five Top Ten R&B hits in two and a half years. Tina was the star and the group was renamed The Ike and Tina Turner Revue



Tina became pregnant by Ike's saxophone player (her first son, Raymond), moved into Ike's house, began a relationship with Ike, and eventually gave birth to Ike's baby. They were married in a quickie Tijuana ceremony, which turned out to be illegal, since Ike never bothered to divorce his first wife.



In 1961 Ike and Tina released many singles including "It's Gonna Work Out Fine," which made them major stars in England. Soon the Ike and Tina Turner Revue, dominated by Tina's gyrating, prancing, and her thrilling voice, had crossed over from R&B to become a top pop-rock act with hit singles like "River Deep Mountain High," "Want To Take You Higher," "Nutbush City Limits," and "The Midnight Special." Ike and Tina reached worldwide popularity when they opened for the Rolling Stones in 1969. All expectations were filled in 1971 with "Proud Mary," a number four hit which became the capstone of Ike & Tina's Revue.



Ike Turner had many problems when he was off the stage. A drug addict, he abused his wife and children both mentally and physically. Ike's complete dominance over her life had become too much for Tina, and after an unsuccessful suicide attempt, she walked out on him in 1975, with nothing more than thirty-six cents and a gas station credit card.

Later he would be arrested for drugs and battery. During this time he recorded two solo albums in his own studio, and he wrote a book called Taking Back My Life. He also remade "Proud Mary" with Billy Rodgers. Today he is sixty-eight and plays at the House of Blues and Hustling.

Many thought Tina would disappear without Ike's musical muscle. Tina relinquished almost all claims for compensation, deciding her complete freedom from Ike was more important than the money. In debt, she briefly lived on food stamps before climbing her way back up by working in small-time nightclub six days a week.

After her divorce from Ike Tina celebrated her new-found freedom in 1975 with a role in the film version of the Who's Tommy. Playing the Acid Queen. She recorded only occasionally later in the decade but resurfaced in the mid-'80s first teaming with a Heaven 17 project named BEF on a remake of the Temptations' "Ball of Confusion." That same year she signed a solo contract with Capitol Records. Her first single, a cover of Al Green's "Let's Stay Together," hit the Top 30 early in 1984. Second single "What's Love Got to Do with It" became one of the year's biggest hits, spending three weeks at number one. Her album Private Dancer included two more Top Ten singles, the title track and "Better Be Good to Me." With another movie role in 1985 (Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome), she found a number-two hit with its theme, "We Don't Need Another Hero." She embarked on the twenty-five-country Break Every Rule tour in 1987, breaking box-office records around the globe.Her next big hit followed in 1986 ("Typical Male"), after which Tina began to decline, still charting occasionally and selling respectably with each album.

I, Tina, the entertainer's best-selling autobiography, became the basis of the 1993 hit movie What's Love Got to Do With It.

Following an extended period of relative silence Tina Turner once again got ready to strut her stuff on stage. In 1997, Tina embarked on her first North American tour in six years; proving her staying power, Turner's tour proved to be the seventh most popular draw of 1997, earning $24.8 million.

Two years later, Turner is once again ready to prove her stage prowess. On April 13, she'll join Whitney Houston, Cher, and Brandy on the stage of New York City's Beacon Theater as one of VH1's second wave of Divas Live. Other events on Turner's 1999 calendar include an upcoming "greatest hits" album as well as a fall tour with 1998's top concert draw, Elton John. In addition to taking place around Tina's 60th birthday, the tour will include a pre-millennial concert stop on Dec. 30 at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas.

Ike and Tina Turner were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1991
Jackie Brenson and Ike Turner





01-05-04 12:41 PM
Nasty Habits
quote:
Lambchop wrote:
Tina lost it without Ike.




WORD.
01-05-04 01:10 PM
Ten Thousand Motels Oh Yeah I saw Sly & The Family Stone about the same time as The I&T Revue, within about a year...another underated act, at least live.
[Edited by Ten Thousand Motels]
01-05-04 01:11 PM
glencar Underrated until Sly dropped himself into a huge coke habit that proved impossible to get out of.
01-05-04 03:12 PM
SHINE A LIGHT i've had second thoughts about this list....YES, i do fit all of the criteria. all ten of 'em.
[Edited by SHINE A LIGHT]
01-05-04 03:21 PM
Gimme Shelter Great list.....I qualify.