True Adventures Of The Rolling Stones (1984) - Plot & Excerpts
It was as if we had been still living in the nineteenth century and then suddenly found the twentieth glaring and screaming at us. We were yanked into our own age, fascinating, jungle-haunted, monstrous. We were used to being sung at in music halls in a robust and zestful fashion, but the syncopated frenzy of these three young Americans was something quite different; shining with sweat, they almost hung over the footlights, defying us to resist the rhythm, gradually hypnotising us, chanting and drumming us into another kind of life in which anything might happen. J. B. PRIESTLEY: The Edwardians “SO WE START TALKING to Brian,” Keith said, “and he’s moving up to London with his chick and his baby. His second baby, his first one belongs to some other chick. He’s left her and he’s really cuttin’ up in Cheltenham. He can’t stay there any longer, he’s got shotguns coming out of the hills after him, so he’s moving up to town.” “He used to come up on the weekends and I’d say, ‘Look, man, stick it out till you’ve got a bit of bread together, and then come to London,’”
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