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Stones get the three-day blues

The Rolling Stones’ first album in 11 years is not what they expected. reports.

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The Rolling Stones initially went into the studio to create original rock music, but after rehearsing blues songs to flex their musical muscles, they took an unintended path.

They recorded an entire blues album, and it only took them three days.

‘‘It was really quick, super quick. It was really fun to do something that fast. And you didn’t really have time to analyse and think and overdub,’’ Mick Jagger says.

‘‘I didn’t know if it was any good ... it was just too fast, and I listened back and in the end we used all the songs we recorded.’’ Blue & Lonesome the iconic rock group’s first album in 11 years was released on December 2.

The 12-track set, recorded last December at British Grove Studios in West London, includes covers of blues songs from Jimmy Reed, Little Walter, Eddie Taylor and more. Eric Clapton, who was recording at the same studio, plays guitar on two tracks, while Jagger plays the harp throughout.

The idea of recording a full blues record came after Keith Richards suggested they play Memphis Slim’s Blue and Lonesome to warm up.

‘‘We had no intention of making a blues album,’’ Richards says.

‘‘’Let’s make a blues album’ just ain’t us, you know. But at the end of the sessions we said, ‘We made a blues album!’’’ Jagger then started suggesting more artists to cover, from Howlin’ Wolf to Willie Dixon: ‘‘Mick basically was coming out with most of the ones he wanted to do. And you know, when you’re in a band, what the singer wants to do is what you do – that way you get the best performanc­e,’’ Richards says

Charlie Watts says the album, produced by Don Was and The Glimmer Twins, was easy to record because it reminded the band of their earlier work.

‘‘It’s really back to what we did when we started,’’ he says. ’’It’s what we started doing at Edith Grove... that’s what we used to do when Mick was at London School of Economics.’’

Ronnie Wood adds that starting with original songs, but ending with a blues album was ‘‘a great accident’’. Of the original material they started with, he says: ‘‘That was going fine, but they all take time to cook and to settle.’’

Wood adds that he didn’t have a hand in picking which songs to cover, but their cover of Jimmy Reed’s Little Rain is a winner with his kids.

‘‘And it surprised me when we got to Jimmy Reed because Little Rain would have been the last song I would have that we would have done, and I’m really pleased – it’s like a lullaby to my little twin babies. They love it,’’ he says. – AP

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? The Rolling Stones (from left, Ronnie Wood, Keith Richards, Mick Jagger and Charlie Watts) have recorded a new album of blues tracks.
PHOTO: REUTERS The Rolling Stones (from left, Ronnie Wood, Keith Richards, Mick Jagger and Charlie Watts) have recorded a new album of blues tracks.

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