Last year, eternal global rockers THE ROLLING STONES launched their
new LP Hackney Diamonds, their first original music album since 2005 Bigger Bang longplayer and the first since Charlie Watts passed away
in 2021.
Mick Jagger is 80, Keith ‘Human RiffRichards is 80 and Ron Wood is 79,
yet they started a ‘Hackney Diamonds’ tour in Northern America 2 nights
ago when they played Houston in front of a rapturous crowd.
NME: Rejoice! The rock legends’ first album of original material in almost two decades is an absolute barnstormer. If ‘Hackney Diamonds’ does round off the most successful career in rock music ever, it wouldn’t be a bad place to leave it. A natural end, but definitely not a normal one.” Full review here. Score: 4/5.
TUTV: After more than 6 decades the immortal Stones still are hungry, still motivated and still confident to prove that they still can come up with aflame fireworks. Enter Hackney Diamonds. A record that mixes vintage Stones stuff. Riff-loaded rippers and blues ballads.
Nothing new, no masterpiece whatsoever, but still heated entertainment with ‘start me up’ thrills and impassioned musings. At 80 Mick Jagger’s voice is outstanding and tandem Ron Wood/KeithRichards take care, as usual, about rad riffs, hot hooks, and lively licks. It’s only rock ‘n’ roll but they still like it and still do it. Score: 3.5/5.
Singles/clips:Angry / Sweet Sounds Of Heaven
– ANGRY –
– SWEET SOUNDS OF HEAVEN –
Featuring stunning vocals by Lady Gaga
As already announced, eternal iconic rock stars THE ROLLING STONES canned
a new longplayer, and baptized it HACKNEY DIAMONDS. It’s their 24th British and
26th American album. It lands on 20 October. Their first proper LP in 13 years, since
the release of A Bigger Bang.
Ahead of it, the 3 Stones shared
two stellar tasters (so far).
– ANGRY –
A classic Keef-riff rocker,
with classic Jagger vocals
and a classic Stones chorus.
– SWEET SOUNDS OF HEAVEN –
An instant blues-rock-ballad classic with impassioned Jagger vocals and
sky-scraping gospel delirium caused by Lady Gaga‘s fantastic vocality.
Legendary American magazine (print/website) Rolling Stone put
their review of the LP online yesterday.
It reads as follows (shortened by TUTV).
“A collection of bangers, old-school division) that nobody in their right mind had a right to expect in 2023, ‘Hackney Diamonds’ isn’t just another new Stones album, but a vibrant and cohesive record — the first Stones album in ages you’ll want to crank more than once before filing away.
“Whether it’s a first-time Stones producer (Andrew Watt), bits of technological wizardry, or simply a desire to remind us why we cared about them in the first place, they haven’t sounded this brisk and focused in what feels like a half century. Keith Richards’ and Ron Wood’s guitars are crisp and uncluttered, with most of the slovenly strumming of the past banished. Depending on the song, Mick Jagger sounds snappish, peeved, needy, or insouciant, with lyrics and a more pronounced British accent to match: In the sputtery single “Angry,” he spits out, “It hasn’t rained in a month, the river’s run dry/We haven’t made love, and I wanna know why.” Not exactly rock poetry, true, but he also hasn’t sounded this engaged with the songs since the heyday of the cassette. “Depending on You” could have been one of those draggy ballads that have made their way onto later Stones albums, but Jagger wails as if he wants the whole world to hear him.
When all of those elements come together, a fountain of musical youth miraculously emerges. Toward the end of “Live by the Sword,” one of two tracks they made with drummer Charlie Watts before his passing in 2021, Jagger snarls as the guitars tear it up around him, and you’d hardly think it was the 21st century. With Watt burnishing their sound just enough, songs that could have easily been rote feel revitalized.
Steve Jordan, the longtime X-Pensive Winos member who has taken Watts’ place on the road, plays on the majority of the record. Jordan hits his kit harder than Watts ever did, but his contributions aren’t as jarring as they could have been.
What you won’t find much of here is the late-in-life introspection heard on recent records by some of the Stones’ peers. We’ve arrived at a fascinating period in rock history, when aging boomer rockers aren’t just dragging themselves onstage but continuing to write songs — uncharted territory for them and us. In a first for that generation, we get to hear what‘s on the minds of Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Paul McCartney, Paul Simon, or Judy Collins as they approach or enter their eighties — in songs that confront mortality, look back over tumultuous lives or recent history, and occasionally rant about the state of the planet or politics.
The everlasting mega-iconic rock legends THE ROLLING STONES are quite a phenomena.
Mick Jagger is 80, Keef Richards turns 80 in December and Ron Wood is 76 and they look in absolute great shape. But it’s not only about their cool, healty looks at that age, they’re still terrifically active, like I witnessed last year when they played for 75.000 in Brussels on their umpteenth tour.
And now new music is coming up. HACKNEY DIAMONDS is their 24th British
and 26th American album. It arrives on 20 October. It’s their first proper LP.
in 23 years, since the release of A Bigger Bang.
For more info, watch the very satisfied stones on
the American Fallon talkshow last night chatting
about the brand-new LP.
The first single got his premiere yesterday too.
ANGRY is a classic Keef-riff rocker,
with classic Jagger vocals and a
classic chorus. They are immortal.
Don’t get angry with me
I never caused you no pain
Please just forget about me
Cancel out my name
Please never write to me
I love you just the same
I hear a melody ringing in my brain
Just keep the memories
Don’t have to be ashamed