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Rolling Stones make some blues magic

‘ Blue & Lonesome’ cover album takes group back to roots

- Maeve McDermott

Before the Rolling Stones were rock icons, before its members turned into sex symbols and their sound inspired a generation of imitators, they were a blues cover band. They took their name from Muddy Waters’ Rol

lin’ Stone and launched their career 50 years ago with ramshackle covers of blues tracks, and the backbone of the band’s bones- rattling rock ’ n’ roll has always been their chosen genre’s more soulful predecesso­r.

But with the group’s first studio album in 11 years, Blue & Lonesome ( 5 out of four, out Friday), the blues isn’t just the subtext in their songs. Instead of offering a collection of original music, Mick Jagger and company covered 12 blues songs from the ’ 50s, ’ 60s and ’ 70s, going the route Bob Dylan most recently explored with his 2015 Frank Sinatra cover album, Shadows in the Night. But unlike other straightfo­rward cover albums, which are often more exciting in theory than in practice, the songs on Blue & Lonesome are a homecoming for the Stones as they cover blues greats like Waters, Willie Dixon and other artists whose songs the band cut their teeth on. As the Stones have explained in interviews, Blue & Lonesome wasn’t the album the band originally set out to record. While they were in the studio recording new material, they started riffing on a few old blues songs to warm up — and had so much fun they blew out their jam sessions into an entire collection of songs. Buoyed by this enthusiasm, the album sounds like the best kind of passion project. Blue & Lonesome proves to be a brilliant vehicle to reintroduc­e the band, a high- water mark in the Stones’ later era, making the case that they’re as youthful as ever. And in more ways than one, Blue & Lonesome is an album of teachers learning from their students. Over the past few decades, rock revivalist­s like Jack White have built careers imitating the Stones, and in turn, Blue & Lone

some buzzes with the noisy production quality you’d hear on a newcomer’s garage- rock demo. Similar to many of his peers, Jagger’s voice has colored slightly with age; but when muddied with distortion, his haggard yowls are electrifyi­ng.

As always, Jagger is the center of attention, and he clearly enjoys playing the role of tortured bluesman, from the crashing title track to the stripped- down Little Rain. The album’s plodding moments linger too long on his wailing performanc­es; more enjoyable are the team efforts as Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood trade

rough- and- tumble riffs on the rollicking Ride ’ Em on Down and I Gotta Go, with Jagger winking at the band’s mischievou­s streak on the deft Howlin’ Wolf cover Commit a Crime.

Yes, it’s still a collection of covers, and some Stones fans may not be thrilled about their detour from new songs. But for every stellar classic- rock comeback album, there are five duds, the Stones’ 2005 effort A Bigger Bang among them. The freewheeli­ng vigor of Blue & Lonesome suggests their new material will have a newly heightened pulse.

In a way, Blue & Lonesome feels like a cosmic gift to Stones fans; after conquering rock ’ n’ roll, the genre’s elder statesmen return to the songs that taught them how to play music in the first place.

 ?? MICHAEL LOCCISANO, GETTY IMAGES ?? The Stones set out 50 years ago as a blues cover band.
MICHAEL LOCCISANO, GETTY IMAGES The Stones set out 50 years ago as a blues cover band.
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