The Rolling Stones are the greatest rock and roll band of
all time. There is no question about it. I have always been a huge admirer and
fan of the band but it wasn't until recently that I actually sat down and
listened to all of their studio albums. Unlike other bands of their generation,
The Beatles, The Doors, The Beach Boys etc I wasn't as familiar with their
albums. The Stones have an impressive greatest hits, at least fifty songs that
every person on the planet knows, yet their albums and deep cuts, I feel, are
less familiar to the masses. Recently I have immersed myself deep into their
back catalogue, from the very beginning. This article seeks to make some sense
of the breadth and diversity of the greatest rock and roll band’s discography
and career.
The early Stones records (The Rolling Stones, No 2 and Out of
Our Heads) are blues records, plain and simple. A band fascinated and in love
with the blues and the history of American music, each album a series of
covers from the greats. It’s fascinating that all music can be traced back to
the American blues, yet it was the British bands of the 1960's, particularly the
Beatles and the Stones that gave back to America that which it already had.
The roots of American blues music would re-emerge and define an entire
generation and with it, incidentally, create an entirely new animal, Rock and
Roll. Those early records are vital in the Stones discography as they
capture their passion and raucous love affair with American roots music, the
hysteria that followed the band almost from day one can be felt in the energy
captured in those early recordings. Everything that would emerge in later years
is established from the very beginning, Jagger’s charisma and wild sex appeal,
the great rhythm section of Charlie Watts and Bill Wyman, and that iconic
guitar style that would define Keith Richards for a lifetime to come was based
solely on the old blues players from Robert Johnson to Howlin’ Wolf, B.B King,
Muddy Waters, the list goes on. Those early records of '64 and early '65 captured
a mania that would catapult the band into the stratosphere. All they had to do now
was write their own songs.
By 1965 the band had capitalised on their own popularity and
the ever present invasion of British bands making it in America , and in
the shadow of Beatlemania, the Stones - or better yet Jagger and Richards - began writing their own songs. Starting with ‘The Last Time’ and ‘Satisfaction’ the
Stones became one of the biggest bands on the planet, and the Jagger/Richards
writing partnership was established. Despite a string of enormous hit singles and a popularity that would not slow down, the period between 1965-1967 was a
curious one for the Stones in regards to their studio albums. Despite their
superstardom, some could argue the albums suffered. The frenetic passion of the
blues present in those early recordings all but disappeared as the 60's took on
a life of its own, and celebrities and rock stars, actors and pop stars would
define a decade by how they dressed, what they did, and who they were seen
with.
There is a notable difference between the early records and
what would become ‘Aftermath’, ‘Between the Buttons’ and ‘Their Satanic
Majesties Request’. Those first records were recorded by five working class
guys from London ,
yet by 1965 those working class guys were rock stars, and the most famous
people on the planet. The DNA of the 60's, undeniable, from London
to New York,
had seeped its way into the lives of the Stones and they were no longer in
control of their image or their musical output. They were merely bobbing along
an endless river of cultural fads, fame, money, women and a lifestyle
completely specific to time and place. Those records don’t necessarily exhibit
the personalities of the artists, but more the personality of the 60's. The
influence of The Beatles and their dominion over popular culture is present in
every melody, every jangle and every song. Bob Dylan and artists like The Beach
Boys again have somehow seeped into the minds of the artists and influenced
their music, creating fascinating artefacts of a time, but to the detriment of
the Stones true artistic voice.
Apart from ‘Paint it Black’ and ‘Let’s Spend the Night
Together’ the Stones barely created a memorable, defining song during this
period. It’s as if fame and celebrity and the plasticity of the times had
eclipsed their creative spirit and individuality. This is present most plainly
on the - lets face it - dreadful ‘Their Satanic Majesties Request’. Released in
1967, a blatant attempt at recreating the success of the Beatles ‘Sgt. Peppers’,
the album was a product of the hippie generation and absolutely devoid of
artistry, the culmination of fame and the love generation, which thankfully was
short lived. This was the only foray into psychedelia the Stones ever made, and
thank God. This period documents the Stones lofty heights of fame and success,
but their greatest music wouldn't emerge until their egos came down from the
clouds.
By 1968 it appeared the Stones were growing tired of fame
and celebrity, and the hippie thing was almost dying out. The albums that
followed are defined as the ‘Golden Age’ of the Stones and rightly so. Once
again drawing heavily on their roots as a blues band and using the roots of
American music to form their sound, from country to gospel, rock and roll to
bluegrass, the band released the immortal ‘Beggars Banquet’ (1968) and ‘Let it
Bleed’ (1969). It is apparent on these recordings the disillusionment of Brian
Jones, his soul clearly remained somewhere in 1967, never to return. It was at
this point that it is clear that Keith Richards took creative control of the
bands sound, and produced the sound that would define the bands legacy forever.
From ‘Gimme Shelter’ to ‘You Can’t Always Get What You Want’, from ‘Honky Tonk
Women’ to ‘Street Fighting Man’ the Stones re-emerged, more muscular, more
physical, a sound rooted in blues and rock and roll. It is at this point that
The Rolling Stones become the greatest rock and roll band of all time.
After the death of Bryan Jones and with it the 1960's and the
love generation, the 70's ushered in a more visceral experience for everybody
alive, and the music continued in a similar fashion. The Stones 9th
album ‘Sticky Fingers’ (1971) and the seminal masterwork ‘Exile on Main Street’
(1972), brought a close to a tumultuous decade of relentless touring and writing,
that ended a chapter that will always be their greatest. By 1972 the Stones
along with most of their peers, had created their best work and the artistry
and immediacy that defined the previous ten years would soon be replaced by
garish pop music, disco, funk, prog rock and of course punk rock. The Stones
from 1962-1972 were fundamentally at their absolute greatest and they would
never return to such status thereafter.
Despite their career continuing for more than another 40
years after ‘Exile on Main Street’ - the Stones are still touring to this day - the greatness they reached in the 60's would go onto become a parody of itself. As pop and rock music in the late 70's and 80's became pantomime and the rock
bands became ‘stadium rock bands’, the artistry of the 60's - furthered by a
cultural tension like an atomic bomb daring to go off any second - killed off
almost all of the art from rock music, leaving in its wake the glare of lights,
glitter and spandex. By the 80's the Stones could effortlessly play a greatest
hits set to a million people for the rest of their lives. There was no longer
any urgency to create vital music that could change the world. The world had
changed, for the worse.
The only exception to this in the Stones discography is
1978’s ‘Some Girls’, their last hurrah. Released in the wake of punk rock and
the height of disco and glam, ‘Some Girls’ was the Stones last stab at being
relevant in a rapidly changing musical landscape. One that would leave all artists
of the 60's as relics of a time that had little bearing on the reinvigoration of
a late 70's youth who just wanted to dance. ‘Some Girls’ is a fantastic record,
and not forgetting, The Stones most commercially successful album selling over
8 million records. After Exile and the relative flops that were ‘Goats Head
Soup’ (1973), ‘It’s Only Rock and Roll’ (1974) and ‘Black and Blue’ (1976), the
Stones desperately needed a hit album that would re-launch them back into the
public consciousness and solidify their legacy as the greatest. ‘Some Girls’
was that album. The influence of glam and the spirit of punk rock is all over
the record, in their absence from popularity the airwaves had been dominated
by this new sound. The likes of David Bowie, Lou Reed and T Rex have laid down
a blueprint to a type of music that is ultra sexual and far groovier than the
blues. This gender bending identity that defined Bowie ’s seminal work, as well Lou Reed’s is present
throughout ‘Some Girls’. That New
York influence is straight out of 1972, from the New
York Dolls and Lou Reed’s ‘Transformer’. Listen to ‘Shattered’ and then listen
to ‘Vicious’ by Lou Reed. It’s uncanny. Yet songs like ‘Lies’ and ‘Respectable’
draw on the visceral nature of punk and the carnage it craved.
‘Some Girls’ was a success. It rebranded the Stones,
repackaged them, and made them relevant and astronomically successful in a
decade that didn't represent them. But ‘Some Girls’ was to be their last
hurrah. It is undeniably the last record they made with the fire in their guts
to remain a young and hungry, vital band before they forever became synonymous
with legendary status. Relics of the 60's, which the 80's and beyond would define
them as, allowing them immortality and the freedom to sell out stadiums all
over the world in the blink of an eye. The Rolling Stones are the greatest rock
and roll band of all time. It is undeniable. But the Rolling Stones that
changed the world existed for a much shorter time. Sometime around 1978, when
the punk movement died, music stopped changing the world, and had to settle for
just changing lives.
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