My Bloody Valentine - Loveless play album
Rock
Electronic / Hip-hop / Jazz / Rock / Blues / Creative music
Going To A Go-Go(Four Flicks: Disc Four) (Paris Olympia Theatre).
going to a go go (live) качать онлайн, как и The Rolling Stones - Going to a Go Go, Go-A - Веснянка Live, Go Sakabe - Pride, Эпитафия - G. .
Going to a Go-Go" is a 1965 single recorded by The Miracles for Motown's Tamla label. Issued in December 1965, "Going to a Go-Go" peaked at number 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States the following spring Contents. 1 The Miracles' original version. 2 The Rolling Stones live version. Going to a Go-Go" is featured on the Miracles' album of the same name, which proved to be their highest-charting LP of all-original material. The album reached the Top Ten of the Billboard Top 200 Albums chart in early 1966, peaking at number eight, and reached on the Billboard top R&B albums chart. In 2003, the Miracles' Going To A Go-Go album was ranked number 271 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time . com – The Rolling Stones – Going to a Go Go (Live)". Retrieved 18 June 2016.
Both tracks recorded live. A: Jobete Music (UK) Ltd. – Taken from the album Still Life (American Concert 1981) B: EMI Music Publ. Ltd. ℗ 1982 Original sound recording made by Promotone . Manufactured in the UK by EMI Records Limited. Matrix, Runout (Label side A): RSR 110A. Matrix, Runout (Label side B): RSR 110B. Matrix, Runout (Runout side A, stamped variant 1): RSR 110 A-1-1-2-13.
The Rolling Stones – As Tears Go By. 3:20. The Rolling Stones 2016 Blue & Lonesome – 08 Hate To See You Go. 2:49. The Rolling Stones – Con Le Mie Lacrime (As Tears Go By).
Smokey Robinson & the Miracles. Though its title track ignited a nationwide fad for go-go music, Smokey Robinson & the Miracles' Going to a Go-Go LP certainly wasn't just a cash-in effort.
The Rolling Stones singer on the band’s upcoming North American tour, new ‘Sticky Fingers’ box set and the possibility of a new album. Are you going to play more Sticky Fingers songs than usual because the album is being re-released? Maybe, yeah, or at least playing the ones we don’t normally play. But I haven’t really gotten to that yet. We’re floating the idea of doing the whole album. I played it – and it’s a really great album – but it’s got a lot of slow songs. I’m just worried that’s a bit problematic for a stadium. So, I’m sure we’ll have a go at playing the whole thing. I mean,, I’m not sure it’s gonna work. There used to be long gaps between tours. You’d go out for two years, and then disappear for the next four or so. But you’ve been on tour since 2012, though doing far fewer shows with long gaps between legs. What’s changed? As you say, we do less shows. It’s still the same in that we go around the world and then start again. We ended in Australia in December and then we’re back where we started. The 50th anniversary tour started in England.
Yeah, don't you wanna go, and that's alright, tell me. Going to a go go, everybody Going to a go go. It doesn't matter you come in drag It doesn't matter you come in stag I'm telling everyone to get down here Every taxi that you flag. Is going to a go go, everybody Going to a go go Don't you wanna go And that's alright, tell me, yeah That's alright, yeah. Rolling Stones - Anybody Seen My Baby? 2. Rolling Stones - (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction. 3. Rolling Stones - She Smiled Sweetly. 4. Rolling Stones - 19th Nervous Breakdown.
The Rolling Stones’ tour of North America in late 1969 was their first since the summer of 1966 and it was their first anywhere since the Spring of 1967. They had of course played the huge free concert in London’s Hyde Park in July 1969, shortly after Brian Jones’ tragic death, but they were not the road-honed outfit that they had become in the heady days between 1963 to 1967. The Stones started out by rehearsing in Stephen Stills’ basement before moving to a Warner Bros Studios soundstage. They flew between most gigs, while basing themselves in Los Angeles and New York for some of the tour. They also quite often went on stage late – sometimes very late. The band decided to call their second live album, Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out! and released it in September 1970. Originally it was to be a double-album, including tracks by BB King and Ike and Tina Turner. But, as Mick said at the time Decca weren’t interested.
| A | Going To A Go GoWritten-By – Rogers*, Robinson*, Johnson*, Moore* |
3:23 |
| B | Beast Of BurdenWritten-By – Jagger-Richards |
5:10 |
| Category | Artist | Title (Format) | Label | Category | Country | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RSR 110 | Rolling Stones* | Going To A Go Go (Live) (7", Single) | Rolling Stones Records | RSR 110 | UK | 1982 |
| 3C 006-64820 | Rolling Stones* | Going To A Go Go (Live) (7") | Rolling Stones Records | 3C 006-64820 | Italy | 1982 |
| 1C 006-64 820 | Rolling Stones* | Going To A Go Go (Live) (7", Single) | Rolling Stones Records | 1C 006-64 820 | Germany | 1982 |
| 11C 008-64820 | Rolling Stones* | Going To A Go Go (Live) (7") | Rolling Stones Records | 11C 008-64820 | Portugal | 1982 |
| 01.21.1994 | The Rolling Stones | Going To A Go Go = Yendo A Un Go Go (7", Single) | Rolling Stones Records | 01.21.1994 | Peru | 1982 |
Rock / Blues
Pop
Rock
Rock / Pop
Rock
Rock
Rock / Pop
Electronic
Electronic / Soulful music / Pop
Rock