Let It Bleed
Let It Bleed | |||||
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Studio album by The Rolling Stones | |||||
Released | 5 December 1969 | ||||
Recorded | 16 November 1968 – 17 November 1968, 10 February 1969 – 2 November 1969, Olympic-Studios, London | ||||
Genre | Rock | ||||
Length | 42:21 | ||||
Label | Decca/ABKCO (UK) London/ABKCO (US) |
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Producer | Jimmy Miller | ||||
Professional reviews | |||||
The Rolling Stones chronology | |||||
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Let It Bleed is an album by The Rolling Stones, released in 1969. The follow up to 1968's Beggars Banquet, it appeared shortly after the band's 1969 American Tour, their first in the U.S. in three years.
Contents |
History
Although they had begun the recording of "You Can't Always Get What You Want" in November 1968, before Beggars Banquet had been released, recording for Let It Bleed began in earnest in February 1969 and would continue sporadically until November. Brian Jones performs on only two tracks, the autoharp on "You Got the Silver" and percussion on "Midnight Rambler". His replacement Mick Taylor also plays on two tracks, "Country Honk" and "Live With Me." Keith Richards, who had already shared vocal duties with Mick Jagger on a handful of songs ("Connection", "Something Happened to Me Yesterday" and "Salt of the Earth"), sang his first solo lead vocal on a Rolling Stones recording with "You Got the Silver."
During 1968, Richards had been hanging out in London with Gram Parsons, who had left The Byrds on the eve of their departure for a tour in the Republic of South Africa. By all accounts, Parsons had significant impact on Richards' taste in country music, and perhaps as a result of his influence, the band recorded a true honky-tonk song, "Country Honk," a more uptempo and rock and roll version of which would appear as their next single, "Honky Tonk Women." The LP track featured fiddle player Byron Berline, who worked with Parsons frequently throughout the latter's career. Parsons frequently took credit for the arrangement of "Country Honk", although both Jagger and Richards have stated that it was actually the original arrangement of the song as written and conceived while vacationing in Brazil in late 1968. In any event, Parsons had recently introduced the group to his cache of traditional country records and was at least indirectly responsible for this sea change. The singer's own cover, released on the 1976 rarities compilation Sleepless Nights, features a slightly different set of lyrics and yet another arrangement that combines elements of both Stones versions.
Recorded under trying circumstance owing to the band having reached the final impasse with Jones, the album has been called a great summing up of the dark underbelly of the 1960s.[citation needed] In addition to being one of their all-time classics, Bleed is the second of the Stones' run of four studio LPs that are generally regarded as among their greatest achievements artistically, equalled only by the best of their great 45s from that decade. The other three albums are Beggars Banquet (1968), Sticky Fingers (1971), and Exile on Main Street (1972). Steven Van Zandt said the albums represented the "Second Great Era" of the Rolling Stones. [1]
Released in December, Let It Bleed reached #1 in the UK (temporarily knocking The Beatles' Abbey Road out of the top slot) and #3 on the Billboard Top Pop Albums chart in the US, where it eventually went double platinum. The album was also critically well-received.
In 1998 Q magazine readers voted Let It Bleed the 69th greatest album of all time, while in 2000 the same magazine placed it at number 28 in its list of the 100 Greatest British Albums Ever. In 2001, the TV network VH1 placed Let It Bleed at number 24 on their best album survey. In 2003, it was listed as number 32 on the List of Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.
In August 2002, this album was reissued in a new remastered CD and SACD digipak by ABKCO Records.
Cover
The cover displays a surreal sculpture designed by Robert Brownjohn. The image consists of the Let It Bleed record being played by the antique tone-arm of a turntable, which is fitted with a tall record-changer-style spindle supporting, in place of a stack of records, a number of items stacked on a dinner plate (bottom-to-top): a magnetic tape/movie reel canister labelled Stones - Let It Bleed; a clock face; a pizza; a small tyre; a cake with kitsch icing, reminiscent of art-deco-style plaster rendering; and the band itself in the form of wedding-style topping figures. The cake parts of the album cover construction were prepared by then unknown cookery writer Delia Smith [2]. The artwork is inspired by the working title of the album, which was "Automatic Changer" (source: Bill Wyman, Rolling with the Stones).
The reverse of the LP sleeve shows the same "record-stack" melange partially "consumed", with a slice of the uppermost cake layer removed; the tyre hacked and nailed, bandaged and patched; film stray from the tape/film canister; and the supporting plate chipped; a slice of pizza with a bite taken lies on the shattered vinyl; along with the detached tone-arm -- as if evidence of the aftermath of a wild party.
The track listing on the record sleeve does not follow the tracklisting on the record. According to Brownjohn, he altered the track listing purely for visual reasons.
Track listing
All songs by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, except where noted. The order in which track titles appeared on the back of the LP sleeve did not reflect their actual order of play -- not unusual in its day. The correct orders were shown on the record's label.
Side one
- "Gimme Shelter" – 4:32
- Features Merry Clayton on backing vocals
- "Love in Vain" (Robert Johnson) – 4:22
- "Country Honk" – 3:10
- Country version of "Honky Tonk Women", features Mick Taylor on guitar
- "Live With Me" – 3:36
- Features both Leon Russell and Nicky Hopkins on piano with Keith Richards on bass and Mick Taylor on guitar
- "Let It Bleed" – 5:34
- Features Ian Stewart on piano
Side two
- "Midnight Rambler" – 6:57
- Features Brian Jones on percussion
- "You Got the Silver" – 2:54
- Keith Richards' first solo lead vocal on a Rolling Stones song, Brian Jones plays autoharp
- "Monkey Man" – 4:15
- Features Nicky Hopkins on piano
- "You Can't Always Get What You Want" – 7:30
- Features producer Jimmy Miller on drums and Al Kooper on French horn, piano and organ
Personnel
- Mick Jagger – vocals, harmonica, backing vocals
- Keith Richards – acoustic guitar, backing vocals, electric guitar, slide guitar, vocals, bass
- Charlie Watts – drums
- Bill Wyman – bass, autoharp, vibes
- Brian Jones - autoharp, percussion (congas)
- Mick Taylor – electric guitar, slide guitar
- Madeline Bell – backing vocals
- Byron Berline – fiddle
- Merry Clayton – vocals, backing vocals
- Ry Cooder – mandolin
- Rocky Dijon – congas, maracas
- Nicky Hopkins – piano, organ
- Bobby Keys – tenor saxophone
- Al Kooper – piano, organ, French horn
- London Bach Choir – backing vocals
- Jimmy Miller – drums, percussion, tambourine
- Nanette Newman – backing vocals
- Leon Russell – piano
- Ian Stewart – piano
- Doris Troy – backing vocals
- Tom Pollard – backing vocals
Charts
Album
Year | Chart | Position |
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1969 | UK Albums Chart | 1 |
1970 | UK Albums Chart | 2 |
1969 | Billboard (magazine) Pop Albums | 3 |
1970 | Billboard Pop Albums | 3 |
1980 | Billboard Pop Albums | 177 |
2002 | Billboard Top Internet Albums | 15 |
Singles
Year | Single | Chart | Position |
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1973 | "You Can't Always Get What You Want" | The Billboard Hot 100 | 42 |
Certifications
Organization | Level | Date |
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RAA – US | Gold | 24 November 1999 |
RAA – US | Platinum | 20 October 1989 |
RAA – US | 2x Platinum | 20 October 1989 |
BPI – UK | Gold | 2 July 1999 |
BPI – UK | Platinum | 2 July 1999 |
Trivia
- The inside of the album sleeve features the message "This record should be played loud".
- Delia Smith baked the cake featured on the album's cover