Midnight Rambler

Highly Appreciated

MIDNIGHT RAMBLER
 
 
“Midnight Rambler”  is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, released on their 1969 album Let It Bleed.  The song is a loose biography of Albert DeSalvo, who confessed to being the Boston Strangler.  Keith Richards has called the number “a blues opera” and the quintessential Jagger-Richards song, stating in the 2012 documentary Crossfire Hurricane that “nobody else could have written that song”.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 
The concert was made not long after the release of one of my favorite Rolling Stones albums, Beggars Banquet, and includes two songs from that album, “Sympathy for the Devil” and “Street Fighting Man”, plus several more from their most recent album at that time, Let it Bleed:  “Gimme Shelter”, “Love In Vain”, “Midnight Rambler”, “Live with Me”, and “Honky Tonk Women” – a country version of this song was included on Let it Bleed under the name of “Country Honk”, while Honky Tonk Women itself was released five months earlier as a single only.  The Greatest Group on Earth was the only concert album that I had of the Stones for several years (in fact, I did not own very many albums back then, period) – just one live album by the Rolling Stones had been officially released previously, Got Live If You Want It! (1966) – so I played this record a lot. 
 
(September 2017)
 
Last edited: March 22, 2021