Beggars Banquet Released: December 6, 1968
This is one of most people's favourite Stones albums. It's also one of the Stones' favourite Stones albums. If it's not one of your favourite Stones albums, look and listen here, and see and hear why it should be.
Beggars Banquet in depth
1968 was the year that flower power turned nasty. The previously peaceful 'counter culture' ran out of control. Students started rioting in the streets of Paris and the joy of youthful self-realisation turned to anger and aggression. Everywhere, the ceremony of innocence was drowned.
But it was also the year that, after the atypical psychedelic excursion that is Their Satanic Majesties Request, The Stones decided to strip it down and start again, building from the basics of what they believed in, which has never had anything directly to do with getting high or taking on The Man with bricks and bottles in the streets.
The drug-fuelled, jet set, rock star lifestyle may come with the package for successful popular musicians. But The Rolling Stones exist for one reason, and that's to play blues-based, beat-driven guitar music. And on Beggars Banquet they do that for the first time in a style and with a controlled power that no other band has ever been able to emulate.
“You know the ones I like. The first album was good. Beggars Banquet was good. That's about it.”
Mick Jagger, 1968
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Beggars Banquet marks the return of the Rolling Stones to fundamental rock 'n' roll, 1960s style.
From the album's (harmless, relevant, mildly amusing) original cover art for the record - a toilet wall covered with graffiti (shock horror!) - which was banned by the band's own label for so-called 'indecency'; to genuinely subversive and provocative tracks like 'Sympathy for the Devil' and 'Street Fighting Man', this is the record where the true, mature musical and cultural identity of the band is first revealed in all its glory.
Beggars Banquet isn't just a hugely original rock-blues album though. The Sixties, for all the whimsy and folly that led too many great musicians, The Rolling Stones included, down too many dead end alleys, did encourage and foster a spirit of imagination and experimentation; and Beggars Banquet is filled with distinctive and original touches.
The basic track of 'Street Fighting Man', for example, was recorded on a cassette deck at Keith's house, with Keith on acoustic guitar and Charlie Watts on a toy drum kit. If Jig-Saw Puzzle sounds like a pastiche or pisstake of Bob Dylan, it does so with a very real, and very Stones humour and menace.
The continuing relevance of lyrics like 'Let's think of the wavering millions, who need leaders but get gamblers instead' (Salt Of The Earth) is just as clear today as it was in 1968.









Comments (25)
“I was in Paris earlier this year (2010), down by the Sorbonne and spent part of my time wondering where the barricades were set up in 1968, what was all the yelling about, who did it and was it any fun? I think we all would forget about 1968 if it weren't for the Stones most exquisite depiction of the attitude. The songs, given their proper place, give me chills when I listen and that's a good thing. ”
Submitted by Stickyboy McBride (not verified) on Sat, 2011-01-01 14:16.“The best stones ever with exil on main st. But I like, out of head and some girls.Long live the stones and happy new year.CG”
Submitted by christian gerardin (not verified) on Sat, 2011-01-01 12:44.“This album is indeed fantastic. Then again, I am very biased. I think all albums are fantastic....”
Submitted by Michel Wouterse (not verified) on Fri, 2010-12-31 13:33.“what can anyone say 'cept they're the greatest r&r band in the world”
Submitted by mike (not verified) on Fri, 2010-12-31 02:18.“Keith's Gud”
Submitted by Derek Donatelli (not verified) on Fri, 2010-12-31 01:43.“Having been a Stones fan since 1965 I've always considered Beggers and Exile my fav's but with all the great and talented musicians on this album they could have left Brian off the credits, unless you want to credit him with being a disruption to group,kinda like the tax and legal problems they had to deal with then! Long Live Keef and Company!!!”
Submitted by Mike Elam (not verified) on Thu, 2010-12-30 23:18.“I must say I have loved the Stones music since I was old enough to appreciate it. The band has grown over the years and proved the test of time cranking out hit after hit through my life. Thank god for the British Invasion. The 60's and 70's produced some of the greatest bands of a lifetime and I love every one of them. I liked this album quite a bit but I have to say I also loved Black and Blue. Mick and the boys really know how to play and sing the blues!
Submitted by Jack C (not verified) on Thu, 2010-12-30 23:08.Happy New Year to the band and your family's and thank you for decades of listening pleasure!”
“you guys are Smokin'”
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 2010-12-30 22:41.“Long live Mick Jagger.”
Submitted by Susana (not verified) on Thu, 2010-12-30 21:17.“Hello togheter.For me is it absolutly the best album of the Stones.It s great!!!!Charlie.”
Submitted by Charlie Gut (not verified) on Thu, 2010-12-30 21:01.“Country Music was born on this album”
Submitted by Johnny Black (not verified) on Thu, 2010-12-30 20:36.“arr 43 years , no way! ”
Submitted by nigel mellows (not verified) on Thu, 2010-12-30 17:35.“Cookaroo! I like the song 'Sympathy for the Devil'.”
Submitted by Jeroen Meefout (not verified) on Thu, 2010-12-30 17:12.“
I will be 64 in two weeks. I was at Madison Square Garden in 69. We drove 17 hours to get there. I must have heard "Street fighting man" hundreds of times since then. I still get a rush when I hear the opening licks.
God bless you all during this Christmas season and thank you for all the happiness your music has given me through these years.”
Submitted by don dawkins (not verified) on Thu, 2010-12-30 17:07.“this album brought them out of their darkness of drug bust
Submitted by vito arndt (not verified) on Thu, 2010-12-30 16:30.and Her Santanic majesties request.”
“Beggars Banquet is in my opinion the first truly great Stones album--not a single weak link, unlike even their strongest earlier records. And despite the core blues sound, it has a remarkable diversity of sound and style.”
Submitted by Dominick Grace (not verified) on Thu, 2010-12-30 16:07.“
Submitted by Ed Scannell (not verified) on Thu, 2010-12-30 15:38.Simply the best of the 24 studio records they have written and recorded. It is an effective blend of guts and soul that lyrically brings all of society's devils, rebels and other outcasts together under one roof. Great engineering by Glyn Johns, which makes a largely acoustic record sound very electric. Brian's last hurrah, where he plays great acoustic slide guitar on No Expectations and sitar and the Tamboura I believe, on Street Fighting Man. They should use this record for inspiration if and when they next record in the studio.”
“I agree this is one of the best stones album. It plays all the time in my house from Vinyl > CD >MP3. Long live the Stones! ”
Submitted by Zapple70 (not verified) on Thu, 2010-12-30 15:33.“Love you guys, love the Stones, love this album buy, "Everywhere, the ceremony of innocence was drowned" is a paraphrase from a Yeats poem without any kind of acknowledgement. Not good.”
Submitted by William Todd (not verified) on Thu, 2010-12-30 15:30.“At first, I didn't know what was good or not, being 15 and all. Then, after listening to Forty Licks a little, I wanted to get down to the soul of these weird old geezers; I put in Beggars' Banquet while walking around some neglected nature trail, and I've never looked back since. The Stones are my favorite band, and no synthesizer, moshpit, or club track can ever beat those tasty, raw licks that Keef puts down. P.S: R.I.P Brian, it sucks how the world just fucked you up; too bad.”
Submitted by Alabamian (not verified) on Wed, 2010-12-22 18:54.“At first, I didn't know what was good or not, being 15 and all. Then, after listening to Forty Licks a little, I wanted to get down to the soul of these weird old geezers; I put in Beggars' Banquet while walking around some neglected nature trail, and I've never looked back since. The Stones are my favorite band, and no synthesizer, moshpit, or club track can ever beat those tasty, raw licks that Keef puts down. P.S: R.I.P Brian, it sucks how the world just fucked you up; too bad.”
Submitted by Alabamian (not verified) on Wed, 2010-12-22 18:54.“Доступное, скоростное и эффективное детское такси по низкой цене!”
Submitted by taximalysh.ru (not verified) on Mon, 2010-12-20 18:48.“I really wish you would post the lyrics somewhere...”
Submitted by P McMullen (not verified) on Sat, 2010-08-07 02:24.“just wanna say the i think the answer to the question "whats my name?" is i'mmoreright thanyou. what cha got to say? i'm i right?”
Submitted by mjhaze (not verified) on Sat, 2010-07-17 21:01.“when i was 5 i found a tape,slipped it into a recorder and hit the big green fisher-price button. sympathy for the devil is the greatest song i ever heard for 6 years.my favorite now is satisfaction.heard it at vertigo records Ottawa.”
Submitted by yoshtin (not verified) on Tue, 2010-06-22 00:55.What do you think?