Some Girls The Rolling Stones

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CD - Remastered / Reissue

  • Release Date: 06/09/2009
  • Original Release: 1978
  • Sales Rank: 9,592
  • Label: UMVD LABELS
  • UPC: 602527015668

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
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Some Girls

1LISTENMiss You 4:48
2LISTENWhen the Whip Comes Down 4:20
3LISTENJust My Imagination (Running Away With Me) 4:38
4LISTENSome Girls 4:36
5LISTENLies 3:11
6LISTENFar Away Eyes 4:24
7LISTENRespectable 3:06
8LISTENBefore They Make Me Run 3:25
9LISTENBeast of Burden 4:25
10LISTENShattered 3:47

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Outlaws in their youth, by 1978, The Rolling Stones were men in their mid thirties, who had been outflanked by the punk movement. The Clash's slogan had been "No Beatles, Elvis, Stones in 1977." The Stones responded with one of their final great records, Some Girls. While parts of Goats Head Soup and Black and Blue were focused on New York City, this album was a late '70s statement of NYC funk. Guitarist Ronnie Wood was firmly within the ranks and he and Richards drove the Stones toward their earlier lofty heights. "Shattered" rocked intensely, while "Miss you" added grit to a disco beat. They even sparked a little bit of controversy among the politically correct crowd when one of the lyrics on the title track suggested that black women wanted to have sex all night (only black women? Isn't that sentiment universal?). The recording resulted in international hits for the group and stopped their first precipitous decline. Martin Johnson, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

Fine comebackby Anonymous

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July 12, 2004: Some Girls arrived after the explosion of punk, and it seemed as though the big bands of the early seventies needed to get their act together if they wanted to look as though they were still relevant to a younger generation of fans. Pink Floyd did an admirable job, following the bloated and windy Wish You Were Here with the striking, angry and raw edge of Animals, and The Rolling Stones did a halfway decent job with Some Girls, which displays a new-found confidence and swagger following the half-hearted and awkward transitional sound of their previous album, Black and Blue. Easily the Stones most versatile and genre-hopping album, there's disco, country, garage rock, balladry, funk and a return to the straight, flat out Stones sound all contained within one album. Such versatility is admirable, however the results are not as successful as one would have hoped. A cover of 'Just My Imagination (Runnin' Away With Me)' is by-the-numbers, Keef turns in another of his sloppy, standard cuts in 'Before They Make Me Run', and the tongue-in-cheek but nevertheless idiotic sexism of the title track is one of the worst offenders. 'Miss You' was the big hit from the album and remains one of their greatest latter day singles, while the excellent funk strut of 'Shattered' closes the album on a high. 'Beast of Burden' is a pretty ballad and the whiplash firepower of 'When the Whip Comes Down' and 'Lies' are brilliant, no-nonsense rockers. You can take or leave the parodic silliness of 'Faraway Eyes' and the self-copying 'Respectable', which sounds like a lesser duplicate of 'Lies'. Some Girls was a huge hit, and to this day remains the Stones most commercially successful album, proving that their monstrous popularity was something that even punk, new wave and well, every other type of musical challenge on Earth could not hope to overthrow at the time. It's certainly overrated, nowhere near the staggering heights of other peak 70's albums like Sticky Fingers or Exile on Main Street or even the underrated Goats Head Soup, but it is a fine middle-weight Stones album, and necessary listening for causal or devoted Stones fans.

This review was written about the CD edition.

Booze and Pills and Powdersby Anonymous

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June 18, 2004: Ah. Always a great listen. The remastered version sounds even crisper. Thanks Boys for making my youth that much better...

This review was written about the CD edition.


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