the rolling stones (bill wyman song) - goodbye girl - wide mono III

ruudtes 2022-03-03

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the rolling stones (bill wyman song) - goodbye girl - processed 'stereo' III

Edit 3 for headphones. Source file is from the bootleg cd "The Rolling Stones Outtakes, Demos & Radio Sessions [1964-1968]" by RMP Series (cat.nr. RMP 11)(Recording Music Production). This is the first song written by Bill Wyman. Great short number, recorded on November 8, 1964, but never released. Excellent guitar performance by Brian Jones. THIS is how the Rolling Stones could have sounded if Brian would have remained in 'pole position'... Listen to his great guitar solo, starting at 1:19 all the way till the end of the song!

Recorded on November 8, 1964 in the Chess Studios Chicago, Illinois. *
Guitars: Brian Jones (main lead) & Keith Richards. Lead vocals: Mick Jagger. Bass: Bill Wyman. Drums: Charlie Watts. Backing vocals: Bill Wyman & Keith Richards.

GOODBYE GIRL
(Bill Wyman)

goodbye girl
it's time to part
when you leave me, you take my heart
better get a start
and get back, get back to the one you love

no one told me, I just knew
but nothing I can do
to make her stay true
well it's time that you do
get back, get back to the one you love

well I've know her daddy since the first time we met
seems like there's talk that I would regret

goodbye girl, this might sound strange
but I told you when I met you, that you'd change
better get that train and make it home
get back, get back to the one you love

®© ruudtes

*
Founded and run by Jewish immigrant brothers from Poland, Leonard and Phil Chess, the company produced and released many singles and albums regarded as central to the rock music canon. The musician and critic Cub Koda described Chess as "America's greatest blues label."
Chess was based at several different locations on the south side of Chicago, initially at two different locations on South Cottage Grove Ave. The most famous location was 2120 South Michigan Avenue from around 1956 to 1965, immortalized by the Rolling Stones in "2120 South Michigan Avenue", an instrumental recorded there during the group's first U.S. tour in 1964. The Stones recorded at Chess Studios on two more occasions. The building is now the home of Willie Dixon's Blues Heaven Foundation. In the mid-1960s, Chess relocated to a much larger building, at 320 East 21st Street, the label's final Chicago home.

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