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Quarantine does not mean that interviews with great guests cease, rather the opposite. With the measure of staying at home as the best way to prevent the spread of coronavirus, artists answer the phone to converse via audio or video with various programs.
Last week, Sir Paul McCartney had a conversation with the radio program The Howard Stern Show, in which he referred to the pandemic, to the film Let it be Peter Jackson and the historical comparisons between the Rolling Stones and The Beatles.
“The Stones are a fantastic group. I go and see them every time they go out because they’re just a great band, and Mick [Jagger] he can really do it, the singing and the movements and everything, and Keith [Richards] and now Ronnie [Wood] and Charlie [Watts]. I mean, they are great. They really are great. So, I love you, but your stuff is rooted in the blues, “McCartney said of the men in” You Can’t Always Get What You Want, “who participated in the One World concert and released a song this week.
“I love the Stones, but I’m with you, the Beatles are better,” added the musician who also did his thing in the streaming show organized by Lady Gaga.
A week after that conversation, a reply to his comment arrived, from the mouth of no one else and no one less than one of the alluded to: Mick Jagger.
In an interview with Zane Lowe of Apple Music, Jagger was asked about the sayings of McCartney, who responded with a laugh and cold cloths to the “controversy”.
“That is very funny. He is a love. Obviously there is no competition whatsoever, ”said the voice of the Stones. But it did point to an important distinction between the two groups.
“The big difference is, however, and slightly serious, that the Rolling Stones are a band of great concerts in other decades and other areas when The Beatles never did an ‘Arena Tour’, a Madison Square Garden with a decent sound system . They broke up before the business started, before the touring business was real, “said Jagger.
So that business started in 1969 and the Beatles never experienced that. They did great concerts, and I was there at Shea Stadium. They did that stadium show. But the Stones continued, we started with the stadium shows in the 70’s and we still do it now. That is the real big difference between these two bands. One is incredibly lucky to continue playing in stadiums and the other band doesn’t exist, ”continued the voice accompanied by Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and Charlie Watts.
What’s more, this week the Rolling Stones released a song after seven years without debuting compositions. “Living in a ghost town” was released on various digital platforms. As Keith Richards related in a press release, it was recorded more than a year ago for a new album that is still in process.
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