Remember to click on the person’s name to see all of the details of how we made these creations and leave these wonderful girls some comment loveĪndrea turned some cassette tapes into magnets using Prima Heavy White Gesso, Tim Holtz’s Elementary Flash Cards and some Starshine patterned paper.Īnna-Karin wishes she could wake up to a happy song every morning, and did an art journal page about pastel coloured calm mornings, using Distress Crayons, and Simon Says Stamp Exclusive Cottage Stem die and Glimmery Cardstock.īarbara loves a lot the Michael Jackson’s video: Thriller ( she’s a 80s girl)! The Manor and the Lost Zombie by Tim Holtz are perfect to tell the story of this song!Ĭathie was inspired to use Simon Says Stamp You Matter and Melange Tissue Paper with musical notes to create her card.Ĭheiron was inspired by the musical sentiment in Dina Wakley’s Scribbly Birds stamp set. This week the challenge is Inspired By MusicĪs always Simon Says Stamp will be giving away $50 voucher to shop at the fabulous Simon Says Stamp Store Thank you for joining us for the ‘At The Movies’ Challenge and we hope you will all join us again this week too. Rock star Mick Jagger in New York in 1993.Hi all and welcome to another week on the Simon Says Stamp Monday Challenge A short video clip of Jagger playing a guitar was posted on his Instagram account over the weekend. The Rolling Stones, who wrapped up a tour of Britain and Europe in July, have said they are working on a new studio album. The tape of that song was reportedly sold at auction. That song, “No One Loves You More Than Me,” is believed to have been recorded in 1964 and was found in 2016. The new finding comes two years after another previously unheard Rolling Stones song was uncovered. In cleaner terms, and as a hint to the name of the tour movie, that song is often referred to as “Schoolboy Blues.” The name of the film is obscene in itself, stemming from the obscene name of an obscene song the band recorded a few years earlier to fulfill a recording contract they didn’t want to actually fulfill. But it’s not exactly easy to find, either.Ī snippet of the song, with its passage of Jagger repeatedly singing, “It’s funny, funny, funny,” is briefly heard in a scene in the publicly unreleased documentary about the 1972 Rolling Stones tour of America. While the song will be new to most listeners, it is not completely unknown to hardcore Stones fans. My motive for sending it to Rolling Stone was to pass it to Carly.” Representatives from the Rolling Stones did not immediately respond to a request for comment. “I’m not doing it for the money,” Lee said. But he said Wednesday that he sent a digital copy of the song to Rolling Stone magazine because they promised to give it to Simon. Lee, an entrepreneur from London, declined to say where the tape of the song came from. Simon and Jagger worked together in 1972 when the Rolling Stones frontman supposedly sang backup vocals on Simon’s hit “You’re So Vain.” For many years, it was thought that Jagger was the subject of that song, but Simon has denied that. When the song ends, a female voice believed to be Simon’s gasps: “Good song.” That matches with Lee’s recording, except Jagger and Simon appear to sing “change” instead of “cry.” Jagger does most of the singing, with Simon adding some harmonies. She also sang a line of the song from memory, “Funny, funny, funny, funny, funny, How love can make you cry.” 29, 2016, according to the magazine’s website. “We had this little back and forth at the piano for about an hour,” Simon says in the Rolling Stone interview, published Nov. Singer Carly Simon (right) performs with guitarist Peter Calo at the Orpheum Theater in Boston on Nov.
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