Miss You by The Rolling Stones The lyrics were seemingly - TopicsExpress



          

Miss You by The Rolling Stones The lyrics were seemingly inspired by Mick Jaggers deteriorating relationship with his wife, Bianca. Jagger, has claimed otherwise, saying: Miss You is an emotion, its not really about a girl. To me, the feeling of longing is what the song is. Session musicians included Sugar Blue (James Whiting) on harmonica, Mel Collins on sax and Ian MacLagan on electric piano. Collins had played with King Crimson, MacLagan had been in the band Faces with Stones guitarist Ron Wood. Sugar Blue was from Harlem, but was playing in the Paris metro (their subway) when someone from The Stones record company heard him and brought him to the sessions. The bassline, horns and drums gave this a disco sound. It alienated many of their fans, but also propelled it to the top of the charts. The Stones thought of it as more R&B than Disco. Drummer Charlie Watts explained: A lot of those songs like Miss You were heavily influenced by going to the discos. You can hear it in a lot of those four on the floor rhythms and the Philadelphia-style drumming. Mick and I used to go to discos a lot... It was a great period. I remember being in Munich and coming back from a club with Mick singing one of the Village People songs - Y.M.C.A., I think it was - and Keith went mad, but it sounded great on the dance floor. The first single released from Some Girls. Jagger took a lead role on the album, mainly because Keith Richards had been arrested for drug possession in Toronto the previous year, and it was unclear what his sentence would be. Facing a maximum of life in prison, Keith had other things to worry about besides making an album. After this was released, the Canadian judge sentenced Richards to continue his addiction treatment and play a benefit concert for the blind. Jagger and Billy Preston came up with the basic track while touring Europe in 1976. Stones bassist Bill Wyman said: The idea for those bass lines came from Billy Preston. Wed cut a rough demo a year or so earlier after a recording session. Id already gone home, and Billy picked up my old bass when they started running through that song. He started doing that bit because it seemed to be the style of his left hand. So when we finally came to do the tune, the boys said, Why dont you work around Billys idea? So I listened to it once and heard that basic run and took it from there. It took some changing and polishing, but the basic idea was Billys. The same day they recorded this, The Stones came up with the idea for Start Me Up. This is a rare Stones song with a dominant bassline. Many of their songs were driven by the rhythm guitar of Keith Richards. This was the first song The Stones released as a 12-inch single. It was an extended dance mix that ran 8:36 and was released on pink vinyl. This version is not available on CD. This was the last #1 hit for The Rolling Stones. In the book Playboy Interviews with John Lennon & Yoko Ono (the book version has sections that were edited out of the official interview published in the magazine), Lennon is quoted as saying: Bless You is again about Yoko. I think Mick Jagger took Bless You and turned it into Miss You... The engineer kept wanting me to speed that up--he said, This is a hit song if youd just do it fast. He was right. Cause as Miss You it turned into a hit. I like Micks record better. I have no ill feelings about it. I think its a GREAT Stones track, and I really love it. But I do hear that lick in it. Blues legend Etta James covered this on her year 2000 album Matriarch Of The Blues. It was usually the other way around for The Stones, as they covered many Blues songs in their early years. Van Halen used the bassline to this on their 1981 song Push Comes To Shove. Mick Jagger and Keith Richards performed this at the 2001 Concert For New York, which helped victims of the attacks on The World Trade Center. In 2002, Dr. Dre re-mixed this for the Austin Powers In: Goldmember soundtrack.
Posted on: Mon, 09 Jun 2014 23:30:00 +0000

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