Aftermath (Rolling Stones album)

Aftermath is a studio album by the English rock band the Rolling Stones. The group recorded the album at RCA Studios in California in December 1965 and March 1966, during breaks between their international tours. It was released in the United Kingdom on 15 April 1966 by Decca Records and in the United States on 2 July by London Records. It is the band's fourth British and sixth American studio album, and follows closely after a series of international hit singles that helped bring the Stones newfound wealth and popularity that rivalled their contemporaries, the Beatles.

Aftermath
UK release
Studio album by
Released15 April 1966 (1966-04-15)
Recorded6–10 December 1965, 3–12 March 1966
StudioRCA in Hollywood, California
Genre
Length52:23
LabelDecca
ProducerAndrew Loog Oldham
The Rolling Stones UK chronology
Out of Our Heads
(1965)
Aftermath
(1966)
Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass)
(1966)
The Rolling Stones US chronology
Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass)
(1966)
Aftermath
(1966)
Got Live If You Want It!
(1966)
Alternative cover
US release by London Records
Singles from Aftermath
  1. "Paint It, Black" / "Stupid Girl"
    Released: 7 May 1966 (US)
  2. "Mother's Little Helper" / "Lady Jane"
    Released: 2 July 1966 (US)

The album is considered by music scholars to be an artistic breakthrough for the Rolling Stones. It is their first to consist entirely of original compositions, all of which were credited to Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. Brian Jones emerged as a key contributor and experimented with instruments not usually associated with popular music, including the sitar, Appalachian dulcimer, Japanese koto and marimbas, as well as guitar and harmonica. Along with Jones' instrumental textures, the Stones incorporated a wider range of chords and stylistic elements beyond their Chicago blues and R&B influences, such as pop, folk, country, psychedelia, Baroque and Middle Eastern music. Influenced in part by intense love affairs outside the band and their demanding touring itinerary, Jagger and Richards wrote the album around psychodramatic themes of love, sex, desire, power and dominance, hate, obsession, modern society and rock stardom. Women feature as prominent characters in their often dark, sarcastic, casually offensive lyrics.

The album's release was briefly delayed by controversy over the proposed packaging and title – Could You Walk on the Water? – by the Stones' manager/producer Andrew Loog Oldham. Decca and London rejected his idea, fearing the allusion to Jesus walking on water would provoke a negative reaction from Christians in the US. In response to the lack of creative control, and without another idea for the title, the Stones bitterly settled on Aftermath, and two different photos of the band were used for the cover to each edition of the album. The UK release featured a run-time of more than 52 minutes, the longest for a popular music LP up to that point. The American edition was issued with a shorter track listing, substituting the single "Paint It, Black" in place of four of the British version's songs, in keeping with the industry preference for shorter LPs in the US market at the time.

Aftermath was an immediate commercial success in both the UK and the US, topping the British albums chart for eight consecutive weeks and eventually achieving platinum certification from the Recording Industry Association of America. Rivalling the contemporaneous impact of the Beatles' Rubber Soul (1965), the album reflected the youth culture and values of 1960s Swinging London and the burgeoning counterculture while attracting thousands of new fans to the Rolling Stones. An inaugural release of the album era, it marked the beginnings of the LP replacing the single as popular music's dominant product and artistic medium. The album was also highly successful with critics, although some listeners were offended by the derisive attitudes towards female characters in certain songs. Its subversive music solidified the band's rebellious rock image while pioneering the darker psychological and social content that glam rock and British punk rock would explore in the 1970s. Aftermath has since been considered the most important of the Stones' early, formative music and their first classic album, frequently ranking on professional lists of the greatest albums.

Background

In 1965, the Rolling Stones' popularity increased markedly with a series of international hit singles written by the band's lead singer Mick Jagger and their guitarist Keith Richards.[1] This success attracted the attention of Allen Klein, an American businessman who became their US representative in August while Andrew Loog Oldham, the group's manager, continued in the role of promoter and record producer.[2] One of Klein's first actions on the band's behalf was to force Decca Records to grant a $1.2 million royalty advance to the group, bringing the members their first signs of financial wealth and allowing them to purchase country houses and new cars.[3] Their October–December 1965 tour of North America was the group's fourth and largest tour there up to that point.[4] According to the biographer Victor Bockris, through Klein's involvement, the concerts afforded the band "more publicity, more protection and higher fees than ever before".[5]

In 1966, inspired by the formidable women around them, driven by the twin engines of ambition and drugs, the Rolling Stones continued a run of visionary hit singles and began to release albums that stood as crucial works of the era. The influence of a powerful new female energy on the Stones was undeniable … At the same time, it was the era of 'Stupid Girl' and 'Under My Thumb,' misogynist songs of dominance set to the Stones' darkest, most ardent music.

—Stephen Davis (2001)[6]

By this time, the Rolling Stones had begun to respond to the increasingly sophisticated music of the Beatles, to whom they had long been promoted by Oldham as a rougher alternative.[7] With the success of the Jagger-Richards-penned singles "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" (1965), "Get Off of My Cloud" (1965) and "19th Nervous Breakdown" (1966), the band increasingly rivalled the Beatles' musical and cultural influence.[8] The Stones' outspoken, surly attitude on songs like "Satisfaction" alienated the establishment detractors of rock music, which, as the music historian Colin King explains, "only made the group more appealing to those sons and daughters who found themselves estranged from the hypocrisies of the adult world – an element that would solidify into an increasingly militant and disenchanted counterculture as the decade wore on."[9] Like other contemporary British and American rock acts, with Aftermath the Stones sought to create an album as an artistic statement, inspired by the Beatles' achievements with their December 1965 release Rubber Soul – an LP that Oldham later described as having "changed the musical world we lived in then to the one we still live in today".[10]

Within the Stones, tensions were rife as Brian Jones continued to be viewed by fans and the press as the band's leader, a situation that Jagger and Oldham resented.[11] The group dynamics were also affected by some of the band members' romantic entanglements.[12] Jones' new relationship with the German model Anita Pallenberg, which had taken on sadomasochistic aspects, helped renew his confidence and encourage him to experiment musically, while her intelligence and sophistication both intimidated and elicited envy from the other Stones.[13] Jagger came to view his girlfriend, Chrissie Shrimpton, as inadequate by comparison; while Jagger sought a more glamorous companion commensurate with his newfound wealth, the aura surrounding Jones and Pallenberg contributed to the end of his and Shrimpton's increasingly acrimonious relationship.[14] Richards' relationship with Linda Keith also deteriorated as her drug use escalated to include Mandrax and heroin.[15] The band's biographer Stephen Davis describes these entanglements as a "revolution under way within the Stones", adding that "Anita Pallenberg restored the faltering Brian Jones to his place in the band and in the Rolling Stones mythos. Keith Richards fell in love with her too, and their romantic triad realigned the precarious political axis within the Stones."[16]

Writing and recording

Mick Jagger (left) and Keith Richards (right), the band's chief songwriters, and Brian Jones (back, center), who contributed to Aftermath as a multi-instrumentalist

Aftermath is the first Stones LP to have all-original material by the group.[17] All the songs were, at Oldham's instigation, written by and credited to the songwriting partnership of Jagger and Richards.[18] The pair wrote much of the material during the October–December 1965 tour and recording began immediately after the tour ended.[19] According to the band's bassist Bill Wyman in his book Rolling with the Stones, they originally conceived Aftermath as the soundtrack for a planned film, Back, Behind and in Front. The plan was abandoned after Jagger met the potential director, Nicholas Ray, and disliked him.[20][nb 1] The recording sessions took place at RCA Studios in Los Angeles on 6–10 December 1965 and, following promotion for their "19th Nervous Breakdown" single and an Australasian tour, on 3–12 March 1966.[23] Charlie Watts, the group's drummer, told the press that they had completed 10 songs during the first block of sessions; according to Wyman's book, at least 20 were recorded in March.[24] Among the songs were four tracks issued on singles by the Rolling Stones in the first half of 1966, the A-sides of which were "19th Nervous Breakdown" and "Paint It, Black".[25][nb 2]

Referring to the atmosphere at RCA, Richards told Beat Instrumental magazine in February 1966: "Our previous sessions have always been rush jobs. This time we were able to relax a little, take our time."[27] The main engineer for the album, Dave Hassinger, was pivotal in making the group feel comfortable during the sessions, as he let them experiment with instrumentals and team up with session musicians like Jack Nitzsche to variegate their sound. Wyman recalled that Nitzsche and Jones would pick up instruments that were in the studio and experiment with sounds for each song. According to Jagger, Richards was writing a lot of melodies and the group would perform them in different ways, which were mainly thought out in the studio.[28] In the recollection of the engineer Denny Bruce, the songs often developed through Nitzsche organising the musical ideas on piano.[29] Wyman was later critical of Oldham for nurturing Jagger and Richards as songwriters to the exclusion of the rest of the band.[30] The bassist also complained that "Paint It, Black" should have been credited to the band's collective pseudonym, Nanker Phelge, rather than Jagger–Richards, since the song originated from a studio improvisation by himself, Jones and Watts, with Jones providing the melody line.[31]

Jones proved important in shaping the album's tone and arrangements, as he experimented with instruments that were unusual in popular music, such as the marimba, sitar and Appalachian dulcimer.[32] Davis cites the "acid imagery and exotic influences" on Rubber Soul, particularly George Harrison's use of the Indian sitar on "Norwegian Wood", as the inspiration for Jones' experimentation with the instrument in January 1966: "One night George put the massive sitar in Brian's hands, and within an hour Brian was working out little melodies."[12] According to Nitzsche, Jones deserved a co-writing credit for "Under My Thumb", which Nitzsche recalled as being an unoriginal-sounding three-chord sequence until Jones discovered a Mexican marimba left behind from a previous session, and transformed the piece by providing its central riff.[33] Wyman agreed, saying, "Well, without the marimba part, it's not really a song, is it?"[34]

An Appalachian dulcimer, one of several instruments Jones introduced to the Stones' sound for the album

During the recording sessions, Richards and Oldham dismissed Jones' interest in exotic instrumentation as an affectation.[35] According to the music journalist Barbara Charone, writing in 1979, everyone connected with the Stones credited Jones for "literally transforming certain records with some odd magical instrument".[36] While Nitzsche was shocked at how cruelly they treated Jones, he later said that Jones was sometimes absent or incapacitated by drugs.[37] Hassinger recalled seeing Jones often "laying on the floor, stoned or on some trip" and unable to play, but that his bandmates would wait for him to leave rather than entering into an argument as other bands would.[38]

Because of Jones' distractions, Richards ended up playing most of the guitar parts for Aftermath, making it one of the first albums to have him do so. Richards later said he found the challenge musically rewarding but resented Jones for his unprofessional attitude when the band were under extreme pressure to record and maintain a hectic touring schedule.[39] On some songs, Richards supported Wyman's bass lines with a fuzz bass part, which the music historians Philippe Margotin and Jean-Michel Guesdon suggest was influenced by Paul McCartney's use on the track "Think for Yourself" from the Beatles' Rubber Soul album.[40] Aftermath was also the first Stones LP to be recorded in true stereo, as opposed to electronically recreated stereo.[41]

Musical style

According to the musicologist David Malvinni, Aftermath is the culmination of the Rolling Stones' stylistic development dating back to 1964, a synthesis of previously explored sounds from the blues, rock and roll, rhythm and blues, soul, folk rock and pop ballads.[42] Margotin and Guesdon go further in saying the album shows the Stones to be free from influences that had overwhelmed their earlier music, specifically the band's Chicago blues roots. Instead, they say, the record features an original style of art rock that resulted from Jones' musical experimentation and draws not only on the blues and rock but also pop, R&B, country, Baroque, classical and world music.[43] Musical tones and scales from English lute song and Middle Eastern music feature among Aftermath's riff-based rock and blues in both its country and urban forms.[44] While still considering it a blues rock effort, Tom Moon likens the music to a collaboration between the art rock band the Velvet Underground and the Stax house band.[45] Jagger echoes these sentiments in a 1995 interview for Rolling Stone, regarding it as a stylistically diverse work and milestone for him that "finally laid to rest the ghost of having to do these very nice and interesting, no doubt, but still, cover versions of old R&B songs – which we didn't really feel we were doing justice, to be perfectly honest".[46]

Along with their 1967 follow-up, Between the Buttons, Aftermath is cited by Malvinni as part of the Rolling Stones' pop-rock period as it features a chordal range more diverse and inclusive of minor chords than their blues-based recordings.[47] According to Kevin Courrier, the Stones use "softly intricate" arrangements that lend the record a "seductive ambience" similar to Rubber Soul, particularly on "Lady Jane", "I Am Waiting", "Under My Thumb" and "Out of Time".[48] The latter two songs, among Aftermath's more standard pop-rock titles, are often-cited examples of Jones interweaving unconventional instruments and quirky sounds into the album's sonic character, his use of the marimba featured on both.[49] In the opinion of Philip Norman, Jones' varied contributions give Aftermath both the "chameleon colours" associated with Swinging London fashion and a "visual quality" unlike any other Stones album.[32] Robert Christgau says the texture of the Stones' blues-derived hard rock is "permanently enriched" as Jones "daub[s] on occult instrumental [colours]", Watts "mold[s] jazz chops to rock forms", Richards "rock[s] roughly on" and the band "as a whole learn[s] to respect and exploit (never revere) studio nuance"; Wyman's playing here is described by Moon as the "funkiest" on a Stones LP.[50]

Citing individual songs, Rolling Stone describes Aftermath as "an expansive collection of tough riffs ('It's Not Easy') and tougher acoustic blues ('High and Dry'); of zooming psychedelia ('Paint It, Black'), baroque-folk gallantry ('I Am Waiting') and epic groove (the eleven minutes of 'Goin' Home')".[51] Jon Savage also highlights the stylistic diversity of the album, saying that it "range[s] from modern madrigals ('Lady Jane'), music-hall ragas ('Mother's Little Helper'), strange, curse-like dirges ('I Am Waiting') and uptempo pop ('Think') to several bone-dry blues mutations ('High and Dry', 'Flight 505' [and] 'Going Home')".[52] The first four songs of Aftermath's US edition – "Paint It, Black", "Stupid Girl", "Lady Jane" and "Under My Thumb" – are identified by the music academic James Perone as its most explicit attempts to transcend the blues-based rock and roll conventions of the Stones' past. He also notes how Richards' guitar riff and solo on the latter track are "minimalistic, in a fairly low tessitura and relatively emotionless", compared to previous Stones hits like "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction", "Get Off of My Cloud" and "19th Nervous Breakdown".[53]

Lyrics and themes

It was almost as if women in all their contradictory humanity symbolised the conditions of life that were the ultimate target of the Stones' anger.

—An unnamed music critic (c. 1966)[54]

Aftermath's diverse musical style contrasts the dark themes explored in Jagger and Richards' lyrics, which often scorn female lovers. Margotin and Gueson say that Jagger, who had been accused of misogyny before the album, is avenging real-life grievances with the songs, using "language and imagery that had the power to hurt". "Stupid Girl", which assails the "supposed greed and facile certitudes of women", is speculated by the writers to indirectly criticise Shrimpton. "High and Dry" expresses a cynical outlook on a lost romantic connection, while "Under My Thumb", "Out of Time" and "Think" show how "a man's revenge on his mistress (or perhaps wife) becomes a source of real pleasure".[18] Shrimpton was devastated by the lyrics to "Out of Time", in which Jagger sings, "You're obsolete, my baby, my poor old-fashioned baby".[55][nb 3] Savage views such songs as evoking "the nastiness of the Rolling Stones' constructed image" in lyrical form by capturing Jagger's antipathy towards Shrimpton, whom he describes as a "feisty upper-middle-class girl who gave as good as she got".[56] Conceding that male chauvinism became a key theme of the Stones' lyrics from late 1965 onwards, Richards later told Bockris: "It was all a spin-off from our environment ... hotels and too many dumb chicks. Not all dumb, not by any means, but that's how one got. You got really cut off."[54]

In Guesdon and Margotin's view, the Stones express a more compassionate attitude towards women in "Mother's Little Helper", which examines a housewife's reliance on pharmaceutical drugs to cope with her daily life, and in "Lady Jane"'s story of romantic courtship.[18] By contrast, Davis writes of Aftermath containing a "blatant attack on motherhood" and says that "Mother's Little Helper" addresses "tranquilised suburban housewives".[57] According to Hassinger, his wife Marie provided the inspiration for "Mother's Little Helper" when she supplied some downers in response to a request from one of the studio staff.[58] Davis likens "Lady Jane" to a Tudor love song with lyrics apparently inspired by Henry VIII's love letters to Lady Jane Seymour.[59] Some listeners assumed the song was about Jagger's high-society friend Jane Ormsby-Gore, daughter of David Ormsby-Gore, 5th Baron Harlech.[59] In what the music journalist Chris Salewicz terms a "disingenuous" claim, Jagger told Shrimpton that "Lady Jane" was written for her.[60]

Overall, the darker themes lead Margotin and Guesdon to call Aftermath "a sombre album in which desolation, paranoia, despair and frustration are echoed as track succeeds track".[18] According to Steven Hyden, Jagger's songwriting explores "sex as pleasure, sex as power, love disguised as hate and hate disguised as love".[61] Moon believes the time period's flower power ideology is recast in a dark light on "these tough, lean, desperately lonely songs", while Norman calls them "songs of callow male triumph" in which Jagger alternately displays childlike charm and misogynistic scorn.[62] While songs such as "Stupid Girl" and "Under My Thumb" may be misogynistic, they are also interpreted as dark representations of the narrator's hateful masculinity. Misogyny, as on "Under My Thumb", "may be just a tool for restoring the fragile narcissism and arrogance of the male narrator", muses the music scholar Norma Coates.[63] Referring to the American version of the LP, Perone identifies numerous musical and lyrical features that lend Aftermath a conceptual unity which, although not sufficient for it to be considered a concept album, allows for the record to be understood "as a psychodrama around the theme of love, desire and obsession that never quite turns out right", or "as part of a dark male fantasy world, perhaps constructed as a means of dealing with loneliness caused by a broken relationship or a series of broken relationships with women."[64] As he explains:

The individual songs seem to ping-pong back and forth between themes of love/desire for women and the desire to control women and out-and-out misogyny. However, the band uses musical connections between songs as well as the subtheme of travel, the use of feline metaphors for women and other lyrical connections to suggest that the characters whom lead singer Mick Jagger portrays throughout the album are really one and perhaps stem from the deep recesses of his psyche.[65]

Swinging London, Carnaby Street, c. 1968. Aftermath captured the Rolling Stones' engagement with Swinging London at a time when the city was gaining international recognition as the centre of youth culture.

According to the music historian Simon Philo, like all the Stones' 1966 releases, Aftermath also reflects the band's "engagement" with Swinging London, a scene in which their decadent image afforded them a pre-eminent role by capturing the meritocratic ideals of youth, looks and wealth over social class.[66] Author Ian MacDonald says that, like on Between the Buttons, the Stones perform here as storytellers of the scene and produce a "subversive" kind of pop music comparable to their contemporaries the Kinks.[67] As Greil Marcus observes, the songs' protagonists can be interpreted as London bohemians severely disdainful of bourgeois comfort, positing "a duel between the sexes" and weaponizing humour and derision.[68] In agreement with Marcus, Courrier adds that, as the "evil twin" of Rubber Soul, Aftermath takes that album's "romantic scepticism" and reframes it into a narrative of "underclass revolt".[69]

Both "Mother's Little Helper" and "What to Do" connect modern society to feelings of unhappiness. The band's misgivings about their rock stardom are also touched on, including relentless concert tours in "Goin' Home" and fans who imitate them in "Doncha Bother Me", in which Jagger sings, "The lines around my eyes are protected by copyright law".[70] Savage views the same lyric, preceded by the lines "All the clubs and the bars / And the little red cars / Not knowing why, but trying to get high", as the Stones' cynical take on Swinging London at a time when the phenomenon was receiving international attention and being presented as a tourist attraction.[71] According to Perone, "I Am Waiting" suggests paranoia on the narrator's part and that societal forces are the cause, yet the song presents a degree of resignation in comparison to the album's other commentaries on class- and consumer-focused society.[72]

Title and packaging

The preliminary title and cover were rejected by the Stones' record label for alluding to Jesus walking on water; Christ Walking on the Water by Julius von Klever (c. 1880) shown above

During the recording, Oldham wanted to title the album Could You Walk on the Water?[73] In mid-January 1966, the British press announced that a new Rolling Stones LP carrying that title would be released on 10 March.[74] In Rolling with the Stones, Wyman refers to the announcement as "audacity" on Oldham's part, although he attributes Could You Walk on the Water? as their manager's proposed title for the band's March compilation album Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass), rather than for Aftermath.[75] At the time, Richards complained that Oldham was continually trying to "[get] in on the act" and "the Stones have practically become a projection of his own ego."[76] While a Decca spokesman said they would not issue an album with such a title "at any price", the idea upset executives at the company's American distributor, London Records, who feared the allusion to Jesus walking on water would provoke a negative response from Christians.[77]

The title controversy embroiled the Stones in a conflict with Decca, delaying Aftermath's release from March to April 1966.[78] Oldham had also proposed the idea of producing a deluxe gatefold featuring six pages of colour photos from the Stones' recent American tour and a cover depicting the band walking atop a California reservoir in the manner of "pop messiahs on the Sea of Galilee", as Davis describes. Rejected by Decca, the packaging was used instead for the US version of Big Hits, albeit with a cover showing the band standing on the shore of the reservoir.[79] According to Davis, "in the bitterness (over lack of control of their work) that followed, the album was called Aftermath for want of another concept."[6] Rolling Stone discerns a connection between the final title and themes explored in the music: "Aftermath of what? of the whirlwind fame that had resulted from releasing five albums in two years, for one thing … And of hypocritical women".[51] In Norman's view, an "aftermath" of the earlier title's "sacrilegious reference to the most spectacular of Christ's miracles" is "the very thing from which their God-fearing bosses may well have saved them", effectively avoiding the international furore that John Lennon created with his remark, in March, that the Beatles are "more popular than Jesus".[80]

The front cover photo for Aftermath's British release was taken by Guy Webster and the cover design was done by Oldham, credited as "Sandy Beach".[81] Instead of the elaborate essay that Oldham usually supplied for the Stones' albums, the liner notes were written by Hassinger and were a straight commentary on the music.[82] Hassinger wrote in part: "It's been great working with the Stones, who, contrary to the countless jibes of mediocre comedians all over the world, are real professionals, and a gas to work with."[83] For the cover image, close-ups of the band members' faces were diagonally aligned against a pale-pink and black coloured background, and the album title was cut in half across a line break.[84] The back of the LP featured four black-and-white photos of the group taken by Jerry Schatzberg at his photographic studio in New York in February 1966.[85] Jones was vocal in his dislike of Oldham's design when interviewed by Melody Maker in April.[84]

For the American edition's cover, David Bailey took a colour photo of Jones and Richards in front of Jagger, Watts and Wyman, and set it against a blurred black background. According to Margotin and Guesdon, the photo was intentionally blurred as "an allusion to the psychedelic movement" and "corresponds better to the Stones' new artistic direction".[84][nb 4]

Marketing and sales

Seated left to right: Bill Wyman, Jones, Richards and Jagger, interviewed by music press in Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport while on tour shortly before Aftermath's release

Aftermath's release was preceded by the Rolling Stones' two-week tour of Europe, which began on 25 March 1966.[87] Decca issued the album in the United Kingdom on 15 April and an accompanying press release that declared: "We look to Shakespeare and Dickens and Chaucer for accounts of other times in our history, and we feel that tomorrow we will on many occasions look to the gramophone records of the Rolling Stones ... who act as a mirror for today's mind, action and happenings."[88] On the same day, Time magazine published a feature titled "London: A Swinging City", belatedly recognising the Swinging London phenomenon a year after its peak.[89] The British edition of Aftermath featured a run-time of 52 minutes and 23 seconds, the longest for a popular music LP at that time.[90] The record was pressed with reduced volume to allow for its unusual length.[52] In the Netherlands, Phonogram Records rush-released the album during the week of 14 May in response to high demand from Dutch music retailers.[91]

In the US, London delayed the album's release to market the Big Hits compilation first but issued "Paint It, Black" as a single in May.[92] The band began their fifth North American tour on 24 June in support of Aftermath; it was their highest-grossing tour yet and, according to Richards, the start of a period of rapprochement between Jones, Jagger and himself.[93] On 2 July, London released the American edition of the album with "Paint It, Black" replacing "Mother's Little Helper", which was released the same day in the US as a single with "Lady Jane" as the B-side.[94][nb 5] "Out of Time", "Take It or Leave It" and "What to Do" were similarly cut from the US LP's running order in an effort to significantly reduce its length, in keeping with the industry policy of issuing shorter albums and maximising the amount of LP releases for popular artists.[97][nb 6] Aftermath was the band's fourth British and sixth American studio album.[100]

In the UK, Aftermath topped the Record Retailer LPs chart (subsequently adopted as the UK Albums Chart) for eight consecutive weeks, replacing the soundtrack album for The Sound of Music (1965) at number 1. It stayed on the chart for 28 weeks.[101] Aftermath proved the fourth highest-selling album of 1966 in the UK, and it also became a top-10 best-seller in the Netherlands.[102] In the US, the album entered the Billboard Top LPs at number 117 on 2 July, making it the chart's highest new entry that week. By 13 August, it had risen to number 2 behind the Beatles' Yesterday and Today.[96] That month, the Recording Industry Association of America awarded Aftermath a gold certification for shipments of 500,000 copies; in 1989 it was certified platinum for one million copies.[103]

According to the pop historian Richard Havers, Aftermath's 1966 US chart run was assisted by the success of "Paint It, Black", which topped the Billboard Hot 100 for two weeks in June.[96] "Mother's Little Helper" was a Hot 100 hit as well, peaking at number 8 on the chart.[84] The album's songs also proved popular among other recording artists, "Mother's Little Helper", "Take It or Leave It", "Under My Thumb" and "Lady Jane" all being covered within a month of Aftermath's release.[104] Adding to Jagger and Richards' success as writers, Chris Farlowe topped the UK charts with his Jagger-produced recording of "Out of Time" in August.[105][nb 7]

Critical reception

Aftermath received highly favourable reviews in the music press.[107] It was released just months before Bob Dylan's Blonde on Blonde and the Beatles' Revolver, albums by artists that Jagger and Richards had received comparisons to while Oldham was promoting the band's artistic maturation to the press.[108] Among British critics, Richard Green of Record Mirror, in April 1966, began his review by saying: "Whether they realise it or not – and I think Andrew Oldham does – the Rolling Stones have on their hands the smash LP of the year with Aftermath", adding that it would take much effort to surpass their achievement. Green said the music is unmistakably rock and roll and was especially impressed by Watts' drumming.[109] Keith Altham of the New Musical Express hailed the Stones as "masterminds behind the electric machines" who have recorded an LP of "the finest value for money ever". He described "Goin' Home" as a "fantastic R&B improvisation" and said that "Lady Jane", "Under My Thumb" and "Mother's Little Helper" have the potential to be great singles.[110] Aftermath was regarded in Melody Maker as the group's best LP to date and one that would "effortlessly take Britain by storm". The magazine's reviewer applauded its focus "on big beat, power and interesting 'sounds'", noting how the use of dulcimer, sitar, organ, harpsichord, marimba and fuzz boxes creates an "overwhelming variety of atmospherics and tones".[111]

While the lyrics' derisive attitude to women offended some listeners, this aspect received little attention in the British pop press or complaints from female fans.[112][nb 8] In the cultural journal New Left Review, Alan Beckett wrote that the band's lyrics could only be fully appreciated by an audience familiar with modern city life, particularly London. He said that the Stones' "archetypal girl", as first introduced in their 1964 song "Play with Fire", was "rich, spoiled, confused, weak, using drugs, etc.", adding that: "Anyone who has been around Chelsea or Kensington can put at least one name to this character."[114] Responding in the same publication, the intellectual historian Perry Anderson (using the pseudonym of Richard Merton) defended the band's message as an audacious and satirical exposé on sexual inequality. He said that in songs such as "Stupid Girl" and "Under My Thumb", the Stones had "defied a central taboo of the social system" and that "they have done so in the most radical and unacceptable way possible: by celebrating it."[115][nb 9]

Among the album's earliest supporters was the musician, journalist and feminist icon Patti Smith (1978).

Some feminist writers defended Jagger's stance in "Under My Thumb".[117] Camille Paglia considered the song "a work of art", despite its sexist lyrics, and Aftermath a "great album" with "rich sonorities".[118][nb 10] In a 1973 piece for Creem, Patti Smith recounted her response to the album in 1966: "The Aftermath album was the real move. two faced woman. doncha bother me. the singer displays contempt for his lady. he's on top and that's what I like. then he raises her as queen. his obsession is her. 'goin home.' What a song ... stones music is screwing music."[120]

Among US commentators, Bryan Gray wrote in the Deseret News: "This album does the best job yet of alienating the over-twenties. The reason – they attempt to sing."[20] Billboard's reviewer predicted that Aftermath would become another hit for the Stones, citing "Paint It, Black" as the focal point of the hard rock album and revering Oldham for his production.[121] Cash Box was extremely impressed by the LP and also predicted immediate chart success, saying "Lady Jane" and "Goin' Home" in particular are likely to attract considerable notice.[122] Writing in Esquire in 1967, Robert Christgau said that the Stones' records present the only possible challenge to Rubber Soul's place as "an album that for innovation, tightness and lyrical intelligence" far surpassed any previous work in popular music.[123] About two years later, in Stereo Review, he included the American Aftermath in his basic rock "library" of 25 albums and attributed the Stones' artistic identity largely to Jagger, "whose power, subtlety and wit are unparalleled in contemporary popular music".[124] While suggesting Jagger and Richards rank second behind John Lennon and Paul McCartney as composers of melody in rock, Christgau still considered it the best album in any category and wrote:

Rock aficionados class the Stones with the Beatles, but perhaps they haven't impressed a wider audience because their devotion to the music is pure: the Hollyridge Strings will never record an album of Jagger–Richard melodies. But for anyone willing to discard his preconceptions, Aftermath is a great experience, a distillation of everything that rock and blues are about.[124][nb 11]

Influence

Aftermath is considered the most important of the Rolling Stones' early albums.[125] It was an inaugural release of the album era, during which the LP replaced the single as the primary product and form of artistic expression in popular music.[126] As with Rubber Soul, the extent of Aftermath's commercial success foiled the music industry's attempts to re-establish the LP market as the domain of wealthier, adult record-buyers – a plan that had been driven by the industry's disapproval of the uncouth image associated with Jagger and their belief that young record-buyers were more concerned with singles.[127] In Malvinni's opinion, Aftermath was "the crucial step for the Stones' conquering of the pop world and their much-needed answer" to Rubber Soul, which had similarly embodied the emergence of youth culture in popular music during the mid-1960s.[128][nb 12] With their continued commercial success, the Stones joined the Beatles and the Who as one of the few rock acts who were able to follow their own artistic direction and align themselves with London's elite bohemian scene without alienating the wider youth audience or appearing to compromise their working-class values.[131] Speaking on the cultural impact of Aftermath's British release in 1966, Margotin and Guesdon say it was, "in a sense, the soundtrack of Swinging London, a gift to hip young people" and "one of the brightest stars of the new culture (or counterculture) that was to reach its zenith the following year in the Summer of Love".[132]

Aftermath follows directly in the wake of the Stones' trilogy of songs based on their American Experience: '(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction', 'Get Off of My Cloud' and '19th Nervous Breakdown', and it establishes that they had gained sufficient confidence in their own writing prowess to present an album of all-original material. Though perhaps they weren't aware of it then, their initial adrenalin rush (which had sustained them for three years) was just about exhausted. However, the sheer momentum of their struggle for Stateside supremacy enabled them to pull off this coup de grace without showing any signs of artistic fatigue.

—Roy Carr (1976)[133]

Aftermath is regarded as the most artistically formative of the Rolling Stones' early work.[125] Their new sound on the album helped expand their following by the thousands, while its content solidified their dark image.[134] As Ritchie Unterberger observes, its contemptuous perspective about society and women contributed significantly to the group's reputation as "the bad boys" of rock music.[135] According to John Mendelsohn from PopMatters, the social commentary of "Mother's Little Helper" in particular "cemented their reputation as a subversive cultural force", as it exposed the hypocrisy of mainstream culture's exclusive association of psychoactive drug use with addicts and rock stars.[136] The NME's Jazz Monroe writes that Aftermath simultaneously disowned and reimagined rock tradition and forever elevated the Stones as equals to the Beatles.[137] Writing for The A.V. Club, Hyden describes it as "a template for every classic Stones album that came afterward", crediting its "sarcastic, dark and casually shocking" songs with introducing themes Jagger would explore further in the future through a "complex, slippery persona" that allowed him to "be good and evil, man and woman, tough and tender, victim and victimiser". This deliberately "confounding, complicated image" helped make Jagger one of the most captivating lead musicians in rock, Hyden concludes.[61]

The album proved influential in the development of rock music. Its dark content pioneered the darker psychological and social themes of glam rock and British punk rock in the 1970s.[138] The music historian Nicholas Schaffner, in The British Invasion: From the First Wave to the New Wave (1982), acknowledges the Stones on the album for being the first recording act to engage themes of sex, drugs and rock culture "with both a measure of intelligence and a corresponding lack of sentimentality or even romanticism".[139] The attitude of songs like "Paint It, Black" in particular influenced punk's nihilistic outlook.[140]

Some of Aftermath's blues-oriented rock elements foreshadowed the blues-rock music of the late 1960s.[44] Schaffner suggests "Goin' Home" anticipated the trend of extended musical improvisations by professional rock bands, while Rob Young of Uncut says it heralded "the approaching psychedelic tide" in the manner of Rubber Soul.[141] Summarising Aftermath's impact in 2017, the pop culture writer Judy Berman describes "Paint It, Black" as "rock's most nihilistic hit to date" and concludes that, "with Jones ditching his guitar for a closetful of exotic instruments and the band channelling their touring musicians' homesickness on the record's 11-minute culminating blues jam, 'Goin' Home,' they also pushed rock forward."[117]

Legacy and reappraisal

Retrospective professional reviews
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[135]
Blender[142]
Encyclopedia of Popular MusicUK:
US:[143]
Entertainment WeeklyA–[144]
The Great Rock Discography7/10[145]
MusicHound Rock5/5[146]
Music Story[147]
NME7/10[148]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[149]
Tom HullUK: A–
US: A[150]

Aftermath is often considered the Rolling Stones' first classic album.[151] According to Stephen Davis, its standing as the first wholly Jagger–Richards collection makes it, "for serious fans, the first real Rolling Stones album".[152] In The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock & Roll (1976), Christgau names it the first in a series of Stones LPs – including Between the Buttons, Beggars Banquet (1968) and Let It Bleed (1969) – that stand "among the greatest rock albums".[153] Of its standing in the band's catalogue, Schaffner says it is "the most creative" and possibly the best of their albums "in the first five years", while Hyden cites it as their "first full-fledged masterpiece".[154] Writing for Uncut, Ian MacDonald recognises it as an "early peak" in the Stones' career, and Jody Rosen, in a "Back Catalogue" feature for Blender, includes it as the first of the group's "essential" albums.[155] The Guardian's Alexis Petridis names Aftermath the Stones' fifth best record, while Graeme Ross of The Independent ranks it sixth and suggests it stands on a level with other benchmark LPs from 1966, including Blonde on Blonde, Revolver and the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds.[156] In MusicHound Rock (1999), Greg Kot highlights Jones' "canny" instrumental contributions while identifying Aftermath as the album that transformed the Stones from British blues "traditionalists" into canonical artists of the album-rock era, alongside the Beatles and Bob Dylan.[146] In a retrospective review for AllMusic, Unterberger applauds the band's use of influences from Dylan and psychedelia on "Paint It, Black", and similarly praises "Under My Thumb", "Lady Jane" and "I Am Waiting" as masterpieces.[135]

In 2002, both versions of Aftermath were digitally remastered as part of ABKCO Records' reissue campaign of the Rolling Stones' 1960s albums. Reviewing the reissues for Entertainment Weekly, David Browne recommends the UK version over the US, while Tom Moon, in his appraisal in The Rolling Stone Album Guide (2004), prefers the US edition for its replacement of "Mother's Little Helper" with "Paint It, Black" and highlights the clever lyrics of Jagger.[157] Colin Larkin, who rates the British version higher in his Encyclopedia of Popular Music (2011), describes Aftermath as "a breakthrough work in a crucial year" and an album that demonstrates a flexibility in the group's writing and musical styles as well as "signs of the band's inveterate misogyny".[158] In their book The Beatles vs. The Rolling Stones: Sound Opinions on the Great Rock 'n' Roll Rivalry (2010), Jim DeRogatis and Greg Kot agree that Aftermath is "the first really great Stones album beginning to end", with DeRogatis especially impressed by the British edition's first half of songs.[159]

The pop culture author Shawn Levy, in his 2002 book Ready, Steady, Go!: Swinging London and the Invention of Cool, says that, unlike the three previous Stones albums, Aftermath displayed "purpose" in its sequencing and "a real sense that a coherent vision was at work" in the manner of the Beatles' Rubber Soul. However, he adds that with the August 1966 release of Revolver, Aftermath appeared "limp, tame, dated".[160][nb 13] Young believes its reputation as a work on-par with Rubber Soul is undeserved since the quality of its songs is inconsistent, the production is "relatively straight" and the assorted stylistic approach ensures it lacks the unifying aspect of the period's other major LPs.[162] Discussing the album's critical legacy for PopMatters, Mendelsohn and Eric Klinger echo this sentiment while agreeing that it is more of a transitional work for the Stones and not up to the level of the albums from their subsequent "golden years" – Beggars Banquet, Let It Bleed, Sticky Fingers (1971) and Exile on Main St. (1972).[136] In an article for Clash celebrating Aftermath's 40th anniversary, Simon Harper concedes that its artistic standing alongside the Beatles' contemporaneous works may be debatable but, "as the rebirth of the world's greatest rock and roll band, its importance is undisputed."[163]

Some retrospective appraisals are critical towards the harsh treatment of female characters on the album. As Schaffner remarks, "the brutal thrust of such ditties as 'Stupid Girl,' 'Under My Thumb' and 'Out of Time' has since, of course, induced paroxysms of rage among feminists."[139] Young infers that the album's principal lyrical theme now evokes a "rather old-fashioned sensation of brattish, spiky misogyny", presenting female characters as "pill-popping housewives … the idiotic hussy … the 'obsolete' fashion dummy … or the subjugated arm candy".[162] Berman also singles out this aspect in her otherwise positive estimation of Aftermath, saying it "indulged the Stones' misogyny on the bitchy diss track 'Stupid Girl' and tamed a shrew on 'Under My Thumb,' a nasty piece of work".[117] Unterberger expresses similar reservations about the substance behind songs like "Goin' Home" and "Stupid Girl", finding the latter particularly callow.[135]

Rankings

Aftermath frequently appears on professional rankings of the best albums.[147] In 1987, it was voted 68th in Paul Gambaccini's book Critics' Choice: The Top 100 Rock 'n' Roll Albums of All Time, based on submissions from an international panel of 81 critics, writers and broadcasters.[164] In contemporaneous rankings of the greatest albums, the Dutch OOR, the British Sounds and the Irish Hot Press placed it as 17th, 61st and 85th, respectively. The French magazine Rock & Folk included Aftermath in its 1995 list of "The 300 Best Albums from 1965-1995".[147] In 2000, it was voted number 387 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums.[165] In 2003, Rolling Stone ranked the American edition at number 109 on the magazine's "500 Greatest Albums of All Time" list, a position it retained in the 2012 revised list.[166] The French retailer FNAC's 2008 list named Aftermath the 183rd greatest album of all time. In contemporaneous listings of the "coolest" albums, Rolling Stone and GQ ranked it second and 10th, respectively.[147] In 2017, Pitchfork listed Aftermath at number 98 on the website's "200 Best Albums of the 1960s".[117]

The album is also highlighted in popular record guides. It is named in Greil Marcus' 1979 anthology Stranded as one of his "Treasure Island" albums, comprising a personal discography of rock music's first 25 years.[167] The American edition of the album is included in "A Basic Record Library" of 1950s and 1960s recordings published in Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies (1981).[168] The same version appears in James Perone's book The Album: A Guide to Pop Music's Most Provocative, Influential and Important Creations (2012) and in Chris Smith's 101 Albums That Changed Popular Music (2009), albeit in the latter's appendix "Ten Albums That Almost Made It".[169] In addition, Aftermath features in Bill Shapiro's 1991 Rock & Roll Review: A Guide to Good Rock on CD (listed in its section on "The Top 100 Rock Compact Discs"), Chuck Eddy's The Accidental Evolution of Rock'n'roll (1997), the 2006 Greenwood Encyclopedia of Rock History's "Most Significant Rock Albums", Tom Moon's 2008 book 1,000 Recordings to Hear Before You Die and Robert Dimery's 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die (2010).[170]

Based on Aftermath's appearances in professional rankings and listings, the aggregate website Acclaimed Music lists it as the 33rd most acclaimed album of the 1960s and the 150th most acclaimed album in history.[147][nb 14]

Track listing

UK edition

All tracks are written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards.

Side one
No.TitleLength
1."Mother's Little Helper"2:40
2."Stupid Girl"2:52
3."Lady Jane"3:06
4."Under My Thumb"3:20
5."Doncha Bother Me"2:35
6."Goin' Home"11:35
Total length:26:08
Side two
No.TitleLength
1."Flight 505"3:25
2."High and Dry"3:06
3."Out of Time"5:15
4."It's Not Easy"2:52
5."I Am Waiting"3:10
6."Take It or Leave It"2:47
7."Think"3:10
8."What to Do"2:30
Total length:26:15
  • ABKCO's 2002 SACD remaster of the UK edition was released with an otherwise unavailable stereo mix of "Mother's Little Helper".[171]

US edition

All tracks are written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards.

Side one
No.TitleLength
1."Paint It, Black"3:20
2."Stupid Girl"2:52
3."Lady Jane"3:06
4."Under My Thumb"3:20
5."Doncha Bother Me"2:35
6."Think"3:10
Total length:18:23
Side two
No.TitleLength
1."Flight 505"3:25
2."High and Dry"3:06
3."It's Not Easy"2:52
4."I Am Waiting"3:10
5."Goin' Home"11:35
Total length:24:08

Personnel

Credits are from the 2002 CD booklet and contributions listed in Philippe Margotin and Jean-Michel Guesdon's book All the Songs, except where noted otherwise.[172]

The Rolling Stones

  • Mick Jagger – lead and backing vocals, percussion; harmonica ("Doncha Bother Me")
  • Keith Richards – harmony and backing vocals, electric and acoustic guitars; fuzz bass ("Under My Thumb", "Flight 505", "It's Not Easy")
  • Brian Jones – electric and acoustic guitars; sitar ("Paint It, Black"), dulcimer ("Lady Jane", "I Am Waiting"), harmonica ("Goin' Home", "High and Dry"), marimba ("Under My Thumb", "Out of Time"), koto ("Take It or Leave It")[173]
  • Bill Wyman – bass guitar, fuzz bass; organ ("Paint It, Black"), bells
  • Charlie Watts – drums, percussion, bells

Additional musicians

  • Jack Nitzsche – piano, organ, harpsichord, percussion
  • Ian Stewart – piano, organ

Additional personnel

  • David Bailey – photography (US edition)[174]
  • Dave Hassinger – engineering
  • Andrew Loog Oldham – production, cover design (UK edition)[82]
  • Jerry Schatzberg – photography
  • Guy Webster – photography (UK edition)

Charts

Chart (1966) Peak
position
UK Record Retailer LPs Chart[175] 1
US Billboard Top LPs[96] 2
US Cash Box Top 100 Albums[176] 1
West German Musikmarkt LP Hit-Parade[177] 1

Certifications

Region CertificationCertified units/sales
United Kingdom (BPI)[178] Silver 60,000^
United States (RIAA)[103] Platinum 1,000,000^

*sales figures based on certification alone
^shipments figures based on certification alone

See also

  • British Invasion
  • Classic rock
  • List of rock albums

Notes

  1. The film was announced on 17 December 1965, with the Rolling Stones reportedly in starring roles.[21] The production was officially cancelled the following May, when a press release stated that the band were due to film a screen adaptation of the Dave Wallis novel Only Lovers Left Alive.[22]
  2. "Ride On, Baby" and "Sittin' on a Fence" were also recorded during the sessions but were first released on the 1967 US album Flowers.[26]
  3. She was also devastated by the withering depiction of a neurotic girl in "19th Nervous Breakdown".[55]
  4. Jagger was among the pop musicians and other leading creative figures of contemporary London that Bailey included in his collection of monochrome photographic portraits, Box of Pin-Ups, published in November 1965.[86]
  5. Margotin and Guesdon give a date of 20 June for Aftermath but acknowledge that Wyman's book states a US release date of 2 July, while Salewicz gives 1 July.[95] The album entered the US chart compiled by Billboard magazine on 9 July.[96]
  6. "Out of Time" and "Take It or Leave It" remained unreleased in the US until June 1967, when they were included on the London Records album Flowers.[98] "What to Do" was eventually released on the 1972 American compilation More Hot Rocks (Big Hits & Fazed Cookies).[99]
  7. Farlowe's single was released on Immediate Records, a new Oldham business venture that allowed Jagger and Richards to produce records for the first time.[106]
  8. Davis writes, however, that Aftermath was a source of embarrassment for Shrimpton, since "people generally identified her with the [album's] scathing put-downs", and that it led to an argument she and Jagger had while attending a party hosted by Guinness heir Tara Browne in April 1966.[113]
  9. Anderson used the pseudonym in his brief endeavor into rock criticism, which the sociologist Gregory Elliott later described as a prudent move because Anderson's preferences – for the Stones over the Beatles, and for the Beach Boys over Bob Dylan – were "curios of the counterculture".[116]
  10. In 1970, Paglia defended "Under My Thumb" in an exchange with members of the New Haven Women's Liberation Rock Band, who she recounted "went into a rage, surrounded me, practically spat in my face" and "cornered me with my back against the wall" before telling her, "Nothing that demeans woman can be art." Addressing the incident in an interview for Reason magazine, Paglia says, "Now, as a student of art history, how can you have any dialogue with these people? That is the Nazi and Stalinist view of art, where art is subordinate to a pre-fab political agenda." She explains that such incidents contributed to her exclusion from the women's movement.[119]
  11. Christgau later wrote a letter to Stereo Review, charging the magazine's editor with deleting and altering the contents of his article, including his concluding statement on Aftermath: "Let me insist that I do not consider the Rolling Stones' Aftermath 'the best album of its kind,' as your editor would have it. I consider it quite simply the best."[124]
  12. In tribute to Aftermath, the Beatles jokingly considered naming their next album After Geography.[129] The title of Rubber Soul had come about through Paul McCartney overhearing black American musicians describing Jagger's singing as "plastic soul".[130]
  13. In Simon Philo's description, Revolver announced "underground London"'s arrival in pop, supplanting the sound associated with Swinging London.[161]
  14. In 2013, the album had placed as high as number 125 on Acclaimed Music's all-time list.[136]

References

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  2. Charone 1979, pp. 75–76; Bockris 1992, p. 69; Norman 2001, p. 176.
  3. Davis 2001, p. 134.
  4. Wyman 2002, p. 208.
  5. Bockris 1992, p. 69.
  6. Davis 2001, p. 155.
  7. Erlewine n.d.; Simonelli 2013, pp. 44–45; Philo 2015, p. 71.
  8. Williams 2002.
  9. King 2004.
  10. Simonelli 2013, p. 96; Kubernik 2015.
  11. Salewicz 2002, p. 98; Trynka 2015, p. 180.
  12. Davis 2001, pp. 155–56.
  13. Davis 2001, pp. 147, 155–56.
  14. Salewicz 2002, p. 98; Norman 2001, pp. 197, 201.
  15. Salewicz 2002, p. 99.
  16. Davis 2001, pp. 155, 156.
  17. Jagger et al. 2003, p. 108.
  18. Margotin & Guesdon 2016, p. 138.
  19. Salewicz 2002, p. 96; Davis 2001, p. 150.
  20. Wyman 2002, p. 232.
  21. Bonanno 1990, p. 48.
  22. Bonanno 1990, p. 54.
  23. Bonanno 1990, pp. 49–50, 52.
  24. Wyman 2002, pp. 212, 222.
  25. Margotin & Guesdon 2016, p. 140.
  26. Margotin & Guesdon 2016, p. 140; Davis 2001, p. 212.
  27. Wyman 2002, p. 213.
  28. Jagger et al. 2003, p. 100.
  29. Trynka 2015, p. 177.
  30. Charone 1979, p. 84.
  31. Wyman 2002, p. 234; Trynka 2015, p. 187.
  32. Norman 2001, p. 197.
  33. Trynka 2015, pp. 185–86.
  34. Trynka 2015, p. 187.
  35. Trynka 2015, p. 188.
  36. Charone 1979, p. 83.
  37. Trynka 2015, pp. 177–78; Charone 1979, p. 85.
  38. Charone 1979, pp. 88–89.
  39. Charone 1979, p. 85; Bockris 1992, pp. 70–71.
  40. Margotin & Guesdon 2016, pp. 149, 152, 155.
  41. Fremer 2010.
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  43. Margotin & Guesdon 2016, pp. 136, 138.
  44. Perone 2012, p. 91.
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  46. Wenner 1995.
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  51. Anon. 2003.
  52. Savage 2015, p. 71.
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  54. Bockris 1992, p. 70.
  55. Salewicz 2002, pp. 103, 107.
  56. Savage 2015, p. 72.
  57. Davis 2001, pp. 161–62.
  58. Margotin & Guesdon 2016, p. 142.
  59. Davis 2001, p. 162.
  60. Salewicz 2002, p. 106.
  61. Hyden 2008.
  62. Moon 2004, p. 697; Norman 2001, p. 197.
  63. Hyden 2008; Coates 2019.
  64. Perone 2012, pp. 91–92, 97.
  65. Perone 2012, pp. 91–92.
  66. Philo 2015, pp. 103–04.
  67. MacDonald 2002.
  68. Marcus 1980, p. 181.
  69. Courrier 2008, p. 133.
  70. Margotin & Guesdon 2016, p. 138; Anon. 2003.
  71. Savage 2015, p. 74.
  72. Perone 2012, pp. 96–97.
  73. Davis 2001, p. 155; Margotin & Guesdon 2016, p. 139.
  74. Bonanno 1990, p. 50.
  75. Wyman 2002, pp. 217, 230.
  76. Wyman 2002, p. 222.
  77. Wyman 2002, p. 217; Margotin & Guesdon 2016, p. 139; Norman 2012, p. 203.
  78. Davis 2001, p. 155; Anon. 2001.
  79. Davis 2001, pp. 155, 160.
  80. Norman 2012, p. 203.
  81. Davis 2001, p. 161; Norman 2001, p. 196.
  82. Norman 2001, p. 196.
  83. Margotin & Guesdon 2016, pp. 139–40.
  84. Margotin & Guesdon 2016, p. 139.
  85. Davis 2001, pp. 158, 161.
  86. Bray 2014, pp. xii, 252–53.
  87. Bonanno 1990, pp. 52–53.
  88. Clayson 2006, p. 40; Bockris 1992, pp. 75–76.
  89. Savage 2015, pp. 73–74.
  90. Schaffner 1982, p. 68.
  91. Hegeman 1966, p. 32.
  92. Salewicz 2002, pp. 105, 106.
  93. Bonanno 1990, p. 55; Wyman 2002, p. 236; Charone 1979, p. 89.
  94. Wyman 2002, p. 232; Salewicz 2002, p. 106; Wyman 2002, p. 240; Bonanno 1990, pp. 54–55.
  95. Margotin & Guesdon 2016, p. 139; Salewicz 2002, p. 106.
  96. Havers 2018.
  97. Margotin & Guesdon 2016, p. 139; Havers 2018; Bentley 2010, p. 142.
  98. Davis 2001, p. 212.
  99. Unterberger (a) n.d.
  100. Persad 2013; Dalton 1982, p. 34.
  101. Margotin & Guesdon 2016, p. 139; Anon. (c) n.d..
  102. Mawer 2007; Hegeman 1966, p. 32.
  103. Anon. (e) n.d.
  104. Bonanno 1990, p. 53.
  105. Norman 2001, p. 210; Larkin 2011, pp. 1995–96.
  106. Norman 2001, p. 210.
  107. Margotin & Guesdon 2016, p. 139; Savage 2015, pp. 71–72.
  108. Margotin & Guesdon 2016, pp. 137–39.
  109. Green 1966, p. 5.
  110. Altham 1966, p. 48.
  111. Anon. (a) 1966.
  112. Davis 2001, p. 163; Savage 2015, pp. 72–73.
  113. Davis 2001, p. 164.
  114. Bockris 1992, p. 76.
  115. Davis 2001, p. 163.
  116. Elliott 1998, p. 60.
  117. Berman 2017.
  118. Gillespie 2015; Paglia 1994, p. 224.
  119. Smith 2019; Gillespie 2015.
  120. Smith 1973.
  121. Anon. (c) 1966, p. 66.
  122. Anon. (b) 1966, p. 192.
  123. Christgau 1967, p. 283.
  124. Christgau 1969.
  125. Anon. 2018.
  126. Snow 2015, p. 67.
  127. Simonelli 2013, p. 96.
  128. Malvinni 2016, pp. 43, xxxvi.
  129. Sheffield 2012.
  130. Bray 2014, p. 269.
  131. Simonelli 2013, p. 97.
  132. Margotin & Guesdon 2016, p. 136.
  133. Bockris 1992, p. 75.
  134. Anon. 2018; Perone 2012, p. 97.
  135. Unterberger (b) n.d.
  136. Mendelsohn & Klinger 2013.
  137. Monroe 2015.
  138. Perone 2012, p. 97.
  139. Schaffner 1982, p. 69.
  140. Palmer 2011.
  141. Schaffner 1982, p. 69; Young 2010, pp. 18–19.
  142. Rosen 2006.
  143. Larkin 2011, p. 2005.
  144. Browne 2002.
  145. Strong 2006, p. 993.
  146. Kot 1999, p. 950.
  147. Franzon n.d.
  148. Anon. 1995, p. 46.
  149. Moon 2004, p. 695.
  150. Hull n.d.
  151. Marchese 2017.
  152. Davis 2001, p. 161.
  153. Christgau 1976.
  154. Schaffner 1982, p. 68; Hyden 2008.
  155. MacDonald 2002; Rosen 2006.
  156. Petridis 2018; Ross 2018.
  157. Browne 2002; Moon 2004, p. 697
  158. Larkin 2011, pp. 1995–96.
  159. DeRogatis & Kot 2010, pp. 38–39.
  160. Levy 2002, p. 175.
  161. Philo 2015, p. 112.
  162. Young 2010, pp. 18–19.
  163. Harper 2006.
  164. Franzon n.d.; Taylor 1987.
  165. Larkin 2000, p. 147.
  166. Anon. 2003; Anon. 2012.
  167. Marcus 1979.
  168. Christgau 1981.
  169. Perone 2012, p. vi; Smith 2009, pp. 243, 244.
  170. Franzon n.d.; Dimery 2010, p. 93.
  171. Walsh 2002, p. 27.
  172. Anon. (a) 2002; Margotin & Guesdon 2016, pp. 134–75.
  173. Janovitz 2013, p. 88.
  174. Anon. (b) 2002.
  175. Anon. (d) n.d.
  176. Anon. (d) 1966, p. 41.
  177. Anon. (b) n.d.
  178. Anon. (a) n.d.

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Further reading

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