The Rolling Stones, very early and very late7 songs, 21 min 4 sec
Dear listeners,I’ve spent the past week thinking a lot about the Rolling Stones — specifically, both poles of the band’s impossibly long existence. That’s partly because I’m about a third of the way through Bob Spitz’s new book “The Rolling Stones: The Biography,” an authoritative but lively chronicle of all things Stones. I wasn’t sure the world needed yet another book about one of the most famous rock bands in all of Western civilization, but when I flipped through its prologue — which vividly recounts a chance meeting, on Oct. 17, 1961, between a teenage Keith Richards and Mick Jagger on a train platform in a London suburb — I was immediately drawn in and have barely been able to put it down. Why am I such a sucker for an engagingly written music biography, especially if it’s about an act whose place in cultural history is so deeply entrenched? I think it’s because I enjoy the suspension of inevitability that occurs when an author is able to bring a band’s earliest days to life. In his opening chapters, Spitz effectively shows how unlikely it is that this particular band of peculiar characters came together at all, and how strange it was that a ragtag collection of degenerate British blues nerds established what would go on to become, by just about any measure, the most successful rock band of all time. For the first hundred pages or so, their world-conquering triumph is anything but inevitable, which makes you realize anew all the particular contingencies that had to align for history as we so well know it to take place. So much depends upon being in the right place at the right time, which for Jagger and Richards was a westbound train to London on that October morning. Nearly 65 years later — last Tuesday — I witnessed those same two lads standing together onstage at an event in Brooklyn, talking about the upcoming release of their 25th studio album, “Foreign Tongues.” (This was going to be the LP that finally put these guys on the map, joked the M.C., Conan O’Brien.) At this point in their existence, the Rolling Stones feel as much like a social experiment as they do a rock band, providing a rare example of what a group sounds like more than six decades into its improbably continuous existence. Given that their past and present is on my mind, I thought it would be fun to make a playlist that juxtaposes their earliest material with their most recent, beginning with their very first single from 1963, and concluding with the two new “Foreign Tongues” songs they released last week, “Rough and Twisted” and “In the Stars.” It strikes me, listening in sequence, that recording technology has changed more than the Stones’ signature sound, which as ever centers on Richards’s bluesy riffs and Jagger’s punchy staccato vocals. Also, today I’m introducing a new feature you’ll see in The Amplifier every so often: The Amplifier Quiz! Test your knowledge of music trivia — or learn a fun fact that you can share with your music-loving friends. See today’s Rolling Stones-themed question below. What a drag it is getting old, Lindsay
Listen along while you read.1. “Come On”Released in June 1963, the Rolling Stones’ debut single was a jaunty rendition of a relatively obscure 1961 Chuck Berry song. Punctuated by Richards’s rhythmic playing and a wailing harmonica riff from Brian Jones, “Come On” didn’t exactly set the world afire — it peaked at No. 21 on the British singles charts — and one of the first critics to write about the band, Norman Jopling, didn’t think it captured the energy of the group’s electric live performances. Still, “Come On” gave the Stones exposure and established a sound and attitude that they would continue to refine in the coming years. ▶ Listen on Spotify, Apple Music or YouTube
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Of the two new songs the Stones released last week, I prefer this one: a growling, bluesy rocker that proves Jagger can still snarl and Richards can still shred.
▶ Listen on Spotify, Apple Music or YouTube
Here’s the sleeker track of the new pair, which features a chorus on which Jagger muses with a cosmic perspective, “It’s in the stars, it’s our destiny.” How have the Rolling Stones kept it going this long? Maybe, like that chance meeting 64 years ago on a train platform, it’s just fate.
▶ Listen on Spotify, Apple Music or YouTube
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Test your knowledge of music trivia — or learn a fun fact that you can share with your music-loving friends. Click an answer to see if you’re right. (The link will be free.)
What did Mick Jagger’s father, rather appropriately, do for a living?
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“The Rolling Stones, Very Early and Very Late” track list
Track 1: “Come On”
Track 2: “I Wanna Be Your Man”
Track 3: “Tell Me”
Track 4: “Not Fade Away”
Track 5: “Rolling Stone Blues”
Track 6: “Rough and Twisted”
Track 7: “In the Stars”
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Have feedback? Ideas for a playlist? We’d love to hear from you. Email us at theamplifier@nytimes.com.
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