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Background. Written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, the song's lyrics relate two stories: one is a story of New York City police shooting a boy "right through the heart" because they mistook him for someone else, and the second of a ten-year-old girl who dies in an alley of a drug overdose. The latter event is not known to be factual.
Goats Head Soup is the eleventh studio album by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, released on 31 August 1973 by Rolling Stones Records. Like its predecessor Exile on Main St., the band composed and recorded much of it outside of the United Kingdom due to their status as tax exiles. Goats Head Soup was recorded in Jamaica, the United ...
Hot Rocks 1964–1971 is a compilation album by the Rolling Stones released by London Records in December 1971. It became the Rolling Stones' best-selling release of their career and an enduring and popular retrospective. The album includes a mixture of hit singles, such as "Jumping Jack Flash", B-sides such as "Play with Fire", and album ...
from the album The Rolling Stones, Now! " Heart of Stone " is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, credited to the songwriting partnership of Jagger/Richards. London Records first issued it as a single in the United States in December 1964. The song was subsequently included on The Rolling Stones, Now!
Street Fighting Man. " Street Fighting Man " is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, written by the songwriting team of Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. Considered one of the band's most popular and most controversial songs, it features Indian instrumentation contributed by Brian Jones, which has led to it being characterized as a ...
The song is credited, as most Rolling Stones songs are, to both Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. "Angie" was recorded in November and December 1972 and is an acoustic guitar-driven ballad characterizing the end of a romance. The song's distinctive piano accompaniment, written by Richards, was played on the album by Nicky Hopkins, a Rolling ...
The Rolling Stones (UK) The Rolling Stones, Now! (US) Bo Diddley: Jagger "Money" 1963 1964 The Rolling Stones (EP) (UK) More Hot Rocks (Big Hits & Fazed Cookies) (US) Janie Bradford/Berry Gordy: Jagger "Monkey Man" 1969 1969 Let It Bleed: Jagger/Richards Jagger "Moon is Up" 1994 1994 Voodoo Lounge: Jagger/Richards Jagger "Moonlight Mile" 1970 ...
Rewind (1971–1984) is a compilation album by English rock band The Rolling Stones, released in 1984.Coming only three years after Sucking in the Seventies, the album was primarily compiled to mark the end of the band's alliance with Warner Music (in North America) and EMI (all other territories), both of whom were the distributors of Rolling Stones Records.