Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Immediate Records released "Out of Time" on 17 June 1966. [9] It entered the UK Singles Chart on 23 June 1966, at a position of number 36. [19] "Out of Time" became Farlowe's only top-10 hit, reaching number 1 on 28 July that year, where it stayed for a week. [19] It stayed on the chart for 13 weeks, leaving on 21 September at a position of ...
"Rocks Off" is the opening song on the Rolling Stones' 1972 double album Exile on Main St. Recorded between July 1971 and March 1972, "Rocks Off" is one of the songs on the album that was partially recorded at Villa Nellcôte, a house Keith Richards rented in the south of France during the summer and autumn of 1971.
The music of the song is one of several Rolling Stones songs from this period that shows Appalachian and English folk influences. [5] [6] As he does on "Lady Jane," another song from Aftermath, Rolling Stones guitarist Brian Jones plays a dulcimer on "I Am Waiting." [5] [7] Jack Nitzsche plays harpsichord. [8]
The lyric I added is very gentle and loving, about friendships in the band." Jagger also had stated that the 1981 lyrics were contemplated for a future possible video, making the song the first Rolling Stones single to be packaged as a possible video for the emerging MTV channel. The lyrics see a more mature side of singer Jagger represented.
To date, "Saint of Me" is the Rolling Stones' last original song to chart on the Billboard Hot 100. A recording from the Bridges to Babylon Tour can be found on the 1998 live album, No Security. The B-side, "Anyway You Look at It", is a ballad and appears on the compilation Rarities 1971–2003, released in 2005.
Jagger thought Ronstadt should sing more rock and roll songs, suggested "Tumbling Dice", and wrote out the lyrics for her. [105] The opening line of Ronstadt’s version varied significantly from the Rolling Stones. Their version begins with: Women think I'm tasty but they're always tryin' to waste me. Ronstadt opened with: People try to rape me.
“We haven’t done a matinee show in years,” Mick Jagger observed drolly, halfway through The Rolling Stones’ first appearance at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival on Thursday evening.
In 1971, the song was released on an album for the first time in the UK on the Decca Records compilation Stone Age. [4] The song was written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. The title takes its name from the 1829 poem by Mary Howitt. The lyrics speak about what the band, especially the leader, will do after their gig is over: