Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Live with Me" is a song by the Rolling Stones from their album Let It Bleed, released in December 1969. It was the first song recorded with the band's new guitarist Mick Taylor, who joined the band in June 1969, [2] although the first record the band released with Taylor was the single version of Honky Tonk Women. Taylor later described the ...
"Connection" is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, featured on their 1967 album Between the Buttons. It was written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards (but mostly Richards), features vocals by both and is said to be about the long hours the band spent in airports. The lyrics contain much rhyming based on the word connection. The ...
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]
"Let It Bleed" is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones. It was written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards and is featured on the 1969 album of the same name, the first example of a Rolling Stones title track. It was released as a single in Japan in February 1970.
After 50 years of proving themselves as songwriters whose catalog reaches far beyond the Delta Blues, the Stones went back to the music that started it all with their first full-on covers album ...
Nicky Hopkins performs the song's piano. Bill Wyman performs bass while Charlie Watts performs drums. [3] An overlooked song from the Stones canon of work, "Till the Next Goodbye" has never been performed live by the Stones and was not included on any compilation albums until the release of the Heartbreak EP in early 2021.
L.A. Friday (Live 1975) Ladies and Gentlemen: The Rolling Stones; Let's Spend the Night Together (film) Licked Live in NYC; Light the Fuse; Live 1965: Music from Charlie Is My Darling; Live at Leeds (Rolling Stones album) Live at the Checkerboard Lounge, Chicago 1981; Live at the Tokyo Dome; Live at the Wiltern (Rolling Stones album) Live Licks
Complex.com praised its "mystical, evocative lyrics" and ranked it 25th in its Top 50 Rolling Stones songs. [5] Rolling Stone ranked it 39th in its countdown of the band's top 100 songs, calling it "an early, vital result of the Stones turning to rock's deeper roots." [6] Classic Rock History critic Matthew Pollard rated "No Expectations" as ...