Hi Amy, The Rolling Stones channeled the dissatisfaction living among early 60s youth. In those days, there were riots everywhere they performed. For the fans coming to their shows, half of it was about the band, but the other half was about fighting with the police. The roughness of the sound, the empasis on the beat and the overall energy stimulated the early fans in spades. The girls fell in love and fainted, and the boys rioted! They broke down the venue in Scheveningen, Holland in 1964. So "I Can't Get No Satisfaction" was taken as more than a sexual innuendo. Micha
The bass guitarist, Bill Wyman, was rarely flashy, whether in a recording studio or playing like. But like Ringo Starr on drums, Wyman knew what to do with the bass for every song the Stones ever played.
True. But the Stones most iconic songs have Keith playing bass in a more up front style. Jumping Jack Flash and Symphony fot the Devil to name a couple. Bill was a bottom player.
I’m LOVING LOVING these deep dives into artists on weekends as a means to expose you quickly to major artists that you haven’t heard even after a year. Very satisfying for us….and hopefully for you too! 😁
The oft told story is that Keith was sleeping one night, woke up and found his cassette tape recorder and put down the riff to Satisfaction (which was originally supposed to be played on Sax? I read that somewhere) and then promptly fell asleep. Woke up the next morning - saw the tape at the end of the reel, played it back, heard the riff and then 40 minutes of snoring. From the Horses own mouth, this story is.
The riff was done on the first commercial fuzz pedal from a company owned by Gibson called Maestro. The pedal even had a record that advertised it espousing the pedal being able to sound like a tuba or sousaphone etc. He woke up and did the riff but they recorded a rough track where Richards used the fuzz where there were notes to remove it and replace it with horns. I think it was released with the fuzz guitar and Richards didn't expect it to be done.
@@kentl7228And then a couple of years later Otis Redding covered Satisfaction, complete with a brass section playing the riff as Keef had originally envisioned it.
Amy, you said you're not the type to bang your head up and down and be satisfied with that; you're looking for interesting content that stimulates your intellect. But Rock like the Stones produce it, is primarilly a music for the body. It's music to move/dance to! If Rock does that well and really makes you want to move, that's a quality in itself. A quality that you never value in this series. By the way, how the different guitars rhythmically play around each other - they themselves call it "weaving", and it's one of the Stones' trademarks. Micha
When my mother was a teenage girl my grandmother took her to see the Rolling Stones when this song was top of the UK charts. More than 50 years later my mother took me to a Rolling Stones gig as a surprise and they ended the concert with this song.
Amy, it's great to see you finally listen to The Rolling Stones and look forward to when you get to "Sympathy For The Devil", "Jumpin' Jack Flash" and "Paint It Black". Fun Fact: The Beatles wrote their first UK hit song "I Wanna Be Your Man".
It's quite clear from watching this channel that Amy being a classically trained musician helps her get to the heart of what is going on in these songs very quickly, stuff that the average listener just doesn't hear.
Indeed! It's roughly 50 years since I'd have heard the song the first time and I've enjoyed it hundreds of times since. I never noticed the weaving of the lead guitar and bass lines, yet it takes Amy a single listen. Makes me feel like I'm not even worthy to enjoy rock music! 😄 Ah, but at least I had several wonderful hours of dancin' and headbangin' over the years, and I don't care that I didn't know what Keith & Bill & co were really doing.. It's a song that makes the listener want to move, and I sure did!
I think one thing people seem to fail to take into consideration about the "British Invasion" is that, in the early sixties, London and Liverpool had two very different music scenes. London had a more blues dominated scene, with John Mahal, The Yardbirds, and The Rolling Stones among many other examples, while bands like The Searchers, The Hollies, Billy J Kramer and the Dakotas, and The Roadrunners, and others had a more pop oriented and '50s American rock influenced sound. By the end of the decade the lines had blurred, as the musicians were drawn together, (as musician often are.)
You are most engaging host of all the reaction shows . You're loaded with personality and you talk to us like a friend imparting insight and complete openness. I'm a big fan 👍
You may discover, as you delve deeper into the Stones' catalog, and agree with what their former band member, and later road manager/piano player, Ian Stewart fondly called them: "My three chord wonders." Tons of their songs have only a few chords -- but they created tons of classic rock songs with just those few chords.
I think this early version is better than all of the live versions they ever made. It has this touch of youth and innocence and desperation. And you can feel when the singer in the band really means it. Am I right?
I agree. I have lots of live versions of Satisfaction, from all eras, and I don't find in them what made the original studio version so amazing. First of all, the fuzz guitar sound was never reproduced properly live, even though it's the signature of the song.
For me, what made this song such a hit was two things: the fuzz guitar sound which was completely new and electrifying at the time and the lyrics which expressed the frustration of an entire generation. You could dance to this song and shout the lyrics at the same time. To today's ears it's nothing truly groundbreaking, but in 1965 it was. This song really resonated with teenagers and young adults because it expressed in a simple and direct way what they themselves felt and wanted to hear.
As always, I really enjoyed your reaction. I am glad you recognized the importance of the riff in this song, with a good explanation of how the guitar and bass work together for its impact. While I thought Satisfaction would be too simplistic and repetitive for you to fully enjoy and appreciate, it is an important historical marker that really helped to establish the Stones as a major rock band. Like the early Beatles, it provides a good benchmark to compare to their later work. A good starting point to understand the Stones (the bad boys of rock, relative to the Beatles). It had a big impact at the time.
@@scottzappa9314 Thanks. Yeah, a lot of great rock is fairly simple and repetitive. If a song has a great rhythm and groove, along with some catchy riffs and hooks they can be very successful in the rock world. And as you say, a song should always be evaluated in the context of the time of their release. Some songs are timeless and hold up well over time, while others tend to sound dated. The quality of the recording tech also plays a roll.
I think it doesn't matter if the song sounds dated as long as you still love it. Beauty is in the ear. The good thing is many artists still care about sound quality and make great albums, and the best they can do on CD's. Neil Young and Tool being 2 examples.
@@scottzappa9314 Yeah, I like a lot of songs that sound dated, mostly since I grew up with them and can relate to the time. I have noticed though that younger listeners tend to relate more to those songs I consider timeless. I am a huge Neil Young fan (my all time favorite artist in fact) and have been since the late 60s when I was still a kid. For me, he is one of the greatest singer-songwriters ever, which of course depends on how well somebody personally relates to the lyrics and music. He has continued to put out great stuff over all the decades since. I am also a Tool fan, but that of course came much later.
I agree with all of that, you tend to like what you grew up with. I LOVE Tool now, especially Danny Carey since I used to try to play drums. Neil is of course Legendary, I like the other great song writers like Joni Mitchell and Billy Joel. Yes, the youngins today are digging all the great older music, my opinion is it's close to universally appealing, music experts and casual listeners alike. But it's still almost hard to believe that somebody is hearing Stairway to Heaven for the first time, LOL.
Back at the time The Beatles image was promoted as the good, clean boys while The Rolling Stones image was promoted as the bad boys. The Beatles were in matching suits while The Stones wore street clothes. The Beatles were singing love songs while The Stones were singing street/real life/ blues-based songs. Everyone had their own voice because you now had singer/song writers as opposed to songs by writing teams being given to singers.
The goodness is partly in the subtlety of just how the sections compliment each other and how each section is the exact right length before it gets trite, and then it moves into the next section. I think that was one of or the first uses of fuzz guitar too. It still sounds like one of the best examples of tone. It's a horn section, an angry animal, a call to arms, an anthem. You can get lost in the tiny subtleties of the song. There's so much going on and nothing is wrong. It's all right. It's similar to Come Together, by the Beatles in that every note is needed and makes the song better, and the recording is great for what it is and the timing and tightness is great.
I'm so happy you finally got to the Stones, the quintessential rock and roll band. Putting out great rock for the last 6 decades. They are just about to release their 24th studio album in October, and they just released a video of the album's single "Angry" 8 days ago and it is already at 14 million views. They are number 1 on the current pre-order charts, with Ren at number 2 for his Sick Boi album which is also coming out in October. Ren said in his latest livestream that he never imagined that one day he would be number 2 following the Stones. Pretty cool that the Rolling Stones weekend should be the same weekend that you hit 100K. Another great choice for these Special Weekends.
@@splitimage137. Very excited since it is one of my favorites of theirs during their late 60s period (2nd to Gimme Shelter). I also think "Gimme Shelter" would be more musically interesting for Amy, but still thrilled she is doing Sympathy. Satisfaction is a good start due to its historical importance, although probably too simplistic and repetitive for Amy's tastes.
@@LeeKennison Satisfactions appeal has almost nothing to do with its technical musicality. It’s sound and attitude with some notes used for a little movement to get the energy going.
Released in June 1965-the same year I graduated from High School-when i first heard it on the AM radio station I was just blown away-it spoke to every kid who graduated that year-that opening riff by Keith Richard just grabbed you. Then that drum fill in the middle of the song by Charlie Watts was dynamite. Still my all-time favorite song--Mick was telling all of us teenagers that he felt the same way as we did felt then-Can't get No Satisfaction.
this song is a good example of how much bands rely on a steady drummer to follow. the hardest (and most important) job a drummer can do is to simply keep a steady beat. the bass and rhythm guitar can use the beat to work against, sometimes putting notes just a little before or after the beat to get the right feel. charlie watts was never a showman like neil peart or buddy rich, but he did one thing consistently and reliably every time.
I am so shocked at your clarity of description of sound. at 6 mim in your face was so animated I was trying to think what was going on inside. Were you thinking the people that like this noise are neanderthals or what. The when you describe the music you seem to explain why is it so attracting to us even in its simple sounds because of the flipped riff to bass, although maybe you want to throw us head bangers a bone. Any case you are incredible to watch, so Fun, D
Thank you for your amazing insights! I’m a huge Stones fan and I’ve listened to this song in particular many, many times and I’ve I never caught that interplay between the base and guitar. Keith Richards often said that Bill Wyman was a great bassist and maybe this is a great illustration of that. To understand the song even more, you have to understand that, while Keith did wake up from a slumber with the riff in his head and recorded it on a cassette player he had sitting nearby, he initially intended it to be played on horns,not a guitar. Otis Redding later covered the song with horns playing the riff, if you’re ever curious to hear what that sounds like. In any case, when it came to recording the song, Keith recorded his guitar into a tape recorder again, then played the cassette through an amplifier to capture the final fuzzy sound in the riff. I was surprised that you didn’t pick up on that because that is also what gives this song it’s unique quality. To fully appreciate the impact of this song, you really have to understand the times in which it was released. Due to the untimely death of Buddy Holly and Elvis Presley being drafted into the US Army, the bebop era of rock ‘n roll came to a rather sudden end just as baby boomers were coming to the forefront, and they wanted a new sound. In swept The Beatles with their Mersey sound and gentle ballads about wanting to hold your hand and just wanting to dance with you. Meanwhile, down in London, far away from Liverpool, another group of boys formed a band with roots deeply steeped in American Blues music which always had a grittier, more rudimentary sound. By the time we get to Satisfaction, The Stones have refined their sound and image.. They’re playing into the counter-culture of the time and the kids are eating it up. Mick doesn’t want to just hold hands, he wants to meet up and get some satisfaction but the girl’s just at that time of the month where she’s on losing streak so she asks him to come back next week. This clear allusion to sex didn’t slide by the critics which is why this song was reviled and so was the band, something they would bear (but thrive in) for many decades to come as they were labelled “the bad boys of rock ‘n roll” and were instrumental in the coining of the phrase “sex, drugs, and rock ‘n roll”. Anyway, I’ve gone on long enough. Enjoy the weekend! Can’t wait for you to get to Gimme Shelter, Jumpin’ Jack Flash, or Sympathy for the Devil.
Amy, I am looking forward to your videos of this weekend! For They, them were right Amy (who is They, it's always "they did it"), you CAN NOT claim to study modern/rock music, be in that journey and skip The Stones, can not be done, period. I am reminded of an interview with Keith Richard that I watched and the interviewer asked: Mister Richard, what is to you the pure essence of what Rock 'n Roll is? Keith Richard halted for a brief moment, maybe one second while he thought, and then answered in a thick British accent: "Me". For a moment I thought that that was quite an assumptious answer, thinks quite highly of himself but after thinking it through a bit deeper I concluded that the answer was about as good and, dare I say, accurate as any. Keith Richard and Mick Jagger were part of the unofficial, unstructured delegation, so to speak, of young British University studentS who traveled to the US, got lost in the deep south and ended up in these black entertainment shacks where black musicians played the purest forms of blues music for audiences of their own. Amazed and mesmerized were these British youngsters. They went back home, told others about their experiences and started to play this blues music in faster tempos and putting a white civilization spin on it. And British Rock was born. You're not going to get complexity from The Stones. They've done a lot musically, covered a lot of ground, but underneath is always very recognizable, the American Black folks rhythm 'n blues music. In the mid 80's they even jumped on The Disco bandwagon with the "Some Girls" album, but even it stringed on rhythm 'n blues foundations. Satisfaction contains one of the most recognizable riffs known in rock and that before riffs were a thing. If produced today it would go nowhere and you can study it musically, and, as always, I appreciate what you've done, But this song is a vibe, imagine hearing it on the radio when it was current, and while you live as a youngster, with this song on the radio you decide what cool jeans jacket you're going to buy, with the necklace that has an aluminum piece emblem, discussing with your friends what you're going to do on the weekend. Your school "day/date agenda" has photos of The Rolling Stones in it, stores sell posters of this band. You hear news flashes of what The Stones are doing this week and what troubles they're getting into. While The Beatles are relatively clean cut, not offensive in any way to any 14 year old girl, The Stones have a right image of, and here's a new rock 'n roll term for you, "Nasty" in their music/act. A Bad boy element. Today, 50-60 years later The Rolling Stones is a commodity, but not just a money value type of commodity, they are an institution, a representation of what rock 'n roll, in its purity is, a celebration of all what inspired The British rock invasion. THE ROLLING STONES ARE A STANDARD, MAYBE THE STANDARD!
There’s a whole genre of classical musicians reacting to pop and rock on UA-cam (a couple of composers, a flute player, a singer and vocal coach who even got into harsh vocals), and the jarring thing is that they NEVER find anything negative or boring. This is the only one that ever says “this is very basic, not creative”. I think they’re afraid to alienate audience. The classical-reacts crowd seems to have all made a video on Camel’s “Rhayader/Rhayader goes to town” The Daily Doug even made two (one of an excellent live version and one of the entire studio album). It’s a fun track in the style of Genesis and Emerson Lake and Palmer. It also has no vocals (although other songs by the band have). You’ll certainly find things to appreciate (it has a kind of fancy ABCA structure; the flute has a way of starting from a slow intro naturally into the faster rock thing). There’s also aspects in which it’s overrated (Latimer became an amazing guitar soloist over time, but there he’s a lot more… basic… than people think.) Vlad, do keep up with the Joneses ;)
I think you have to look at 'Satisfaction' in the context of the time when it was written. In the period preceeding it the aim was to get a clean tone on the electric guitar but this song was one of the first to purposely use a distorted, or 'fuzz', tone on the guitar. To achieve this 'fuzz' effect guitar players would physically damage their speakers with razor blades although later this effect would be created via a less destructive electric circuit. Another early example of this effect being used is in The Kinks' 'You Really Got Me'. These two songs would've seemed rather exciting to young ears used to a clean and ringing guitar tone.
Charles Robert Watts (2 June 1941 - 24 August 2021) was an English musician. He was the drummer of the Rolling Stones from 1963 until his death in 2021. Originally trained as a graphic artist, Watts developed an interest in jazz at a young age and joined the band Blues Incorporated. He also started playing drums in London's rhythm and blues clubs, where he met future bandmates Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and Brian Jones. In January 1963, he left Blues Incorporated and joined the Rolling Stones as drummer, while doubling as designer of their record sleeves and tour stages. Watts' first public appearance as a permanent member was in February 1963; he remained with the band for 58 years until his death, at which time he, Jagger and Richards were the only members of the band to have performed on every one of their studio albums. Mick Jagger and Keith Richards both went to the same school in Dartford, Kent, England. In September 1950, Keith Richards and Jagger first met as classmates at Wentworth Primary School in Dartford, prior to the Jagger family's 1954 move to Wilmington, Kent. The same year he passed the eleven-plus examination and attended Dartford Grammar School, which now has the Mick Jagger Centre performing arts venue. Jagger and Richards lost contact with each other when they went to different schools. Jagger met Richards again on 17 October 1961 on Platform Two of Dartford railway station. Wikipedia.
Stones music is much more spontaneous than when, for example, David Byrne tries to fuse Pop with Latin rhythms, or Paul Simon does it with African rhythms. Their work is good, but one cannot help but notice the "hybrid" at all times... They approached from a more academic, almost anthropological side. The Stones, on the other hand, approached the phenomenon more willing for it to invade and penetrate them. And not taking distance. They were not like Byrne: them on one side and ethnicity on the other. They made a kind of 'minestrone', in which you end up not knowing which came first. This is why Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley were very comfortable with what they did with their music and their songs. And it is the main reason why they are constantly cited in the most serious books, notes and documentaries dealing with the evolution of Blues with all its enormous and rich history, as keys and indispensable links between the ancestral roots, and the modern music charts.
It's worth noting that The Beatles gave The Stones their first hit " I Wanna Be Your Man ". Apparently John and Paul wrote it on the spot when The Stones came to visit them at their recording studio. Seeing this inspired Mick and Keith to start writing their own songs. The Beatles also released their version of it, but most people seem to prefer The Stones version.
One interesting intersection between the Beatles and The Rolling Stones is that John Lennon and Paul McCartney wrote their first hit, “I Want to Be Your Man.” It’s interesting to compare the version the Beatles recorded (from “With the Beatles”) and the version the Stones recorded. The Stones version is much glitter and more bluesy. Interestingly, it was watching Lennon and McCartney compose the song on the spot when asked that inspired Mick Jagger and Keith Richards to try their hand at songwriting. Satisfaction is an early Jagger-Richards song and, as you noted, it is rather simple. However, like all the great rock bands of this era, their songwriting improved quickly and incorporated a variety of styles. Overall, the Stones are bluesy with a strong dollop of country but they composed in many other genres too, especially in the mid-60s.
Maybe the most typical blues move would be to use a minor third over a major harmony. This bass line is no exception. 😇 I wish you hit the 100K subscribers this weekend! Cheers!
For my Junior year sock hop, in '65, the local band learned this that afternoon, so they could play it that night. It was that immediate a hit. Now try 'Wild Horses', Angie', and 'Can't You Hear Me Knockin'.
Satisfaction had an immeasurable impact on us adolescent boys in 1965. Keith Richard's fuzz tone guitar was dramatically insistent and the lyrics resonate with our passions. Unlike their pop music competitors,The Beatles, the Rolling Stones roots were as a Rhythm and Blues band. With this song, the Stones drew a line in the sand, distinguishing themselves as the bad boys of rock and roll.
That riff is Keith Richards experimentng with an early device called a fuzz box. Keith thought the song needed horns, so he recorded that melody line with the fuzz box as a guide for the horns to be put on later. They ended up liking the version with the fuzz box and never bothered with the horns. If you want to hear a version with horns, there's a cover version of the song by Otis Redding.
The bass is playing the bass harmony as well. The riff is one of the most memorable in rock and roll (and one of the earliest guitar riffs featuring a fuzz tone pedal) however this music isn't meant to be analyzed but danced to.
I remember when Satisfaction came out and I was so taken by the riff and the song. My memory is also that the Stones were the first to take singles beyond 3:00 minutes. In this video you cleared up a mystery for me! I have listened to the Stones for many years, and in spite of my tastes for prog and more complex music, I never tire of them. Their songs seem simple, and even rough, yet interesting and complex in some sort of way that I don't tire of them. I think I got a clue on how they did that from your analysis. Try out "Gimme Shelter" when you can!
Their best song is You Can't Always Get What You Want (1969). Featuring the London Bach Choir, French horn and bongos. Charlie Watts couldn't play the drum groove, so Jimmy Miller played it.
I was unable to be a part of the live chat. And Vlad will probably bring this up or has brought this up. When they were coming up with a name for the band Brian Jones saw a Muddy Waters album and said Rolling Stones. It's a great name for a band but the guys did have their trepidation about it. They thought people would think it's corny or cheeky to name their band after a song. They thought they would really hear it from American audiences. When they came to the U.S. people asked them about the name. They were taken aback by the fact that the white audiences didn't know who Muddy Waters was or knew what song they were talking about. They thought if they knew these things so would every white American fan of Rock and Roll. As a result of this, three significant things happened to make Blues fully enter the realm of American commercial music. 1. The Rolling stones were asked to do an American TV show called Shindig. This was a show that young Rock and Roll fans would watch. They agreed to do the show with one stipulation. That was to feature one of their idols Howlin' Wolf. That was the first time a lot of America's youth were introduced to the Blues as well as one of the most important names in blues. If you watch it on UA-cam and I hope you do, for your own knowledge you will see the Rolling Stones sitting around the stage absorbing Howlin' Wolf's every move. It's a very important TV event in American cultural history. 2. It brought new life, recognition and fame to a lot of Blues bands and players. When the Rolling Stones hit big in the U.S. the Blues bands were experiencing a drop in popularity, and money. Especially in Britain everyone wanted to see and hear these Blues bands that were so special and influential to the groups they were listening to such as The Rolling Stones, Jeff Beck, Clapton, the Animals. Also the album oriented FM stations along with the usual Stones or Beatles or Pink Floyd songs would also play Muddy Waters or B.B. King etc. And they would promote their concerts and do interviews with them. Album oriented FM stations had a big tent back then. Muddy Waters did a concert tour in England the coveted hottest gig was to be the band to tour with him. Everyone wanted it. The band that actually received that honor was Eric Burdon and the Animals. 3. All this renewed life to the American Blues music made it easier for other Blues and riff based music to get recognition and popularity. I love the Rolling Stones I love...most of their music. But I think getting Howlin' Wolf on Shindig was their finest hour.
I'm so glad you brought this important facet of the Stones story up. It is an example of how culturally important the Stones were to their times. They absorbed the blues and brought it back to America, particularly white Americans who were unaware of the blues, since many of the radio stations refused to play them. There is a great documentary here on UA-cam called "Blues Story: A Documentary" that covers the blues from early Delta blues of the 30s through the Chicago blues of the 50s. It also covers this aspect of the story on how much of an impact the Stones had in promoting the blues and blues greats in America.
You have captured the essence of the Stones. Basic, simple head-bobbing music. I always appreciate your analysis. Especially since I've never found the Stones to be the most exciting band in the Rock pantheon, but I do respect their place in its history.
Great reaction and analysis, Amy. From what I understand, the Rolling Stones rhythm section, bass - Bill Wyman and drums - Charlie Watts, were known studio musicians before joining the Stones, for some early American Blues artists, such as Muddy Waters, and they were a little older than Keith, Mick and Brian Jones. The Sones have a very American Blues influence plus other music influences, country, disco, psychedelic...
Charlie was a jazz drummer who played with Alexis Korner. He never played with Muddy Waters before The Stones. Bill had never recorded anything before The Stones.
The Rolling Stones have a new single and album out this week, the Single is called Angry and the album is called Hackney Diamonds. I've seen the Rolling stones live 3 times and their greatest strength is their live performances.
Did their just-released new song inspire you to take a dive into The Stones? Along with The Beatles, The Beach Boys, Led Zeppelin, and Dylan, The Rolling Stones are one of the most important rock/pop artists of the past 60 years.
I wonder when you'll listen to "Gimme Shelter." It's considered one of the most powerful war protest songs of all times, and the voice of back-up singer Merry Clayton just blew the mind of Mick Jagger; it was so utterly fantastic. The Rolling Stones became so successful because they were so accessible.
What rocked our world with this song was the use of the fuzz tone, when this came out that summer. While such guitar effects are central to rock'n'roll after this time, this was the introduction. They didn't invent the fuzz box, and the sound certainly builds on the Beatles' use of feedback the year before on 'I Feel Fine', but they take the tone and run with it. It's the sound of ripping the fabric of society, a process the Beatles and the Stones led in a good cop bad cop fashion. It may be difficult to grasp the affect these rough tones had on popular music now because we take them for granted, but to hear that rude riff rip out of the am radio in your parents car was lifechanging. To be fair, this is the essential nature or intent of rock and roll and these effects build on guitar styles of American blues for sure. But 'Satisfaction' was a huge mile post in the evolution of this rough sound. It was then incubated by US underground groups, particularly in San Francisco, and finally went mainstream with breakout musicians like Hendrix, the Cream, Lead Zeppelin and such.
Well Gimme Shelter HAS to be one of the songs on your deep dive. Perhaps the song in their huge catalogue that seems to blow away younger reactors these days. That and Sympathy for the Devil.
If anyone tells you that the Beatles and the Stones were in a feud, they were not. They were friends. I loved both groups and still do. If you would like to hear how they evolved, listen to Sympathy for the Devil or Honky Tonk Women from their later albums. My personal favorite of theirs is As Tears Go By, which is from an early album but has some good symphonic music in it. It’s a sad song about loneliness but I used to just get lost in the music.
1965 was a pivotal year in rock music and this song struck a nerve. Musically it’s much like Link Wray in the fifties and the lyrics were probably inspired by Dylan. This song is kind of when rock and roll turned into rock music.
I agree, the lyrics are more Dylan like than Beatles like (at the time). Great observation on the development of rock. Chuck Berry also had a big impact (particularly on Keith). Did you ever see the concert/documentary Keith organized to honor Chuck?
@@LeeKennison yes that’s good and funny. Thanks. It’s interesting that all those guys born around 1940-45 were copying the same half dozen songs when they were starting out and then all those bands developed distinctive styles and sound. It was like an explosion.
@@Hartlor_Tayley By the way, I almost missed your post since you changed your profile image. You should take old men such as myself into consideration before such drastic actions. 😉With my old eyes it is the profile image that tends to catch my eyes rather than the smaller name print. Your old image really stood out.
I'll be interested to see what else you decide to listen to. Lot of great choices with very different feels. There were different eras of the band. The albums with Mick Taylor on guitar in addition to Keith Richards are considered by many to be their best.
This song is notable for the “fuzz” sound in the main riff. 1965 is the cusp of a big change in guitar sound. The Beatles used a fuzz bass on a song from Rubber Soul (“Think for Yourself”) but the sound was still relatively new. Distorted guitars had shown up occasionally in the past but usually due to a mistake and they were still a bit of a novelty (“Rocket 88” by Ike Turner with Jackie Brenton; “Don’t Worry” by country singer Marty Robbins; “I Just Don’t Understand” by Ann-Margaret and “You Really Got Me” by the Kinks). The fuzz tone in this song was very deliberate and represented changes that were coming in guitar amp technology. The “distorted” guitar would be made mainstream by Jimi Hendrix and quickly change the sound of rock music, as you will clearly hear as you move through the Beatles’s catalog. On Rubber Soul, there is on song with fuzz guitar; on the next album (recorded only a few months later) you will hear fuzz guitars throughout. The Stones were masters of the guitar and early adopters of the distorted guitar sound. It was both the guitar sound and the guitar riff that made this song stand out in 1965. The very satirical lyrics (“he can’t be a man because he doesn’t smoke the same cigarettes as me”) added to the charm of the song.
Always pay attention to when songs came out. A lot of the groups from the 60’s hung out together and listened to each others music and built songs more and more complex as the years went on. Just like early Beatles is simple compared to last songs by the Beatles. They grew and evolved over time and listen more i their peers. You can see some old videos of Mick Jagger hanging out with the Beatles and I think on Audio that one of the Beatles was raving about Led Zeppelin’s first album. Cheers.
The bass always works as an anchor between the rhythm and melodic/harmonic Instruments. And in this case that Motown-influenced Bill Wyman's bass line did its magic maybe without even thinking about it. And yes, music doesn't have to be over complicated or virtuosic to be good. It's a matter of good taste
Bill Wyman was a brilliant bassist - Charlie Watts, the drummer, was heavily influenced by jazz - all contributing to a differing Invasion sound compared to groups like the Beatles and the Dave Clark Five
It was the guitar tone (fuzz guitar) that made this stand out so much when it came out in the summer of 1965. This was new to all the young music fans' ears... and took everyone by storm.
I wouldn’t say I’m a fan and I never pick their music out to listen to. Having said this, I know all the words to a ton of their songs and could easily name a lot of them off the top of my head. I know the names of at least 4 band members and would easily recognize their faces from any point in their careers. They are absolutely deserving of their reputation and place in rock history. Definitely a must for your rock journey.
I really hope you watch a live performance of Satisfaction, Amy. I really think the Stones are best appreciated along with the visual component. I think the emotion comes through so much more clearly if you can see Mick's body and facial expression.
A whole weekend of Stones? Gosh, I hope one of the other songs is either 'Emotional Rescue' or 'Start Me Up' ! 😀👍 And this song, 'Satisfaction', supposedly had come to guitarist Keith Richards in a dream 😊
@@theghostofsw6276 - Well, that might just be the difference between us two then, because I do like Freddie Mercury a lot! 😁 In _my_ book, the Stones have just as many bad songs as they have good ones; It'd be fine with me if Amy chose one of those two you mentioned 😉👍
Great work as always! I recommend sticking with the 60´s Stones for an interesting listening experience. Paint It Black, Mother´s Little Helper, Street Fighting Man and Gimme Shelter (for instance) are so much more than just rock´n´roll.
The Stones are one of those absolutely monolithic bands however they kept it together and because of that they kept touring and playing good music for over 60 years.
The "Stones" turned up when I was in the 3 rd. grade in 1961 and was an instant fan. Watching the music as it was being released gave my crew of friends the freedom of expression that had been squashed for generations.
As you say, a very simple song and the interest supplied by the different guitar and bass lines certainly helps avoid monotony. Its also worth noting that the fuzz guitar tone on that main riff was so revolutionary and startling at the time (at least on a mainstream record) that it was probably enough in itself to hold people’s interest and ensure the song’s place in rock history!
Like the Beatles and most music of this time dancing was a big thing. This song is definitely a danceable tune...it also heralds the beginning of stoner music that was more heady with timing and tempo changes. Rock goes psychedelic...from there comes prog rock. 😊
I'm the same age as this song. It feels like my birthday song. Mick used to say that if he was still singing Satisfaction when he was 50, he would kill himself. Now he's 80.
Similarly, a young Paul McCartney said he can't imagine he'd still play Beatles songs when he's 40. He then thought he'd only have enough energy to be a Sinatra-type crooner when he's THAT OLD! Eventually we all learn that it's only the body that ever grows old. Oh, yes, let's not forget Pete Townshend and his "I hope I die before I get old"... How naive we all are/were in our youth!
Yay! So glad you've finally got to the Stones. Love your break down of this song. Lol...Don't leave me behind, don't leave me behind. Hey Hey Hey. It's official. You're a rock n roller. If you're going to spend the weekend with the Stones, there are sooo many great songs, but may I suggest "Can't You Hear Me Knocking". The guitar intro is so gritty, so dirty and pure rock n roll. I'd love to hear you break it down and watch your reaction. Thank you!
Amy, you are so perceptive and so good at explaining details that non-musicians would not notice and why they enhance the music. Now please, please review "You can´t always get what you want" and other songs from Let It Bleed, one of the greatest pop music albums of all time. You will like it, I´m sure, and we will love your review.
An interesting follow up song to Satisfaction would be The Police’s ‘Every breath you take.’ Great analysis of one of the most iconic songs of the 20th century!
Paul McCartney said 'God Only Knows’ is one of the few songs that reduces me to tears every time I hear it. Amy, would be nice a Beach Boys song to react. I love Brian Wilson.
Happy that you got to the Stones! Even though they're not my favourite band, they made some of my favourite songs ever. Mick Jagger is not a crazy technical singer, but he's a hell of a performer and his way of singing is extremely expressive (you'll find out with songs like Sympathy for the Devil and Angie).
When Keith Richards brought in the song "Satisfaction" to the group, he had used an early model fuzz box to create the sound of the main riff on the demo. He had used it to represent the sound of a sax, which he thought should play the riff. Instead of switching to a sax, they kept the unique guitar sound, and "Satisfaction" became one of the first hit songs to use an external guitar effects pedal. This was at the forefront of the search for ways to manipulate electric guitar tones.
Keith Richards claims that this riff came to him in the middle of the night (possibly in a dream), he got up, sang it into a tape recorder & in the morning woke up to the tape of the riff & 45 minutes of snoring. He says he always heard it as a horn riff. Oatis Reading later did a cover with horns. It's one of the 1st pop/rock songs to use a distortion box on the guitar, which inspired an entire generation of guitarists. The "I'm trying to make some girl" line was incredibly suggestive in a pop song in 1965. Possibly even more in the US than other parts of the world. Keep in mind this is a few years prior to music like Jimi Hendrix, The Doors, Janis Joplin etc. In 64/65 the majority of pop music was still very clean cut, boys and girls holding hands, puppy love kind of stuff.
I think you missed the lyrical content in your listen. This is more a comment on our society than anything else and I personally think that is what made it a hit. (aside from the musical parts you mentioned) First talking about how advertising was affecting society " telling me more and more, about some useless information supposed to drive my imagination" then "a man comes on and tells me how white my shirts should be, but he can't be a man cause he doesn't smoke the same cigarettes as me" and how that whole media thing affected courting girls in the last verse. I remember hearing this and thinking, Yeah they got that right. The other part that you mentioned was the "oboe" sound of the guitar. Many bands were beginning to experiment with sound at that time. I heard/or read, that the way they got that sound was by using a screwdriver to poke a hole in the speaker and then driving the speaker at a higher volume. This was the beginning of the use of distortion in rock at that time. From which later Heavy Metal was developed.
Interesting to see reviewers trying to understand the 60s with the now dominant view that it was all about The Beatles. At the time one question was "Beatles or Stones, who do you like/follow". They were equal competitors for fans, with possible 50 or 100 slightly lesse maybe bands. There was also no "mainstream media" other than top of the pops. Pirate Radio was the music scene and caused the starting of BBC Radio 1.
In terms of their public image, the Beatles were the Nice Boys and the Stones were the Bad Boys. (It's worth bearing in mind that at the time this was released, rock was considered "kiddie music".) I would like to see you react to a later Stones song. They never got prog or anything like that, but some of their stuff is a bit more complex than this.
I love that it's 2023 and we're seeing a professional musician, no less, listen to "Satisfaction" for the very first time.
Hi Amy,
The Rolling Stones channeled the dissatisfaction living among early 60s youth. In those days, there were riots everywhere they performed. For the fans coming to their shows, half of it was about the band, but the other half was about fighting with the police. The roughness of the sound, the empasis on the beat and the overall energy stimulated the early fans in spades. The girls fell in love and fainted, and the boys rioted! They broke down the venue in Scheveningen, Holland in 1964.
So "I Can't Get No Satisfaction" was taken as more than a sexual innuendo.
Micha
The bass guitarist, Bill Wyman, was rarely flashy, whether in a recording studio or playing like. But like Ringo Starr on drums, Wyman knew what to do with the bass for every song the Stones ever played.
True. But the Stones most iconic songs have Keith playing bass in a more up front style. Jumping Jack Flash and Symphony fot the Devil to name a couple. Bill was a bottom player.
@@tomslick2058sympathy for the Devil is actually Keith Richards on Bass
I’m LOVING LOVING these deep dives into artists on weekends as a means to expose you quickly to major artists that you haven’t heard even after a year. Very satisfying for us….and hopefully for you too! 😁
Amazing analysis. I’ve never understood why with such a simple riff the song is addictive rather than monotonous - this is explains it!!
Bill would love this. He always said songs need a bottom. But I will argue Woods bass on Shattered is fantastic. Played more like a lead guitar.
Complexity does not imply quality, and simplicity is often a virtue.
The oft told story is that Keith was sleeping one night, woke up and found his cassette tape recorder and put down the riff to Satisfaction (which was originally supposed to be played on Sax? I read that somewhere) and then promptly fell asleep. Woke up the next morning - saw the tape at the end of the reel, played it back, heard the riff and then 40 minutes of snoring. From the Horses own mouth, this story is.
Some say there is a lost recording of this song that features the snoring
but because it was longer than 3 minutes 45 it wasn't commercial
I've read the same story on this riff by Keith.
The riff was done on the first commercial fuzz pedal from a company owned by Gibson called Maestro. The pedal even had a record that advertised it espousing the pedal being able to sound like a tuba or sousaphone etc. He woke up and did the riff but they recorded a rough track where Richards used the fuzz where there were notes to remove it and replace it with horns. I think it was released with the fuzz guitar and Richards didn't expect it to be done.
@@kentl7228And then a couple of years later Otis Redding covered Satisfaction, complete with a brass section playing the riff as Keef had originally envisioned it.
@@riklionheart23 Cool. I didn't know that. Thanks.
At last, I've found a musician who explains how the music works. Thanks.
Amy, you said you're not the type to bang your head up and down and be satisfied with that; you're looking for interesting content that stimulates your intellect. But Rock like the Stones produce it, is primarilly a music for the body. It's music to move/dance to! If Rock does that well and really makes you want to move, that's a quality in itself. A quality that you never value in this series.
By the way, how the different guitars rhythmically play around each other - they themselves call it "weaving", and it's one of the Stones' trademarks.
Micha
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
When my mother was a teenage girl my grandmother took her to see the Rolling Stones when this song was top of the UK charts.
More than 50 years later my mother took me to a Rolling Stones gig as a surprise and they ended the concert with this song.
Amy, it's great to see you finally listen to The Rolling Stones and look forward to when you get to "Sympathy For The Devil", "Jumpin' Jack Flash" and "Paint It Black".
Fun Fact: The Beatles wrote their first UK hit song "I Wanna Be Your Man".
"Sympathy" is in my opinion not a good choice. "Gimme Shelter" is musically far more interesting.
@stefan_becker over time, I have become convinced Gimme Shelter is their greatest song.
I would add either Angie or Wild Horses to get a different side to their music...
@@heartoftherosewithout a doubt, and I've of the greatest rock songs of all be time.
It's quite clear from watching this channel that Amy being a classically trained musician helps her get to the heart of what is going on in these songs very quickly, stuff that the average listener just doesn't hear.
Indeed! It's roughly 50 years since I'd have heard the song the first time and I've enjoyed it hundreds of times since. I never noticed the weaving of the lead guitar and bass lines, yet it takes Amy a single listen. Makes me feel like I'm not even worthy to enjoy rock music! 😄 Ah, but at least I had several wonderful hours of dancin' and headbangin' over the years, and I don't care that I didn't know what Keith & Bill & co were really doing.. It's a song that makes the listener want to move, and I sure did!
This was a staple of local cover bands at high school/college dances at the time.
I think one thing people seem to fail to take into consideration about the "British Invasion" is that, in the early sixties, London and Liverpool had two very different music scenes. London had a more blues dominated scene, with John Mahal, The Yardbirds, and The Rolling Stones among many other examples, while bands like The Searchers, The Hollies, Billy J Kramer and the Dakotas, and The Roadrunners, and others had a more pop oriented and '50s American rock influenced sound. By the end of the decade the lines had blurred, as the musicians were drawn together, (as musician often are.)
You are most engaging host of all the reaction shows . You're loaded with personality and you talk to us like a friend imparting insight and complete openness. I'm a big fan 👍
You may discover, as you delve deeper into the Stones' catalog, and agree with what their former band member, and later road manager/piano player, Ian Stewart fondly called them: "My three chord wonders." Tons of their songs have only a few chords -- but they created tons of classic rock songs with just those few chords.
Lou Reed once said, “One chord is fine, two chords is pushing it, three chords and you're into jazz”
I think this early version is better than all of the live versions they ever made. It has this touch of youth and innocence and desperation. And you can feel when the singer in the band really means it. Am I right?
Yea. Keith never got that fuzz tone sound live that he had on the record. To me, that's vital.
I agree. I have lots of live versions of Satisfaction, from all eras, and I don't find in them what made the original studio version so amazing. First of all, the fuzz guitar sound was never reproduced properly live, even though it's the signature of the song.
Still it is funny though, that she never gets the importance of the words....
During the creation of the Stones they covered American blues classics. That was a key to their sound and success for decades.
For me, what made this song such a hit was two things: the fuzz guitar sound which was completely new and electrifying at the time and the lyrics which expressed the frustration of an entire generation. You could dance to this song and shout the lyrics at the same time. To today's ears it's nothing truly groundbreaking, but in 1965 it was. This song really resonated with teenagers and young adults because it expressed in a simple and direct way what they themselves felt and wanted to hear.
As always, I really enjoyed your reaction. I am glad you recognized the importance of the riff in this song, with a good explanation of how the guitar and bass work together for its impact. While I thought Satisfaction would be too simplistic and repetitive for you to fully enjoy and appreciate, it is an important historical marker that really helped to establish the Stones as a major rock band. Like the early Beatles, it provides a good benchmark to compare to their later work. A good starting point to understand the Stones (the bad boys of rock, relative to the Beatles). It had a big impact at the time.
Good description, it's not overly complex. It also should be taken in the context of the time it found itself in.
@@scottzappa9314 Thanks. Yeah, a lot of great rock is fairly simple and repetitive. If a song has a great rhythm and groove, along with some catchy riffs and hooks they can be very successful in the rock world. And as you say, a song should always be evaluated in the context of the time of their release. Some songs are timeless and hold up well over time, while others tend to sound dated. The quality of the recording tech also plays a roll.
I think it doesn't matter if the song sounds dated as long as you still love it. Beauty is in the ear. The good thing is many artists still care about sound quality and make great albums, and the best they can do on CD's. Neil Young and Tool being 2 examples.
@@scottzappa9314 Yeah, I like a lot of songs that sound dated, mostly since I grew up with them and can relate to the time. I have noticed though that younger listeners tend to relate more to those songs I consider timeless. I am a huge Neil Young fan (my all time favorite artist in fact) and have been since the late 60s when I was still a kid. For me, he is one of the greatest singer-songwriters ever, which of course depends on how well somebody personally relates to the lyrics and music. He has continued to put out great stuff over all the decades since. I am also a Tool fan, but that of course came much later.
I agree with all of that, you tend to like what you grew up with. I LOVE Tool now, especially Danny Carey since I used to try to play drums. Neil is of course Legendary, I like the other great song writers like Joni Mitchell and Billy Joel. Yes, the youngins today are digging all the great older music, my opinion is it's close to universally appealing, music experts and casual listeners alike. But it's still almost hard to believe that somebody is hearing Stairway to Heaven for the first time, LOL.
Back at the time The Beatles image was promoted as the good, clean boys while The Rolling Stones image was promoted as the bad boys. The Beatles were in matching suits while The Stones wore street clothes. The Beatles were singing love songs while The Stones were singing street/real life/ blues-based songs. Everyone had their own voice because you now had singer/song writers as opposed to songs by writing teams being given to singers.
The goodness is partly in the subtlety of just how the sections compliment each other and how each section is the exact right length before it gets trite, and then it moves into the next section. I think that was one of or the first uses of fuzz guitar too. It still sounds like one of the best examples of tone. It's a horn section, an angry animal, a call to arms, an anthem. You can get lost in the tiny subtleties of the song. There's so much going on and nothing is wrong. It's all right. It's similar to Come Together, by the Beatles in that every note is needed and makes the song better, and the recording is great for what it is and the timing and tightness is great.
I'm so happy you finally got to the Stones, the quintessential rock and roll band. Putting out great rock for the last 6 decades. They are just about to release their 24th studio album in October, and they just released a video of the album's single "Angry" 8 days ago and it is already at 14 million views. They are number 1 on the current pre-order charts, with Ren at number 2 for his Sick Boi album which is also coming out in October. Ren said in his latest livestream that he never imagined that one day he would be number 2 following the Stones. Pretty cool that the Rolling Stones weekend should be the same weekend that you hit 100K. Another great choice for these Special Weekends.
Lee, if you're this excited for Satisfaction, how are you gonna handle Sympathy For The Devil and Angie - soon to follow?
@@splitimage137. Very excited since it is one of my favorites of theirs during their late 60s period (2nd to Gimme Shelter). I also think "Gimme Shelter" would be more musically interesting for Amy, but still thrilled she is doing Sympathy. Satisfaction is a good start due to its historical importance, although probably too simplistic and repetitive for Amy's tastes.
@@LeeKennison Satisfactions appeal has almost nothing to do with its technical musicality. It’s sound and attitude with some notes used for a little movement to get the energy going.
@@LeeKennison To me, Gimme Shelter is probably their best song. (Good enough to name a movie after ;)
@@Hartlor_Tayley Agreed. Well said. Your statement can apply to a lot of great rock songs, but it particularly applies to Satisfaction.
Released in June 1965-the same year I graduated from High School-when i first heard it on the AM radio station I was just blown away-it spoke to every kid who graduated that year-that opening riff by Keith Richard just grabbed you. Then that drum fill in the middle of the song by Charlie Watts was dynamite. Still my all-time favorite song--Mick was telling all of us teenagers that he felt the same way as we did felt then-Can't get No Satisfaction.
this song is a good example of how much bands rely on a steady drummer to follow.
the hardest (and most important) job a drummer can do is to simply keep a steady beat. the bass and rhythm guitar can use the beat to work against, sometimes putting notes just a little before or after the beat to get the right feel.
charlie watts was never a showman like neil peart or buddy rich, but he did one thing consistently and reliably every time.
When Charlie died Keith did an interview where he talked about the band and how Charlie followed Keith. He said it gave the Sones music a wobble.
I remember when this first came on the radio. My 14 year old self was incredibly impressed!
I am so shocked at your clarity of description of sound. at 6 mim in your face was so animated I was trying to think what was going on inside. Were you thinking the people that like this noise are neanderthals or what. The when you describe the music you seem to explain why is it so attracting to us even in its simple sounds because of the flipped riff to bass, although maybe you want to throw us head bangers a bone. Any case you are incredible to watch, so Fun, D
Thank you for your amazing insights! I’m a huge Stones fan and I’ve listened to this song in particular many, many times and I’ve I never caught that interplay between the base and guitar. Keith Richards often said that Bill Wyman was a great bassist and maybe this is a great illustration of that. To understand the song even more, you have to understand that, while Keith did wake up from a slumber with the riff in his head and recorded it on a cassette player he had sitting nearby, he initially intended it to be played on horns,not a guitar. Otis Redding later covered the song with horns playing the riff, if you’re ever curious to hear what that sounds like. In any case, when it came to recording the song, Keith recorded his guitar into a tape recorder again, then played the cassette through an amplifier to capture the final fuzzy sound in the riff. I was surprised that you didn’t pick up on that because that is also what gives this song it’s unique quality. To fully appreciate the impact of this song, you really have to understand the times in which it was released. Due to the untimely death of Buddy Holly and Elvis Presley being drafted into the US Army, the bebop era of rock ‘n roll came to a rather sudden end just as baby boomers were coming to the forefront, and they wanted a new sound. In swept The Beatles with their Mersey sound and gentle ballads about wanting to hold your hand and just wanting to dance with you. Meanwhile, down in London, far away from Liverpool, another group of boys formed a band with roots deeply steeped in American Blues music which always had a grittier, more rudimentary sound. By the time we get to Satisfaction, The Stones have refined their sound and image.. They’re playing into the counter-culture of the time and the kids are eating it up. Mick doesn’t want to just hold hands, he wants to meet up and get some satisfaction but the girl’s just at that time of the month where she’s on losing streak so she asks him to come back next week. This clear allusion to sex didn’t slide by the critics which is why this song was reviled and so was the band, something they would bear (but thrive in) for many decades to come as they were labelled “the bad boys of rock ‘n roll” and were instrumental in the coining of the phrase “sex, drugs, and rock ‘n roll”. Anyway, I’ve gone on long enough. Enjoy the weekend! Can’t wait for you to get to Gimme Shelter, Jumpin’ Jack Flash, or Sympathy for the Devil.
Amy,
I am looking forward to your videos of this weekend! For They, them were right Amy (who is They, it's always "they did it"), you CAN NOT claim to study modern/rock music, be in that journey and skip The Stones, can not be done, period.
I am reminded of an interview with Keith Richard that I watched and the interviewer asked: Mister Richard, what is to you the pure essence of what Rock 'n Roll is? Keith Richard halted for a brief moment, maybe one second while he thought, and then answered in a thick British accent: "Me". For a moment I thought that that was quite an assumptious answer, thinks quite highly of himself but after thinking it through a bit deeper I concluded that the answer was about as good and, dare I say, accurate as any.
Keith Richard and Mick Jagger were part of the unofficial, unstructured delegation, so to speak, of young British University studentS who traveled to the US, got lost in the deep south and ended up in these black entertainment shacks where black musicians played the purest forms of blues music for audiences of their own. Amazed and mesmerized were these British youngsters. They went back home, told others about their experiences and started to play this blues music in faster tempos and putting a white civilization spin on it. And British Rock was born.
You're not going to get complexity from The Stones. They've done a lot musically, covered a lot of ground, but underneath is always very recognizable, the American Black folks rhythm 'n blues music. In the mid 80's they even jumped on The Disco bandwagon with the "Some Girls" album, but even it stringed on rhythm 'n blues foundations.
Satisfaction contains one of the most recognizable riffs known in rock and that before riffs were a thing. If produced today it would go nowhere and you can study it musically, and, as always, I appreciate what you've done, But this song is a vibe, imagine hearing it on the radio when it was current, and while you live as a youngster, with this song on the radio you decide what cool jeans jacket you're going to buy, with the necklace that has an aluminum piece emblem, discussing with your friends what you're going to do on the weekend. Your school "day/date agenda" has photos of The Rolling Stones in it, stores sell posters of this band. You hear news flashes of what The Stones are doing this week and what troubles they're getting into. While The Beatles are relatively clean cut, not offensive in any way to any 14 year old girl, The Stones have a right image of, and here's a new rock 'n roll term for you, "Nasty" in their music/act. A Bad boy element.
Today, 50-60 years later The Rolling Stones is a commodity, but not just a money value type of commodity, they are an institution, a representation of what rock 'n roll, in its purity is, a celebration of all what inspired The British rock invasion.
THE ROLLING STONES ARE A STANDARD, MAYBE THE STANDARD!
There’s a whole genre of classical musicians reacting to pop and rock on UA-cam (a couple of composers, a flute player, a singer and vocal coach who even got into harsh vocals), and the jarring thing is that they NEVER find anything negative or boring. This is the only one that ever says “this is very basic, not creative”. I think they’re afraid to alienate audience.
The classical-reacts crowd seems to have all made a video on Camel’s “Rhayader/Rhayader goes to town” The Daily Doug even made two (one of an excellent live version and one of the entire studio album). It’s a fun track in the style of Genesis and Emerson Lake and Palmer. It also has no vocals (although other songs by the band have). You’ll certainly find things to appreciate (it has a kind of fancy ABCA structure; the flute has a way of starting from a slow intro naturally into the faster rock thing). There’s also aspects in which it’s overrated (Latimer became an amazing guitar soloist over time, but there he’s a lot more… basic… than people think.)
Vlad, do keep up with the Joneses ;)
I think you have to look at 'Satisfaction' in the context of the time when it was written. In the period preceeding it the aim was to get a clean tone on the electric guitar but this song was one of the first to purposely use a distorted, or 'fuzz', tone on the guitar. To achieve this 'fuzz' effect guitar players would physically damage their speakers with razor blades although later this effect would be created via a less destructive electric circuit. Another early example of this effect being used is in The Kinks' 'You Really Got Me'. These two songs would've seemed rather exciting to young ears used to a clean and ringing guitar tone.
Charles Robert Watts (2 June 1941 - 24 August 2021) was an English musician. He was the drummer of the Rolling Stones from 1963 until his death in 2021.
Originally trained as a graphic artist, Watts developed an interest in jazz at a young age and joined the band Blues Incorporated. He also started playing drums in London's rhythm and blues clubs, where he met future bandmates Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and Brian Jones. In January 1963, he left Blues Incorporated and joined the Rolling Stones as drummer, while doubling as designer of their record sleeves and tour stages. Watts' first public appearance as a permanent member was in February 1963; he remained with the band for 58 years until his death, at which time he, Jagger and Richards were the only members of the band to have performed on every one of their studio albums.
Mick Jagger and Keith Richards both went to the same school in Dartford, Kent, England.
In September 1950, Keith Richards and Jagger first met as classmates at Wentworth Primary School in Dartford, prior to the Jagger family's 1954 move to Wilmington, Kent. The same year he passed the eleven-plus examination and attended Dartford Grammar School, which now has the Mick Jagger Centre performing arts venue. Jagger and Richards lost contact with each other when they went to different schools. Jagger met Richards again on 17 October 1961 on Platform Two of Dartford railway station. Wikipedia.
I read once an article that called the opening guitar riff to this song the "Beethoven's 5th of rock music." I can't argue with that assessment.
Stones music is much more spontaneous than when, for example, David Byrne tries to fuse Pop with Latin rhythms, or Paul Simon does it with African rhythms. Their work is good, but one cannot help but notice the "hybrid" at all times... They approached from a more academic, almost anthropological side. The Stones, on the other hand, approached the phenomenon more willing for it to invade and penetrate them. And not taking distance.
They were not like Byrne: them on one side and ethnicity on the other. They made a kind of 'minestrone', in which you end up not knowing which came first. This is why Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley were very comfortable with what they did with their music and their songs. And it is the main reason why they are constantly cited in the most serious books, notes and documentaries dealing with the evolution of Blues with all its enormous and rich history, as keys and indispensable links between the ancestral roots, and the modern music charts.
It's worth noting that The Beatles gave The Stones their first hit " I Wanna Be Your Man ". Apparently John and Paul wrote it on the spot when The Stones came to visit them at their recording studio. Seeing this inspired Mick and Keith to start writing their own songs. The Beatles also released their version of it, but most people seem to prefer The Stones version.
One interesting intersection between the Beatles and The Rolling Stones is that John Lennon and Paul McCartney wrote their first hit, “I Want to Be Your Man.” It’s interesting to compare the version the Beatles recorded (from “With the Beatles”) and the version the Stones recorded. The Stones version is much glitter and more bluesy. Interestingly, it was watching Lennon and McCartney compose the song on the spot when asked that inspired Mick Jagger and Keith Richards to try their hand at songwriting. Satisfaction is an early Jagger-Richards song and, as you noted, it is rather simple. However, like all the great rock bands of this era, their songwriting improved quickly and incorporated a variety of styles. Overall, the Stones are bluesy with a strong dollop of country but they composed in many other genres too, especially in the mid-60s.
You are in maximum teacher mode in this episode! Love your graphical insert with handwritten explanation on the note chart. Always enjoy your content.
Maybe the most typical blues move would be to use a minor third over a major harmony. This bass line is no exception. 😇
I wish you hit the 100K subscribers this weekend! Cheers!
For my Junior year sock hop, in '65, the local band learned this that afternoon, so they could play it that night. It was that immediate a hit. Now try 'Wild Horses', Angie', and 'Can't You Hear Me Knockin'.
Satisfaction had an immeasurable impact on us adolescent boys in 1965. Keith Richard's fuzz tone guitar was dramatically insistent and the lyrics resonate with our passions. Unlike their pop music competitors,The Beatles, the Rolling Stones roots were as a Rhythm and Blues band. With this song, the Stones drew a line in the sand, distinguishing themselves as the bad boys of rock and roll.
That riff is Keith Richards experimentng with an early device called a fuzz box. Keith thought the song needed horns, so he recorded that melody line with the fuzz box as a guide for the horns to be put on later. They ended up liking the version with the fuzz box and never bothered with the horns. If you want to hear a version with horns, there's a cover version of the song by Otis Redding.
The bass is playing the bass harmony as well. The riff is one of the most memorable in rock and roll (and one of the earliest guitar riffs featuring a fuzz tone pedal) however this music isn't meant to be analyzed but danced to.
I love watching Amy.
One riff only, still pure greatness. The music term is Complex Simplicity.
You've nailed it, bravo !
I remember when Satisfaction came out and I was so taken by the riff and the song. My memory is also that the Stones were the first to take singles beyond 3:00 minutes. In this video you cleared up a mystery for me! I have listened to the Stones for many years, and in spite of my tastes for prog and more complex music, I never tire of them. Their songs seem simple, and even rough, yet interesting and complex in some sort of way that I don't tire of them. I think I got a clue on how they did that from your analysis. Try out "Gimme Shelter" when you can!
The Rolling Stones is a band that has truly lived up to their name. Still rolling!
I really enjoy listening to her interpretations of rock songs. She truly has a gift of hearing the sounds.
Their best song is You Can't Always Get What You Want (1969). Featuring the London Bach Choir, French horn and bongos. Charlie Watts couldn't play the drum groove, so Jimmy Miller played it.
You know that is one of their songs I just can't stand. I don't know why.
@@nellgwenn We are all individuals.
It's funny I still dig this song after all these years, just something about the Stones. Nostalgia too.
I was unable to be a part of the live chat. And Vlad will probably bring this up or has brought this up.
When they were coming up with a name for the band Brian Jones saw a Muddy Waters album and said Rolling Stones. It's a great name for a band but the guys did have their trepidation about it. They thought people would think it's corny or cheeky to name their band after a song. They thought they would really hear it from American audiences.
When they came to the U.S. people asked them about the name. They were taken aback by the fact that the white audiences didn't know who Muddy Waters was or knew what song they were talking about. They thought if they knew these things so would every white American fan of Rock and Roll.
As a result of this, three significant things happened to make Blues fully enter the realm of American commercial music.
1. The Rolling stones were asked to do an American TV show called Shindig. This was a show that young Rock and Roll fans would watch. They agreed to do the show with one stipulation. That was to feature one of their idols Howlin' Wolf. That was the first time a lot of America's youth were introduced to the Blues as well as one of the most important names in blues. If you watch it on UA-cam and I hope you do, for your own knowledge you will see the Rolling Stones sitting around the stage absorbing Howlin' Wolf's every move. It's a very important TV event in American cultural history.
2. It brought new life, recognition and fame to a lot of Blues bands and players. When the Rolling Stones hit big in the U.S. the Blues bands were experiencing a drop in popularity, and money. Especially in Britain everyone wanted to see and hear these Blues bands that were so special and influential to the groups they were listening to such as The Rolling Stones, Jeff Beck, Clapton, the Animals.
Also the album oriented FM stations along with the usual Stones or Beatles or Pink Floyd songs would also play Muddy Waters or B.B. King etc. And they would promote their concerts and do interviews with them. Album oriented FM stations had a big tent back then.
Muddy Waters did a concert tour in England the coveted hottest gig was to be the band to tour with him. Everyone wanted it. The band that actually received that honor was Eric Burdon and the Animals.
3. All this renewed life to the American Blues music made it easier for other Blues and riff based music to get recognition and popularity.
I love the Rolling Stones I love...most of their music. But I think getting Howlin' Wolf on Shindig was their finest hour.
I'm so glad you brought this important facet of the Stones story up. It is an example of how culturally important the Stones were to their times. They absorbed the blues and brought it back to America, particularly white Americans who were unaware of the blues, since many of the radio stations refused to play them. There is a great documentary here on UA-cam called "Blues Story: A Documentary" that covers the blues from early Delta blues of the 30s through the Chicago blues of the 50s. It also covers this aspect of the story on how much of an impact the Stones had in promoting the blues and blues greats in America.
You have captured the essence of the Stones. Basic, simple head-bobbing music. I always appreciate your analysis. Especially since I've never found the Stones to be the most exciting band in the Rock pantheon, but I do respect their place in its history.
They are a great live performance band!! Dance till you drop (18 year old self talking) 😅
Great reaction and analysis, Amy. From what I understand, the Rolling Stones rhythm section, bass - Bill Wyman and drums - Charlie Watts, were known studio musicians before joining the Stones, for some early American Blues artists, such as Muddy Waters, and they were a little older than Keith, Mick and Brian Jones. The Sones have a very American Blues influence plus other music influences, country, disco, psychedelic...
Charlie was a jazz drummer who played with Alexis Korner. He never played with Muddy Waters before The Stones. Bill had never recorded anything before The Stones.
@@BigSky1my bad. I Should've checked my info. They played with various Blues artists but while they were with Stones.
@@williammcdonald3922 Yes.
The Rolling Stones have a new single and album out this week, the Single is called Angry and the album is called Hackney Diamonds. I've seen the Rolling stones live 3 times and their greatest strength is their live performances.
Did their just-released new song inspire you to take a dive into The Stones? Along with The Beatles, The Beach Boys, Led Zeppelin, and Dylan, The Rolling Stones are one of the most important rock/pop artists of the past 60 years.
I wonder when you'll listen to "Gimme Shelter."
It's considered one of the most powerful war protest songs of all times, and the voice of back-up singer Merry Clayton just blew the mind of Mick Jagger; it was so utterly fantastic.
The Rolling Stones became so successful because they were so accessible.
What rocked our world with this song was the use of the fuzz tone, when this came out that summer. While such guitar effects are central to rock'n'roll after this time, this was the introduction. They didn't invent the fuzz box, and the sound certainly builds on the Beatles' use of feedback the year before on 'I Feel Fine', but they take the tone and run with it. It's the sound of ripping the fabric of society, a process the Beatles and the Stones led in a good cop bad cop fashion.
It may be difficult to grasp the affect these rough tones had on popular music now because we take them for granted, but to hear that rude riff rip out of the am radio in your parents car was lifechanging. To be fair, this is the essential nature or intent of rock and roll and these effects build on guitar styles of American blues for sure. But 'Satisfaction' was a huge mile post in the evolution of this rough sound. It was then incubated by US underground groups, particularly in San Francisco, and finally went mainstream with breakout musicians like Hendrix, the Cream, Lead Zeppelin and such.
As a music enthousiast who doesn't read a note of music, this was cool to watch !
Well Gimme Shelter HAS to be one of the songs on your deep dive. Perhaps the song in their huge catalogue that seems to blow away younger reactors these days. That and Sympathy for the Devil.
If anyone tells you that the Beatles and the Stones were in a feud, they were not. They were friends. I loved both groups and still do. If you would like to hear how they evolved, listen to Sympathy for the Devil or Honky Tonk Women from their later albums. My personal favorite of theirs is As Tears Go By, which is from an early album but has some good symphonic music in it. It’s a sad song about loneliness but I used to just get lost in the music.
Yea, totally agree, that's a huge song, so velvety and harsh at the same time ! Painfully beautiful !
1965 was a pivotal year in rock music and this song struck a nerve. Musically it’s much like Link Wray in the fifties and the lyrics were probably inspired by Dylan. This song is kind of when rock and roll turned into rock music.
" rock and roll turned into rock music"
That's an excellent point.
I agree, the lyrics are more Dylan like than Beatles like (at the time). Great observation on the development of rock. Chuck Berry also had a big impact (particularly on Keith). Did you ever see the concert/documentary Keith organized to honor Chuck?
@@LeeKennison yes that’s good and funny. Thanks. It’s interesting that all those guys born around 1940-45 were copying the same half dozen songs when they were starting out and then all those bands developed distinctive styles and sound. It was like an explosion.
@@kylben thank you. You got what I meant. That’s well satisfying.
@@Hartlor_Tayley By the way, I almost missed your post since you changed your profile image. You should take old men such as myself into consideration before such drastic actions. 😉With my old eyes it is the profile image that tends to catch my eyes rather than the smaller name print. Your old image really stood out.
I'll be interested to see what else you decide to listen to. Lot of great choices with very different feels. There were different eras of the band. The albums with Mick Taylor on guitar in addition to Keith Richards are considered by many to be their best.
This song is notable for the “fuzz” sound in the main riff. 1965 is the cusp of a big change in guitar sound. The Beatles used a fuzz bass on a song from Rubber Soul (“Think for Yourself”) but the sound was still relatively new. Distorted guitars had shown up occasionally in the past but usually due to a mistake and they were still a bit of a novelty (“Rocket 88” by Ike Turner with Jackie Brenton; “Don’t Worry” by country singer Marty Robbins; “I Just Don’t Understand” by Ann-Margaret and “You Really Got Me” by the Kinks). The fuzz tone in this song was very deliberate and represented changes that were coming in guitar amp technology. The “distorted” guitar would be made mainstream by Jimi Hendrix and quickly change the sound of rock music, as you will clearly hear as you move through the Beatles’s catalog. On Rubber Soul, there is on song with fuzz guitar; on the next album (recorded only a few months later) you will hear fuzz guitars throughout. The Stones were masters of the guitar and early adopters of the distorted guitar sound. It was both the guitar sound and the guitar riff that made this song stand out in 1965. The very satirical lyrics (“he can’t be a man because he doesn’t smoke the same cigarettes as me”) added to the charm of the song.
Seriously, though, this is a superb analysis!
Always pay attention to when songs came out. A lot of the groups from the 60’s hung out together and listened to each others music and built songs more and more complex as the years went on. Just like early Beatles is simple compared to last songs by the Beatles. They grew and evolved over time and listen more i their peers. You can see some old videos of Mick Jagger hanging out with the Beatles and I think on Audio that one of the Beatles was raving about Led Zeppelin’s first album. Cheers.
She is amazing…A little chicken walk Jaggers moves would be icing for cake.
Wonder what she would do with AC/DC THUNDER STRUCK!
The bass always works as an anchor between the rhythm and melodic/harmonic Instruments. And in this case that Motown-influenced Bill Wyman's bass line did its magic maybe without even thinking about it.
And yes, music doesn't have to be over complicated or virtuosic to be good. It's a matter of good taste
Bill Wyman was a brilliant bassist - Charlie Watts, the drummer, was heavily influenced by jazz - all contributing to a differing Invasion sound compared to groups like the Beatles and the Dave Clark Five
It was the guitar tone (fuzz guitar) that made this stand out so much when it came out in the summer of 1965. This was new to all the young music fans' ears... and took everyone by storm.
I wouldn’t say I’m a fan and I never pick their music out to listen to. Having said this, I know all the words to a ton of their songs and could easily name a lot of them off the top of my head. I know the names of at least 4 band members and would easily recognize their faces from any point in their careers. They are absolutely deserving of their reputation and place in rock history. Definitely a must for your rock journey.
I really hope you watch a live performance of Satisfaction, Amy. I really think the Stones are best appreciated along with the visual component. I think the emotion comes through so much more clearly if you can see Mick's body and facial expression.
A whole weekend of Stones? Gosh, I hope one of the other songs is either 'Emotional Rescue' or 'Start Me Up' ! 😀👍 And this song, 'Satisfaction', supposedly had come to guitarist Keith Richards in a dream 😊
Good god.....NO!
@@theghostofsw6276 - Well, which Stones songs do _you_ want to hear then? 'Gimme Shelter'? 🥴 'Brown Sugar'? 🤢 'Honky Tonk Women'? 🤮 😅
@@mightyV444 Can't You Hear Me Knocking, and/or Monkey Man. Can't stand Mick Jagger in his "Freddy Mercury" phase...if you know what I mean.
@@theghostofsw6276 - Well, that might just be the difference between us two then, because I do like Freddie Mercury a lot! 😁 In _my_ book, the Stones have just as many bad songs as they have good ones; It'd be fine with me if Amy chose one of those two you mentioned 😉👍
@@theghostofsw6276 - I was thinking yesterday, "May she just not go for 'Sympathy For The Devil' either!" - but that's exactly what she did! 😅
Great work as always! I recommend sticking with the 60´s Stones for an interesting listening experience. Paint It Black, Mother´s Little Helper, Street Fighting Man and Gimme Shelter (for instance) are so much more than just rock´n´roll.
The Stones are one of those absolutely monolithic bands however they kept it together and because of that they kept touring and playing good music for over 60 years.
The "Stones" turned up when I was in the 3 rd. grade in 1961 and was an instant fan. Watching the music as it was being released gave my crew of friends the freedom of expression that had been squashed for generations.
This song changed how I listened to music.
There’s a Swift Boat scene in Apocalypse Now, American troops water skiing behind their boat, this song the perfect soundtrack background.
Wow that was such a scene 😮😮😮
As you say, a very simple song and the interest supplied by the different guitar and bass lines certainly helps avoid monotony. Its also worth noting that the fuzz guitar tone on that main riff was so revolutionary and startling at the time (at least on a mainstream record) that it was probably enough in itself to hold people’s interest and ensure the song’s place in rock history!
Like the Beatles and most music of this time dancing was a big thing. This song is definitely a danceable tune...it also heralds the beginning of stoner music that was more heady with timing and tempo changes. Rock goes psychedelic...from there comes prog rock. 😊
I'm the same age as this song. It feels like my birthday song.
Mick used to say that if he was still singing Satisfaction when he was 50, he would kill himself. Now he's 80.
Similarly, a young Paul McCartney said he can't imagine he'd still play Beatles songs when he's 40. He then thought he'd only have enough energy to be a Sinatra-type crooner when he's THAT OLD! Eventually we all learn that it's only the body that ever grows old. Oh, yes, let's not forget Pete Townshend and his "I hope I die before I get old"... How naive we all are/were in our youth!
It’s so ashtonishing how still one person on this earth don’t know Satisfaction. But I’m enjoying your video’s very much. Thanx!
If she has or she hasn’t, I have never considered the role of the bass chasing the guitar and am more informed for having audited this video.
Yay! So glad you've finally got to the Stones. Love your break down of this song. Lol...Don't leave me behind, don't leave me behind. Hey Hey Hey. It's official. You're a rock n roller. If you're going to spend the weekend with the Stones, there are sooo many great songs, but may I suggest "Can't You Hear Me Knocking". The guitar intro is so gritty, so dirty and pure rock n roll. I'd love to hear you break it down and watch your reaction. Thank you!
Ohhh, you might also give a listen to their song She's A Rainbow-
Love to hear what you think of their use of piano and strings.
Amy, , I say it again you are most engaging, insightful and entertaining host of these channels
Amy, you are so perceptive and so good at explaining details that non-musicians would not notice and why they enhance the music. Now please, please review "You can´t always get what you want" and other songs from Let It Bleed, one of the greatest pop music albums of all time. You will like it, I´m sure, and we will love your review.
Really fantastic analysis, genuinely brought this song together for me. You gotta check out the Devo version, though!
An interesting follow up song to Satisfaction would be The Police’s ‘Every breath you take.’ Great analysis of one of the most iconic songs of the 20th century!
Paul McCartney said 'God Only Knows’ is one of the few songs that reduces me to tears every time I hear it. Amy, would be nice a Beach Boys song to react. I love Brian Wilson.
Happy that you got to the Stones! Even though they're not my favourite band, they made some of my favourite songs ever. Mick Jagger is not a crazy technical singer, but he's a hell of a performer and his way of singing is extremely expressive (you'll find out with songs like Sympathy for the Devil and Angie).
When Keith Richards brought in the song "Satisfaction" to the group, he had used an early model fuzz box to create the sound of the main riff on the demo. He had used it to represent the sound of a sax, which he thought should play the riff. Instead of switching to a sax, they kept the unique guitar sound, and "Satisfaction" became one of the first hit songs to use an external guitar effects pedal. This was at the forefront of the search for ways to manipulate electric guitar tones.
The first version has Brian playing a harp.
Jeff Beck used something like that on Heart Full Of Soul. Both songs were released the same year. That's interesting.
Keith Richards claims that this riff came to him in the middle of the night (possibly in a dream), he got up, sang it into a tape recorder & in the morning woke up to the tape of the riff & 45 minutes of snoring.
He says he always heard it as a horn riff. Oatis Reading later did a cover with horns.
It's one of the 1st pop/rock songs to use a distortion box on the guitar, which inspired an entire generation of guitarists.
The "I'm trying to make some girl" line was incredibly suggestive in a pop song in 1965. Possibly even more in the US than other parts of the world. Keep in mind this is a few years prior to music like Jimi Hendrix, The Doors, Janis Joplin etc. In 64/65 the majority of pop music was still very clean cut, boys and girls holding hands, puppy love kind of stuff.
I don't recall any other video where Amy didn't pause the song, I know is kind of short, but you can tell she was really into the song, loved it!
Kieth Richards, one of my all time fav guitars.
I m the same ago group as the Stones. They have been a stalwart of my life
Really hope you react to Sympathy for the Devil. To me it's the greatest song ever written.
I think you missed the lyrical content in your listen. This is more a comment on our society than anything else and I personally think that is what made it a hit. (aside from the musical parts you mentioned) First talking about how advertising was affecting society " telling me more and more, about some useless information supposed to drive my imagination" then "a man comes on and tells me how white my shirts should be, but he can't be a man cause he doesn't smoke the same cigarettes as me" and how that whole media thing affected courting girls in the last verse. I remember hearing this and thinking, Yeah they got that right. The other part that you mentioned was the "oboe" sound of the guitar. Many bands were beginning to experiment with sound at that time. I heard/or read, that the way they got that sound was by using a screwdriver to poke a hole in the speaker and then driving the speaker at a higher volume. This was the beginning of the use of distortion in rock at that time. From which later Heavy Metal was developed.
Would be great a reaction to a whole RS album. Personal suggestion: Aftermath, Exile on main St, Sticky Fingers
Interesting to see reviewers trying to understand the 60s with the now dominant view that it was all about The Beatles. At the time one question was "Beatles or Stones, who do you like/follow". They were equal competitors for fans, with possible 50 or 100 slightly lesse maybe bands. There was also no "mainstream media" other than top of the pops. Pirate Radio was the music scene and caused the starting of BBC Radio 1.
I have always believed, and will always claim that "Sympathy For the Devil" is the greatest rock song ever recorded - even with the minimal guitar
So for you the greatest rock song is a samba 😁
"60s Stones were all about dancing. So good to dance to.
In terms of their public image, the Beatles were the Nice Boys and the Stones were the Bad Boys. (It's worth bearing in mind that at the time this was released, rock was considered "kiddie music".)
I would like to see you react to a later Stones song. They never got prog or anything like that, but some of their stuff is a bit more complex than this.
Ah ... The quiet brilliance of Bill Wyman!