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The Rolling Stones

History of the Rolling Stones

The Rolling Stones were probably the most impressive set of talents to come together in Britain before the Soft Machine: decadent vocalist Mick Jagger (who distorted soul crooning and turned it into an animal instinct), guitarist Keith Richards (who took Chuck Berry's riffs into a new dimension of fractured harmony), multi-instrumentalist Brian Jones (who penned their baroque and psychedelic arrangements), and the phenomenal, funky rhythm section of bassist Bill Wyman and drummer Charlie Watts. Steeped in the blues, the Rolling Stones redefined the rock performer, the rock concert and the rock song. They turned on the degree of vulgarity and provocation to levels that made Chuck Berry look silly. Arguably the greatest rock and roll band of all times, the Rolling Stones revolutionized each of the classical instruments of rock music: the drums incorporated the lascivious tom-tom of tribal folk, the martial pace of military bands and the sophisticated swing of jazz; the guitar amplified the raw and ringing style of Chuck Berry; the bass invented a depraved sound, the singing turned the sensual crooning of soul music in an animal howl, half sleazy lust and half call to arms; and the arragements of keyboards, flutes and exotic instruments completely misinterpreted the intentions of the cultures from which they were borrowed. The revolution carried out by the Rolling Stones was thorough and radical.

Indirectly, the Rolling Stones invented the fundamental axis of rock and roll: the sexy singer, sexual object and shaman, and the charismatic guitarist. For at least forty years that would remain the only constant in rock music (and one of the external features that set it apart from jazz, folk, classical music). In an era still crowded with vocal groups of pop music (Beach Boys, Beatles) inspired by those of the 1940s', the Stones represented a generational trauma.
After them, not only rock music but western civilization itself will never be the same again.

The Stones constituted a rare miracle: five reckless white boys from a European capital who managed not only to appropriate the music of black Americans, but to surpass all their teachers. Nobody ever did the blues like the Stones, and perhaps nobody ever will. Their blues was a metaphysical, political and mystical.

When they appeared, in 1962, they represented most of all an epic cry of revenge. The rockers of the 50s, from Chuck Berry on, had been systematically chased away by the recording industry who favored the "teen idols". The Rolling Stones were the legitimate heirs of those forsaken rockers. In fact, they married Berry's wicked ethos to the violent impulses of urban vandalism. The result was an explosive mix that the world of music, popular or classic, black or white, had never heard.

The Stones were blues-rock specialists. A banality really, a genre within a genre, yet it was fundamental to the development of rock music. The world before and after the Rolling Stones are actually two separate worlds. Before there were only ditties. After there is rock as we have come to know it. In a sense, the Rolling Stones invented the opposite of the short, little songs that had dominated the preceding decades, and that continued for a while, thanks to the Beatles. And the binomial "blues+rock" remains today the dominant style of rock music. From Led Zeppelin to Nirvana, directly or indirectly, they're all children of The Rolling Stones. Without the Stones the history of rock and roll would have been completely different. Without most of the melodic bands of the time, rock history would have remained precisely the same, only the names in the hit parade would have changed. The short silly little song was there before, was there after and it's still around, but blues-rock was not there, and it has become the fundamental structure of most modern genres, from hard rock, that the Stones invented in 1963, to grunge, that the Stones invented in 1968.

The leaders, Mick Jagger and Keith Richard, were from Kent. Jagger, a student of economy, was an aspiring rhythm and blues singer being schooled by white blues man Alexis Korner. Richards, a graphic designer, was a guitar player fascinated by the John Lee Hooker's hypnotic riffs. They both came across a jazz inspired multi-instrumentalist who, at sixteen, had already fathered two children: Brian Jones.

Jones became from the beginning the soul of the group. He was a prodigy, in music(he could already play anything, from the organ to the saxophone) as well as sexually (in a decade he fathered six children - the first at fifteen - by six different girls). Jones was also the first rock agitator: long hair, androgynous make-up, quarrelsome attitude, free use of drugs. Jagger was among the first to imitate him, possibly contributing to Jones' moral decay in a Dostoevskyan existence that in end turned Hitchcockian.

Raised in the suburbs, Brian Jones fell in love at an early age with Charlie Parker. He had played the sax and the clarinet from London to Stockholm, from the metropolitan clubs to the street corners before being introduced to Jagger and Richard at the Ealing Blues Club. In the same club the trio scouted pianist Ian Stewart, bass player Bill Wyman and drummer Charlie Watts,three unemployed jazz aficionados. The Stones began to play gaining in a short time the reputation of a white rhythm and blues band.

Within a year they became one of the most legendary attractions of the wild London underground. Their sanguine, frenetic, loud and engaging style was exciting. The concept of song was lost in these nocturnal sarabands, in which a piece was twisted by improvisation and ended with a repetitive theme, as in the best black tradition. Compared at first to the bands of the Mersey beat, the Rolling Stones were a much more sensational novelty. In Richmond, where they performed for four dollars a head, all the VIPs of the "swinging London", Mary Quant included,gathered to listen. Going back to the roots of the ugly, dirty and bad music, they were awarded the palm of best band of the area.

When they - minus Stewart, lost along the way in 1963 - entered a recording studio for the first time, their repertory had stabilized around the classics of rock and roll. With their first three 45s, Come On (by Chuck Berry) in June, I Wanna Be Your Man (by Lennon and McCartney) in November, Not Fade Away (by Buddy Holly) in March 1964, they grabbed the attention of the young and the hostility of the mass-media. The young saw in them real and spontaneous spokespeople. The mass-media saw them as dangerous and perverted subversives. Their attitude conquered the young, their anger frightened the old.

The Rolling Stones, unlike the bands of the Mersey beat, were also good musicians: an expressive and versatile vocalist, a razor-sharp rhythmic guitar and a natural talent like Jones as the inspiration, the coordinator, the arranger and saboteur. Richard in particular, whose style was the first conscious imitation of Chuck Berry, imposed himself immediately as the best beat guitarist. His fuzz tone functioned to compensate for the absence of brasses. Watts and Wyman formed the funkiest, most essential rhythmic session in the history of rock and roll. Jagger was the principal attraction: he modeled his vocals upon the suffering vocalizations of Otis Redding and Solomon Burke, and he moved about so much on stage as to be compared with the blackest performers of ten years before.

Although The Rolling Stones did not belong to the "swinging London", the London boastful and loud, but to the squalid and smoke-ridden neighborhoods, their songs dazed and seduced even those who were not aspiring hooligans.

The group was as restless in public as it was in private. Jagger and Richards, already subscribers to the tryptich of sex/drugs/violence were led astray by Jones' derailing personality. The inside story of the group was one that women fought over (plenty of charming and fatal "Faithfulls" self-destructed chasing their idols). It was a story of dependency on heavy drugs, of corrupted and ambiguous friendships, of straight degradation: all under the web of Brian Jones.

Their first LP Rolling Stones (Decca, April 1964) was the best album ever released in England. It contains some rhythm and blues classics played with a rebel stand of the youth of poor neighborhoods, and also the first writing collaboration between Jagger and Richard: Tell Me. I'm A King Bee (Slim Harpo), Carol (Berry), Route 66, I Just Want To Make Love To You (Dixon) literally erupt from the grooves - crackling, exciting, shattering. The Stones had a historic illumination: nobody before them had ever correctly interpreted blues and rock through the body. They were the first to do it, the first to recognize without reserve, what was the real intent of black musicians. For years every white rocker had kindheartedly "justified" that sound, smuggling it as "race music." With the Stones the truth came to surface: their music was desperate, lewd, violent, sacrilegious, anarchic.

In monumentally confusing and fragmented discography of the time, it is difficult to find the next album as such. Nevertheless, The Rolling Stones were active with 45s while their LPs were stuffed mostly with rhythm and blues and rock and roll covers. The orgiastic climate was beginning to tone down progressively into more mature performances that preserved the stylistic ingredients of the first album (sharp guitars, irreverent choruses, tribal rhythms, coarse harmonics), in a more cautious mix.

Richard's urgent guitar playing, assault by fingertips, dominates these new tracks, all covers: Around And Around (by Chuck Berry), Empty Heart, She Said Yeah, and It's All Over Now (by Bobby Womack), the 45 that introduces once and for all their forceful and unconventional stance. Slow songs also proliferate to showcase Jagger's vocal quality in all their theatrical mode: covers Time Is On My Side, Confessing The Blues and Little Red Rooster (Dixon), and much more melodramatic originals: Heart Of Stone, I'm Free, and Good Times Bad Times.

Heart Of Stone and Little Red Rooster entered the English hit parade and brought the Stones to the United States. The following October they released a second LP for the States (12x5). Rolling Stones n. 2 came out in February 1965 (entitled Now in the United States).

1965 began a succession of Jagger and Richard masterpieces: The Last Time (February, stolen from the Staple Singers' 1958 This May Be The Last Time), Satisfaction (May), Get Off Of My Cloud (September), all originated by a corrosive and haunting mix of distorted blues riffs, of wickedly sensual vocals and of demonic rhythms, all catapulted to the top on both sides of the Atlantic, and also Fortune Teller, a bursting performance with a frantic cadence. The menacing and anxious synthesis of blues and rock and roll had reached the boiling point. The stentorian riff of Last Time keeps going without respite, hypnotic and obsessive like a war cry, while Jagger twists without mercy a feverish gospel refrain. The shouting impetus of Get Off Of My Cloud unhinges the door of gospel with alternating hammering rhythms and choral slogans. With Satisfaction, under the influence of a Tamla soul party, Jagger's perverted tone and Richard's maniacal distortions (wah-wah, wah-wah-wah ...) set a sex flick to music. The anthem reached the top of "Billboard" where it stayed for four weeks, definitely consecrating the group and pulling to the top the album Out Of Our Heads (1965, mostly the American release). Never before had people so wretched ousted established musicians from the best seller lists. An army of frustrated youth saw itself in those five shady characters and their raunchy music.

In those years the Stones didn't play songs, they shouted in people faces. While the Beatles had tea with the Queen, the Stones were pissing in public.

Conversely, at the same time the band presented two delicate and melodic acoustic ballads, carefully arranged: Play With Fire an aggressive "slow song" for harpsichord and harness bells, and As Tears Go By (September), a tender serenade with a sentimental string section. They are the first signs of a new sensibility.

December's Children (1965), mostly a compilation of already released material, puts the spotlight on the rhythm section of Watts and Wyman, perhaps the greatest of all time.

1965 also marked the persecution of the mass-media, of the moralists and of the authorities: the sexual references were too explicit - in the text as well as in Jagger's mimicking stage performances - their behavior at concerts promoted violence, behind the scene there was incessant talk of drugs. Rooted in the lower classes, Jagger, Richard and Jones knew how to excite the crowd with forceful body language, exploiting the frustrations of the young masses. Trouble followed them everywhere: the pillage of Berlin in 1966 after Jagger's provoking Nazi goose-step, the disturbances from Paris to Vienna, from Cortina to Warsaw, with the police always on alert and the insurance companies refusing to guarantee their concerts. The recurrent trials for illegal drugs made them outlaws or martyrs for the opposing factions of media detractors and infatuated fans. Jagger, Richard and Jones spent a night together in jail. They were convicted and came very close to spending several months in prison.

Actually, by the end of 1965 the Rolling Stones had already accomplished their mission. After having turned upside down the world of music with their sound, their words and their body language, and after having entrusted their name to two immortal pieces (The Last Time, a masterpiece of white rhythm and blues and Satisfaction, a hymn to the frustration of their generation), the five found themselves wanting to remain faithful to their image of bandits but also willing to adjust to the changing times.

Aftermath (Decca, 1966), recorded in Los Angeles in march 1966, is the first album that doesn't showcase only hits and it's also the first entirely composed by Jagger and Richard. With it, the Stones aligned themselves with the wind of newness that blew over rock music and showed the competence required to put together an LP. Another precious and velvety acoustic ballad Lady Jane,with the dulcimer, and a long, pulsating and obsessive jam Going Home, are the most substantial contributions to the new, progressive sound. Under My Thumb set to a marimba rhythm keeps high the banner of the captivating, dirty sound, the image of the macho who enslaves the girl. The more melodic and exciting blues of Out Of Time stretches over a Caribbean rhythm.

Although the Stones still have their sound solidly rooted in black music, as the faithfully rendered High And Dry, Stupid Girl and Doncha Bother Me show, Brian Jones knows how to arrange each piece using instruments such as the dulcimer, the marimbas, the sitar, the flute and all kinds of keyboards.

The progression of the masterpieces at 45rpm keeps going with the loud and epileptic 19th Nervous Breakdown (February) and with the mystical epic Paint It Black (May), which, on the painful notes of the sitar and Jagger's vibrating baritone, lights an historic ode to the disquietude of young people, completing the great trilogy of frustration (with Last Time and Satisfaction).

The blasphemous Indian litany Mother's Little Helper (June), with the chorus "what a drag it is getting old" and drug references, and the cynical sarcasm of Have You Seen Your Mother Baby (September) with psychedelic trumpets and a bacchanal of percussion complete (with 19th Nervous Breakdown) a trilogy of psychotic rock.

That memorable year ends with Let's Spend The Night Together (December), a relentless boogie with an allegedly obscene text (many radio stations will censure the word "night").

The Stones were navigating the road of irreverence, much like a sort of Kinks of the underworld. Their songs are a gallery of characters vile and depraved: neurotics, psychopaths, prostitutes, hooligans, drug addicts.

Between The Buttons (Decca, 1967) and Their Satanic Majesties Request (Decca, 1967), are esoteric and surreal works that attempt to ride the tiger of psychedelia, but they also are perhaps masterpiece compilations.

Buttons puts to use the instrumental chromatism of Aftermath with pieces such as Yesterday's Papers (xylophone and harpsichord), Complicated (tribal drums), Miss Amanda Jones (the most rocking), and Cool Calm & Collected (a Vaudeville-style rag) and Something Happening To Me (played in the style of a 1920s Salvation Army Band). In the proudest acid style there is All Sold Out: a trombone rhythm section, scorched by guitar distortions, piano dissonance and flute improvisations, a stentorian blues and an aggressive refrain. Ruby Tuesday, accompanied by flute counterpointed by contrabass and piano is a form of chamber psychedelia; the refrain, perhaps the simplest of their career, is worthy of the Beatles.

This LP completes the progression toward "album-oriented" production. If Aftermath had provided them with artistic autonomy, Buttons had emancipated them from past styles. The Stones were now on to a varied and original sound.

Their Satanic Majesties Request shows how much they had progressed artistically -holographic jacket, fantastic text, impressive arrangements. Majesties is a milestone of English psychedelia and magical rock, although at times it falls due to mannerism and sensationalism. Majestic, chaotic, poetic and unbalanced, this album (the least "Rolling Stoned" of all the Stones' albums) is a pretentious medley of relentless riffs (Citadel), of catchy melodies (Sing This All Together/I, 2000 Man), and of eccentric arrangements. The deployment of instruments is imposing: harpsichord, flutes, organ, electronic effects, etc. Nicky Hopkins' keyboards contribution is pivotal.

The charm of the album (the charm of Brian Jones, that is) is in bizarre modernist pieces such as the tribal orgy Sing This All Together/II, the oriental inspiration of Gomper, the futuristic electronic effects in 2000 Light Years From Home. The masterpiece She's A Rainbow, fuses the sonic attack of the early Stones' rhythm and blues with psychedelic trumpets, a string session and a musicbox-like piano (Hopkins, again).

In line with that acid/baroque tendency that obsesses over the arrangements - and seems to want to copy The Beatles (guests of honor in the choruses), We Love You (the single of August, with Jones on mellotron), completes the trilogy, along with Ruby and Rainbow, of the Stones' great psychedelic songs, hammering, cacophonous and ethereal, continuing the ascent of melodic and harmonic refinement.

The great creative season of the psychedelic Stones was heading for an early and very tragic end. The real protagonist of that turn of events, Brian Jones, now completely dulled by drugs, was being progressively marginalized, while Jagger kept the mass media busy with his relationship with Marianne Faithful and with plenty of drug charges. Jagger took advantage of these early signals of disintegration to take over the control of the band.

The pretext for change came with student riots.When generational frustrations finally exploded in May 1968, Jagger, making use of his experience as public meddler and bringing the language of the working classes up to date, didn't hesitate to join in. It was the year of Jumping Jack Flash (May) - their first try in the field of belligerent anthems - and of Beggar's Banquet (Decca, 1968), the bluesiest, most socially oriented album of their career.

Beggar's Banquet is the opposite of the two albums that preceded it. It significantly modifies the image of the Stones. As much as Jones had tried to transform them in altar boys, Jagger gives them back the charisma of evil in accordance with the dictates of a more modern blues - masculine, hard, vibrant, syncopated - sustained by the sharp shavings of electric guitar and by the relentless marathon of drums: the powerful Stray Cat Blues, the country-gospel choral Salt Of The Earth and the slowest, most intricate post-war blues Parachute Woman and Prodigal Son. The lyrics speak of sex, drugs, politics. The Stones are the modern outlaws of music, they court the devil and sing by his inspiration, like their legendary black forefathers.

The road was paved by Street Fighting Man, the revolutionary hymn (sequestered for two years by the recording studio), that burst with the most martial riff of Richard's career and cadenced by Watts' war drums. It is surpassed in wickedness only by the demonic tribalism of Sympathy For The Devil - Jagger's last will and testament - thanks to the epic piano phrasing of Hopkins.

>From this moment on, however, the story of The Rolling Stones became a monotonous chronicle of mundane foul deeds and a list of albums always dignified but held together more by undeniable class than by new ideas, a slow, descending parable of hedonism, fetishism, narcissism, bohemianism, aura, erotomania and schizophrenia.

In July 1969 Brian Jones - the sitar of Paint It Black, the dulcimer of Lady Jane, the flute of Ruby Tuesday - was found dead of an overdose in his swimming pool. Neurotic, hallucinated, broken by loneliness and powerlessness, Jones had become a wreck. He had been replaced in the band a month before by Mick Taylor.

In December of the same year, during a concert in Altamont, California the Hell's Angels fueled disturbances that culminated with the death a spectator. At last, Jagger left Marianne Faithful full of drugs (she would attempt suicide shortly after) to marry a model.

By now The Rolling Stones were eccentric multi-millionaires surrounded by a team of managers (to handle their millions), of lawyers (to run from the laws they continuously broke), of technicians (to prepare their concerts), of doctors (to avoid the risk that someone could wind up like Jones).

In those same months came the obscene affront Honky Tonk Women (July), not for nothing one of the most syncopated rhythm and blues of all time, the masterpiece of the Stones rhythm section, to complete the trilogy - with Let's Spend The Night Together and Sympathy For The Devil, of a depraved and blasphemous rock.

Among the most creative blues of the times must be added You Can't Always Get What You Want, introduced by a cappella by choir of children, then immediately underlined by Latin percussions, a jazz piano, a church organ and the London Bach Choir.

At the end of the year the Stone released Let It Bleed (1969), another frenetic and rugged album , featuring Gimme Shelter, a quintessential jam that featured lascivious post-psychedelic guitar counterpoint, pounding pseudo-voodoo rhythm section and profane gospel invocation.

After the death of Brian Jones, their sound became sort of a puritan rhythm and blues, a sound reluctant to accept any instrumental extravaganza.

Through those years The Rolling Stones became by all accounts one of the greatest rock and roll bands. Their continuous concerts established a standard reference for younger bands, a fact not to be overlooked considering that in general the new generation was better served technically than the old one. But that's not the case for The Rolling Stones, who would continue to dominate even when their albums were mediocre. While The Beatles (and many others of their generation) were no longer playing live, realizing their mediocrity as musicians and embarrassed to confront themselves with a much better prepared generation, The Rolling Stones put on the best show on earth.

Sticky Fingers (Rolling Stones, 1971) left behind the psychedelic and avant guard craziness to mark a singular comeback to their blues roots. With this album the Stones found a post-blues format, intellectual yet spartan, vulgar yet elegant, rowdy yet impeccable, lewd yet austere, that would become the classic of classics. The album was much talked about because of its sexy jacket, the zipper designed by Andy Warhol, a metaphor of the contents. It's one of the most explicit and provocative albums of all time, a continuous apology to dependency - from lascivious to self-destructive; a collection of libidinous chants and grim sabbaths to drugs. The animalesque assault of Brown Sugar, one of their best works and a masterpiece of rugged rock is the quintessence of their savage style. Also worthy are the passionate ode Wild Horses and the languid and rarefied Sister Morphine. It's blues, labored blues, ghoulish and romantic, but it's not the blues of the plantations, it's the blues of psychedelic lights. Musically the band achieves an even higher level with the bold and fearless Bitch, a mini jam seven minutes long, and with the conga and sax of Can't You Hear Me Knocking.

The double album Exile On Main Street (Rolling Stones, 1972) completes the maturation. Abandoning all pretenses and concentrating only on their infernal nature, the Stones deliver on the concept of sexual obsession. The songs are luxuriously bacchanalian, syncopated and droll, but the album is self-referential, a sort of museum of the styles absorbed by the Stones sound, from the hiccuping gospel of Tumbling Dice to the visceral, percussive and stentorian funk of Rocks Off. It's a multi-voiced shouting style mostly derived from gospel, with a rumbling jump-blues rhythmic counterpoint of swooping horn blasts and heavy drum rolls. Percussion dominates, albeit in different styles from song to song, along with suggestive instrumental combinations and rhythmic patterns that go well beyond their legendary syncopation. Exemplary are the saraband Happy and the choral decadence of All Down The Line.

The quieter episodes are counterbalanced by a sinister aspect: the solemn and martial blues Torn And Frayed, the frenetic and possessed boogie Turd On The Run, the tribal and demonic serenade Black Angel. The autobiographical choral hymn Soul Survivor seals the work. Perhaps not by chance the best piece is a cover, the captivating dance Hip Shake by Slim Harpo.

Having replaced Taylor - another victim of the band's excesses - with Ron Wood in 1974, the Stones were enticed by reggae and disco, but substantially their music wouldn't change, still solid and gruff as in the beginning but lacking the attitude and the fantasy of earlier times. For the remainder of the decade their albums parade yearly but the singles are not the "chansons de geste" of the past: the struggling Angie (1973) from the mediocre Goat Head's Soup, the anthem It's Only Rock And Roll (1974) from the album of the same name, the disco crossovers Miss You (1978) from Some Girls and Emotional Rescue (1980) from its album. There is nothing worth mentioning from Black And Blue (1976), an album mined from Jagger's passion for reggae.

Schizophrenically stretched between a bourgeois normalcy (home, marriage, hobbies) and the image of heroin addicts afflicted with the "millionaire loneliness syndrome" (permanently engulfed from one side of the world to the other in a sort of consumerist caricature of the road adventures of Henry Miller and Jack Kerouac: entire hotels reserved in their name, million dollars nights of beer and fruit juice, gargantuan dinners) but still able to suck into their tragic vortex groupies and casual friends (plenty killed or grown stupid from drug abuse, from suicide or otherwise ruined), the Stones ascended to living legends, venerated by the media and by fans of every age from every country, masterful as they were in feeding their own cult.

In 1984 they are the first band to gain admission in the Rock'n'Roll Hall of Fame, the shrine of the stars who filled Madison Square Garden. At the end of 1985 keyboardist Ian Stewart, the unofficial sixth member of the group, died. The progressive marginalization of drug addict Ron Wood began. The disagreements and fights between Richard and Jagger filled the papers.

Their later hits pushed their ideology of music for the body to the extreme, preserving only the rhythmical qualities of rhythm and blues, their forte. The compositions, dried to the bone, lost their melodic packaging, submerged completely in the sweat and breath of movement: the hyper-syncopated voluptuous She`s So Cold (1980), the sweeping Start Me Up (1980), ennobled by the beat of the most skin tight rhythm section in the history of music, Undercover Of The Night (1983) from the album of the same name, Had It With You (1984), a quintessential essay on the Stones' ritualism and One Hit To The Body (1986), another hyper-cadenced classic that "sounds" like The Rolling Stones. After that a modernistic coloring seems to erase the might of the band. There is really little to save in Steel Wheels (1989).


The Rolling Stones tabs:

The Rolling Stones - Angie tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - As Tears Go By tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Beast of Burden tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Brown Sugar tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Get off of my cloud tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Gimme Shelter tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Honky tonk women tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - It's only rock'n'roll but I like it tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Jumpin' Jack Flash tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Let's Spend The Night Together tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Midnight Rambler tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Miss You tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Mother's little helper tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Paint it black tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Ruby Tuesday tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Shattered tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Start me up tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Street Fighting Man tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Sympathi for the devil tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Tumbling Dice tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Under my thumb tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - Wild Horses tab and chord

The Rolling Stones - You can't always get what you want tab and chord

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