The Rolling Stones- Let It Bleed (1969)
Gimme Shelter
Love In Vain
Country Honk
Live With Me
Let It Bleed
Midnight Rambler
You’ve Got the Silver
Monkey Man
You Can’t Always Get What You Want
Stephen King, writing as Richard Bachman, has a short novel called Roadwork from the early 70s in which the main character, faced with losing his house to eminent domain, gets a bunch of guns and has a shootout with the police. Before he does he invites a young hippie girl to stay at his house for a few nights, and she introduces him to rock music by way of two albums: Crosby Stills and Nash and Let It Bleed. The “hero” is in his 40s and not familiar with the music; he finds CSN to be boring, but, as King describes, Let It Bleed “filled him with a darkness he immediately recognized and welcomed into his soul.” He plays the record several times before the final shootout.
If Let it Bleed is filled with darkness as King claims, it isn’t because of the title song, which is rather cheerful, or the optimistic classic “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” (which ironically is played at the end of every Donald Trump rally). Nor is it the country explorations of “Country Honk” and “You Got the Silver”. Nor is it the ballad “Love In Vain” or the rocker “Live With Me.”
The “darkness” is located in 3 songs: the scary “Monkey Man”, the scarier “Midnight Rambler”, and the scariest of all “Gimme Shelter” which opens the album. These songs are not for the faint of heart. They are tunes played hard, to be taken seriously. Merry Clayton isn’t joking around on “Gimme Shelter”; neither is the rest of the band. Hide your precious belongings.