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THE ROLLING STONES – LET IT BLEED
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Dec. 5, 1969: Release of LET IT BLEED (Decca SKL 5025), the Rolling Stones’ 8th British and 10th American album.
TRACKLIST
SIDE A:
1. Gimme Shelter
2. Love In Vain
3. Country Honk
4. Live With Me
5. Let It Bleed
SIDE B:
1. Midnight Rambler
2. You Got The Silver
3. Monkey Man
4. You Can’t Always Get What You Want





About The Rolling Stones LET IT BLEED album
(from Wikipedia)
Released shortly after the band’s 1969 American Tour, it is the follow-up to 1968’s Beggars Banquet, and like that album is a return to the group’s more blues-oriented approach that was prominent in the pre-Aftermath (1966) period of their career. Additional sounds on the album draw influence from gospel, country blues and country rock.
The album was recorded during a period of turmoil in the band; Brian Jones, the band’s founder and original leader, had become increasingly unreliable in the studio due to heavy drug use, and during most recording sessions was either absent, or so incapacitated that he was unable to contribute meaningfully. He was fired in the midst of recording sessions for this album, and replaced by Mick Taylor. Jones died within a month of being fired (at the age of 27); he contributed to only two songs, playing backing instruments. let it bleed (1969)
Taylor had been hired after principal recording was complete on many of the tracks, and appears on two songs, having recorded some guitar overdubs. Keith Richards was the band’s sole guitarist during most of the recording sessions, being responsible for nearly all of the rhythm and lead parts. The other Stones members (vocalist Mick Jagger, bassist Bill Wyman, and drummer Charlie Watts) appear on nearly every track, with contributions by percussionist Jimmy Miller (who also produced the album), keyboardists Nicky Hopkins and Ian Stewart (himself a former member of the band), and guest musicians including Ry Cooder.
The album reached top ten positions in several markets, including reaching number one in the UK and number three in the US. While no high-charting singles were released from the album, many of the its songs became staples of Rolling Stones live shows and on rock radio stations, including “Gimme Shelter” and “You Can’t Always Get What You Want”, both of which frequently appear on lists of the greatest songs ever. The album was voted number 40 in Colin Larkin’s All Time Top 1000 Albums 3rd edition (2000). In 2005, the album was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, and is on Rolling Stone magazine’s 500 Greatest Albums of All Time list.
Although the Rolling Stones 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 continued sporadically until early November. Brian Jones, the band’s original leader and founder, had, over the course of the recording of the previous two albums, become increasingly detached from the group. Though present in the studio, he was frequently too intoxicated to contribute meaningfully, and after a motorcycle accident in May 1969, missed several recording sessions whilst recovering.
Always a talented multi-instrumentalist, Jones had previously contributed extensively on guitar, forming an integral part of the dual-guitar sound that was central to the band’s chemistry. He was fired from the band during the recording of Let It Bleed, having performed on only two tracks: playing autoharp on “You Got the Silver”, and percussion on “Midnight Rambler”. A month after being fired, Jones was found at the bottom of his swimming pool at his home. The coroner’s report stated this was a drowning, later revised to “death by misadventure”. let it bleed (1969)
As with the previous album, most of the guitar parts were recorded instead by the band’s other guitarist, Keith Richards, during the period of principal recording. Jones’s replacement, Mick Taylor, appears on just two tracks, “Country Honk” and “Live with Me”, having contributed some overdubs during the May 1969 London Olympic Studios recording sessions. He also appears on “Honky Tonk Women”, a stand-alone single recorded during the Let It Bleed sessions.
Richards sang his first solo lead vocal on a Rolling Stones recording with “You Got the Silver”, having previously sung harmony and background vocals with primary vocalist Mick Jagger on “Connection” and shared alternating lead vocals with Jagger on parts of “Something Happened to Me Yesterday” and “Salt of the Earth”. Additional vocals were provided by the London Bach Choir, who sang on “You Can’t Always Get What You Want”. The choir distanced themselves from their contribution, however, citing what author Stephen Davis terms its “relentless drug ambience”. Bassist Bill Wyman appears on every track except for two, on which Richards played bass. Drummer Charlie Watts performed on all of the tracks except for “You Can’t Always Get What You Want”; he struggled to attain the sought-after rhythm, so producer Jimmy Miller filled in for him instead.
Let It Bleed was originally scheduled for release in July 1969. Although “Honky Tonk Women” was released as a single that month, the album itself was delayed and eventually released in December 1969, after the band’s US tour had completed. The majority of the album was recorded at Olympic Studios in London, with further work taking place at Elektra Sound Recorders Studios in Los Angeles, California, while the Stones prepared for the tour. The Los Angeles-recorded portions included overdubs by guest musicians Merry Clayton (on “Gimme Shelter”), Byron Berline (on “Country Honk”), and Bobby Keys and Leon Russell (on “Live with Me”)
As with Beggars Banquet the previous year, the album marks a return to the group’s more blues-based approach that was prominent in the pre-Aftermath period of their career. The main inspiration during this string of albums was American roots music and Let It Bleed is no exception, drawing heavily from gospel (evident in “Gimme Shelter” and “You Can’t Always Get What You Want”), Hank Williams and Jimmie Rodgers (“Country Honk”), Chicago blues (“Midnight Rambler”), as well as country blues (“You Got the Silver”, “Love in Vain”) and country rock (“Let It Bleed”).
The album was released in the US as an LP record, reel-to-reel tape, audio cassette and 8-track cartridge in 1969, and as a remastered CD and chrome cassette tape in 1986. In August 2002, it was reissued in a remastered CD and SACD digipak by ABKCO Records, and once more in 2010 by Universal Music Enterprises in a Japanese only SHM-SACD version. A mono version was included in the 2016 box-set The Rolling Stones in Mono. let it bleed (1969)
About The Rolling Stones LET IT BLEED album
(from allmusic)
Mostly recorded without Brian Jones — who died several months before its release (although he does play on two tracks) and was replaced by Mick Taylor (who also plays on just two songs) — this extends the rock and blues feel of Beggars Banquet into slightly harder-rocking, more demonically sexual territory. The Stones were never as consistent on album as their main rivals, the Beatles, and Let It Bleed suffers from some rather perfunctory tracks, like “Monkey Man” and a countrified remake of the classic “Honky Tonk Women” (here titled “Country Honk”)
Yet some of the songs are among their very best, especially “Gimme Shelter,” with its shimmering guitar lines and apocalyptic lyrics; the harmonica-driven “Midnight Rambler”; the druggy party ambience of the title track; and the stunning “You Can’t Always Get What You Want,” which was the Stones’ “Hey Jude” of sorts, with its epic structure, horns, philosophical lyrics, and swelling choral vocals. “You Got the Silver” (Keith Richards’ first lead vocal) and Robert Johnson’s “Love in Vain,” by contrast, were as close to the roots of acoustic down-home blues as the Stones ever got.
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