Brussels Affair (Live 1973)
Brussels Affair is a live album by the Rolling Stones, released in 2011. It is compiled from two shows recorded in Brussels at the Forest National Arena on Wednesday 17 October 1973, during their The [Rolling Stones European Tour 1973|European Tour]. At the time, the band was unable to enter France, as guitarist Keith Richards had been temporarily banned from visiting the country after being charged with drug possession by a French court. The album was released exclusively as a digital download through Google Play Music on 18 October 2011 in the US and through the Rolling Stones Archive website for the rest of the world in both lossy MP3 and lossless FLAC format. The 2011 digital edition has been bootlegged on physical CD. On 29 August 2012, an official announcement was made, stating its physical release as a high-priced boxset. All three releases include a triple LP and double CD.
Brussels Affair was officially released on a two-disc CD in Japan in 2015 as a bonus of the CD/DVD Set "Marquee Club ". The same 15 Brussels tracks also appear on the 2020 Super Deluxe and Deluxe box set reissue of Goats Head Soup.
The title of the release is the same as that of several famous and widely known bootleg recordings. The most famous iteration consists principally of the early show as broadcast by the King Biscuit Flower Hour and several bonus tracks added from the Tuesday 9 September 1973 London show. The official 2011 release is mainly culled from the second Brussels show; however, "Brown Sugar", "Midnight Rambler" and a transposed guitar solo on "All Down the Line" were taken from the first show.
Concert film clips
On 8 September 2020, the concert footage of the live album was officially released for the first time, in any format, on streaming services such as YouTube. The videos are short clips that keep repeating as the live album plays.Overview
The album was recorded during their 1973 European Tour, promoting their latest album Goats Head Soup.In 1973, the Rolling Stones were banned from entering France due to pending drug cases against Keith Richards, Bobby Keys and Anita Pallenberg. The band decided to organise a concert in Brussels for the French audience; RTL Radio chartered a train for French fans.
Critical reception
Reviewing for Vice, Robert Christgau cited "Starfucker" and "Happy" as highlights, and wrote of the album, "The rare arena-rock recording that does justice to the subgenre's power dwarfs their 26 March 1971 Marquee Club vault-pull while making a case for the excision of 'Midnight Rambler' and 'Brown Sugar' from their A list". John Harris was more enthusiastic about the release, writing in The Guardian that it is "unimpeachably great: a beautifully recorded, often unhinged 70 minutes during which the Stones manage to sound like the Platonic ideal of a rock band: simultaneously tight, unhinged, absolutely convincing, and gloriously ludicrous."Personnel
;The Rolling Stones- Mick Jagger – lead vocals, harmonica
- Keith Richards – guitar, vocals
- Mick Taylor – guitar, slide guitar
- Bill Wyman – bass guitar
- Charlie Watts – drums
- Billy Preston – piano, organ, clavinet, background vocals
- Steve Madaio – trumpet, flugelhorn
- Trevor Lawrence – saxophone