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(TV) Dinosaur Seniors



Technical Question for list:

What is the difference --IF ANY---betwwen send out an e-mail posted to
 'tv@obbard.com' versus tv@obbard.com (i.e., without the single quotes)
	Leo
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"Stones Rrip Up the Joint at Orpheum Show" 
By Joan Anderman, Globe Staff, 9/9/2002 
It's one thing to strut your stuff in a stadium show - blown up to superhuman 
size on an eight-panel video screen, lit by flames and fireworks, and buoyed 
by the force field that forms when 53,000 delirious fans commune in your honor. 
To bring off a rock concert on the humble planks of the 2,800-seat Orpheum Theater 
is another thing entirely. Let there be no confusion: deep creases etched into the faces 
of aging rock stars come into bold relief under the plebeian white lights. Creaky 
knees and creaky songs alike are impossible to disguise.
 In the small music hall there is no such thing as phoning it in.
So for the Rolling Stones, forty years into their career, intimacy 
is a double-edged sword. The hottest ticket in town was also an unforgiving 
test for the titans of classic rock. 
There was only one true measure of the Stones' boutique set last night - a 
standard as fundamental to rock 'n' roll as any searing guitar solo. Were they 
or were they not having a hell of a good time? 
They were, and the Stones' - particularly Mick Jagger's - irrepressible energy 
is what pushed this show across the line that separates a lucrative exercise in 
nostalgia and an affecting trip through the classic rock songbook. An enduring 
catalogue doesn't hurt, either. Keith Richard's sneering guitar licks on ''Jumpin' 
Jack Flash'' - the walloping first number - have been encoded in the DNA of a 
certain generation of rock fans. And while the swagger and defiance that define 
the Rolling Stones (collective age: 232) may be bound and tied to the idea of youth, 
this band has something to sell besides memories. 
Jagger pouted, twitched, shimmied, and testified during a set that saved the run of 
crowdpleasers for a finale that included ''Honky Tonk Women,'' '
'Start Me Up,'' ''Brown Sugar,'' and ''Tumblin' Dice.'' As promised, the 
bulk of the show dug deep into the past, unearthing some of the most obscure, 
rarely-performed songs in the Stones' repertoire and a handful of heartfelt blues covers. 
Mick and Keith were mirror images of a bad attitude on ''Parachute Woman,'' from 
1968's ''Beggar's Banquet.'' Another rarity, ''Hand of Fate'' from ''Black and Blue,'' and '
'All Down the Line'' a no-nonsense blues-rocker from ''Exile on Main Street'' were greeted 
with astonished jubilation from the crowd - which included Sen. John Kerry, actor 
Bill Murray, rocker Peter Wolf, and Aerosmith guitarist Joe Perry. 
Even a band as timeless as the Stones isn't immune to the occasion fashion faux pas, 
as the prancing disco track ''Dance Part I'' from 1980's ''Emotional Rescue'' demonstrated. 
That thumping number's foil was ''Heart of Stone,'' an ominous blues that drew Jagger's 
most inspired, madly inflected vocal of the night and an amazed gasp from a devotee in the
 next seat, who flew from LA to Boston for his 91st Stones concert last night. 
It's not that the lads haven't aged. They have. Jagger is hardly the menacing livewire he 
once was. Charlie Watts resembles noone so much as Father Time. And Richards has 
always seemed to materialize via seance rather than limo. The point is not so much that 
they're still here, but that they're still in command of the music. 
''This used to be our opening number. I'm not even going to tell you when. 
But I wasn't born yet,'' cracked Jagger in introduction to ''Everybody Need Somebody,'' 
a soul standard the band played often in the early '60s. The refrain of ''I need you, you, you'' 
was hardly less relevant today, and perhaps more, as Jagger and company step into their 
fifth decade of rock `n' roll - defying time with passion. 
Chicago blues king Buddy Guy joined the Stones for the old blues ''Rock Me Baby,'' 
and played an opening set filled with incendiary guitar work and tortured vocals.
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