On bass Keith Richards (in addition to lead guitar); although Bill Wyman claims the main riff cell is his, he does the organ there and Brian does the mellotron and other guitars; Jimmy Miller on maracas; and yes, Charlie plays on the "toy" portable drum set. He has the guitar/sitar and one in Nashville tuning (in octaves higher); the latter perhaps influenced by Ry Cooder or Gram Parsons.
This is the greatest rock song ever written and performed. It’s rock and roll perfection. It’s so bright and energetic with great lyrics and nothing that pulls focus from the overall band performance no dramatic solos or anything just a straight up band tapestry. I wish we could have the guitar and keyboard separated as well
I am a Beatles fan, first and foremost... but it's hard to argue that this is - perhaps - the greatest Rock 'n' Roll song recorded. It never gets old, never gets tired, always interesting to listen to and always gets me going.
possibly the greatest basslines ever to be played on a riff-based rock song. such a badass stuff. normally, you would expect the same riff as the guitar part, but playing a single note constantly with variation in rhythm makes it so much more badass. Keith is a great bassist
I did'nt know that the bass line was made by Keith. I love the Bill's job with the Stones but, for me, perhaps Keith is the best bass player of the Stones ever.
I'm glad someone else noticed that. It's like Wyman just checks out if things get too complicated. Keith's bass on SFTD sounds like a lead guitar, not a baseball bat hitting dirt.
Keith Richards played acoustic guitar and distorted acoustic guitar on the Rolling Stones' 1968 song "Jumpin' Jack Flash". Richards achieved the song's original sound by recording an acoustic guitar through a tape recorder until it sounded like the end of the world. He also played two guitars layered on top of each other, one in open E tuning with a capo and the other in Nashville tuning.
Way back in the early '90s, I was in a band playing lead guitar. One afternoon, when we were playing at a party, we decided last-minute to add "Jumping Jack Flash" to our set. Our bass player was not familiar with the song, so I sat with him and showed him what to play. This was long before TH-cam, where you could locate isolated tracks for faster learning. I am proud to say that, after listening to the isolated bass track, I was pretty much spot-on with what I suggested your bass player payed. 😏
Brilliant song and that middle part when he sings it’s a gas just sounds like the Sixties. Those notes were perfect and it’s so catchy. Keith just hit the right notes!
all credit to Bill Wyman (except for lyrics,melotron,12 string), this song was initially his creation..the riff,time signature and bass line were created by Wyman
@gigagod3384 Keith and Mick walked into the recoding session and Wyman was playing the riff on bass..Keith said play that again and they built the guitars around it. BILL took to the organ for the final mix while Keith was on bass. Saw an interview years ago where Bill explained it
Good grief, Bill himself only claims he was playing the (very basic) riff...on the PIANO, when Mick and Keith showed up (again, that's straight from Bill). If true, and it very well could be that he was hammering out a few notes that formed the outline of a riff, he didn't write the song (big difference). Also, they didn't sit down right there and record it. It was later, after the famous "gardener waking Mick up" incident that the song was written, and recorded shortly thereafter. There is very little evidence (that I'm aware of) that Bill put up any fight about the credit other than mentioning the above story publicly once or twice. I'm sure Bill was frustrated from time to time over the years, but he knew his place...and became a very wealthy and respected musician because of it (the only way that was going to happen). Could they have thrown him a bone and given him a third of the credit? I suppose so, but I doubt many composers would have under similar circumstances. And, that ain't the way the Stones work anyway.
It's Nashville tuning. Not exactly a 12 string. Replacing the bass side strings on a standard 6 string guitar with the skinny octave strings from a 12 string set.
@captaincat40 but look at the picture Jones is playing Rickenbacker 12 string and the Nashville tuning strategy didn't start until 69 Let it Bleed sessions onward plus it says in this video description
Organ is a nice touch. Always thought it was melotron. Keith plays a great bass. The guitar parts are all priceless. I would hope Brian played a bit of guitar. But will never know. The piano also provides a nice subdued backdrop. Just a brilliant song. My no 1 Rock song of all time. Never wares on you and gets annoying.
@@ednorko5128 Perhaps, although Bill Wyman says otherwise. Also, it was Bill and Brian's riff and it should have been credited to Nanker Phelge and not Jagger/Richards.
there are many guitar parts, in my opinion Brian's guitar is on the left with a sound close to the bass. it's the same line that he plays on the rock'n'roll circus and that he does in the videos.
@@ednorko5128 According to authors Philippe Margotin and Jean-Michel Guesdon, Keith played acoustic guitar and Brian Jones played electric rhythm guitar on this song.
It is a simplicity of rock n roll where the result is just an amazing classic. The stones play it in several different ways and still a great song. Love it
BRIAN JONES (1943 ~ 1969) "When this you see , remember me and bear me in your mind Let all the world say what they may, speak of me as you find" This quote was featured on The Rolling Stones album ~ THROUGH THE PAST, DARKLY (Big Hits Vol.2) which was released on September 12,1969. The cover and back photos were taken on May 21,1969 by photographer Ethan Russell. Little did we know that Brian Jones would be dismissed from the group on June 8,1969. I proudly have a framed album British copy of Through The Past Darkly, with Jumpin' Jack Flash as the leadoff track, proudly displayed on my bedroom wall. It is a very cool pic!
I'll never forget Charlie Watts' Toy Drum kit on "Jumpin' Jack Flash"! That's some of the funkiest and hypnotic Drumming ever! Charlie used the same Toy Drum kit on "Street Fighting Man". The Guitars, Organ, Keith Richards Bass, Mick's Lead Vocal.and Harmony Vocals, the whole production is perfection! "Jumpin' Jack Flash" is the greatest ever Pop/Rock Single "A" Side!
Yea, me too. I have the separated tracks and the bass is a lot easier to play than most people on TH-cam are showing and it sounds way better to me to play it just as it is on the recording. So if you have two guitarists in your band, play the bass part just like the recording, it sounds way better in my opinion.
Since I first learned this in about 1972 I’ve always played the bass part riding that B with the Keith vamps thrown in. Every bar band does it doubling the guitar part though and now and then till this day I’ve had people ask me why it sounds so much heavier when whatever group I’m in plays it. Because you ride the B. That’s why! Let the guitars do their part. Let the bass do its part. That’s the secret!
I know it is Keith on bass...however, I read somewhere...this riff was created by Bill Wyman. And...that Mick and Keith kind of stole the credit from Bill for this riff. The article said Bill always kind of held a grudge with Mick and Keith for snatching credit for his invention.
Was that Brian on the jangly but of guitar work. He was playing a 12 string Rickenbacker so it’s possible. Really interesting to hear how the song was put together including Keith’s propulsive bass.
That sounds like Kieth with the opening guitar bell like groove but then he chugs through the rest of it. Brian and Piano player playing the main riff.
Keith and Mick wrote this masterpiece entirely at Keith's home, Redlands in an all night session where Keith was trying out new sounds by playing his acoustic Hummingbird guitar through one of the first available Norelco Philips cassette recorders. By putting the microphone inside the guitar and turning it up he got that distinctive overdriven acoustic guitar riff played high on the neck with a capo. It was a unique sound that gave his relatively mellow acoustic guitar an exciting aggressive edge that he loved. Keith wrote the first verse and the refrain himself with Mick fleshing out the rest of the verse's lyrics. Jumpin' Jack was actually Keith's gardener, Jack Dyer, who Keith had nicknamed "Jumpin' Jack" for the way he hopped around doing his landscaping work around Redlands ...Jack surprised Mick doing his morning chores with his rubber boots on in the wet grass walking by the window where Mick was sitting inside. Surprised by the sloshing sound, Mick said "Who's that?" Keith answered "Oh that's just my gardener, Jumpin' Jack" ... "FLASH!" Mick reacted and the song was created. Keith's first verse "I was born in a crossfire hurricane" refers to the night he was born during a WWII bombing run the luftwaffe made on London. When the sirens sounded, Keith's mom was shepharded off to the protection of a bomb shelter where Keith was born, underground amid the vibrations of the exploding bombs. Instead of bombing London that night they dumped their bombs on Keith's home town, Dartford, demolishing and leveling his home with the cradle meant for newborn, infant Keith still in it. Above everything else, Keith is a survivor as well as a songwriting and innovating guitar genius.
I wish someone would ask Keith who played what on this particular song. Always though there was melotron. And if that's Brian on the 12 string it's pretty damn impressive.
@@martinkent333But it’s usually based on third person accounts, while Keith, on the other hand, was there. And there’s no need to interject while sounding like a dickhead.
Since 1968 I thought it was Nicky Hopkins playing the Hammond B3 Organ but it actually is none other that Bill Wyman! Kudos to Bill! What hip Organ work!
HOLY WATER ENEMAS MIXED WITH KENTUCKY MOONSHINE WILL MAKE YOU SEE GOD, CUPCAKE. ICE CREAM IS FOR KIDS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ICE CREAM CAN'T SPEW ON ATHEIST, CAN IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! JESUS IS COMING SOON, BUT RIGHT NOW HE IS IN URANUS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Charlie. Driving them forward, tapping the brakes,holding them strictly in the middle. I'm glad Mr. Jordan has taken the spot, but I think they needed Charlie to become what they are.
I once heard it said that Jumping Jack Flash was the song that saved The Rolling Stones from their period of psychedelic experimentation with their music and got them back to rock and roll basics.
They didn’t need saving though. This is a killer track, but Satanic Majesties was a natural evolution from their mid sixties pop peak. Not sure they needed to switch to cosplaying like they are from the US south
@@will2741 I agree, even Jagger said in later interviews that he was disappointed that the band largely dropped any experimentation in their music after "Satanic" (with a few exceptions like "Can You Hear The Music" or "Continental Drift", both of which have a "Satanic"-like element to them).
It’s the first time I’ve heard of Brian using his Ricky 12 string on this. Is this in addition to the Nashville strung acoustic? Do we have any confirmation of Brian using the Ricky and any ideas which parts it plays?
@@HJsCorn909 Is it an educated guess or did you read it somewhere? I definitely think there is an ES-330TD playing int the right hand Chanel in the intro, riff and the low part of the solo. I’ve tried it on a Casino (a very similar guitar) and it sounds identical. The right hand Chanel chorus work and the higher part of the solo sound more like a tele to my ears and the triplet strums at the end of the chorus don’t sound like standard, open G, D or E tunings. I’m guessing it’s Nashville strung like the acoustic in the other Chanel but tuned to E5 🤔
Elliot: Are you sure that's a Rickenbacker 12? We know Brian had one, but aside from possibly "The singer not the song", I can't hear an electric 12 in any 'Stones song.
The recording and mixing of JJF always bugged me being so dense and muddy sounding. What the heck were they thinking? I mean compare the single with Honky Tonk Woman for a night and day transition from sludge to crispness and clarity.
That dense muddiness in the mix is exactly why JJF is so legendary. It's a sound like no other, although they did do a good repeat with "Street Fighting Man". A remix would probably ruin it.
Shame on the ABCKO Label! Here are priceless Rolling Stones recording session works in progress that should be officially released to their devoted fans! The Beatles have released their definitive albums from 1966~1970 with lavish packaging and interesting outtakes but not The Rolling Stones! It's the same old releases with no outtakes, such as these, and no essays to explain The Stones' recording sessions process! It's the same old unimaginative repackaging with lousy graphics! The Rolling Stones deserve so much better!
No credit given to Wyman who wrote it. Twins are thieves. Just like the way the way they ripped off Ruby Tuesday from Brian. and the songs written by studio musicians.
Single 1968
Drums, Bass and Maracas 0:00-3:34
Guitars, Organ, Toy Drums and Piano 3:36-7:17
Vocals 7:20-9:55
On bass Keith Richards (in addition to lead guitar); although Bill Wyman claims the main riff cell is his, he does the organ there and Brian does the mellotron and other guitars; Jimmy Miller on maracas; and yes, Charlie plays on the "toy" portable drum set. He has the guitar/sitar and one in Nashville tuning (in octaves higher); the latter perhaps influenced by Ry Cooder or Gram Parsons.
That bassline is some badass whiteboy voodoo.
Keith Richards, baby!
@@ednorko5128 Are you aware Keith played the Bass on "Sympathy For The Devil"?
Such wicked Bass lines!
@@RaulMacias-gv3leKeith is a great bassist. He has said that he’s probably a better bassist than guitarist
Makin that root work for its keep. Stones never really had a bassist until they hired out. Just guitarists who played bass.
This is the greatest rock song ever written and performed. It’s rock and roll perfection. It’s so bright and energetic with great lyrics and nothing that pulls focus from the overall band performance no dramatic solos or anything just a straight up band tapestry. I wish we could have the guitar and keyboard separated as well
I do agree. If I was stuck on desert island this would the song I take with me.
I am a Beatles fan, first and foremost... but it's hard to argue that this is - perhaps - the greatest Rock 'n' Roll song recorded. It never gets old, never gets tired, always interesting to listen to and always gets me going.
@@JD0124 that’s huge coming from a Beatles fan. You have excellent taste.
Well said sir
It was absolutely the best rock-n-roll song ever, period!
possibly the greatest basslines ever to be played on a riff-based rock song. such a badass stuff. normally, you would expect the same riff as the guitar part, but playing a single note constantly with variation in rhythm makes it so much more badass. Keith is a great bassist
I would have thought Bill would be playing bass
@@johnt7232the chorus is super bouncy like a Bill bassline, but this is definitely Keith.
Bills riff
I wish Bill had played it that way live. He always just played the guitar riff on bass
Barking dog, was always subliminally there...now it really is there. Brilliant.
Keith and Charlie together are simply excellent.
It's ridiculous how in sync they are plus that busy bass...wow
keith+ Charlie = rock and roll
The multi track recorder is truely a great invention, And I mean that with all of my soul.
Truly, truly.
You can thank Les Paul for that! He was multitracking in the fifties. Genius!!
You can thank Les Paul for that! He was multitracking in the fifties. Genius!!
i love this. All Bass players and drummers please take note.
Love keiths bass playing efforts, always credible
Kieth plays bass on some of their best tracks.
I did'nt know that the bass line was made by Keith.
I love the Bill's job with the Stones but, for me, perhaps Keith is the best bass player of the Stones ever.
Yeah, too bad Bill didn’t get a writing credit for coming up with the riff.
@@Carlos-kq9ov Listen to Woodys bass playing. Especially with Jeff Beck and on Steel Wheels!!
@@thomasjensen3214 I'll do It, thanks.
I'm glad someone else noticed that. It's like Wyman just checks out if things get too complicated. Keith's bass on SFTD sounds like a lead guitar, not a baseball bat hitting dirt.
So pulsating and driving the drums/bass/maracas section is. Love it!! Oh, yeah!
Keith Richards played acoustic guitar and distorted acoustic guitar on the Rolling Stones' 1968 song "Jumpin' Jack Flash". Richards achieved the song's original sound by recording an acoustic guitar through a tape recorder until it sounded like the end of the world. He also played two guitars layered on top of each other, one in open E tuning with a capo and the other in Nashville tuning.
Way back in the early '90s, I was in a band playing lead guitar. One afternoon, when we were playing at a party, we decided last-minute to add "Jumping Jack Flash" to our set. Our bass player was not familiar with the song, so I sat with him and showed him what to play. This was long before TH-cam, where you could locate isolated tracks for faster learning. I am proud to say that, after listening to the isolated bass track, I was pretty much spot-on with what I suggested your bass player payed. 😏
Brilliant song and that middle part when he sings it’s a gas just sounds like the Sixties. Those notes were perfect and it’s so catchy. Keith just hit the right notes!
Guitars, Organ, Barking Dog and Piano 3:36-7:17
I think what's sounds like a barking dog is really the echo of the snare. ;)
Damn, that bass and drum track is funky!
all credit to Bill Wyman (except for lyrics,melotron,12 string), this song was initially his creation..the riff,time signature and bass line were created by Wyman
How could Bill have created the baseline if didn’t play the bass on the song?
@gigagod3384 Keith and Mick walked into the recoding session and Wyman was playing the riff on bass..Keith said play that again and they built the guitars around it. BILL took to the organ for the final mix while Keith was on bass. Saw an interview years ago where Bill explained it
So Bill is the father of the best r'n'roll song of the 20th century !
Good grief, Bill himself only claims he was playing the (very basic) riff...on the PIANO, when Mick and Keith showed up (again, that's straight from Bill). If true, and it very well could be that he was hammering out a few notes that formed the outline of a riff, he didn't write the song (big difference). Also, they didn't sit down right there and record it. It was later, after the famous "gardener waking Mick up" incident that the song was written, and recorded shortly thereafter. There is very little evidence (that I'm aware of) that Bill put up any fight about the credit other than mentioning the above story publicly once or twice. I'm sure Bill was frustrated from time to time over the years, but he knew his place...and became a very wealthy and respected musician because of it (the only way that was going to happen). Could they have thrown him a bone and given him a third of the credit? I suppose so, but I doubt many composers would have under similar circumstances. And, that ain't the way the Stones work anyway.
Bill playing riff wit Brian and Charlie when Keith heard it
You can hear that 12 string ringing out...amazing...
It's Nashville tuning. Not exactly a 12 string. Replacing the bass side strings on a standard 6 string guitar with the skinny octave strings from a 12 string set.
@@captaincat40I’m going to have to try that.
@captaincat40 but look at the picture Jones is playing Rickenbacker 12 string and the Nashville tuning strategy didn't start until 69 Let it Bleed sessions onward plus it says in this video description
Keith, accompanied by his usual mixed batch of session musicians, is as usual, stellar…
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Organ is a nice touch. Always thought it was melotron. Keith plays a great bass. The guitar parts are all priceless. I would hope Brian played a bit of guitar. But will never know. The piano also provides a nice subdued backdrop. Just a brilliant song. My no 1 Rock song of all time. Never wares on you and gets annoying.
I think he is doing that jangle-twang melody line.
@@williamtynertyner1425 that's Keith, Brian was very out of it at this point of time Keith played bass and all guitar parts
@@ednorko5128 Perhaps, although Bill Wyman says otherwise. Also, it was Bill and Brian's riff and it should have been credited to Nanker Phelge and not Jagger/Richards.
there are many guitar parts, in my opinion Brian's guitar is on the left with a sound close to the bass. it's the same line that he plays on the rock'n'roll circus and that he does in the videos.
@@ednorko5128 According to authors Philippe Margotin and Jean-Michel Guesdon, Keith played acoustic guitar and Brian Jones played electric rhythm guitar on this song.
maaaaan i love that drum n bass stem !! Could groove on that forever!
Jumpin' Jack Flash has excess gas!😂😂
It is a simplicity of rock n roll where the result is just an amazing classic. The stones play it in several different ways and still a great song. Love it
The Bass is so cool.
2:20 this part where the maracas come in and leave the song halfway through the chorus, may just be the best part of any song ever
7:20 "Here, yell that into this Radio Shack cassette recorder I got here, its got new batteries. You guys will make millions I tell ya, MILLIONS !!"
BRIAN JONES (1943 ~ 1969)
"When this you see , remember me
and bear me in your mind
Let all the world say what they may,
speak of me as you find"
This quote was featured on The Rolling Stones album ~
THROUGH THE PAST, DARKLY (Big Hits Vol.2)
which was released on September 12,1969.
The cover and back photos were taken on May 21,1969 by photographer Ethan Russell.
Little did we know that Brian Jones would be dismissed from the group on June 8,1969.
I proudly have a framed album British copy of Through The Past Darkly, with Jumpin' Jack Flash as the leadoff track, proudly displayed on my bedroom wall.
It is a very cool pic!
My 1st STONES LP my big brother brought me for Xmas 69, after 2 tours in Viet Nam. Thanx Wayne.
I'll never forget Charlie Watts' Toy Drum kit on "Jumpin' Jack Flash"!
That's some of the funkiest and hypnotic Drumming ever!
Charlie used the same Toy Drum kit on "Street Fighting Man".
The Guitars, Organ, Keith Richards Bass, Mick's Lead Vocal.and Harmony Vocals, the whole production is perfection!
"Jumpin' Jack Flash" is the greatest ever Pop/Rock Single "A" Side!
This was cool to listen to I was actually looking to listen to Just the isolated piano on this track but this is way cool thanks for posting❤
This has helped me more than any how to play tutorial I have watched! thank you 🙏🏻 for this
Keith’s bass reminds me of Magazine,The Light Pours Out Of Me.
Yea, me too. I have the separated tracks and the bass is a lot easier to play than most people on TH-cam are showing and it sounds way better to me to play it just as it is on the recording. So if you have two guitarists in your band, play the bass part just like the recording, it sounds way better in my opinion.
The bass is very important in this song and is overlooked
Since I first learned this in about 1972 I’ve always played the bass part riding that B with the Keith vamps thrown in. Every bar band does it doubling the guitar part though and now and then till this day I’ve had people ask me why it sounds so much heavier when whatever group I’m in plays it. Because you ride the B. That’s why! Let the guitars do their part. Let the bass do its part. That’s the secret!
I love those vocal harmonies so much
That snare is SO WET!!! I LOVE IT!!!
I know it is Keith on bass...however, I read somewhere...this riff was created by Bill Wyman. And...that Mick and Keith kind of stole the credit from Bill for this riff. The article said Bill always kind of held a grudge with Mick and Keith for snatching credit for his invention.
Heard it Too
Bill wrote it on the piano
Wyman onn hammond imitating Oldham who used to play organ at a cinema...Wyman had a laugh and Keef lept up on that.
Bill had the riff on piano/keyboard/organ..
Keith liked it and adapted it to guitar.
Bill Wyman says that in his autobiography, but Richards disagrees saying how proud he is with coming up with the riff as it's satisfaction in reverse
Bad ass!!! God I love this song
Was that Brian on the jangly but of guitar work. He was playing a 12 string Rickenbacker so it’s possible. Really interesting to hear how the song was put together including Keith’s propulsive bass.
Brian most probably is not on the song. There is no Jangly 12 string Ricky or any other 12 string on this.
Bill says he plays guitar here, and was along with Charlie and Bill himself the creator of the riff
That sounds like Kieth with the opening guitar bell like groove but then he chugs through the rest of it. Brian and Piano player playing the main riff.
This song sounds like nothing else in rock (except maybe a little of “Street Fighting Man” and “Stray Cat Blues”). A unique brew.
I love Bill Wyman's organ part. I always thought it was Nicky Hopkins or someone else.
Keith and Mick wrote this masterpiece entirely at Keith's home, Redlands in an all night session where Keith was trying out new sounds by playing his acoustic Hummingbird guitar through one of the first available Norelco Philips cassette recorders. By putting the microphone inside the guitar and turning it up he got that distinctive overdriven acoustic guitar riff played high on the neck with a capo. It was a unique sound that gave his relatively mellow acoustic guitar an exciting aggressive edge that he loved.
Keith wrote the first verse and the refrain himself with Mick fleshing out the rest of the verse's lyrics.
Jumpin' Jack was actually Keith's gardener, Jack Dyer, who Keith had nicknamed "Jumpin' Jack" for the way he hopped around doing his landscaping work around Redlands ...Jack surprised Mick doing his morning chores with his rubber boots on in the wet grass walking by the window where Mick was sitting inside. Surprised by the sloshing sound, Mick said "Who's that?" Keith answered "Oh that's just my gardener, Jumpin' Jack" ... "FLASH!" Mick reacted and the song was created.
Keith's first verse "I was born in a crossfire hurricane" refers to the night he was born during a WWII bombing run the luftwaffe made on London. When the sirens sounded, Keith's mom was shepharded off to the protection of a bomb shelter where Keith was born, underground amid the vibrations of the exploding bombs. Instead of bombing London that night they dumped their bombs on Keith's home town, Dartford, demolishing and leveling his home with the cradle meant for newborn, infant Keith still in it.
Above everything else, Keith is a survivor as well as a songwriting and innovating guitar genius.
made up story
I wish someone would ask Keith who played what on this particular song. Always though there was melotron. And if that's Brian on the 12 string it's pretty damn impressive.
TRY WIKI ROLLING STONES DISCOGRAPHY, CUPCAKE. IT HAS ''PERSONEL'' OUTLINED ON EACH SONG!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@@martinkent333But it’s usually based on third person accounts, while Keith, on the other hand, was there.
And there’s no need to interject while sounding like a dickhead.
So being ignorant is fun? What up? Facts are not hard. R U A Karen?
@@ericoberlies7537
There is no 12 string on JJF.
@@martinkent333 Try turning the caps off and stop shouting.
Keith, the creative soul of the Stones.
Since 1968 I thought it was Nicky Hopkins playing the Hammond B3 Organ but it actually is none other that Bill Wyman!
Kudos to Bill!
What hip Organ work!
He actually contributed more to the song than just the organ.😊
I only now realise that the bass stays on the B during the riff.
i always thought i could hear bagpipes at the end of the song but i guess it's just a bunch of guitars, genius
Bill Wyman on a Hammond B-3
Bon Scott on the highland pipes.
Brian Jones does play on this song!
What does he play because no one has ever confirmed what he plays.
@@BigSky1 this is a pretty good guess as to what he plays th-cam.com/video/W6g6eN8_5II/w-d-xo.html
@@BigSky1 According to Wikipedia he plays electric rhythm guitar.
12 string
@@BigSky1According to Mick and Keith. Bill Wyman tells a different story. It was Brian,Bill and Charlie jamming it when Mick and Keith came in.
I am pretty sure Keith plays the main riff on open E-tuning from the first fret, with open chord. I tried it and it sounds very accurate that way.
Agree
Very handy indeed.
The Ice Cream sandwich is another great invention that doesn’t get the attention or respect it deserves. Delicious sandwich and self contained.
HOLY WATER ENEMAS MIXED WITH KENTUCKY MOONSHINE WILL MAKE YOU SEE GOD, CUPCAKE. ICE CREAM IS FOR KIDS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ICE CREAM CAN'T SPEW ON ATHEIST, CAN IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! JESUS IS COMING SOON, BUT RIGHT NOW HE IS IN URANUS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Excellent!
Keef bass is killer
One of the guitars is speeded up. You can hear that by the extrem high pitched notes
the tuning was off to begin with, but I presume you are hearing the high strung nashville tuning that really comes out during the chorus.
What is muttered at 8:39 and who is it?
Probably Keith or someone
Great answer 🙄
Sounds like a count in
Charlie. Driving them forward, tapping the brakes,holding them strictly in the middle.
I'm glad Mr. Jordan has taken the spot, but I think they needed Charlie to become what they are.
Look up Brian Jones Vox Mando guitar. It's a super short-scale 12-string electric guitar. Probably what he's playing on JJF.
No. Brian didn’t play the Vox Mando on any Stones song even though gered Mankowitz took photos of Brian posing with one in late ‘66.
There is no 12 string guitar on JJF. It's Nashville tuning on one of the guitars that you're hearing.
I once heard it said that Jumping Jack Flash was the song that saved The Rolling Stones from their period of psychedelic experimentation with their music and got them back to rock and roll basics.
@Erathostenes This is about the Stones okay!
They didn’t need saving though. This is a killer track, but Satanic Majesties was a natural evolution from their mid sixties pop peak. Not sure they needed to switch to cosplaying like they are from the US south
@@will2741 I agree, even Jagger said in later interviews that he was disappointed that the band largely dropped any experimentation in their music after "Satanic" (with a few exceptions like "Can You Hear The Music" or "Continental Drift", both of which have a "Satanic"-like element to them).
Satisfaction riff in reverse
Ah so Keith is not playing the bass with the well known riff underneath - just sitting on the B throughout. Interesting.
There is certainly a lot going on during the fadeout.
If this is The Stones best song and The Stones are the best rock band ever does that = best rock song ever 🎸
Wyman claimed in his biography that he created the riff on keyboard. Richards says he made it ans very proudly played his satisfaction riff backwards.
Great, why does the bass sound so much like a thud, flatwounds, old strings
That’s prob what they had at the time
Round wound strings didn't start showing up until the early 1970s generally speaking.
THEY WANTED LOW FIDELITY, LIKE THE OLD SCRATCHY BLUES RECORDS, CUPCAKE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! AFTER '68 THEY USED GLYN JOHNS.
@@nicolekelly4371 THEY USED LOW FI TO SIMULATE THE OLD BLUES RECORDS, NICOLE.
Funk all the way!
It’s the first time I’ve heard of Brian using his Ricky 12 string on this. Is this in addition to the Nashville strung acoustic? Do we have any confirmation of Brian using the Ricky and any ideas which parts it plays?
It’s possible but unknown
@@HJsCorn909 Is it an educated guess or did you read it somewhere? I definitely think there is an ES-330TD playing int the right hand Chanel in the intro, riff and the low part of the solo. I’ve tried it on a Casino (a very similar guitar) and it sounds identical. The right hand Chanel chorus work and the higher part of the solo sound more like a tele to my ears and the triplet strums at the end of the chorus don’t sound like standard, open G, D or E tunings. I’m guessing it’s Nashville strung like the acoustic in the other Chanel but tuned to E5 🤔
Elliot: Are you sure that's a Rickenbacker 12? We know Brian had one, but aside from possibly "The singer not the song", I can't hear an electric 12 in any 'Stones song.
@@elliotnichols6242 Come to think of it-I've heard Brian's part on that song-you may well be right.
@@LarryRickenbacker Brian played 12 on Its All Over Now. Get Off of My Cloud. Blues Turned to Grey. Mothers Little Helper just to name a few.
You can hear the Nashville strung guitar
hmmm..or maybe its the 12 string ricky of brian jones
The recording and mixing of JJF always bugged me being so dense and muddy sounding. What the heck were they thinking? I mean compare the single with Honky Tonk Woman for a night and day transition from sludge to crispness and clarity.
That dense muddiness in the mix is exactly why JJF is so legendary. It's a sound like no other, although they did do a good repeat with "Street Fighting Man". A remix would probably ruin it.
Charlie played a childs beginner drumset on this for the hell of it, ive heard. Is that true?
what's the barking dog sound?
I'm not sure
snare drum leakage
@@Mackermanesq the hounds of hell
keith on a floor tom
Charlie understood the assignment
That organ at the end is GENIUS!..did Brian play it?
No Bill Wyman played the organ on JJF
@@HJsCorn909 Really!!!..THANKS!
Jumping jack It's a gas gas gas
I always thought Bill played the bass on this as the actual riff was his.
Surprisingly no. Keef just nicked the riff from his band mate and played it
Where did you get these priceless and historic recordings?
Was it just a matter of remixing?
Keep up the good work!
I just took the song and put it through mvsep.com to isolate the parts
The bass line sounds like that song from 2016. Idk what it’s called
The Less I Know The Better by Tama Impala?
Keith's band...Keith's song.
Shame on the ABCKO Label!
Here are priceless Rolling Stones recording session works in progress that should be officially released to their devoted fans!
The Beatles have released their definitive albums from 1966~1970 with lavish packaging and interesting outtakes but not The Rolling Stones!
It's the same old releases with no outtakes, such as these, and no essays to explain The Stones' recording sessions process!
It's the same old unimaginative repackaging with lousy graphics!
The Rolling Stones deserve so much better!
HJ, did Keith play bass on this track?
Yes
Hat Bill oder Keith den Bass gespielt? 🤔
Keefy
@@HJsCorn909 Dirty Mac
Do you use a specific software?
mvsep.com
Sleaford mods vibe
No credit given to Wyman who wrote it. Twins are thieves. Just like the way the way they ripped off Ruby Tuesday from Brian. and the songs written by studio musicians.
it's unfortunate that Keith and Mick nicked those ideas :/
oh its true then - Bob Wymann *could* play an instrument !!
AND UNDERAGE GIRLS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
/\_he's right
BIIL?
Lets try that again. BILL?
no comments no context
Basically garbage
k
Amo esta canción.