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Emotional Rescue is the The Rolling Stones' 15th British and 17th American studio album respectively, and was released June 20, 1980. This album immediately shot to the top of the charts in both the United States and United Kingdom.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Emotional Rescue
  • Emotional rescue
rdfs:comment
  • Emotional Rescue is the The Rolling Stones' 15th British and 17th American studio album respectively, and was released June 20, 1980. This album immediately shot to the top of the charts in both the United States and United Kingdom.
  • During the deep Dark Age of Feudalistic Europe, it was reported that 47% of the local female population suffered from some form of clinical depression, oft brought about by being trapped inside the upper stages of tall drafty towers infested with fire-breathing dragons. The Fraternal Brotherhood of Teutonic Knights, suddenly recognizing a great social need and in desperate need of some satisfaction themselves, and having nothing better to do (other than medieval-style wanking), traveled far and wide in search of as many of these legendary distressed damsels as possible. File:Crybabe.JPG
  • Emotional Recuse is the second episode of Season 1 of The Listener.
  • Recorded throughout 1979, first in Nassau, Bahamas (Compass Point), then Paris (Pathe Marconi), with some end-of-year overdubbing in New York City, Emotional Rescue was the first Rolling Stones album recorded following Keith Richards' exoneration from a Toronto drugs charge that could have landed him in jail for years. Fresh from the revitalization of Some Girls, Richards and Mick Jagger led the Stones through dozens of new songs, some of which were held over for Tattoo You, picking only ten for Emotional Rescue.
sameAs
Length
  • 2475.0
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:casualty/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
Previous
song title
  • Summer Romance
  • Let Me Go
  • All About You
  • Dance, Part 1
  • Down In The Hole
  • Emotional Rescue
  • Indian Girl
  • Send It To Me
  • She's So Cold
  • Where The Boys Go
Label
  • Rolling Stones, Atlantic
Producer
  • The Glimmer Twins
Release Date
  • 1980-06-20(xsd:date)
Genre
  • Rock
dbkwik:rollingston...iPageUsesTemplate
Title
  • Emotional Rescue
Artist
  • The Rolling Stones
NEXT
abstract
  • Recorded throughout 1979, first in Nassau, Bahamas (Compass Point), then Paris (Pathe Marconi), with some end-of-year overdubbing in New York City, Emotional Rescue was the first Rolling Stones album recorded following Keith Richards' exoneration from a Toronto drugs charge that could have landed him in jail for years. Fresh from the revitalization of Some Girls, Richards and Mick Jagger led the Stones through dozens of new songs, some of which were held over for Tattoo You, picking only ten for Emotional Rescue. While several of the tracks featured just the core band of Jagger, Richards, Ronnie Wood, Charlie Watts, and Bill Wyman, keyboardists Nicky Hopkins and co-founder Ian Stewart, sax playerBobby Keys and harmonica player Sugar Blue joined the Rolling Stones on Emotional Rescue. The song "Claudine" was rumored to be a part of the original album, but didn't make the cut most likely due to the fear of litigation and controversy. The lyrics dealt with the light sentence (30 days in jail) singer-actress Claudine Longet received after she killed her live-in boyfriend, Olympian ski racer Vladimir "Spider" Sabich, in their Aspen, Colorado home. The song was eventually released as part of the deluxe version of Some Girls in 2011. Some other songs left off the album would find their way onto the next album, Tattoo You ("Black Limousine", "Start Me Up", "Hang Fire", "Little T&A", and "No Use in Crying"). "Think I'm Going Mad", another song from the sessions, was released as the B-side to "She Was Hot" in 1984. Two cover songs were sung by Richards: "We Had It All", now released on the 2011 deluxe Some Girls package, and "Let's Go Steady", still only available on bootlegs. Other songs recorded in these sessions but never released are "Going Mad" "I Can See It" "Rotten Roll" "Fiji Jim" "Misty Roads" "I Like it Too Much" "Need a Yellow Cab" and "Nanker Phelge". These songs can be found on some vinyl bootleg albums of that era.
  • Emotional Rescue is the The Rolling Stones' 15th British and 17th American studio album respectively, and was released June 20, 1980. This album immediately shot to the top of the charts in both the United States and United Kingdom.
  • During the deep Dark Age of Feudalistic Europe, it was reported that 47% of the local female population suffered from some form of clinical depression, oft brought about by being trapped inside the upper stages of tall drafty towers infested with fire-breathing dragons. The Fraternal Brotherhood of Teutonic Knights, suddenly recognizing a great social need and in desperate need of some satisfaction themselves, and having nothing better to do (other than medieval-style wanking), traveled far and wide in search of as many of these legendary distressed damsels as possible. File:Crybabe.JPG
  • Emotional Recuse is the second episode of Season 1 of The Listener.
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