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"As Tears Go By"
Single by Rolling Stones
from the album December's Children (And Everybody's)
B-side "Gotta Get Away"
Released 18 December 1965 (US)
Format 7"
Recorded 26 October 1965, IBC Studios, London
Genre Rock
Length 2 min 45 s
Label London 45-LON9808
Writer(s) Jagger/Richards/Oldham
Producer Andrew Loog Oldham; engineer: Glyn Johns
Rolling Stones singles chronology
"Get Off of My Cloud"
(1965)
"As Tears Go By"
(1965)
"19th Nervous Breakdown"
(1966)
"As Tears Go By"
Single by Marianne Faithfull
B-side "Greensleeves"
Released June 1964
Format 7" single
Recorded 1964
Genre Pop music
Length 2 min 33 s
Label Decca
Writer(s) Jagger/Richards/Oldham
Producer Andrew Loog Oldham
Marianne Faithfull singles chronology
"As Tears Go By"
(1964)
"Blowin' in the Wind"
(1964)

"As Tears Go By" is a song written by The Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger, guitarist Keith Richards, and their manager Andrew Loog Oldham, and was a popular hit for both British singer Marianne Faithfull in 1964 and The Rolling Stones in 1965.

The song is one of the first original compositions by Jagger and Richards, as until that point The Rolling Stones had chiefly been performing covers of blues standards. The myth surrounding the song's genesis has it that Rolling Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham locked Jagger and Richards in a kitchen forcing them to write a song together, even suggesting what type of song he wanted: “I want a song with brick walls all around it, high windows and no sex.” The result was initially named “As Time Goes By” the title of the song Dooley Wilson sings in the film Casablanca. It was Oldham who changed “Time” for “Tears". Oldham subsequently gave the ballad (a format that the Stones were not yet known for) to Faithfull, then 17, for her to record as a B-side. The success of the recording caused the record company, Decca, to switch the song to an A-side, where it became a very popular single. It reached # 9 in the British charts and launched Faithfull's career as a major singer. The song entered the Billboard Hot 100 in America the week ending November 28, 1964, where it stayed for nine weeks peaking at # 22.

The Stones recorded their own version in 1965. This recording is notable for its heavy string arrangement by Mike Leander. It was one of the three songs ("(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" and "19th Nervous Breakdown" being the other two) the band performed live during their third appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show. It was released as a single in December 1965 by their American record label, London Records, due to popular demand after radio DJs across the country started playing the song from the band's recently released album December's Children (And Everybody's). The song peaked at #6 on the American Billboard Charts. The song also had great success on the Billboard Easy Listening chart (#10 peak) years before the seemingly more wholesome Beatles would see their first entry. The song was later released in the UK in 1966 as the B-side to the single "19th Nervous Breakdown".

It was performed live on tour for the first time in November 2005 on the Stones' A Bigger Bang Tour. A performance from the 2006 leg of the tour was captured for the 2008 live release Shine a Light.

Cover versions

Other live versions include a rendition by French pop star Vanessa Paradis and Marianne Faithfull accompanied by guitarist Johnny Marr during a tribute concert to Linda McCartney at the Royal Albert Hall in April 1999.

It was covered by British bubblegummers The Primitives on the 12" of "Sick of It" and as a regular part of their live show.

It has also been recorded in Catalan by the Mallorquina singer Maria del Mar Bonet.

It was also covered by Nancy Sinatra in 1966 on her album Boots and PP Arnold in 1970, once again produced by Andrew Loog Oldham.

The New Age group Angels of Venice made an instrumental cover of this song on their self-titled album.

The song appears as bonus track on the 1984 Psychic TV album of demo recordings A Pagan Day.

The song was translated into Italian ("Con le mie lacrime") and released in 1965 as a bonus track on "As Tears Go By" single album in Italy. It was also performed live in the last Bigger Bang tour in Milan, on July 2006.

Briget Boden covered this song on the Chill Out in Paris Vol 2 (2002).

In popular culture

The Rolling Stones version was played during the final scene of the season five finale of the American TV show, House M.D., titled "Both Sides Now" during the wedding ceremony of Cameron and Chase and the internation of House in a psychiatric hospital.

External links

Preceded by
"Yesterday Man" by Chris Andrews
Canada RPM number-one single
(The Rolling Stones version)

February 7, 1966 (one week)
Succeeded by
"My Love" by Petula Clark







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