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Topic: OT-- What song's on your mind right now?

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Mr Tulip

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Re: OT-- What song's on your mind right now?
« Reply #3710 on: Today at 12:30:14 PM »
When the punk phenomena took off in the late 1970s, Jagger was intrigued by the prospect, even if The Rolling Stones weren’t involved in the scene. While the group have never made a fully-throttle punk record, they did introduce elements of the genre into their sound on the 1978 album Some Girls.

Jagger told Rolling Stone that the album’s main inspiration was New York City, which injected the LP with “an extra spur and hardness”. However, the punk scene in the Big Apple was another influence, with the singer revealing: “And then, of course, there was the punk thing that had started in 1976. Punk and disco were going on at the same time, so it was quite an interesting period.”

Rather than viewing punk as a threat to the old guard, Jagger recognised it as another chapter in rock and roll’s continual evolution. Like the Stones themselves in the early 1960s, punk challenged convention and rattled the establishment, making it easy for him to identify with its rebellious spirit.

The frontman then singled out the track ‘Respectable’ as an example of The Rolling Stones expressing their punk sensibilities. He said of the song: “Yeah, this is the kind of edgy punk ethos. Yeah, the groove of it — and on all of those songs, the whole thing was to play it all fast, fast, fast. I had a lot of problems with Keith [Richards] about it, but that was the deal at the time.”

However, despite Some Girls taking influence from New York, Jagger preferred the British version of punk to the American incarnation. He claimed: “The sort of punk scene in New York, you know, you had the Ramones and you had the New York Dolls, but they didn’t really play that kind of music … it was more of a glam look.”



https://youtu.be/S0hl5WmTTPo
Sorry.  I was just imagining telling Charlie Watts that we're gonna play punk.

FearlessF

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Re: OT-- What song's on your mind right now?
« Reply #3711 on: Today at 12:36:54 PM »
Hah, Charlie and Keith were resistant 

I don't feel much punk in Respectable 
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utee94

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Re: OT-- What song's on your mind right now?
« Reply #3712 on: Today at 02:10:24 PM »
Van Halen's "Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love" was originally intended as a punk parody.  Ultimately it became one of their biggest songs, and it's one of my favorites by the band.


 

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