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"Miss You" is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, released on Rolling Stones Records in May 1978. It was released as the first single one month in advance of their album Some Girls. "Miss You" was written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. It peaked at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and number three on the UK Singles Chart.
The Rolling Stones recorded the song for their album It's Only Rock 'n Roll (1974). [7] They also released it as a single, which reached number 17 in the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart. [ 8 ] The official promotional video features the band, in bright clothing, performing the song on a stage. [ 9 ]
"Far Away Eyes" is the sixth track from the English rock band the Rolling Stones' 1978 album, Some Girls. It was released, as the B-side of the single "Miss You", on Rolling Stones Records, on 9 June 1978. Rolling Stone magazine made it the 73rd song on their list of 100 Greatest Rolling Stone's Songs. [1]
The Rolling Stones performing "Before They Make Me Run" on July 5, 2024 at BC Place in Vancouver "Before They Make Me Run" is a song by English rock band the Rolling Stones, featured on their 1978 album Some Girls. Written by guitarist Keith Richards, the song is a response to his arrest for heroin possession in Toronto in February 1977.
"Miss You" (Rolling Stones song), 1978 "Miss You" (Westlife song), 1999, covered as "I Miss You" by Basshunter (2008) "Miss You" (Yuna Ito song), 2008
[70] Music writer Robert Christgau described it as an "anarchic reading" of the Stones' original. [71] Redding's soul-style arrangement featured horns playing the main riff, [72] as Keith Richards had originally intended. In 2003, Ronnie Wood noted that the Rolling Stones' later concert renditions of the number reflect Redding's interpretation ...
"You Gotta Move" is a traditional African-American spiritual song. Since the 1940s, the song has been recorded by a variety of gospel musicians, usually as "You Got to Move" or "You've Got to Move". It was later popularized with blues and blues rock secular adaptations by Mississippi Fred McDowell and the Rolling Stones.
The song is believed to have been inspired by Amanda Lear, a French singer and model, who was a friend of Brian Jones. [1] Philippe Margotin and Jean-Michael Guesdon in their book The Rolling Stones: All the Songs state that they consider the song to be the prototype for the early seventies sound of the Rolling Stones, with the combination of Jagger's and Richard's voices and the "rhythm riff".