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CD: Rolling Stones Brussels Affair Box Set BRAND NEW IN ORIGINAL SHIPPING BOX
The set is rare to find never opened unused condition and one of the highest end items.
PRIORITY MAIL SHIPPING WITH DELIVERY CONFIRMATION FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
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Back in 1973, the government of France banned the Rolling Stones from entering French territory because of various run-ins with the law—most of them occurring during summer of 1971, while the band members were in the South of France, recording one of their masterpieces, Exile on Main St. This was a blow to the Stones’ hordes of French fans, who would be shut out from experiencing the Greatest Rock 'n' Roll Band In The World on their 1973 European Tour in support of the newly released Goats Head Soup. That October, the band organized a concert across the Belgian border in Brussels, and a local radio station chartered a bus to transport French fans to the now-historic gig.
All the sights and sounds from this historic show and tour have now been amassed for the first time in The Brussels Affair, the inaugural release from the Stones Archive. The package features an 180-gram triple-vinyl album + 2 cd and rare photographs from the Brussels show by Claude Gassian, as well a book documenting the entire 1973 European tour, with exclusive photographs from Michael Putland and a newly written text by acclaimed NME scribe Nick Kent.
• Limited-Edition Book
• Album: 180-gram 3lp Vinyl Set of the Brussels concert. IN SHRINK, NEVER OPENED COPY.
•+2 CD is a real find for stones fans.
• Watch: ’70s-era “Tongue & Lips” Watch—Japan Seiko movement and stainless steel face with brass dial.
• Tour Lithograph: 1973 tour lithograph.
The Rolling Stones have delved into their lengthy past and dug up a rarely heard recording of a show in Brussels, recorded in 1973 on their Goats Head Tour.
The newly released recording is of a show at the Forest Hills Arena in Brussels, Belgium, and exhibits a quality rarely heard in previously unreleased live recordings of the band from that vintage.
“I’ve rarely heard the Stones that early on playing live that well recorded,” remarked Keith Richards of the Stones Archive series.
Now the Brussels recording forms the centerpiece for the Brussels Affair box set; a very high-end package that features a 180 gram vinyl pressing of the show along with a book of rarely seen photos from the tour taken by Michael Putland and accompanied by writing from legendary rock journalist, Nick Kent
Also in the package are a tour lithograph and a lips-and-tongue watch. The whole thing comes in a reproduction of the studio case that housed the unreleased recordings for four decades