Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out!

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out!
Live album from The Rolling Stones

Publication
(s)

September 4, 1970 (UK),
September 26, 1970 (USA)

Label (s) Decca Records (UK),
London Records / abkco Records (USA)

Format (s)

LP, CD

Genre (s)

skirt

Title (number)

10

running time

47:37

occupation

production

The Rolling Stones & Glyn Johns

Studio (s)

The Wally Heider Mobile
(January to April 1970),
Olympic Studios , London
Trident Studios, London

chronology
Let It Bleed
(1969)
Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out! Sticky Fingers
(1971)

Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out! is a 1969 in the USA recorded and published in 1970 for the first time live album of the Rolling Stones .

History of the album

The live album was recorded at three concerts in Madison Square Garden , New York City (on November 27 and 28, 1969) and at a concert in Baltimore (on November 26, 1969) - the first of the Rolling Stones' US tour Tour after a three year break.

Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out! is the first album by the Rolling Stones with guitarist Mick Taylor , who has replaced founding member Brian Jones and who previously appeared on Country Honk and Live With Me on the previously released studio album Let It Bleed . His slide guitar play gives the recordings a special sound compared to other live recordings of the Stones. In addition to nine other tracks, the album contains an approximately nine-minute version of Midnight Rambler . This is one of the few songs that has not been post-edited, as the original recordings were changed by numerous overdubs . Mick Jagger sang the lead vocals back in the studio on some tracks; Keith Richards' backing vocals were also recorded again in the studio. When recording the song Sympathy for the Devil , a verse was subsequently cut out.

The front of the cover was photographed by David Bailey , who was already active in the early days of the Rolling Stones (including No. 2 , Out of Our Heads ).

Originally the album was supposed to be released as a double LP. a. Ike and Tina Turner should participate. But after the record company refused, arguing that a double LP could not be sold, this project was dropped.

The album debuted at number one in the UK charts the week before September 19, 1970 , which it held for another week against Simon and Garfunkel's album Bridge over Troubled Water . The long-playing record remained on the list for a total of 15 weeks. In the US, the album reached position 6 on the Billboard charts.

The name of the album was taken over from the 1938 first recorded blues song Get Your Yas Yas Out by   the US blues singer and guitarist Blind Boy Fuller (1907-1941) in only slightly changed spelling. The Fuller at the Yas Yas written phrase is an expression of ass ( ass ).

Track list

All titles are from Jagger / Richards except where noted.

  1. Jumpin 'Jack Flash (New York City, Nov. 27, 1969) - 4:02
  2. Carol ( Chuck Berry ) (New York City, Nov 28, 1969 1st show) - 3:46
  3. Stray Cat Blues (New York City, Nov 28, 1969 1st show) - 3:46
  4. Love in Vain ( Robert Johnson ) (Baltimore, Nov. 26, 1969) - 4:56
  5. Midnight Rambler (New York City, Nov 28, 1969 2nd show) - 9:04
  6. Sympathy for the Devil (New York City, Nov. 28, 1969, 1st show) - 6:51
  7. Live with Me (New York City, Nov 28, 1969 2nd show) - 3:02
  8. Little Queenie (Chuck Berry) (New York City, Nov. 28, 1969 1st show) - 4:33
  9. Honky Tonk Women (New York City, Nov. 27, 1969) - 3:34
  10. Street Fighting Man (New York City, Nov. 28, 1969 1st show) - 4:03

literature

  • Bill Wyman: Rolling with the Stones . Band biography and documentation.
    Dorling Kindersley Ltd., London 2002. ISBN 0-7513-4646-2 . (English)

Individual evidence

  1. David Roberts (ed.): Guinness World Records - British Hit Singles and Albums , 19th ed., 2006, p. 249 f. ISBN 1-904994-10-5
  2. David Roberts (ed.): Guinness World Records - British Hit Singles and Albums , 19th ed., 2006, p. 468. ISBN 1-904994-10-5
  3. Chart position of the album according to allmusic.com
  4. Image of the label on Discogs
  5. ^ Wyman: Rolling with the Stones , p. 368.
  6. Dietrich Helms, Thomas Phleps: Topic No. 1: Sex and popular music transcript Verlag, 2014 s. 55

Web links