Well as a teenager of the 1960s this was my music. There are a lot of great reviewers on the Amazon site, with a plethora of knowledge and information about the Stones and their recordings. I will discuss the Blues End.
The Stones with Brian Jones started as a Blues Band. That was their primary interest. They got to record this LP at Chess Studios which to me, as a guitarist, would be like a getting to Jam with Albert King. They met Muddy Waters, got offered songs from Willie Dixon, met and had Little Walter on their next UK tour and so on. This was an essential background to the 1960s Blues Revival which started the careers of Eric Clapton, Paul Butterfield, Albert King, Otis Rush, John Mayall and so on.
The tunes, as discussed in previous reviews, are not of uniform brilliance. They were basically tunes they had been performing live for a few years in London clubs. Of the lot "Around and Around" is probably the best and the tune that helped get Chuck Berry back on a career track! It is great, especially the Johnny Otis shuffle in the bridge! "It's All Over Now" also helped the career of Bobby Womack-a great R&B guitar man and soul singer. This tune was a massive hit in the summer of 1964 and has one of the best vocals the Early Stones ever did. The long fade out ending was a prelude the the Beatle's "Hey Jude" a few years later. "Good Times Bad Times", an early Jagger-Richards attempt, was a great use of acoustic 12-string guitar. Probably influenced Jimi Hendrix's "Hear My Train A-Comin'".
My personal favourite on this LP is "Confessin the Blues", a 1940s Blues Standard penned by pianist Jay McShann. It was covered by many including B.B. King, but this is the Chess version of Little Walter Jacobs. Check out the original recording, it's great. This tune has a great arrangement. The guitars copy the Chicago sound and Keith has some of his most effective blues playing ever, a great emulation of Jimmy Dawkins and hard to do, even today! The hand damping triple time shuffle in the second half of the tune by Brian Jones adds so much and its not in the original. Very creative, and no effects!
Of course one who loves Blues has to comment of the Blues Harmonica of both Brian Jones and Mick Jagger. Again, not electricified, but played into the studio mike with reverb, very haunting. The Stones have always been underrated as harpists, but they did much to promote the Chicago Blues Harp. Case in point, "2120 South Michigan Avenue" (the address of the Chess Studios)-just super. Great harp playing and this version includes Keith's snappy guitar solo not in the original US release. And, of course, we have to also mention Keith's top solo ever (to me!) on "It's All Over Now" it's Chuck Berry with speed and soul!!!
"Empty Heart", written, or collaborated with, Phil Spector, is usually described as filler. But I love it and it was a prelude to the Bo Diddley recognition they would do on the "Now" LP. The Vibrato guitar without much singing is almost like a 1960s dance track. "Time Is On My Side" (this is the "organ intro" version released in the U.S. first, I think this is the better one too!), another massive hit from this period, was another attempt by the Stones to cover US R&B Soul tunes. In this case the tune had been a hit for the great Irma Thomas. I always had a lot of respect for Mick Jagger to even attempt to cover tunes by Solomon Burke, The Drifters (Under the Boardwalk) and The Falcons with Wilson Pickett (If You Need Me). That takes guts and they got away with it because most of the originals were not known to the mainstream population at the time. He did go too far when he did "My Girl" later on after it had already been a No. 1 hit.
"Congratulations" was an attempt to write a period Pop Tune. Its chord progression was right out of the 1950s-early 60s doowop era (something like the "Bristol Stomp!"). However the Stones put their own bluesy vocals into it and the "dirt" of the Chess Studios. "Grown Up Wrong" is another writing attempt. This tune clearly pays hommage to Elmore James with its slide riff. However, it is weak and much too repetitive. I used to skip it when I played the LP. This final tune "Suzie-Q" is their cover of Dale Hawkin's classic with the great James Burton riff. Again, it sounds like they ran out of studio time, or they didin't have their soul in it. And it's too short. Interesting, on this tune Keith's playing outshines Mick's singing. The final guitar solo has quite a spark and that's how we fade out in this set.
This is a great CD. It does have a few weak tunes on it and some early attempts at songwriting which are variable. However, the strong tunes are really strong and still sound great today.
Get this CD and revisit the onset of the "White Blues Revival" of the early 1960s!
The second LP isssued in October 1964 by the Stones in the US was in fact an amalgamation of a UK extended play (Five by Five), 3 tracks from the second UK LP(Rolling Stones 2), a UK "A" side, aUS "A" side and 2 UK "B" sides. At the heart of the LP are the five EP tracks, all recorded at the Chess studios in Chicago. The band approach the songs with cofidence including two Jagger-Richard compositions. From the same Chess sessions and included here is It's All Over Now a UK number one although it only reached a disappointing 26 in the US. This Bobby Womack song is a Stones classic and the outstanding track on the album. The remaining tracks were recorded in London and are a mixture of covers and Jagger-Richard compositions. The strongest being the self penned Good Times, Bad Times and a cover version of Susie Q. The US single Time Is On My Side, with a notable organ backing by Ian Stewart rounds things off.
The album provides an interesting comparison between the recording and production techniques of the Regent studios in London and the Chess studios in Chicago. This together with the inclusion of two hit singles provides the interest for this album which
i bought this album when it first came out (1965?). bought it on cd recently and was reminded how good it was/is. in fact, my friends and i used to consider the stones' first 5 albums a sort of "Old Testament"of 60's british invasion r&b. check out "confessin the blues" and "its all over now" in particular.
The raw power of the early Rolling Stones albums are awesome. Have been a fan of the Stones since the beginning.
I purchsed this album on vinyl back in 1964 but did not fully appreciate the true beauty of most of the cuts until years later. Listening to these songs now really brings to mind just how truly talented the Stones were at such a young age. This C.D. is a must for any real blues fan's collection. My favorite tracks include "Empty Heart","Good Times,Bad Times" and especially Jagger's rendition of "Under The Boardwalk".