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Dance Little Sister
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Singles chronology

Dance Little Sister
Dance Little Sister
25/10/1974
Hot Stuff
Hot Stuff
0/0/1976

Dance Little Sister

Rolling Stones

1974 Single
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 25 Octubre 1974 · Fecha Grabación: Mayo 1974 -
    Discográfica: Rolling Stones · · Productor: The Glimmer Twins
    1
    Dance Little Sister
    Rolling StonesThe Rolling Stones • w: Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, except Ain`t Too Proud to Beg by Norman Whitfield and Eddie Holland • 1974 /10 /25
    4:10
  • 2
    " title="A-side and
    Rolling Stones • 1974 /10 /25
    0:00
  • Album


    It's Only Rock 'N Roll

    It's Only Rock 'N Roll

    Fecha Lanzamiento: 18 Octubre 1974 · Fecha Grabación: 24 Noviembre 1973 - 3 Marzo 1974
    Discográfica: Rolling Stones · Estudio de Grabación: Musicland (Munich); Stargroves (Newbury); Island (London) · Productor: The Glimmer Twins
    1
    If you can't rock me
    Rolling Stones • w: Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, except Ain`t Too Proud to Beg by Norman Whitfield and Eddie Holland • 1981 /08 /24
    3:45
  • 2
    Ain't too proud to beg
    Rolling StonesThe Rolling Stones • w: Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, except Ain`t Too Proud to Beg by Norman Whitfield and Eddie Holland • 1974 /10 /18
    3:30
  • 3
    It's only Rock 'n Roll (but I like it)
    Rolling StonesThe Rolling Stones • w: But I Like It • 1974 /10 /18
    5:06
  • 4
    Till the next goodbye
    Rolling Stones • w: Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, except Ain`t Too Proud to Beg by Norman Whitfield and Eddie Holland • 1974 /10 /18
    4:36
  • 5
    Time waits for no one
    Rolling Stones • w: Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, except Ain`t Too Proud to Beg by Norman Whitfield and Eddie Holland • 1974 /10 /18
    6:36
  • 6
    Luxury
    Rolling Stones • w: Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, except Ain`t Too Proud to Beg by Norman Whitfield and Eddie Holland • 1974 /10 /18
    5:00
  • 7
    Dance little sister
    Rolling StonesThe Rolling Stones • w: Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, except Ain`t Too Proud to Beg by Norman Whitfield and Eddie Holland • 1974 /10 /18
    4:10
  • 8
    If you really want to be my friend
    Rolling Stones • w: Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, except Ain`t Too Proud to Beg by Norman Whitfield and Eddie Holland • 1974 /10 /18
    6:15
  • 9
    Short & curlies
    Rolling Stones • w: Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, except Ain`t Too Proud to Beg by Norman Whitfield and Eddie Holland • 1974 /10 /18
    2:43
  • 10
    Fingerprint file
    Rolling Stones • w: Mick Jagger and Keith Richards • 1974 /10 /18
    6:32
  • Album

    Dance Little Sister
    Dance Little Sister
    25/10/1974
    Hot Stuff
    Hot Stuff
    0/0/1976
    "Dance Little Sister"
    Single by the Rolling Stones
    from the album It`s Only Rock `n Roll
    A-side"Ain`t Too Proud to Beg"
    Released25 October 1974
    Recorded20 February–May 1974[1]
    GenreRock
    Length4:11
    LabelRolling Stones
    Songwriter(s)Jagger–Richards
    Producer(s)The Glimmer Twins
    The Rolling Stones singles chronology
    "Ain`t Too Proud to Beg"
    (1974)
    "Dance Little Sister"
    (1974)
    "I Don`t Know Why"
    (1975)

    Review

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Leer más

    1974 single by the Rolling Stones

    "Dance Little Sister" is a song written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards that was first released on the Rolling Stones 1974 album It`s Only Rock `n Roll. It was also released as the B-side of the Rolling Stones single "Ain`t Too Proud to Beg" and on several of their compilation albums.

    Lyrics and music

    The lyrics to "Dance Little Sister" have lead singer Jagger asking women in high heels and tight skirts to dance for him all night.[2] Some of the lyrics refer to Mick and Bianca Jagger spending days in Trinidad watching cricket and spending the nights partying.[1] These include:

    On Saturday night we don`t go home

    We bacchanal, ain`t no dawn[1]

    "Dance Little Sister" is driven by the guitars, and according to author Steve Appleford, Richards` "savage" rhythm guitar in particular.[1][2] Appleford also credits some "excitable" lead guitar passages from Mick Taylor, "fierce" drumming from Charlie Watts and a "rolling bar room piano" part by Ian Stewart.[2] Music critic Bill Janovitz describes it as "a nihilistic dance number," comparing its "world-negating ass-shaking, insistent rock `n` roll beat" to the disco music which would emerge shortly after its release.[3] According to music journalist James Hector, "Dance Little Sister" is a return to the type of "bar-room crowd pleasers" that the group used to record in the mid-1960s.[4]

    Reception

    AllMusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine called it a "sharp, hard-driving album track" and "agreeable filler."[5][6] But Appleford notes that while the song has "all the elements needed for the best kind of devil`s music," the song "never fully erupts" or "clicks into a perfect groove."[2] Hector describes the song`s beginning, where "the guitar and drums struggle to find the exact groove" as precious, but feels the song goes "downhill" afterwards.[4] Sean Egan finds the "industrial strength riff" to be "unattractive" and the rhythm to be "leaden."[7]

    Subsequent to its initial release on It`s Only Rock `n Roll, "Dance Little Sister" was released as the B-side of the "Ain`t Too Proud to Beg" single in October 1974.[1] Rolling Stones biographer Martin Elliott has stated that this deserved to be a double A-side release, as both songs are "foot-tapping dance-oriented numbers."[1] It has also been released on several of the Rolling Stones compilation albums, including Made in the Shade in 1975, Singles 1971–2006 in 2011 and the Super Deluxe (80 track) version of GRRR! in 2012.[5][8][9]

    "Dance Little Sister" was occasionally included in the Rolling Stones` live sets during 1975 and 1977.[1]

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    1974 single by the Rolling Stones

    "Dance Little Sister" is a song written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards that was first released on the Rolling Stones 1974 album It`s Only Rock `n Roll. It was also released as the B-side of the Rolling Stones single "Ain`t Too Proud to Beg" and on several of their compilation albums.

    Lyrics and music

    The lyrics to "Dance Little Sister" have lead singer Jagger asking women in high heels and tight skirts to dance for him all night.[2] Some of the lyrics refer to Mick and Bianca Jagger spending days in Trinidad watching cricket and spending the nights partying.[1] These include:

    On Saturday night we don`t go home

    We bacchanal, ain`t no dawn[1]

    "Dance Little Sister" is driven by the guitars, and according to author Steve Appleford, Richards` "savage" rhythm guitar in particular.[1][2] Appleford also credits some "excitable" lead guitar passages from Mick Taylor, "fierce" drumming from Charlie Watts and a "rolling bar room piano" part by Ian Stewart.[2] Music critic Bill Janovitz describes it as "a nihilistic dance number," comparing its "world-negating ass-shaking, insistent rock `n` roll beat" to the disco music which would emerge shortly after its release.[3] According to music journalist James Hector, "Dance Little Sister" is a return to the type of "bar-room crowd pleasers" that the group used to record in the mid-1960s.[4]

    Reception

    AllMusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine called it a "sharp, hard-driving album track" and "agreeable filler."[5][6] But Appleford notes that while the song has "all the elements needed for the best kind of devil`s music," the song "never fully erupts" or "clicks into a perfect groove."[2] Hector describes the song`s beginning, where "the guitar and drums struggle to find the exact groove" as precious, but feels the song goes "downhill" afterwards.[4] Sean Egan finds the "industrial strength riff" to be "unattractive" and the rhythm to be "leaden."[7]

    Subsequent to its initial release on It`s Only Rock `n Roll, "Dance Little Sister" was released as the B-side of the "Ain`t Too Proud to Beg" single in October 1974.[1] Rolling Stones biographer Martin Elliott has stated that this deserved to be a double A-side release, as both songs are "foot-tapping dance-oriented numbers."[1] It has also been released on several of the Rolling Stones compilation albums, including Made in the Shade in 1975, Singles 1971–2006 in 2011 and the Super Deluxe (80 track) version of GRRR! in 2012.[5][8][9]

    "Dance Little Sister" was occasionally included in the Rolling Stones` live sets during 1975 and 1977.[1]

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