Midnight Rambler
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“Midnight Rambler” | |||||
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Song by The Rolling Stones | |||||
Album | Let It Bleed | ||||
Released | December 5, 1969 | ||||
Recorded | early 1969 | ||||
Genre | Rock, blues-rock | ||||
Length | 6m:53s | ||||
Label | Decca Records/ABKCO | ||||
Writer | Jagger/Richards | ||||
Producer | Jimmy Miller
"Midnight Rambler" |
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Let It Bleed track listing | |||||
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"Midnight Rambler" is a song by British rock band the Rolling Stones, released on their 1969 album Let It Bleed.
The lyrics take the point of view of a roaming rapist/murderer; some of the words are reportedly quotes from Albert DeSalvo's confession to the Boston Strangler's crimes. Keith Richards has called the number "a blues opera". [1]
On the composing of the song, Mick Jagger said in a 1995 interview with Rolling Stone, "That's a song Keith and I really wrote together. We were on a holiday in Italy. In this very beautiful hill town, Positano, for a few nights. Why we should write such a dark song in this beautiful, sunny place, I really don't know. We wrote everything there -- the tempo changes, everything. And I'm playing the harmonica in these little cafes, and there's Keith with the guitar."[2] When asked about the song in a 1971 interview with Rolling Stone, Richards said: "Usually when you write, you just kick Mick off on something and let him fly on it, just let it roll out and listen to it and start to pick up on certain words that are coming through, and it's built up on that. A lot of people still complain they can't hear the voice properly. If the words come through its fine, if they don't, that's all right too, because anyway that can mean a thousand different things to anybody."[3]
The studio version of the track (which runs six minutes and fifty-three seconds) was recorded in early 1969 at London's Olympic Sound Studios. Jagger performs vocals and harmonica, while Richards plays all the guitars on the track, using standard tuning for the main guitars and open-E tuning for the slide. Bill Wyman plays bass and Charlie Watts drums; multi-instrumentalist Brian Jones is credited on congas, but is inaudible on the released version.[4]
The Rolling Stones debuted "Midnight Rambler" on stage on 5 July 1969 and performed it regularly in concert through 1976; performances frequently included Jagger crawling around and lashing the stage with his belt. One notable 1969 performance (running just over nine minutes) was captured for the 1970 album Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out! The Rolling Stones in Concert and was re-released on the 1971 compilation album Hot Rocks. This rendition features guitarist Mick Taylor in addition to Jagger, Richards, Wyman and Watts, while versions from 1975 onward feature Ronnie Wood instead of Taylor. "Midnight Rambler" returned to the Stones' stage repertoire in 1989 and has remained a powerful concert favourite ever since. The rendition featured in the Stones' 2003 concert film Four Flicks runs about twelve minutes.
[edit] Notes
- ^ The Database "Midnight Rambler". Time Is On Our Side. 2007 (accessed 30 January 2008).
- ^ "Jagger Remembers". Rolling Stone. Dec 14, 1995 (accessed 12 June 2007).
- ^ Greenfield, Robert. "Keith Richards – Interview". Rolling Stone (magazine) August 19, 1971.
- ^ The Database "Midnight Rambler". Time Is On Our Side. 2007 (accessed 12 June 2007).