The Rolling Stones - Can't You Hear Me Knocking (REACTION!)

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Published 2022-09-26

All Comments (21)
  • @LostInVegas
    This video was recorded back in July of 2020! It was 'blocked' on YouTube at that time and we had to Dropbox it on Patreon fyi. Thanks for watching!
  • This song got us kicked out of our apartment way back in the '70s. The landlord said she had finally had enough. It was a Saturday afternoon. We were all drunk and high. And we had it cranked up through a couple of Marshall amplifiers. We were unacceptable, I don't deny it!
  • Charlie Watts always served the song. No flash, no 10 minute solos. He played what the song needed.
  • @panfriedegg5048
    It always warms my heart to see people discovering old music I grew up with, and loving it as much as anyone. That's what it means for music to be timeless.
  • @adityasalian7631
    A guitar riff that is so badass, a drum beat that is so steady and a voice that is out of this world!!! This song is as rock and roll as it gets!! My favourite
  • @deltabravo287
    That riff that you all loved so much is pure Keith Richards. He used an alternate tuning on his guitar known as Open G tuning. I agree it’s pure fire.
  • @keefriff99
    Absolutely brilliant song…one of Keith’s best riffs, appropriately sleazy lyrics and delivery from Jagger, propulsive drumming from Charlie, a killer Bobby Keys sax part, and then Mick Taylor channels Santana on the back nine with one of the most sublime lead tones ever put to tape. Magic.
  • Had the privilege of seeing these guys in their prime. They killed this track! Two of the best concerts I've ever seen. This band is the real deal guys. No tricks here
  • Keith Richards is playing the main riff on a Telecaster. Then you can hear Mick Taylor come in playing rhythm on a Gibson. What an amazing tune. It's one of the best recorded jams ever. Nobody knew how it was going to turn out. And you're right: the drumming is very important.
  • @520azdc
    Mick Taylor achieved immortality on this record.
  • This reminds me of running through the jungle in Saigon dodging bullets. I needed too live to hear this song again! Thank you guys. The "Stones", during the Vietnam conflict, were priceless.
  • Guys the whole Sticky Fingers album is incredible. One of the greatest albums of all time. You need to listen to the whole album.
  • Bobby Keys. RIP. One of the greatest sax players in rock & roll. He played with numerous artists over the decades, & deserves all the accolades he's ever received.
  • @zackattack635
    Sticky Fingers is very close to a perfect album. This is the crown jewel track though. Only a band at the heights of their powers would have attempted this.
  • Hardest thing for a Rolling Stones fan to do is make a top 10 list. They have so many great songs
  • @kikiki4592
    Mick Taylor took The Stones to another level that they have never been back to since he left. Amazing guitar player.
  • The drumming. Ahhh, the drumming... Thank you, Mr Watts, for the years of hitting your kit at precisely the right moment - not too often but always enough. Crisp and clean. A catalogue that is now complete. RIP The other guys are not too bad, either.
  • I’ve heard this song 1 billion times. It’s a timeless classic. And just like you guys always do you had me feeling like it was the FIRST time I’ve ever heard it. Lost in Vegas’s enjoyment and energy is infectious man. Glad you found this gem
  • @rajmoran
    This song starts with a positively ruthless groove. If you’re not instantly bopping to this, you’re dead.
  • @AU88
    The secret of this cut? Of all the STONES songs, this is the most menacing. The most dangerous. So many times it could go off the wheels. You heard it yourselves. It’s the most Stones song, ever.