Ruby Tuesday

Highly Appreciated

RUBY TUESDAY
 
 
“Ruby Tuesday”  is a song recorded by the Rolling Stones in 1966, released in January 1967.  The song, coupled with “Let’s Spend the Night Together”, was a number-one hit in the United States and reached number three in the United Kingdom.  The song was included in the American version of Between the Buttons (in the UK, singles were often excluded from studio albums).  Rolling Stone magazine ranked the song number 310 on their list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.  The song title was the source of the restaurant chain of the same name.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 

As with Lennon/McCartney, additionally some of the songs were written only by Mick Jagger, and others only by Keith Richards.  Wikipedia gives as examples that Mick Jagger wrote “Sympathy for the Devil” and “Brown Sugar”, and that Keith Richards wrote “Happy”, “Ruby Tuesday”, and “Little T&A”.  In the same 1995 interview with Jann Wenner mentioned above, Mick Jagger said:  “I think in the end it all balances out.” 

 

(May 2015)

 

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The name of Hollis Brown is taken from a Bob Dylan song Ballad of Hollis Brown.  (Did I mention that I have a cover version of “Ballad of Hollis Brown” by Iggy and the Stooges?  Quite good also).  Like Ruby Tuesday (which became the name of a major American restaurant chain) and Jumpin’ Jack Flash (Jumpin’ Jack Flash is also the name of a Whoopi Goldberg film, and as I remember, the song lyrics figure into the story also), Amanda Jones is a character in a Rolling Stones song, “Miss Amanda Jones”.  The song appears on one of my favorite Rolling Stones albums, Between the Buttons – “Ruby Tuesday” also appears on that album, at least the US version.  I don’t think it a coincidence that the UARB shares its name with this song, though I suppose it is possible. 
 
According to the promotional material by Bomp! Records for the band’s EP, Amanda JonesAmanda Jones was born in March 1995 as a collaboration of Amanda (Mandy) Brix and Jeff Drake, previously in the punk rock band the Joneses.  The combination of her first name and his former band name clearly brought about the band name Amanda Jones, but they were almost certainly mindful of the Rolling Stones connection also:  Their sound has the same kind of playful spirit as early mid-period Stones albums like Between the Buttons (released in January 1967); besides Miss Amanda Jones and Ruby Tuesday, the album also includes the song “Let’s Spend the Night Together” that got the band into so much trouble with The Ed Sullivan Show – Mick Jagger sung the title lyric as “let’s spend some time together” as Ed Sullivan insisted, though he and bassist Bill Wyman were rolling their eyes at the time.  A few months back, I discussed the controversial lyrics in their first big hit (I Can’t Get No) Satisfactionthe Rolling Stones were able to sing that number on The Ed Sullivan Show with no censorship. 
 
(December 2015)
 
Last edited: March 22, 2021