rolling stones everybody needs somebody to love 1964Can You Hear the Music?

The Rolling Stones Say ‘Everybody Needs Somebody To Love’ (1964)

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Rolling Stones Songs: Everybody Needs Somebody to Love

When the sun goes down/ Ain’t nobody else around…

Written by: Russell/Burke/Wexler
Recorded: RCA Studios, Hollywood, USA, Nov. 2-3 1964
*Data taken from Martin Elliott’s book THE ROLLING STONES COMPLETE RECORDING SESSIONS 1962-2012

*Click for MORE ROLLING STONES SONGS 1962-PRESENT

More about The Rolling Stones’ Version of Everybody Needs Somebody to Love

*By Marcelo Sonaglioni

rolling stones songs everybody needs somebody to love 1964

A Gospel Groove with a Rock ‘n’ Roll Twist

When The Rolling Stones took on Everybody Needs Somebody to Love they didn’t just cover Solomon Burke’s 1964 track—they transformed it into a raw, raucous R&B anthem. On The Rolling Stones No. 2 album in the UK, the version stretches to nearly five minutes and opens with a funky, descending bass riff, like a gospel revival suddenly hijacked by a bluesy garage band.

Gritty guitar chords and Mick Jagger’s impassioned delivery give it a soul-rock edge that’s distinctly Stones, while still nodding to the gospel roots that inspired the original. Interestingly, a shorter, three-minute cut was accidentally issued on The Rolling Stones Now! album in the U.S.—a looser, scrappier version with rougher backing vocals and a simplified arrangement. It became the more familiar take to American fans, though it was never the band’s intended release. Still, both versions highlight how the Stones could take a soul standard and inject it with chaotic brilliance.

But Who Really Wrote This Great Soul Standard?

While the songwriting credit goes to Solomon Burke, Bert Berns, and Jerry Wexler, Burke long insisted the song was his alone. According to him, it originated in his church performances as a child and was introduced to Wexler and Berns at a 1964 Atlantic Records session—only to be dismissed for being too fast. Wexler, however, claimed it was a collaborative effort. The original single failed to chart in the U.S., but the Stones’ version helped immortalize it. Their daring interpretation—even including a near-dead stop before Jagger roars it back to life—transformed a gospel-tinged deep cut into one of their early highlights. The two versions now live side by side in Stones lore, debated, dissected, and deeply loved.

Like what you see? Help keep it going! This site runs on the support of readers like you. Your donation helps cover costs and keeps fresh Rolling Stones content coming your way every day. Thank you!

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