taken from [
www.timeisonourside.com]
Line-up:
Drums: Charlie Watts
Bass: Bill Wyman
Electric guitars: Keith Richards & Mick Taylor (incl. extended solo)
Lead vocal: Mick Jagger
Background vocals: Mick Jagger & Keith Richards
Organ: Billy Preston
Saxophone: Bobby Keys
Congas: Rocky Dijon
Percussion: Jimmy Miller
Yeah, you've got satin shoes
Yeah, you've got plastic boots
You've all got cocaine eyes
Yeah, you've got speed freak jive now
Can't you hear me knocking on your window?
Can't you hear me knocking on your door?
Can't you hear me knocking down the dirty street?
Yeah
Help me baby, I ain't no stranger
Can't you hear me knocking? Are you safe asleep?
Can't you hear me knocking, yeah, down the gas light street now?
Can't you hear me knocking? Yeah, throw me down the keys
All right now
Hear me ringing big bell toll
Hear me singing soft and low
I've been begging on my knees
I've been kicking, help me please
Hear me prowling - I'm going to take you down
Hear me growling - Yes, I've got a fight in me now, now, now, now
Hear me howling - I'm all around your street now
Hear me knocking - I'm all around your town
TrackTalk
(Keith and I) both played on (the intro) actually, it was one of the few, well not of the few Stones tracks because lots of tracks we recorded with the Stones in those days were actually by and large recorded live the way you would play them onstage, sometimes even in 1 or 2 takes. Very rarely were guitar solos overdubbed, I mean other things may have been overdubbed, but very rarely were guitar solos overdubbed, they were usually sort of done with the backing track so they were done live.
- Mick Taylor, 1995
Can't You Hear Me Knocking... is one of my favorites... (The jam at the end) just happened by accident; that was never planned. Towards the end of the song I just felt like carrying on playing. Everybody was putting their instruments down, but the tape was still rolling and it sounded good, so everybody quickly picked up their instruments again and carried on playing. It just happened, and it was a one-take thing. A lot of people seem to really like that part.
- Mick Taylor, 1979
(The jam at the end wasn't inspired by Carlos Santana.) We didn't even know they were still taping. We thought we'd finished. We were just rambling and they kept the tape rolling. I figured we'd just fade it off. It was only when we heard the playback that we realized, Oh, they kept it going. Basically we realized we had two bits of music. There's the song and there's the jam.
- Keith Richards, 2002
I used a brown Gibson ES-345 for Dead Flowers and the solo on Can't You Hear Me Knocking.
- Mick Taylor, 1979
As a lead, virtuoso guitar, Mick (Taylor) was so lyrical on songs like Can't You Hear Me Knocking, which was an amazing track because that was a complete jam, one take at the end. He had such a good ear, and I would help push him along.
- Charlie Watts, 2003
The song is not a Mick Taylor song at all. Mick merely does a, certainly very fine, but nevertheless Carlos Santana kind of solo part. The whole rough rhythmic characteristic thing about the song is Keith.
- Pierre de Beauport, Keith Richards' guitar technician, 1999
(From the Mick Taylor period,) I love Can't You Hear Me Knocking.
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Oh, give me the beat, boys, and free my soul
I wanna get lost in your rock and roll and drift away