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Singles chronology

Heart of Stone
Heart of Stone
0/12/1964
The Last Time
The Last Time
26/2/1965

Heart of Stone

Rolling Stones

1964 Single
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: Diciembre 1964 · Fecha Grabación: Octubre 1964 -
    Discográfica: London · · Productor: Andrew Loog Oldham
    1
    Heart Of Stone
    Rolling StonesThe Rolling Stones • 1964 .12
    2:44
  • 2
    What A Shame
    Rolling Stones • 1964 .12
    3:09
  • Album


    The Rolling Stones, Now! (US)

    The Rolling Stones, Now! (US)

    Fecha Lanzamiento: Marzo 1965 · Fecha Grabación: 3 Enero 1964 - 8 Noviembre 1964
    Discográfica: London · · Productor: Andrew Loog Oldham
    1
    Everybody Needs Somebody To Love (version 2)
    THE ROLLING STONES • 1965
    5:05
  • 2
    Down Home Girl
    THE ROLLING STONES • 1965
    4:16
  • 3
    You Can't Catch Me
    THE ROLLING STONES • 1965
    3:41
  • 4
    Heart Of Stone
    THE ROLLING STONES • 1965
    2:49
  • 5
    What A Shame
    THE ROLLING STONES • 1965
    3:08
  • 6
    Mona (i Need You Baby)
    THE ROLLING STONES • 1965
    3:37
  • 7
    Down The Road Apiece
    THE ROLLING STONES • 1965
    2:59
  • 8
    Off The Hook
    THE ROLLING STONES • 1965
    2:36
  • 9
    Pain In My Heart
    THE ROLLING STONES • 1965
    2:13
  • 10
    Oh Baby (we Got A Good Thing Goin')
    THE ROLLING STONES • 1965
    2:09
  • 11
    Little Red Rooster
    THE ROLLING STONES • 1965
    3:06
  • 12
    Surprise, Surprise
    THE ROLLING STONES • 1965
    2:30
  • Album

    Heart of Stone
    Heart of Stone
    0/12/1964
    The Last Time
    The Last Time
    26/2/1965
    "Heart of Stone"
    European EP picture sleeve
    Single by the Rolling Stones
    from the album The Rolling Stones, Now!
    B-side"What a Shame"
    ReleasedDecember 1964 (1964-12) (US)[1]
    RecordedOctober 1964
    StudioRCA, Hollywood, California
    GenreRock
    Length2:50
    LabelLondon
    Songwriter(s)Jagger/Richards
    Producer(s)Andrew Loog Oldham
    The Rolling Stones US singles chronology
    "Time Is on My Side"
    (1964)
    "Heart of Stone"
    (1964)
    "The Last Time"
    (1965)

    Review

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Leer más

    1964 single by the Rolling Stones

    "Heart of Stone" is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, credited to the songwriting partnership of Jagger/Richards. London Records first issued it as a single in the United States in December 1964. The song was subsequently included on The Rolling Stones, Now! (February 1965, US) and Out of Our Heads (September 1965, UK).

    Composition

    In an AllMusic review, Richie Unterberger writes, "`Heart of Stone` [is] a slow and soulful, dramatic ballad with the kind of vaguely discordant, droning guitars heard on many an early Rolling Stones slow number. What was impressive was how the Jagger/Richards song, though similar in some respect to American soul ballads of the period ... was not explicitly derivative of any one blues or soul song that they were covering on their mid-60s records. The lilt of the verses owed something to country music and the mournful harmonies heard on the latter part of the verses added to the overall feeling of melancholy moodiness."[2]

    The song sees the singer discuss his life as a womanizer, and how one girl in particular won`t break his heart:

    There`ve been so many girls that I`ve known

    I`ve made so many cry and still I wonder why

    Here comes the little girl

    I see her walking down the street

    She`s all by herself, I try and knock her off her feet

    But she`ll never break, never break, never break, never break,

    This heart of stone[1]

    Recording and release

    "Heart of Stone" was recorded in October 1964 at the RCA Studios in Los Angeles[1] with Jagger singing, Keith Richards and Brian Jones on guitars, Bill Wyman on bass, and Charlie Watts on drums. Jack Nitzsche performs tambourine and piano.

    "Heart of Stone" was initially released in December 1964 as a single in the US where it became their second Top 20 US hit, reaching number 19. The song was included on the US album The Rolling Stones, Now! the following February. In 1966, it was included on the collection Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass); it later appeared on compilation albums including Hot Rocks 1964-1971 (1971), 30 Greatest Hits (1977), Singles Collection: The London Years (1989),[1] and GRRR! (2012).

    A longer version appeared in 1975 on the album Metamorphosis. This had been recorded on 21–23 July 1964 with Jimmy Page on guitar and Clem Cattini on drums, probably as a demo.[citation needed]

    Personnel

    • Mick Jagger – lead vocals
    • Keith Richards – lead guitar
    • Brian Jones – baritone guitar, rhythm guitar
    • Bill Wyman – bass guitar, backing vocals
    • Charlie Watts – drums
    • Jack Nitzsche – tambourine, piano

    Charts

    Chart (1965)

    Peak
    position

    Canada Top Singles (RPM)[3]

    15

    Finland (Soumen Virallinen)[4]

    39

    Netherlands (Single Top 100)[5]

    8

    US Billboard Hot 100[6]

    19

    Cover versions

    The British post-punk group the Mekons covered the song on their 1988 album So Good It Hurts, twisting the song`s impact with female vocals provided by Sally Timms. The Allman Brothers Band covered the song on their 2003 album Hittin` the Note, their first release with slide guitar player Derek Trucks. The Outcasts from Texas covered the song in 1965. Sonic`s Rendezvous Band has also played the song.

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    1964 single by the Rolling Stones

    "Heart of Stone" is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, credited to the songwriting partnership of Jagger/Richards. London Records first issued it as a single in the United States in December 1964. The song was subsequently included on The Rolling Stones, Now! (February 1965, US) and Out of Our Heads (September 1965, UK).

    Composition

    In an AllMusic review, Richie Unterberger writes, "`Heart of Stone` [is] a slow and soulful, dramatic ballad with the kind of vaguely discordant, droning guitars heard on many an early Rolling Stones slow number. What was impressive was how the Jagger/Richards song, though similar in some respect to American soul ballads of the period ... was not explicitly derivative of any one blues or soul song that they were covering on their mid-60s records. The lilt of the verses owed something to country music and the mournful harmonies heard on the latter part of the verses added to the overall feeling of melancholy moodiness."[2]

    The song sees the singer discuss his life as a womanizer, and how one girl in particular won`t break his heart:

    There`ve been so many girls that I`ve known

    I`ve made so many cry and still I wonder why

    Here comes the little girl

    I see her walking down the street

    She`s all by herself, I try and knock her off her feet

    But she`ll never break, never break, never break, never break,

    This heart of stone[1]

    Recording and release

    "Heart of Stone" was recorded in October 1964 at the RCA Studios in Los Angeles[1] with Jagger singing, Keith Richards and Brian Jones on guitars, Bill Wyman on bass, and Charlie Watts on drums. Jack Nitzsche performs tambourine and piano.

    "Heart of Stone" was initially released in December 1964 as a single in the US where it became their second Top 20 US hit, reaching number 19. The song was included on the US album The Rolling Stones, Now! the following February. In 1966, it was included on the collection Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass); it later appeared on compilation albums including Hot Rocks 1964-1971 (1971), 30 Greatest Hits (1977), Singles Collection: The London Years (1989),[1] and GRRR! (2012).

    A longer version appeared in 1975 on the album Metamorphosis. This had been recorded on 21–23 July 1964 with Jimmy Page on guitar and Clem Cattini on drums, probably as a demo.[citation needed]

    Personnel

    • Mick Jagger – lead vocals
    • Keith Richards – lead guitar
    • Brian Jones – baritone guitar, rhythm guitar
    • Bill Wyman – bass guitar, backing vocals
    • Charlie Watts – drums
    • Jack Nitzsche – tambourine, piano

    Charts

    Chart (1965)

    Peak
    position

    Canada Top Singles (RPM)[3]

    15

    Finland (Soumen Virallinen)[4]

    39

    Netherlands (Single Top 100)[5]

    8

    US Billboard Hot 100[6]

    19

    Cover versions

    The British post-punk group the Mekons covered the song on their 1988 album So Good It Hurts, twisting the song`s impact with female vocals provided by Sally Timms. The Allman Brothers Band covered the song on their 2003 album Hittin` the Note, their first release with slide guitar player Derek Trucks. The Outcasts from Texas covered the song in 1965. Sonic`s Rendezvous Band has also played the song.

    DISCOGRAFÍA

    The Rolling Stones - Heart Of Stone (Official Lyric Video) · Channel: ABKCOVEVO · 2m 52s
    Title: 1-Heart Of Stone