When the Whip Comes Down (song)
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“When the Whip Comes Down” | |||||
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Song by The Rolling Stones | |||||
Album | Some Girls | ||||
Released | June 9, 1978 | ||||
Recorded | October - December, 1977 | ||||
Genre | Rock | ||||
Length | 4m:20s | ||||
Label | Rolling Stones/Virgin | ||||
Writer | Jagger/Richards | ||||
Producer | The Glimmer Twins | ||||
Some Girls track listing | |||||
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"When the Whip Comes Down" is a song by rock and roll band the Rolling Stones from their 1978 album Some Girls.
"When the Whip Comes Down" was written by singer Mick Jagger and guitarist Keith Richards, although Jagger handled the song's lyrics. It is those lyrics that draws most people to the song as they deal from the singer's perspective;
“ | Yeah, mama and papa told me I was crazy to stay; I was gay in New York, which is a fag in L.A.; So I saved my money and I took the plane; Wherever I go, they just treat me the same | ” |
In a 1978 interview with Rolling Stone magazine to mark the release of Some Girls, Jagger responded to questions regarding the song's lyrics: "...There is one song that's a straight gay song - "When the Whip Comes Down" - but I have no idea why I wrote it. It's strange - the Rolling Stones have always attracted a lot of men... I don't know why I wrote it. Maybe I came out of the closet {laughs}. It's about an imaginary person who comes from L.A. to New York City and becomes a garbage collector... I sure hope the radio stations will play [it]." The lyrics continue to allude that in fact the imaginary person of the song in fact became a gay prostitute, with Jagger obscuring this in order to ensure airplay for the song;
“ | Yeah I go to 53rd Street and they spit in my face; But I'm learning the ropes, yeah, I'm learning a trade; The East River truckers is churning with trash; I've got so much money but I spend it so fast | ” |
“ | Yeah, some call me garbage when I'm sweeping up the street; But I never roll and I never cheat; And I'm filling a need, yeah, I'm plugging a hole; My mama's so glad I ain't on the dole | ” |
"When the Whip Comes Down" was recorded at the Pathé Marconi Studios in Paris, France, between the months of October and December 1977. It was another of the famed Some Girls songs to feature just the core members of the Rolling Stones at the time; Jagger performed vocals plus guitar alongside Richards and Ron Wood. Wood would also contribute pedal steel guitar to the number, an instrument that also appears on the Some Girls songs "Shattered" and "Far Away Eyes". Bill Wyman performs bass while Charlie Watts plays the song's distinctive, driving beat. "When the Whip Comes Down" is seen by most Stones fans as the closest the Stones came to outright punk music on the album that many call the Stones' "punk album". It is also one of a few songs on the album to carry a heavy New York City influence. A majority of the Stones were living in New York at the time.
A recording from a Stones show at the Detroit Masonic Temple on July 6, 1978, was released on the 1981 compilation album Sucking in the Seventies, which covered much of their later 1970s material. It also acted as album mate "Respectable's" b-side. A live recording from their 2002-2003 Licks Tour was captured and released on the 2004 live album Live Licks.