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It was released by The Rolling Stones on their 1965 US-only album December's Children (And Everybody's) later that year. On this album, "Blue Turns to Grey" as well as "The Singer Not the Song" features Brian Jones on a 12-string electric guitar and Keith on a 6-string. It did not see a UK release until the 1971 compilation album Stone Age. [2]
The album itself was a return to the band's blues roots, and co-producer Don Was said it was a manifest testament to the purity of the Stones' love for making music. [8] The Rolling Stones' version of "Hate to See You Go" is a harmonica-driven [9] call-and-response between a cyclical riff and a four-chord rhythm sequence. [10]
The Rolling Stones first recorded the track on 10 May 1965 at Chess Studios in Chicago, Illinois, [8] which included Brian Jones on harmonica. The Stones lip-synched to a dub of this version the first time they debuted the song on the American music variety television programme Shindig! [9]
The song itself is a low and lumbering blues number, with Bill Janovitz saying in his review, “the instrumental arrangement clearly aims for the Chess Studios approach.” [2] Jagger double tracks the lead vocal, a studio technique rarely used in Rolling Stones recordings.
The Rolling Stones are releasing a new album on Oct. 20. Here are the band's albums, ranked ... of Jagger’s career on songs like Little Walter’s Chicago blues classic “Just Your Fool ...
The Rolling Stones: The First 50 Years. LA CASE Books. ISBN 978-8897526889. Carroll, Jeffrey (2005). When Your Way Gets Dark: A Rhetoric of the Blues. Parlor Press. ISBN 978-1932559385. Davis, Stephen (2001). Old Gods Almost Dead: The 40 Year Odyssey of the Rolling Stones. New York City: Doubleday Books. ISBN 978-0767909563.
Let It Bleed is the eighth studio album by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, released on 28 November 1969 by London Records in the United States and on 5 December 1969 by Decca Records in the United Kingdom. [2]
"I Got the Blues" is a song recorded by the Rolling Stones. Written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards , it appears on their 1971 album Sticky Fingers . It is a slow-paced, bluesy song featuring languid guitars with heavy blues and soul influences.