Goin' Home (Rolling Stones song)

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Main other "Goin' Home" is a song recorded by the English rock band the Rolling Stones. Written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, it was the longest popular music song at the time, coming in at 11 minutes and 35 seconds, and was the first extended rock improvisation released by a major recording act. It was included as the sixth track on side one of the United Kingdom version and the fifth track on side two of the American version of the band's 1966 studio album Aftermath.

Writing and recording

"Goin Home" was written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, and recorded at RCA Studios in Hollywood from 8 to 10 December 1965.Template:Sfn The recording is a long blues-inspired track that is notable as one of the first songs by a rock and roll band to break the ten-minute mark and the longest recorded song on any Stones album.[1] While many bands had stretched a song's duration in live performances, and Bob Dylan was known to write long songs (such as Desolation Row), "Goin' Home" was the first "jam" recorded expressly for an album. In an interview with the magazine Rolling Stone, Richards said:

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Jack Nitzsche, a regular Stones contributor throughout the 1960s, here performs percussion.

The song, while lengthy, is built around a common theme, as opposed to later Stones songs of great length like "Midnight Rambler" or "Can't You Hear Me Knocking" which are divided into distinct sections punctuated by differing instrumentations. "Goin' Home" plays as a long jam, eventually deconstructing Richards' guitar piece, Jagger's lyrics, and Watts' drum lines which build in power as the song progresses. Jagger's lyrics are called "a basic expression of [his] pining for his girl and determining to go home and get him some. It's the bumpety-bump, ascending chorus of announcing his intentions to go home that's the most 'pop' element of the song."[2] A bitter-sweet ending is in the final lyrics: "Come on, little girl, you may look sweet, but I know you ain't".

Classic Rock History critic Matthew Pollard rated "Goin' Home" as the Rolling Stones' 10th best deep cut, based on the raw rhythm, "nice effects-driven blues riff," Brian Jones' harmonica playing and Mick Jagger's "sex-drenched innuendos."[3]

Legacy

According to the music historian Nicholas Schaffner, at 11 minutes and 35 seconds, "Goin' Home" displaced the 1965 Bob Dylan song "Desolation Row" (11:21)[4] as the longest recording in popular music. He also cites it as "the first extended improvisation released by a major rock group—though by no means the last."[5]

Personnel

According to authors Philippe Margotin and Jean-Michel Guesdon,Template:Sfn except where noted:

The Rolling Stones

Additional musicians

Notes

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Sources

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External links

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