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Have their even commented on it at all?Quote
vertigojoe
I’m gonna take a wild guess. Was it Jagger/Richards? Hehe.
Seriously tho like all the best ones they wrote it TOGETHER.
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stanlove
I am always curious about who wrote different and all Stones songs. Would like to keep a thread going about it.
Who wrote You Can't Always Get What You Want?
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Taylor1
Salt of the Earth, Brown Sugar,Dead Flowers,Star Star, Fingerprint File, Miss You,Some Girls,Emotional Rescue, Out of Tears,are I think all Mick ,among others.Keith has probably written most of the songs
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GazzaQuote
stanlove
I am always curious about who wrote different and all Stones songs. Would like to keep a thread going about it.
Who wrote You Can't Always Get What You Want?
[www.timeisonourside.com]
Check out the 'Track Talk' section on this site and then click on the links for the individual songs. In many cases, you'll find quotes from the individual band members on the writing and recording of the song
For YCAGWYW :
[www.timeisonourside.com]
Keith said it was in an interview to Rolling Stone in 1971Quote
zQuote
Taylor1
Salt of the Earth, Brown Sugar,Dead Flowers,Star Star, Fingerprint File, Miss You,Some Girls,Emotional Rescue, Out of Tears,are I think all Mick ,among others.Keith has probably written most of the songs
Salt of the Earth all Mick?? I don't think so.
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Taylor1Keith said it was in an interview to Rolling Stone in 1971Quote
zQuote
Taylor1
Salt of the Earth, Brown Sugar,Dead Flowers,Star Star, Fingerprint File, Miss You,Some Girls,Emotional Rescue, Out of Tears,are I think all Mick ,among others.Keith has probably written most of the songs
Salt of the Earth all Mick?? I don't think so.
Quote
zQuote
Taylor1Keith said it was in an interview to Rolling Stone in 1971Quote
zQuote
Taylor1
Salt of the Earth, Brown Sugar,Dead Flowers,Star Star, Fingerprint File, Miss You,Some Girls,Emotional Rescue, Out of Tears,are I think all Mick ,among others.Keith has probably written most of the songs
Salt of the Earth all Mick?? I don't think so.
He was talking about the lyrics imho, not the music.
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GazzaQuote
stanlove
I am always curious about who wrote different and all Stones songs. Would like to keep a thread going about it.
Who wrote You Can't Always Get What You Want?
[www.timeisonourside.com]
Check out the 'Track Talk' section on this site and then click on the links for the individual songs. In many cases, you'll find quotes from the individual band members on the writing and recording of the song
For YCAGWYW :
[www.timeisonourside.com]
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Mathijs
Until the end of the 1960's, Keith wrote just about all of the music and parts of the lyrics, and Jagger the lyrics. Starting from 1969 Mick started to write more and more of the music, and the songs started to be really joint efforts. From 1985 on Keith seems to be fairly dried up, with Talk is Cheap his last truly great effort.
Mathijs
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keithsmanQuote
Mathijs
Until the end of the 1960's, Keith wrote just about all of the music and parts of the lyrics, and Jagger the lyrics. Starting from 1969 Mick started to write more and more of the music, and the songs started to be really joint efforts. From 1985 on Keith seems to be fairly dried up, with Talk is Cheap his last truly great effort.
Mathijs
Absolutely agree with the first part of your post, Keith was definitely responsible for most of those great meaningful sounds and memerable songs in the 60's, and of course the masterpiece Exile was very much down to Keith and it's well documented that at that time Keith was very much relied upon, people waiting and waiting for the creative Keith to arrive and trying to work around Keith's hours of functioning.
But on iorr many posters focus on the Mick Songs.
But most fans are aware that the best music , the music this band is famous for, and 70% of the music that is played live is very much down to Keith and the sound he creates with those monster intros and killer riffs, that's what puts the chills down your spine musically speaking, of course it would be nothing without Mick's singing, Keith is the sound of the music, Mick is the voice, that's how I'm hearing it.
Someone will comment in a minute that Brown Sugar is all Mick for instance to sway the discussion and try to turn it upside down, but even if you give Brown Sugar to Mick, what would that song have achieved without Keith's amazing intro and riff and general sound , it might have sounded like Testify or something from a Mick solo album.
As for you thinking Keith dried up about 85' I'd say sure, but Mick dried up a whole lot more when it comes to writing great songs, and by the way i don't consider Crosseyed Heart dried up, far from it, someone needs to get Keith in the Studio and inspire those creative juices out of him, sadly Mick is no longer capable of doing that or willing to do that.
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keithsman
As for you thinking Keith dried up about 85' I'd say sure, but Mick dried up a whole lot more when it comes to writing great songs, and by the way i don't consider Crosseyed Heart dried up, far from it, someone needs to get Keith in the Studio and inspire those creative juices out of him, sadly Mick is no longer capable of doing that or willing to do that.
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DandelionPowderman
Ronnie
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DoxaQuote
keithsmanQuote
Mathijs
Until the end of the 1960's, Keith wrote just about all of the music and parts of the lyrics, and Jagger the lyrics. Starting from 1969 Mick started to write more and more of the music, and the songs started to be really joint efforts. From 1985 on Keith seems to be fairly dried up, with Talk is Cheap his last truly great effort.
Mathijs
Absolutely agree with the first part of your post, Keith was definitely responsible for most of those great meaningful sounds and memerable songs in the 60's, and of course the masterpiece Exile was very much down to Keith and it's well documented that at that time Keith was very much relied upon, people waiting and waiting for the creative Keith to arrive and trying to work around Keith's hours of functioning.
But on iorr many posters focus on the Mick Songs.
But most fans are aware that the best music , the music this band is famous for, and 70% of the music that is played live is very much down to Keith and the sound he creates with those monster intros and killer riffs, that's what puts the chills down your spine musically speaking, of course it would be nothing without Mick's singing, Keith is the sound of the music, Mick is the voice, that's how I'm hearing it.
Someone will comment in a minute that Brown Sugar is all Mick for instance to sway the discussion and try to turn it upside down, but even if you give Brown Sugar to Mick, what would that song have achieved without Keith's amazing intro and riff and general sound , it might have sounded like Testify or something from a Mick solo album.
As for you thinking Keith dried up about 85' I'd say sure, but Mick dried up a whole lot more when it comes to writing great songs, and by the way i don't consider Crosseyed Heart dried up, far from it, someone needs to get Keith in the Studio and inspire those creative juices out of him, sadly Mick is no longer capable of doing that or willing to do that.
As typical, you really can't see such an honest question in trying to figure out the facts who did and what as anything else but a just another dick measure contest between Jagger and Richards. And we all know which one you suck.
- Doxa
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DandelionPowderman
No too bad, Riffie. Weird times.