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Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: René ()
Date: April 14, 2014 10:38

Comments, input and alterations are very welcome!
_______________________________________________________________________________

She Said Yeah
(Sonny Bono / Roddy Jackson)

RCA Studios, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, US, September 5, 1965

Mick Jagger - lead vocals, backing vocals
Keith Richards - electric guitar, backing vocals
Charlie Watts - drums
Bill Wyman - bass
Brian Jones - electric guitar

Dam deedle dee dam dam
Little girl, where did you come from?
Try a little bit to make my mouth dribble
Come on baby, let's ride away in the rain

Baby, you drive me crazy, drive my poor heart hazy
Just a little bit, a little while with you
Come on baby, let's ride away in the rain

She said yeah, she said yeah
She said yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Come on baby, I want to make love to you

Well, you drive me crazy, my love is lazy
Little miss, I want to kiss
Come on baby, won't you do what I wish

She said yeah, she said yeah
She said yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Come on baby, I want to make love to you, yeah

Well, I got the feeling in my soul
I'm gonna love you, you know, one night or another
Come on baby, let me hear you say you love me

She said yeah, she said yeah
She said yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Come on baby, I want to make love to you

Produced by Andrew Loog Oldham

First released on:
The Rolling Stones - “Out Of Our Heads” LP
(Decca SKL 4733) UK, September 24, 1965

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: rootsman ()
Date: April 14, 2014 11:20

Nice noise! >grinning smiley<

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: with sssoul ()
Date: April 14, 2014 11:35

Quote
rootsman
Nice noise! >grinning smiley<

~*YEAH!*~

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: Come On ()
Date: April 14, 2014 11:41

Wonderful little fokker...thumbs up

2 1 2 0

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: RobertJohnson ()
Date: April 14, 2014 12:06

One of the earliest punk titles ... wonderful

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: drewmaster ()
Date: April 14, 2014 13:02

Not my cup of tea, but not horrible either.

Drew

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: latebloomer ()
Date: April 14, 2014 13:28

Quote
with sssoul
Quote
rootsman
Nice noise! >grinning smiley<

~*YEAH!*~

Double YEAH!

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: wandering spirit ()
Date: April 14, 2014 14:30

great track! I like it!

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: Jelly Face Joe ()
Date: April 14, 2014 15:38

Co-written by Sonny Bono? Yikes.

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: Witness ()
Date: April 14, 2014 15:45

Probably I cannot give reasons for the following, anyway I might give rise to a discussion, but I think that I would say
1) that "She said Yeah" was rather a noisy 60s rocker than a pre-punk song,
and
2) that, whereas the original recording of "Around And Around" to me was a rock song played in a R&B way, the recording of "She said Yeah" was a rock song, played as rock song.

As such possibly "She Said Yeah" might be said to be a token of a gradual development of the Stones away from the R&B band that they started out as, into something diversely different (for instance a rock and pop band). OUT OF OUR HEADS then had ingredients both from the R&B ( especially "That's How Strong My Love Is" and "Cry to Me" ) and the rock band, being somewhat a transitional album.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2014-04-14 15:45 by Witness.

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: Title5Take1 ()
Date: April 14, 2014 16:31


Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Date: April 14, 2014 16:53

Quote
Witness
Probably I cannot give reasons for the following, anyway I might give rise to a discussion, but I think that I would say
1) that "She said Yeah" was rather a noisy 60s rocker than a pre-punk song,
and
2) that, whereas the original recording of "Around And Around" to me was a rock song played in a R&B way, the recording of "She said Yeah" was a rock song, played as rock song.

As such possibly "She Said Yeah" might be said to be a token of a gradual development of the Stones away from the R&B band that they started out as, into something diversely different (for instance a rock and pop band). OUT OF OUR HEADS then had ingredients both from the R&B ( especially "That's How Strong My Love Is" and "Cry to Me" ) and the rock band, being somewhat a transitional album.

I would have said soul instead of r&b, and SSY has a heavy "garage"-sound that makes my mind wander to the punk sound. It's the chaos in the track that makes it more than merely a rock song, imo.

And I love it dearly thumbs up

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: coffeepotman ()
Date: April 14, 2014 16:56

One of my favorites from back when I was just discovering the world beyond Hot Rocks!

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: Witness ()
Date: April 14, 2014 17:27

Quote
DandelionPowderman
Quote
Witness
Probably I cannot give reasons for the following, anyway I might give rise to a discussion, but I think that I would say
1) that "She said Yeah" was rather a noisy 60s rocker than a pre-punk song,
and
2) that, whereas the original recording of "Around And Around" to me was a rock song played in a R&B way, the recording of "She said Yeah" was a rock song, played as rock song.

As such possibly "She Said Yeah" might be said to be a token of a gradual development of the Stones away from the R&B band that they started out as, into something diversely different (for instance a rock and pop band). OUT OF OUR HEADS then had ingredients both from the R&B ( especially "That's How Strong My Love Is" and "Cry to Me" ) and the rock band, being somewhat a transitional album.

I would have said soul instead of r&b, and SSY has a heavy "garage"-sound that makes my mind wander to the punk sound. It's the chaos in the track that makes it more than merely a rock song, imo.

And I love it dearly thumbs up

Firstly, your objection no. 1 concerned a really clumsy point in my post, yes: The mentionned two songs from OUT OF OUR HEADS I fully agree are soul (or gospel/soul). I associated the rendition of those two soul songs with the R&B band the Stones were developing from. I therefore wrote (but so clumsily; look above in bold) "ingredients both from the R&B (....) and rock band".

Secondly, I can agree to a kind of "garage rock" as classification for "She Said Yeah", but prefer myself not to rubricate that song as punk.

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: Cafaro ()
Date: April 14, 2014 18:37

I love their version of this song. It would have been great if they played it on the 69 tour!

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: Christian ()
Date: April 14, 2014 20:35

Here are the correct lyrics, I guess.
More audible on the live versions.

SHE SAID YEAH
(Sonny Christy & Roddy Jackson)

Dum deedle dee dum dum
Little girl, where did you come from ?
You try a little bit to make my mouth sing (this one I'm not sure)
Come on, baby, let me buy the wedding ring

Baby, you drive me crazy
Got my poor heart hazy
You got my senses reeling, oh baby what a feeling
Come on, baby, let me buy the wedding ring

She said yeah - Dum deedle dee dum dum
She said yeah - Dum deedle dee dum dum
She said yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Come on, baby, I wanna make love to you too

Oh well you drive me crazy - Dum deedle dee dum dum
My love you've been saving - Dum deedle dee dum dum
You see what I miss, I want a kiss
Come on, baby, don't you treat me like this

She said yeah - Dum deedle dee dum dum
She said yeah - Dum deedle dee dum dum
She said yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Come on, baby, I wanna make love to you too

Yeah ! Ow !

Ooh !

Well I got the feeling - Dum deedle dee dum dum
In my soul - Dum deedle dee dum dum
I know I love no one above you
Come on, baby, just let me love you

Yeah - Dum deedle dee dum dum
She said yeah - Dum deedle dee dum dum
She said yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Come on now, I wanna make love to you too

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: ryanpow ()
Date: April 14, 2014 21:17

Out of Our heads is my favorite early album and she said Yeah is one of the reasons why. The album has such a cool range of sounds, from R&B to early punk.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2014-04-14 21:17 by ryanpow.

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: with sssoul ()
Date: April 14, 2014 21:54

I agree that it's "let's buy the wedding ring" but "let's ride away in the rain" has always appealed to me more -
what a wonderfully imaginative & deviant invitation, so expressive of all kinds of just-plain-wildness!

There are other parts of Christian's version of the lyrics that I disagree with.
But it doesn't matter - this track is about the noise, not the words.

~*YEAH!*~

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Date: April 14, 2014 22:11

Quote
Witness
Quote
DandelionPowderman
Quote
Witness
Probably I cannot give reasons for the following, anyway I might give rise to a discussion, but I think that I would say
1) that "She said Yeah" was rather a noisy 60s rocker than a pre-punk song,
and
2) that, whereas the original recording of "Around And Around" to me was a rock song played in a R&B way, the recording of "She said Yeah" was a rock song, played as rock song.

As such possibly "She Said Yeah" might be said to be a token of a gradual development of the Stones away from the R&B band that they started out as, into something diversely different (for instance a rock and pop band). OUT OF OUR HEADS then had ingredients both from the R&B ( especially "That's How Strong My Love Is" and "Cry to Me" ) and the rock band, being somewhat a transitional album.

I would have said soul instead of r&b, and SSY has a heavy "garage"-sound that makes my mind wander to the punk sound. It's the chaos in the track that makes it more than merely a rock song, imo.

And I love it dearly thumbs up

Firstly, your objection no. 1 concerned a really clumsy point in my post, yes: The mentionned two songs from OUT OF OUR HEADS I fully agree are soul (or gospel/soul). I associated the rendition of those two soul songs with the R&B band the Stones were developing from. I therefore wrote (but so clumsily; look above in bold) "ingredients both from the R&B (....) and rock band".

Secondly, I can agree to a kind of "garage rock" as classification for "She Said Yeah", but prefer myself not to rubricate that song as punk.

All good, Witness. We're on the same wavelength smiling smiley

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: michaelsavage ()
Date: April 15, 2014 00:22

Quote
René
Comments, input and alterations are very welcome!
_______________________________________________________________________________

She Said Yeah
(Sonny Bono / Roddy Jackson)

RCA Studios, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, US, September 5, 1965

Mick Jagger - lead vocals, backing vocals
Keith Richards - electric guitar, backing vocals
Charlie Watts - drums
Bill Wyman - bass
Brian Jones - electric guitar

Dam deedle dee dam dam
Little girl, where did you come from?
Try a little bit to make my mouth dribble
Come on baby, let's ride away in the rain

Baby, you drive me crazy, drive my poor heart hazy
Just a little bit, a little while with you
Come on baby, let's ride away in the rain

She said yeah, she said yeah
She said yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Come on baby, I want to make love to you

Well, you drive me crazy, my love is lazy
Little miss, I want to kiss
Come on baby, won't you do what I wish

She said yeah, she said yeah
She said yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Come on baby, I want to make love to you, yeah

Well, I got the feeling in my soul
I'm gonna love you, you know, one night or another
Come on baby, let me hear you say you love me

She said yeah, she said yeah
She said yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Come on baby, I want to make love to you

Produced by Andrew Loog Oldham

First released on:
The Rolling Stones - “Out Of Our Heads” LP
(Decca SKL 4733) UK, September 24, 1965

OUT OF OUR HEADS? >>Not DECEMBER'S CHILDREN?

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Date: April 15, 2014 01:02

Both. It kicks off the original UK version of Out Of Our Heads.

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: buttons67 ()
Date: April 15, 2014 02:14

she said yeah is one of the best early studio performances, superb energy from the jones era, pity there were few songs this tempo in the latter years.

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: Christian ()
Date: April 15, 2014 11:13

Quote
with sssoul

There are other parts of Christian's version of the lyrics that I disagree with.
But it doesn't matter - this track is about the noise, not the words.

~*YEAH!*~

Please tell me which ones and what's your take on it?
It's always interessing to know what everyone hears
since there is so much differences between Ian McPherson and Keno lyrics for example.

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Date: April 15, 2014 11:44

Quote
buttons67
she said yeah is one of the best early studio performances, superb energy from the jones era, pity there were few songs this tempo in the latter years.

I Just Wanna Make Love To You and Have You Seen Your Mother come to mind. All great songs thumbs up

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: RobertJohnson ()
Date: April 15, 2014 13:52

Quote
buttons67
she said yeah is one of the best early studio performances, superb energy from the jones era, pity there were few songs this tempo in the latter years.

Yes, only Rip This Joint and Twenty Flight Rock are brothers of She Said Yeah.

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: runaway ()
Date: April 15, 2014 20:08

She Said Yeay is a great garage/rock opener of this fine vinyl album "Out Of Our Heads".

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: Deltics ()
Date: April 15, 2014 20:51






"As we say in England, it can get a bit trainspottery"

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: runaway ()
Date: April 15, 2014 21:00

Quote
Deltics



it's always great to listen to the source thumbs up



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2014-04-15 21:02 by runaway.

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: Blueranger ()
Date: April 16, 2014 02:30

Quote
michaelsavage
Quote
René
Comments, input and alterations are very welcome!
_______________________________________________________________________________

She Said Yeah
(Sonny Bono / Roddy Jackson)

RCA Studios, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, US, September 5, 1965

Mick Jagger - lead vocals, backing vocals
Keith Richards - electric guitar, backing vocals
Charlie Watts - drums
Bill Wyman - bass
Brian Jones - electric guitar

Dam deedle dee dam dam
Little girl, where did you come from?
Try a little bit to make my mouth dribble
Come on baby, let's ride away in the rain

Baby, you drive me crazy, drive my poor heart hazy
Just a little bit, a little while with you
Come on baby, let's ride away in the rain

She said yeah, she said yeah
She said yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Come on baby, I want to make love to you

Well, you drive me crazy, my love is lazy
Little miss, I want to kiss
Come on baby, won't you do what I wish

She said yeah, she said yeah
She said yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Come on baby, I want to make love to you, yeah

Well, I got the feeling in my soul
I'm gonna love you, you know, one night or another
Come on baby, let me hear you say you love me

She said yeah, she said yeah
She said yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Come on baby, I want to make love to you

Produced by Andrew Loog Oldham

First released on:
The Rolling Stones - “Out Of Our Heads” LP
(Decca SKL 4733) UK, September 24, 1965

OUT OF OUR HEADS? >>Not DECEMBER'S CHILDREN?

It was first released on the UK Out Of Our Heads, in september 1965. In the US, it was released in december on December's Children (pun intended).

Re: Track Talk: She Said Yeah
Posted by: runaway ()
Date: April 16, 2014 08:49

The British Out of Our Heads – with a different cover – added songs that would surface later in the US on December's Children (And Everybody's) and others that had not been released in the UK thus far (such as "Heart of Stone") instead of the already-released live track and recent hit singles (as singles rarely featured on albums in the UK in those times). Issued later that September, Out of Our Heads reached No. 2 in the UK charts behind the Beatles' Help!. It was The Rolling Stones' last UK album to rely upon R&B covers; the forthcoming Aftermath was entirely composed by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards.

In August 2002 both the US and UK editions of Out of Our Heads were reissued in a new remastered CD and SACD digipak by ABKCO Records.[6]
Track listing (UK)

All songs written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, except where noted.
Side one
No. Title Length
1. "She Said "Yeah"" (Sonny Bono/Roddy Jackson) 1:34
2. "Mercy, Mercy" (Don Covay/Ronnie Miller) 2:45
3. "Hitch Hike" (Marvin Gaye/Clarence Paul/Mickey Stevenson) 2:25
4. "That's How Strong My Love Is" (Roosevelt Jamison) 2:25
5. "Good Times" (Sam Cooke) 1:58
6. "Gotta Get Away" 2:06
Side two
No. Title Length
7. "Talkin' Bout You" (Chuck Berry) 2:31
8. "Cry to Me" (Bert Russell) 3:09
9. "Oh, Baby (We Got a Good Thing Going)" (Barbara Lynn Ozen) 2:08
10. "Heart of Stone" 2:50
11. "The Under Assistant West Coast Promotion Man" (Nanker Phelge) 3:07
12. "I'm Free" 2:24
American release
Out of Our Heads
Studio album by The Rolling Stones
Released 30 July 1965
Recorded 2 November 1964 – 12 May 1965
Length 33:24
Language English
Label London
Producer Andrew Loog Oldham
The Rolling Stones American chronology
The Rolling Stones, Now!
(1965) Out of Our Heads
(1965) December's Children (And Everybody's)
(1965)
Singles from Out of Our Heads

"The Last Time"
Released: 13 March 1965 (US)
"(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction"
Released: 6 June 1965 (US)

Initially issued in July 1965 in the US (featuring a shot from the same photo session that graced the cover of 12 X 5 and The Rolling Stones No. 2), Out of Our Heads was a mixture of recordings made over a six-month period, including the Top 10 hit "The Last Time" and the worldwide number 1 "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" with B-sides as well as a track from the UK-only live EP Got Live If You Want It!. Six songs will be included in the UK version of the album. "One More Try" is an original that was not released in the UK until 1971's Stone Age. Riding the wave of "Satisfaction"'s success, Out of Our Heads became The Rolling Stones' first US No. 1 album, eventually going platinum.

In 2003 the US edition was listed as number 114 on the List of Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.
Track listing

All songs written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards except where noted. "Nanker Phelge" was a pseudomyn used by the Stones for group compositions.
Side one
No. Title Length
1. "Mercy Mercy" (Don Covay/Ronnie Miller) 2:45
2. "Hitch Hike" (Marvin Gaye/Clarence Paul/Mickey Stevenson) 2:25
3. "The Last Time" 3:41
4. "That's How Strong My Love Is" (Roosevelt Jamison) 2:25
5. "Good Times" (Sam Cooke) 1:58
6. "I'm All Right" (Nanker Phelge) (Live) 2:25
Side two
No. Title Length
7. "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" 3:42
8. "Cry to Me" (Bert Russell) 3:09
9. "The Under Assistant West Coast Promotion Man" (Phelge) 3:07
10. "Play with Fire" (Phelge) 2:13
11. "The Spider and the Fly" 3:39
12. "One More Try" 1:58
Personnel

The Rolling Stones

Mick Jagger – lead vocals, harmonica, percussion
Keith Richards – electric and acoustic guitars, backing vocals
Brian Jones – electric and acoustic guitars, harmonica, organ, backing vocals, percussion
Charlie Watts – drums and percussion
Bill Wyman – bass guitar, backing vocals

Additional personnel

Jack Nitzsche – harpsichord, percussion
Phil Spector – detuned "bass" guitar on "Play with Fire"
Ian Stewart – piano



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