Post by tozion on Apr 21, 2006 19:00:41 GMT -5
Pretty much everyone knows this song because if they don't know the original, they probably know an artist who covered it at one point. It's a great ballad and a classic even though it oddly was a commercial failure when it was originally released. It's from ones of my favorite albums by them, Sticky Fingers. Here's another excellent All Music Guide commentary.
"Wild Horses" is one of the Rolling Stones' most beautiful ballads, and one of the most worthwhile country-influenced rock songs ever done by a major rock band. It has often been speculated that its composition bore a strong influence from Gram Parsons, a friend of the group who spent a great deal of time with Keith Richards in particular in the late '60s and early '70s. While it's true that the tune has some of the drawn-out languorousness found in Parsons' music, and indeed within much country music in general, this is not a bandwagon-jumping country outing. It's a rock song, and more important, a Rolling Stones song, with typically salacious, drawling Mick Jagger vocals. In the Stones' songs about women, graceful love declarations were far exceeded by nasty putdowns and aggressive sexual come-ons; the album containing "Wild Horses" ( Sticky Fingers), for instance, had "Brown Sugar" and "b*tch" for a start. But within that minority of heartfelt, romantic originals, "Wild Horses" is certainly one of the Stones' best, most sincere efforts. The folky, melancholy guitar strums interact well with the barroom piano that might be one of the most countryish aspects of the tune. Still, it's that singalong chorus — a trait that, it's not often noted, the Stones excelled at — that is the song's chief hook, as something that can be sung to whether you're toasting glasses in a honky tonk or sitting alone in your living room. A tingly, bluesy guitar solo gives this a nice rock edge that reminds you that you're listening to the Stones, not George Jones. Issued as a single, "Wild Horses" was not too successful as vintage Stones singles went, just landing inside the Top 30, but has been accepted as a classic rock radio staple anyway, helped by its inclusion in the Hot Rocks greatest-hits collection. As one of the relatively few Stones songs that can be convincingly performed acoustically, it's also one of the Jagger/ Richards tunes you're most apt to hear covered at the local tavern or coffeehouse. On record, "Wild Horses" was one of the very few noted Rolling Stones compositions ( "As Tears Go By" was another) to have been released by another artist prior to the release of the Stones' version. Appropriately enough, that artist was Gram Parsons' country-rock band, the Flying Burrito Brothers, who put it on their 1970 Burrito Deluxe album.