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texile
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[quote author=Gazza link=1259721657/0#1 date=1259798991] The only thing that would have normally had me date it later is that Mick is singing falsetto, which would have been quite unusual for him back in 1972-73 ('Tops' was also cut around that time, but he sings it in a lower register than the released version - the vocal for which was redone in 1979 during the 'Emotional Rescue' sessions, at a time when he was REALLY overdoing the Barry Gibb stuff).
The falsetto thing is what threw me off too, and that's why i wasn't sure... but Jagger also uses some of that falsetto in a beggars outtake, "Stuck out all alone" - and he was heavily influenced by Don Covay’s falsetto, who recorded in the 60s... and when his voice drops back to a 'normal' tone, it sounds like Jagger, 73 - if that makes sense… or maybe something in the recording sound of that period: less polished than the vocal sound from the subsequent versions. In other words, his voice matches the sound of the music – it doesn’t sound added on with a different recording technique of the late 70s, early 80s – and the TY version does. Which makes me believe its from 73.... the song has a different feel in both versions lyric-wise: the first version, more romantic, which fits the overall feel of GHS…while the later, more biting and cynical verions, fits the overall mood of 78-81…(he also uses that lower, exaggerated twang from that period) also, sounds like he's singing, ''waiting for my friends..' in the early version.... Plus, Worried about You, Lovely Ladies are from 74…. So it could be Jagger was experimenting with the falsetto in the studio back then, but only for rehearsals….because we do hear it before 80, just not on releases.
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