Track Listing 1. Everybody Needs Somebody to Love - (with Rolling Stones) 2. Down Home Girl - (with Rolling Stones) 3. You Can't Catch Me - (with Rolling Stones) 4. Heart of Stone - (with Rolling Stones) 5. What a Shame - (with Rolling Stones) 6. Mona (I Need You Baby) - (with Rolling Stones) 7. Down the Road Apiece - (with Rolling Stones) 8. Off the Hook - (with Rolling Stones) 9. Pain in My Heart - (with Rolling Stones) 10. Oh Baby (We Got a Good Thing Goin') - (with Rolling Stones) 11. Little Red Rooster - (with Rolling Stones) 12. Surprise, Surprise - (with Rolling Stones)
| Details | | Playing Time: | 35 min. | | Contributing Artists: | Jack Nitzsche | | Producer: | Andrew Loog Oldham, Jody H. Klein (Reissue) | | Distributor: | Universal Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes The Rolling Stones: Mick Jagger (vocals, harmonica); Keith Richards (guitar, background vocals); Brian Jones (guitar, harmonica); Bill Wyman (bass); Charlie Watts (drums). Additional personnel: Ian Stewart (piano, organ); Jack Nitzsche (piano). Recorded at Chess Studios, Chicago, Illinois; RCA Studios, Hollywood, California; Regent Sound, London, England. Includes liner notes by Andrew Loog Oldham. Additional personnel: Jack Nitzche, Ian Stewart (piano). Audio Remasterers: Jon Astley; Bob Ludwig; Steve Rosenthal; Teri Landi; Pascal Byrne. THE ROLLING STONES, NOW! is a masterpiece of early British R&B, Rolling Stones style. Things start off with a powerful rendition of Solomon Burke's signature tune "Everybody Needs Somebody To Love." Elsewhere, the Stones take a tour of American music, from Bo Diddley's "Mona," complete with choppy, reverbed guitar, to a slow, churning version of Willie Dixon's blues evergreen "Little Red Rooster," probably the first version of the song to feature fuzz bass. Amid all this esteemed company, though, the standout tracks are the Jagger-Richards originals. With its heartbreaking lyrics and poignant accompaniment, "Heart of Stone" could have been a classic soul ballad appropriated from some great, obscure American singer. On "What a Shame," the Stones prove that they don't have to look to outside sources for their blues. Keith's penetrating slide here, as on "Little Red Rooster," foreshadows greater things to come.
Editorial Reviews 6 (out of 10) - ...The Stones of '64 and '65 may not have been the world's most accomplished musicians, but they were lean and hungry. There's a lippy arrogance that's best illustrated on ROLLING STONES NOW!, in particular the pasty-faced soul of `Pain In My Heart' and the R&B plod of `Off The Hook'... NME (07/08/1995)
...Sounding fresh and squeaky, the band honors a foundation they would soon destroy and remake in their own image... - Rating: B- Entertainment Weekly (09/20/2002)
6 (out of 10) - ...The Stones of '64 and '65 may not have been the world's most accomplished musicians, but they were lean and hungry. There's a lippy arrogance that's best illustrated on ROLLING STONES NOW!, in particular the pasty-faced soul of `Pain In My Heart' and the R&B plod of `Off The Hook'... NME (07/08/1995)
...Sounding fresh and squeaky, the band honors a foundation they would soon destroy and remake in their own image... - Rating: B-NME (7/8/95, p.46) - 6 (out of 10) - ...The Stones of '64 and '65 may not have been the world's most accomplished musicians, but they were lean and hungry. There's a lippy arrogance that's best illustrated on ROLLING STONES NOW!, in particular the pasty-faced soul of `Pain In My Heart' and the R&B plod of `Off The Hook'... Entertainment Weekly (09/20/2002)
Ranked #181 in Rolling Stone's The 500 Greatest Albums Of All Time Rolling Stone (12/11/2003)
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