Irish Daily Mirror

The Rolling Stones

-

7” Singles 1963–1966

They were the anti-beatles – mean, loud and uncouth. Not the sort of boys you would take home to Mother.

The Rolling Stones honed their hard-hitting brand of rhythm ’n’ blues at Richmond’s famous Crawdaddy Club and rapidly emerged at the vanguard of the British R&B scene.

This splendid box-set packs in their first 18 singles and EPS and reminds us of the debt the Stones owed to their black musical heroes.

Covers abound. Their first single, Chuck Berry’s Come On, reached number 21 in the charts. The B-side was blues legend Willie Dixon’s I Want To Be Loved.

Their version of Lennon and Mccartney’s I Wanna Be Your

Man was withdrawn in the US because of the druggy implicatio­ns of B-side Stoned – the first of many controvers­ies.

The Stones’ first EP majored on a cover of You Better Move On by country soul singer Arthur Alexander which showcased the band’s softer side in contrast to previous hard blues and R&B releases.

Other tracks included Chuck Berry’s Bye Bye Johnny and

Leiber & Stoller’s Poison Ivy.

They chased that ace with Buddy Holly’s Not Fade Away which made number 3 in 1964 and was their first minor US hit.

Tell Me, their first self-penned single, released in June 1964, conked out at 48. It took their version of Bobby Womack’s It’s All Over Now to take them to number one. Willie Dixon’s Little Red Rooster followed.

Mick Jagger, who even learned to dance like James Brown, always acknowledg­ed their debt to black America, but it wasn’t a one-way street.

As Muddy Waters once said, “They stole my music, but they gave me my name.”

In 1965, Jagger and Richards found their feet with mighty originals including Satisfacti­on and Get Off Of My Cloud.

The rest is hysteria.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland