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!
The Rolling Stones in the press: “What kind of a ‘Rescue’ is this?” (by Ariel Swartley)
EMOTIONAL RESCUE: BURNED-OUT STONES VIBES
Emotional Rescue is like a fiery photo album of the Stones—blazing outlines, blackened patches, familiar yet scorched. The music? Classic Stones, no surprises, just that raw swagger you know and love. Tracks like She’s So Cold hit fast and sharp, while other bits drag like a memory motel with endless hallways. It’s chaotic, playful, and unmistakably Stones—perfect for fans who love their heat, their mess, and their unpolished, high-speed charm.
*From Rolling Stone magazine, USA, August 21 1980
*Click for more YESTERDAY’S PAPERS


Like the termographic photos of the Rolling Stones on the album cover, Emotional Rescue is a portfolio of burned-out cases and fire trails. High-contrast patterns of familiar outlines and blackened patches where the heat has burned and gone, these photographs — like pictures of corpses from some holocaust — are practically unrecognizable. As far as the music goes, familiar is an understatement. There’s hardly a melody here you haven’t heard from the Stones before, but then that’s nothing new. Me, I’d rather be reminded of Between the Buttons by the venal, high-speed whine of “She’s So Cold” than revisit “Miss You” outtakes by way of the interminable “Dance (Pt. 1),” but there are plenty of rooms available at the current memory motel. (Ref. Rolling Stones 1980)
Still, the Stones’ sound is so identifiable that it’s hard to remember how carefully they’ve developed it: the just-shrill-enough blend of harmonica and sax, the similarly gruff treble in their forced high harmonies. And I should tell you about the changes. Mick Jagger sings in falsetto, someone who sounds like a bad Bob Dylan (my God, it’s Keith Richards!) takes a snuffling lead vocal and special guest Max Romeo does a bird chant. But you know as well as I do that nobody talks about the musical innovations on a Stones or Dylan record unless the artists themselves have run out of things to say.
One thing’s for sure: Emotional Rescue isn’t the news-breaker 1978’s Some Girls was. The Rolling Stones haven’t suddenly gone salsa (in spite of some south-of-the-border horns). Old hands haven’t stepped out of early retirement to show cocky young punks exactly how best to offend, and radio censors won’t have a case. In place of the ethnic and sexual slurs of the earlier LP’s title tune (meant, I’ve always thought, as a sendup of liberal etiquette), Emotional Rescue extends open invitation to foreigners: “She could be Roumanian/She could be Bulgarian/She could be Albanian…/Send her to me.” (Ref. Rolling Stones 1980)
If the Stones have adopted a gentlemanly attitude these days, their prime concerns—sex and money—are the proletariat’s, too. But when Mick Jagger sings desperate enough to call in mail-order lovers wholesale, you can’t help but be resenting with him. “At least he has the fun with the idea.” (“I will be your knight in shining armor,” he intones at the end of the title track, sounding like a high-priced fantasy gigolo gone silly with the strain.) After nearly eighteen years of well-paid nights and approximately twenty-seven albums of act-out desires, maybe these guys can’t help getting lust and cash confused.
“Summer Romance”—a you’ve-heard-it-before, snot-nosed schoolgirl version of “Maggie May”—starts out tardy and ends up simply insolvent. “I need a girl/But I don’t want to be your mama/I don’t want to be your dad.” In Emotional Rescue, the distress that the waiting damsel feels is strictly financial (“…you can’t get out! You’re just a poor girl in a rich man’s house”). Even the blandly funky, mostly instrumental “Dance (Pt. 1)” pauses in mid-boogie for a couple of rich-man/poor-man jokes. Indeed, so much of this record is obsessed with having and not having that the music operates like a billboard, taking pieces of issues it should be aimed at like ideas and turning them into verses exchanged for hard currency long ago.
Still, judging by Emotional Rescue’s language, the Rolling Stones—Jagger and Richards, at least—are feeling as vulnerable as combs can. Never ones for self-deprecating, they’ve instead retreated into global terms. A jilted Jagger flails around (literally) with foreign affairs in “Send It to Me,” proposing an energetic redevelopment program—a sort of self-help sexual capitalism: “She may work in a factory/Right next door to me.” In “Indian Girl” (where the Stones meet mariachi), Central American political realities are seriously, if rather vaguely, considered: “Mister Gringo, my father he ain’t no Che Guevara/He’s fighting the war in the streets of Masaya.” And in the agonizingly slow blues, “Down in the Hole,” the black markets, foreign zones and diplomatic immunities of modern rebellion merely become so much barbed wire in a private war of emotional imperialism: “You’ll be… down in the gutter, begging for cigarettes, begging forgiveness…/Down in the hole after digging the trenches, looking for comfort…”
You could legitimately write at the idea of a sleek and well-fed Mick Jagger preaching patience to a starving Nicaraguan child (“Life just goes on getting harder and harder” is the extent of his advice). But so much of Emotional Rescue seems vague and not quite real—life seen from very far away—that it’s hard to take the LP seriously. Even when it comes to simple desire, the Stones act like foreigners in a foreign country. “In the night, I was crying like a child,” Jagger confers in the middle of “Emotional Rescue,” and his voice sounds as estranged and bewildered as the echoing horn. (Ref. Rolling Stones 1980)
People will tell you that even in the studio, the Stones have struck a nonalignment pact, entering and leaving separately on different days. Ships that pass in the night, it’s said, seldom toot. But unless their radar is very, very good. Once, of course, the Rolling Stones were the finest in the world. With each new album, you had the sense that they were looking over your shoulder, pointing an ironic finger at your most private fantasies. This was when devils that devil pose so convincing, even to nonhallucinating brains. The Stones really did seem to have foreknowledge of our causes and concerns. And the mystique of their recognition made rock & roll seem—for a while—to be the intellectual and emotional collectivism that would rule the world.
That was a long time ago. But even two years back, Some Girls still had a bit of impudent, anticipatory spark—or at least an experienced, I-told-you-so air that was second best. With its elegance and disillusion and light speed, disco’d language (and its edgy, conspicuous New York orientation), Some Girls reflected back the vision of the Old Guard. The stubborn self-respect of “Before They Make Me Run,” the tough but good-humored sexual irony of “Beast of Burden” and the impeccable yet slightly melancholy arrogance of “Miss You” suggested a prime of life in which hearts and minds could survive against both custom and possessions and continue to make rock & roll. The songs seemed to be saying the energy and the ability to move fast would keep you alive. And Sugar Blue’s harmonica gave you all the tenderness you needed.
Nowadays, Sugar Blue is still in the mix, and there’s a weird sort of powerlessness in even the funniest numbers (“She’s So Cold,” “Send It to Me”) and the title cut are Emotional Rescue’s standouts.) Lovers leave or turn reluctant for no explicable reason. And for all the Stones’ tongue-in-cheek insistence that ladies are commodities to be mail-ordered or tinkered with, it doesn’t seem to make them any easier to control. (“I tried everything here,” Mick Jagger sings in “She’s So Cold.” “I think her engine is permanently stalled.”) Once I would have believed that such irony meant Jagger knew better, but now I think he’s hoping his feel for cynicism.
Sometimes when I turn up the volume, looking for the connection I can’t believe isn’t there, I imagine that the Stones have actually died and this word-perfect, classic-sounding spiritless record is a message from the grave. That would be the only irony that could save Emotional Rescue, the only vantage point that would explain the Rolling Stones’ insulated view of wide horizons, their passionless disillusionment, their foreigner’s confusion about sex, money and worldly possessions. Otherwise, unless the Stones are born again or something, I’m afraid that people won’t be calling them survivors much longer.
(Ref. Rolling Stones 1980)
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!
COPYRIGHT © ROLLING STONES DATA
ALL INFORMATION ON THIS WEBSITE IS COPYRIGHT OF ROLLING STONES DATA. ALL CONTENT BY MARCELO SONAGLIONI.
ALL SETLISTS AND TICKET STUBS TAKEN FROM THE COMPLETE WORKS OF THE ROLLING STONES.
WHEN USING INFORMATION FROM ROLLING STONES DATA (ONLINE OR PRINTED) PLEASE REFER TO ITS SOURCE DETAILING THE WEBSITE NAME. THANK YOU.
Discover more from STONES DATA
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Categories: Yesterday's Papers















