No Security

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

No Security
NoSecurity98.jpg
Live album by
The Rolling Stones
Released2 November 1998
Recorded25 October 1997
12 December 1997
4 April 1998
13 June 1998
1, 5 & 6 July 1998
GenreRock
Length67:50
LanguageEnglish
LabelVirgin
ProducerThe Glimmer Twins
The Rolling Stones live chronology
The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus
(1996)
No Security
(1998)
Live Licks
(2004)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic2.5/5 stars[1]
Rolling Stone4/5 stars[2]

No Security is a live album by The Rolling Stones released by Virgin Records in 1998. Recorded over the course of the band's 1997–1998 worldwide Bridges to Babylon Tour, it was the band's eighth official full-length live release.

Not wishing to repeat songs on previous live albums Still Life (1982), Flashpoint (1991) and Stripped (1995), the Rolling Stones for the most part chose songs that had never been on a live release, including four from the band's most-recent studio album Bridges to Babylon (1997). Taj Mahal and Dave Matthews appeared as special guests. The tracks were taken from live performances at the Amsterdam Arena, Capitol Theatre (Port Chester, New York) (for MTV's Live from the 10 Spot), TWA Dome (St. Louis), River Plate Stadium (Buenos Aires), and Zeppelinfeld (Nuremberg).

The album was released in November 1998, and the band thereafter embarked on another tour, the No Security Tour, crossing North America for 34 shows in hockey and basketball arenas.

No Security peaked at number 67 on the UK Albums Chart, and at number 34 on the US Billboard 200. It failed to achieve US gold record status, selling more than 300,000 copies. The album was not reissued by UMe when Universal reissued the 1971–2005 back catalog.

Track listing[]

All songs by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, except where noted.

  1. "Intro" – 0:50
  2. "You Got Me Rocking" – 3:26 (Amsterdam Arena, 6 July 1998)
  3. "Gimme Shelter" – 6:22 (MTV 10 Spot 25 October 1997)
  4. "Flip the Switch" – 4:12 (Amsterdam Arena, 1 July 1998)
  5. "Memory Motel" – 6:05 (Amsterdam Arena, 5 July 1998)
  6. "Corrina" (Taj Mahal/Jesse Ed Davis) – 4:17 (TWA Dome, St-Louis, MO, 12 December 1997)
  7. "Saint of Me" – 5:25 (River Plate Stadium Buenos Aires, 4 April 1998)
  8. "Waiting on a Friend" – 5:02 (TWA Dome, St-Louis, MO, 12 December 1997)
  9. "Sister Morphine" (Jagger/Richards/Marianne Faithfull) – 6:16 (Amsterdam Arena, 6 July 1998)
  10. "Live with Me" – 3:54 (Amsterdam Arena, 1 July 1998)
  11. "Respectable" – 3:35 (Amsterdam Arena, 5 July 1998)
  12. "Thief in the Night" (Jagger/Richards/Pierre de Beauport) – 5:37 (Zeppelinfeld Nuremberg 13 June 1998)
  13. "The Last Time" – 4:47 (TWA Dome, St-Louis, MO, 12 December 1997)
  14. "Out of Control" – 7:59 (River Plate Stadium Buenos Aires, 4 April 1998)
Japanese edition bonus track
  1. "I Just Want to Make Love to You" (Willie Dixon) – 5:19 (Amsterdam Arena 1 July 1998)
  • Located between "Respectable" and "Thief in the Night"

Personnel[]

The Rolling Stones
  • Mick Jagger – lead vocals, harmonica, and guitar
  • Keith Richards – guitar and vocals
  • Ronnie Wood – electric and lap slide guitar
  • Charlie Watts – drums
Additional musicians
  • Darryl Jones – bass guitar
  • Chuck Leavell – keyboards[3]
  • Pierre de Beauport – Wurlitzer electric piano on "Thief in the Night"
  • Bobby Keys – saxophone
  • Andy Snitzer – saxophone, keyboards
  • Kent Smith – trumpet
  • Michael Davis – trombone
  • Bernard Fowler – backing vocals, percussion
  • Lisa Fischer – backing vocals
  • Blondie Chaplin – backing vocals, percussion
  • Leah Wood – backing vocals on "Thief in the Night"
  • Johnny Starbuck – shaker on "Out of Control"
Special guests
Recording credits

River Plate Stadium Buenos Aires, 4 April 1998

  • Engineering – Ed Cherney and David Hewitt at Remote Recording Services

Chart positions[]

Album
Chart (1998) Position
UK Top 75 Albums 67[citation needed]
The Billboard 200 34[citation needed]
Singles
Single Chart (1998) Position
"Gimme Shelter" Mainstream Rock Tracks 29[citation needed]

References[]

  1. ^ No Security at AllMusic
  2. ^ [1] Archived 9 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Saulnier, Jason (8 April 2010). "Chuck Leavell Interview". Music Legends. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
Retrieved from ""