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Richards) Recorded by "The Rolling Stones" at "Pathé Marconi Studios", Billancourt, France (January/March 2nd, 1978) Vocals: Mick Jagger; Electric Guitars: Keith Richards, Ron Wood; Drums: Charlie Watts; Bass: Bill Wyman Track 08 - "I Need You" . Tuesday 07 May 2019 The Rolling Stones State Farm Stadium (formerly University of Phoenix Stadium), Glendale, AZ, US.
Some Girls is the 14th British and 16th American studio album by the Rolling Stones, released in 1978 on Rolling Stones Records. It was the first album to feature guitarist Ronnie Wood as a full-time member; joining founder members Mick Jagger (vocals), Keith Richards (guitar), Bill Wyman (bass) and Charlie Watts (drums). Wood had contributed to some tracks on the Rolling Stones prior two albums, 1974's It's Only Rock 'n Roll and 1976's Black and Blue, and joined the band full time in 1976
The Rolling Stones - Some Girls (1978).
Some Girls (The Rolling Stones song). Some Girls" is the title track of English rock and roll band the Rolling Stone's 1978 album Some Girls. It marked the third time a song on one of the band's albums also served as the album's title. Like "Under My Thumb", "Brown Sugar", and "Star Star", the lyrics to "Some Girls" created controversy because of the way it depicted women.
Atlantic Records Virgin Records.
The Rolling Stones 1978 Some Girls full original album. Alongside previous Stones releases that courted controversy ("Under My Thumb", "Brown Sugar", "Star Star") due to their apparently degrading lyrics towards women, "Some Girls" caused a ruckus among both feminists and civil rights activists over such lyrics as "black girls just want to get fucked all night" and "Chinese girls are so gentle/They're really such a tease". The song is demonstrative of the unconventional uses of steel guitars heard throughout the Some Girls album, with an unusual, droning, phased two-chord groove that's among the Stones' most unusual arrangements. The original cut of the song ran some 23 minutes and featured verses Jagger came up with as they went along. Harmonica player Sugar Blue provides some virtuosic blues-style solos on the track. The song was featured heavily on the Stones' 1999 North American No Security Tour which concentrated on lesser-known songs from the band's catalogue.
The Rolling Stones had one heck of a decade in the '70s. They started with one of their all-time greats - 1971's 'Sticky Fingers' - and then ended it with another classic, 1978's 'Some Girls. The latter record helped save the band after a few years of rock-star excess nearly sank them. It's one of the group's very best records, a renewed blast of classic rock 'n' roll infused with country swagger and soulful sway. We break it all down, song by song, with Lyrics Uncovered: The Rolling Stones' 'Some Girls' Album. If the rest of 'Some Girls' was the Stones trying to make sense of the punk movement blowing up around them, 'Shattered,' the album's closing track, was the band embracing it. It doubles as Mick Jagger's blast at his adopted home of New York City: "You got rats on the West Side, bed bugs uptown, What a mess, this town's in tatters," he sings.
Instead, Some Girls is like a marriage of convenience: when it works - which is often - it can be meaningful, memorable and quite moving, but it rarely sends the arrow straight through the heart. It took me a long time to discover that the key to acting is honesty, an actor told the anthropologist Edmund Carpenter. Once you know how to fake that, you’ve got it made. While the Stones may have gone back a dozen or more years for the sound and style of the current album, what they’ve really done is to reshoot Rebel Without a Cause as a scaled-down, made-for-TV movie. The rebellion - with the exception of Richards’ powerful Before They Make Me Run - lacks a certain credibility, and the cause is simply survival. If you don’t think that credibility is a major issue here, you haven’t seen any of the band’s recent concerts, most of which have been poor. he’s got to be thinking about himself and the Rolling Stones, among other things. It’s too bad the answer to all his questions isn’t an unqualified yes. In a better world, it should be. It reached number one on the Billboard 200 album chart, and became the band's top selling album in the United States, certified by the RIAA as having six million copies sold as of 2000. It was a major critical success, becoming the only Rolling Stones album to be nominated for a Grammy in the Album of the Year category.
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