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DandelionPowdermanQuote
Stoneage
Jagger solo material, really. I can't take the lyrics seriously. A polygamist singing about fidelity? In all the Jagger songs he's always complaining about all the women leaving him and treating him badly.
Really? I'm supposed to believe that?
Actually, it wasn't. Mick had a ballad he wanted on the album, but Keith and Watt didn't think it was good enough. So they wrote this one together.
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StoneageQuote
DandelionPowdermanQuote
Stoneage
Jagger solo material, really. I can't take the lyrics seriously. A polygamist singing about fidelity? In all the Jagger songs he's always complaining about all the women leaving him and treating him badly.
Really? I'm supposed to believe that?
Actually, it wasn't. Mick had a ballad he wanted on the album, but Keith and Watt didn't think it was good enough. So they wrote this one together.
Now that you mention it; yes, there are some Keith ballad ingredients involved here. Not a bad song but nothing that special either. The lyrics sets me off a bit though (unless they are Keith's lyrics?).
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Pelle
Why isn’t there any credits for the sax-solo anywhere?
Or am I crazy? Cuz that’s a sax-solo in the ending of the song RIGHT?
No sax on DOY, only strings (which are credited).King and Blake are credited on SSOH (if memory serves) and James King is credited on GC.
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PelleQuote
DandelionPowdermanQuote
Pelle
Why isn’t there any credits for the sax-solo anywhere?
Or am I crazy? Cuz that’s a sax-solo in the ending of the song RIGHT?
No sax on DOY, only strings (which are credited).King and Blake are credited on SSOH (if memory serves) and James King is credited on GC.
It does not sound like strings to me at all strangely enough. I can’t be the only one hearing a saxophone in the last part/outro of the song?
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liddas
At what minute?
All I hear is strings, piano, hammond, and, oof course bass and guitars.
C
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Pelle
The end-part of the song. Starts at 3:30