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The Rolling Stones Songs - All Down The Line
The Rolling Stones - All Down The Line


The Rolling Stones - All Down The Line Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

Album: Exile on Main St.
Released: 1972

All Down The Line Lyrics


Yeah, heard the diesel drumming All Down The Line.
Oh, heard the wires a humming all down the line.
Yeah, hear the women sighing all down the line.
Oh, hear the children crying all down the line.

(All down the line.) We'll be watching out for trouble, yeah.
(All down the line.) And we'd better keep the motor running, yeah.
(All down the line.) Well, you can't say yes and you can't say no,
Just be right there when the whistle blows.
I need a sanctified girl with a sanctified mind to help me now.

Yeah, all the people singing all down the line.
Mmmm, watch the men all working, working, yeah. (All down the line.)

(All down the line.) We're gonna open up the throttle yeah.
(All down the line.) We're gonna bust another bottle, yeah.
(All down the line.)

I need a shot of salvation, baby, once in a while.
Hear the whistle blowing, hear it for a thousand miles.

(All down the line.) We're gonna open up the throttle, yeah.
All down the line, We're gonna bust another bottle, yeah.
Well you can't say yes, and you can't say no,
Just be right there when the whistle blows.
I need a sanctified mind to help me out right now.

Be my little baby for a while.
Won't you be my little baby for a while?

Writer/s: RICHARDS, KEITH / JAGGER, MICK
Publisher: Abkco Music, Inc.
Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

All Down The Line Song Chart
  • The Stones first recorded an acoustic version of this song in 1969. They recorded it electric in 1971, and it was the first song completed for the Exile on Main St. sessions. Engineer Andy Johns told Goldmine in 2010: "It was the first one that was finished cause we'd be working for months and months. Mick got very enamored. 'It's finished! It's going to be the single!' I thought, 'This isn't really a single, you know.' I remember going out and talking to him and he was playing the piano. 'Mick, this isn't a single. It doesn't compare to "Jumpin' Jack Flash" or "Street Fighting Man." 'Come on, man.' He went, 'Really? Do you think so?' I thought, 'My God. He's actually listening to me.' (laughs). And then, I was having a struggle with the mix I thought was gonna be it. Ahmet Ertegun then barged in with a bunch of hookers and ruined the one mix. He stood right in front of the left speaker with two birds on each arm (laughs).
    I told Mick, 'I can't hear it here. If I could hear it on the radio that would be nice.' It was just a fantasy. 'Oh, we can do that.' 'Stew (piano player Ian Stewart), go to the nearest FM radio station with the tape and say we'd like to hear it over the radio. And we'll get a limo and Andy can listen to it in the car.' I went, 'Bloody hell…Well, it's the Stones. OK.'
    So sure enough, we're touring down Sunset Strip and Keith is in one seat, and I'm in the back where the speakers are with Mick, and Charlie is in there, too. Just because he was bored (laughs). And Mick's got the radio on and the DJ comes on the air, 'We're so lucky tonight. We're the first people to play the new Stones' record.' And it came on the radio and the speakers in this car were kind of shot. I still couldn't tell. And it finishes. Then Mick turns around. 'So?' 'I'm still not sure, man.' I'm still not used to these speakers'. 'Oh, we'll have him play it again then.'
    Poor Stew. 'Have them play it again' like they were some sort of radio service. It was surreal. Up and down Sunset Strip at 9:00 on a Saturday night. The Strip was jumpin' and I'm in the car with those guys listening to my mixes. It sounded OK. 'I think we're down with that.' So then we moved on."
  • When The Stones gave this to a Los Angeles radio station in 1971 while they were still working on it so they could hear what it sounded like on the radio, it spread rumors that it would be the first single off Exile on Main St., but that honor went to "Tumblin' Dice."
  • Producer Jimmy Miller added percussion. He had to play some of the instruments on the album because The Stones were rarely together during the sessions, which took place at a French villa Keith Richards rented.
  • Kathi McDonald sang backup. She was a backup singer for Leon Russell and went on to record with Nicky Hopkins and Quicksilver Messenger Service. (thanks, Bertrand - Paris, France)

  • The Rolling Stones Songs - Tumbling Dice
    The Rolling Stones - Tumbling Dice


    The Rolling Stones - Tumbling Dice Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

    Album: Exile on Main St.
    Released: 1972

    Tumbling Dice Lyrics


    Wo Yeah! (Wo, wo)
    Women think I'm tasty, but they're always tryin' to waste me
    And make me burn the candle right down,
    But baby, baby, I don't need no jewels in my crown.
    Cause all you women is low down gamblers,
    Cheatin' like I don't know how,
    But baby, baby, there's fever in the funk house now.
    This low down bitchin' got my poor feet a itchin',
    Don't you know you know the duece is still wild.
    Baby, I can't stay, you got to roll me
    And call me the tumblin' dice.
    Always in a hurry, I never stop to worry,
    Don't you see the time flashin' by.
    Honey, got no money,
    I'm all sixes and sevens and nines.
    Say now baby, I'm the rank outsider,
    You can be my partner in crime.
    But baby, I can't stay,
    You got to roll me and call me the tumblin',
    Roll me and call me the tumblin' dice.
    Oh, my, my, my, I'm the lone crap shooter,
    Playin' the field ev'ry night.
    But baby, I can't stay,
    You got to roll me and call me the tumblin' dice, (Call me the tumblin')
    Got to roll me (yayes), Got to roll me, Got to roll me (Oh yeah)
    Got to roll me
    Got to roll me (yeah)
    Got to roll me (Keep on rolling)
    Got to roll me (Keep on rolling)
    Got to roll me (Keep on rolling)
    Got to roll me
    My baby, call me the tumblin' dice, yeah
    Got to roll me
    Baby sweet as sugar (Got to roll me)
    Yeah, my, my, my yeah (Got to roll me)
    I went down baby, oh
    Got to roll me (hit me)
    Baby I'm down

    Writer/s: JAGGER, MICK/RICHARDS, KEITH
    Publisher: Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC, BMG RIGHTS MANAGEMENT US, LLC, SONY ATV MUSIC PUB LLC
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

    Tumbling Dice Song Chart
  • This was originally titled "Good Time Woman," with different lyrics. Mick Jagger told the story of the song to The Sun newspaper May 21, 2010: "It started out with a great riff from Keith and we had it down as a completed song called Good Time Women. That take is one of the bonus tracks on the new Exile package; it was quite fast and sounded great but I wasn't happy with the lyrics.

    Later, I got the title in my head, 'call me the tumbling dice' so I had the theme for it. I didn't know anything about dice playing but I knew lots of jargon used by dice players. I'd heard gamblers in casinos shouting it out.

    I asked my housekeeper if she played dice. She did and she told me these terms. That was the inspiration."
  • The Stones recorded this in the musty basement of the Villa Nellcote, a place Keith Richards rented in France so the band could avoid paying taxes in England. They would sleep all day and record at night with whoever showed up. For this track, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards played guitar, and Mick Taylor, ordinarily lead guitarist, played bass.
  • Jagger played guitar on this, something he rarely did.
  • This was the only track from Exile to chart in the Top 20 of the singles chart. Jagger told The Sun: "It's obviously the most accessible and commercial song on the record. After 'Tumbling Dice,' I remember there wasn't really a follow-up single. People said, 'So, what are you going to release now then?'"
  • Jagger: "It's like a good guitar-hook tune. It's a bit like Honky Tonk Women in a way, in the way it's set up. But it was done for Exile. It's got a lot more background vocals on it. A very messy mix. But that was the fashion in those days. (thanks, Bertrand - Paris, France)
  • This features Bobby Keys on sax and Jim Price on trumpet. They showed up in France to help with the album, and played with The Stones through the early '70s. Keith Richards and Bobby Keys were born on the same day: December 18, 1943. (thanks, Whitney - Houston, TX)
  • Background vocalists include Vanetta Fields and Clydie King.
  • Linda Ronstadt covered this in 1977. Ronstadt's career during the 1970s was based largely on her successful covers of other artists' songs. (thanks, Mike - Santa Barbara, CA)
  • Exile on Main St. was a double album, and the victim of poor sales and harsh criticism when it was released. Over the years, it has become more appreciated and is considered some of The Stones' best work.
  • Andy Johns, who engineered the Exile sessions, told Goldmine in 2010: "Obviously it was going to be great but it was a big struggle. Eventually we get a take. Hooray! I thought, 'Let's kick this up a notch and double track Charlie.' 'Oh, we've never done that before.' 'Well, it doesn't mean we can't do it now.' So we double-tracked Charlie but he couldn't play the ending. For some reason he got a mental block about the ending. So Jimmy Miller plays from the breakdown on out that was very easy to punch in. It was a little bit different than some of the others. That song we did more takes than anything else."

  • The Rolling Stones Songs - Shake Your Hips
    The Rolling Stones - Shake Your Hips


    The Rolling Stones - Shake Your Hips Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

    Album: Exile on Main St.
    Released: 1972

    Shake Your Hips Lyrics


    Shake Your Hips Song Chart
  • This was originally recorded by Bluesman Slim Harpo. It was Mick Jagger's idea to record it for the album - he is a big fan of Harpo. The Stones recorded Harpo's "I'm A King Bee" on their first album.
  • Harpo was born and lived in Louisiana and in the 1950s and the 1960s helped create a style known as Electric Louisiana Blues. A guitarist, vocalist and harmonica player who played songs in the deceptively simple way of Jimmy Reed, Harpo played a style, along with his Louisiana contemporaries Lazy Lester, Lonesome Sundown and Lightnin' Slim, that has also been called swamp blues. The music was definitely laid back in the style of Jimmy Reed, often featuring reverberating guitars and a slower rhythm and mood that gave it the name swamp blues, which also mixed in elements of other Louisiana music (calypso, gospel, R&B and soul). Harpo was an early influence on The Rolling Stones. Jagger and Richards were the first to discover him and were already into his music during the pre-Stones era. When they met Brian Jones, they turned him on to Harpo in the same way that they turned him on to Chuck Berry. The Stones covered Harpo's "I'm a King Bee" on their first album. Their title for the live album Got Live If You Want It! is a reworking of a Harpo song called "Got Love If You Want It." (thanks, Bertrand - Paris, France)
  • The song is also known as "Hip Shake."
  • The Stones recorded this in London, but reworked it at Keith Richards' villa in the South of France, where the band was staying on their "exile." It was recorded to sound like a '50s record.

  • The Rolling Stones Songs - Rocks Off
    The Rolling Stones - Rocks Off


    The Rolling Stones - Rocks Off Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

    Album: Exile on Main St.
    Released: 1972

    Rocks Off Lyrics


    Oh yeah!

    I hear you talking when I'm on the street,
    Your mouth don't move but I can hear you speak.
    What's the matter with the boy?
    He don't come around no more,
    Is he checking out for sure?
    Is he gonna close the door on me?
    I'm always hearing voices on the street,
    I want to shout, but I can't hardly speak.
    I was making love last night
    To a dancer friend of mine.
    I can't seem to stay in step,
    'Cause she come ev'ry time that she pirouettes over me.
    And I only get my Rocks Off while I'm dreaming,
    I only get my rocks off while I'm sleeping.
    I'm zipping through the days at lightning speed.
    Plug in, flush out and fire the fuckin' feed.
    Heading for the overload,
    Splattered on the dirty road,
    Kick me like you've kicked before,
    I can't even feel the pain no more.
    And I only get my rocks off while I'm dreaming, (only get them off)
    I only get my rocks off while I'm sleeping.
    Feel so hypnotized, can't describe the scene.
    Its all mesmerized, all that inside me.
    The sunshine bores the daylights out of me.
    Chasing shadows moonlight mystery.
    Headed for the overload,
    Splattered on the dirty road,
    Kick me like you've kicked before,
    I can't even feel the pain no more.
    And I only get my rocks off while I'm dreaming (only get them off, get them off),
    I only get my rocks off while I'm sleeping (only get them off, get them off).
    I only get my rocks off while I'm dreaming (only get them off, get them off),
    I only get my rocks off while I'm sleeping (only get them off, get them off).
    (Only get them off, get them off) (only get them off, get them off)

    Writer/s: Jagger, Mick / Richards, Keith
    Publisher: EMI Music Publishing, Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC, BMG RIGHTS MANAGEMENT US, LLC, SONY ATV MUSIC PUB LLC
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

    Rocks Off Song Chart
  • The lyrics contain lots of sexual content, but they are very hard to understand. The song is about the impending loss of sexual ability - there was no Viagra back then.
  • Andy Johns, who engineered the Exile on Main St. sessions, told Goldmine magazine in 2010: "It went on for ages. When Mick came back from Paris for the first time he seemed happy with the sound. And Keith would sit down stairs and at one point he sat there for 12 hours without getting out of his chair just playing the riff over and over and over.
    And then one night, it was very late, four or five in the morning, Keith says, 'Let me listen to that take again.' And he nods off while the tape is playing. I thought, 'Great. That's it. End of the night and I'm out of here.' So I go back to my place where I was staying. (Horn player/arranger) Jim Price and I had this villa. It was pretty spanky. I'm tellin' you. A half an hour drive. I walk in the front door and the phone is ringing. I pick it up and it's Keith. 'Where are you?' 'Well, I'm obviously here 'cause I answered the phone.' 'Well you better get back here, man, 'cause I have this guitar part. Come back!'"
  • This was the first of 18 songs on Exile on Main St. Most of the album was recorded at the Villa Nellcote, a place Keith Richards rented in the South of France. The Stones went there to have some fun and get away from England, where they were taxed heavily on their earnings.
  • This features Bobby Keys on sax and Jim Price on trumpet. They provided horns on albums and tours through the early '70s. Nicky Hopkins played piano on the track. (thanks, Bertrand - Paris, France)
  • Keith Richards explained the title of the album in his autobiography Life (2010): "We could record from late in the afternoon until five or six in the morning, and suddenly the dawn comes up and I've got this boat... We'd just jump in, Bobby Keys, me, Mick, whoever was up for it... We'd pull into Monte Carlo for lunch. Have a chat with either Onassis's lot or Niarchos's, who had the big yachts there. You could almost see the guns pointed at each other. That's why we called it Exile On Main Street. When we first came up with the title it worked in American terms because everybody's got a Main Street. But our Main Street was that Riviera strip. And we were exiles, so it rang perfectly true and said everything we needed. The whole Mediterranean coast was an ancient connection of its own, a kind of Main Street without borders. I've hung in Marseilles, and it was all it was cracked up to be and I've no doubt it still is. It's like the capital that embraces the Spanish coast, the North African coast, the whole Mediterranean coast. It's basically a country all its own until a few miles inland." (thanks, Bertrand - Paris, France)

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