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Total ratings: 5627
Length: 4:26
Plays (last 30 days): 0
(''Ooh-ooh-ooh'')
(''Ooh-ooh-ooh'')
(''Ooh-ooh-ooh'')
Ooh, a storm is threatnin'
My very life today
If I don't get some shelter
Oh yeah, I'm gonna fade away
War, children
It's just a shot away, it's just a shot away
War, children
It's just a shot away, it's just a shot away (''Yeah'')
Ooh, see the fire is sweepin'
Our very streets today
Burns like a red coal carpet
Mad bull, lost its way
War, children, yes
It's just a shot away, it's just a shot away
War, children
It's just a shot away, it's just a shot away (''Yeah'')
(''Rape, murder'')
(''It's just a shot away, it's just a shot away'')
(''Rape, murder, yeah'')
(''It's just a shot away, it's just a shot away'')
(''Rape, murder'')
(''It's just a shot away, it's just a shot away, yeah yeah'')
Mmm, the floods is threatnin'
My very life today
Gimme, gimme shelter
Or I'm gonna fade away
War, children
It's just a shot away, it's just a shot away
It's just a shot away, it's just a shot away
It's just a shot away
I tell you love, sister
It's just a kiss away, it's just a kiss away
It's just a kiss away, it's just a kiss away
It's just a kiss away, kiss away, kiss away, yeah
Her vocal is fantastic but the song is already a 10, imho. It's the combo of everything: her vocal, Mick's vocal, the guitar, and the lyrics that nail the gestalt (if that's the right word) of the era.
Well, that's one of the oddest segues I've ever heard on RP:
"Almost Home" by Moby ==> "Gimme Shelter" by The Rolling Stones.
2/3/2024
Must be a pre-recorded rebroadcast — same segue months later. Every now and again we get a peek behind the RP of Oz curtain! ;-)
This is one of my fave Stones songs.
"Almost Home" by Moby ==> "Gimme Shelter" by The Rolling Stones.
There is a documentary film called 20 Feet from Stardom that tells a story about backup singers. Of course, Mary is included. The best RS song ever!
Thank You for the info!
One of the all-time greats.
Wow, after all of these years, I finally read the lyrics. I've been singing along all these years (sorta, now that I've read them) just thinking I knew the words. Jeez, not even close on half of them. Some of them are still hard to understand even knowing what they actually are now after 54 years.
Same here! Thanx for the lyrics RP!
I love the skewed distribution on the ratings. What a song, 10 for me.
Yes! 183 votes in the 1-5 range, with over 2,000 ratings of 10.
The album cover is pretty cool, too.
agreed, and we must have attended the same parties.
Nuf ced ...
Oh for sure, this song is an absolute classic. Just saying as the act to follow hers, his voice is kind of a let down.
The stark juxtaposition of such an amazing and powerful performance by Merry Clayton, followed by Mick's unremarkable voice.
Update 2022, Keith will be 79 in December!
Amazing how simple the song is (on paper)
very few chords
very repetitive
very perfect in every way
the sum is greater than the parts
Sometimes, simplicity is beauty!
The stark juxtaposition of such an amazing and powerful performance by Merry Clayton, followed by Mick's unremarkable voice.
very few chords
very repetitive
very perfect in every way
the sum is greater than the parts
One of the best songs on one of the best albums of all time. Never gets old.
The impending sense of dread and apocalypse seems to be a primal feeling.
Our very streets today
Burns like a red coal carpet
Mad bull, lost its way
A song for Ukraine, today.
[Channeling the Colbert Report]
goose bumps = 10
yes - every single time I hear this song
The all-time best rock n roll track?
Tony Jory, London & Somerset, England.
It was merely a curiosity the first time I heard it, but now every time I listen it gets closer to being one of my all-time favorite tracks. The lyrics get under your skin. This should be the new national anthem for the decades to come, only because the planet itself doesn't have one.
We wish you a Merry Clayton!
Tony Jory, London & Somerset, England.
That documentary is a must-see for anyone interested in the history of popular music.
Clayton had a miscarriage upon returning home from recording "Gimme Shelter", according to the Los Angeles Times.
On June 16, 2014, Clayton was severely injured in a car collision. Both of Clayton's legs were later amputated at the knees due to her suffering "profound trauma to her lower extremities" as a result of the accident.
Saw "20 Feet From Stardom" and she was amazing. Would never have known about the rest.
these guys sound like the foo fighters
ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
Clayton had a miscarriage upon returning home from recording "Gimme Shelter", according to the Los Angeles Times.
On June 16, 2014, Clayton was severely injured in a car collision. Both of Clayton's legs were later amputated at the knees due to her suffering "profound trauma to her lower extremities" as a result of the accident.
I've got this one rated at 10, so I can't disagree much, right? And not having been alive when this came out but alive when we still were afraid of the RUSSIANS (wait....that's still a thing, ain't it?) blowing us up with atomic weapons, this tune does rock and it's a great history lesson too....so yeah...top 10ish works for me ;-) Long Live RP and Learning to Love the Bomb (where's Dr. Strangelove at lately?)
Swigging bleach with His Royal Orange Insanity?
On a more positive note... Hawkwind do an excellent cover of this.
I've got this one rated at 10, so I can't disagree much, right? And not having been alive when this came out but alive when we still were afraid of the RUSSIANS (wait....that's still a thing, ain't it?) blowing us up with atomic weapons, this tune does rock and it's a great history lesson too....so yeah...top 10ish works for me ;-) Long Live RP and Learning to Love the Bomb (where's Dr. Strangelove at lately?)
Music journalist Nick Kent attached to Richards Lord Byron's epithet of "mad, bad, and dangerous to know".
On_The_Beach wrote:
Yes!
1969 and plus/minus 5 years - in music there is no compromise, I think.
The new release,
dropped the needle,
AAAAHHH
NUFF SAID.
in the doc "20 feet from stardom" they play just Clayton's backing vocal in the original studio that she sung it.....it is haunting!!!
Can we tempt you with a 9- Outstanding yet? I've got this at Godlike, a SOLID 10 for this track, summing up the sentiment of the time it was released, and hell if it's not still relevant. Sumabitch.
Long Live RP!!
Sure not hearing this on the radio anywhere nowadays.
I mean the vocals are the same. The guitar playing is the same. The drumming is the same. The harp playing is the same. The background female vocals are the same. The hooks are same. The unforgettable lyrics are the same.
OK....I stop laughing now.
Which causes me to make a confession: I always heard this as "it's just a shout away," and somehow that seemed to work also.
Now that I know it's "shot" well that's more literal. War - it's just a shot away. And because I went these many years thinking the other way, it will probably always be informed by both, for me.
Update December 18, 2023: Keith is 80!
I don't mean necessarily the general term "classic rock" ... I'm talking about the classics.... like Gimme Shelter.
Need to hear a bit more of the music that framed our generation
cheers.
Poster included with original release
Recorded on February 23, 1969.
Merry Clayton's vocals were added on November 2 1969.
Released on Let It Bleed, on December 5, 1969 and at first titled "Gimmie Shelter".
Lead Vocals & Harmonica: Mick Jagger
Electric Guitars: Keith Richards
Drums: Charlie Watts
Bass: Bill Wyman
Vocal Solo Merry Clayton
Backing Vocals: Mick Jagger, Keith Richards & Merry Clayton
Piano: Nicky Hopkins
Percussion (Guiro): Jimmy Miller
Gimme Shelter
(M. Jagger/K. Richards)
Oh, a storm is threat'ning
My very life today
If I don't get some shelter
Oh yeah, I'm gonna fade away
War, children, it's just a shot away
It's just a shot away
Ooh, see the fire is sweepin' our very street today
Burns like a red coal carpet, mad bull lost its way
War, children, it's just a shot away
It's just a shot away
Rape, murder!
It's just a shot away
The floods is threat'ning my very life today
Gimme, gimme shelter, or I'm gonna fade away
War, children, it's just a shot away
It's just a shot away
I tell you love, sister, it's just a kiss away
It's just a kiss away
It's just a kiss away
It's just a kiss away
It's just a kiss away
Kiss away, kiss away ~
MORE HUMAN THAN HUMAN!
HA!!! That's too funny!
Well, except for this one, of course!:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kfVsfOSbJY0
I sure can't argue with that statement.
Oh, wait, I can do that myself. Get me iTunes cranked to public nuisance level.
Time to wake up, everyone.
Sorry.
Just can't help myself cranking the guts out of this.
it seems like his role in the band has been under rated for a long time. It would be interesting to know more about his contributions.
Judging by the commenters on these boards, nothing (i.e. Taylor being underrated) could be further from the truth. He is/was an extremely melodic guitar player and Keith Richards loved what he brought to the band.
Mick Taylor does not appear on this track. He did do overdubs on two tracks from this album but became a full fledged member of the band with the following album, Sticky Fingers. Lack of song writing credits and the bands fierce touring schedule lead to his exit from the band and his subsequent replacement by Ronnie Wood.
That being said, none of those great 69-75 songs would cease to exist without Taylor (they might not have been quite as good, but they all would still have been hits).
it seems like his role in the band has been under rated for a long time. It would be interesting to know more about his contributions.
I never get tired of listening to Gimme Shelter. Everything about it works - including Jagger's harmonica and of course Merry Clayton's vocals.
For a long time I thought that Mick Taylor played the lead on this track however, the guitars on this track are all Keith's. The first recordings were made in Olympic Studios in London during February and March 1969 (before Brian Jones died) so Mick Taylor wasn't even in the band at that point. He only played on Country Honk and Live With Me on the Let It Bleed album.
Merry Clayton's vocals were added in LA in October/November 1969 but none of the backing track was re-recorded from the Feb/March sessions.
Kudos to Keith for this great work!
A great guitarist and a great legacy.
it seems like his role in the band has been under rated for a long time. It would be interesting to know more about his contributions.
That's a great comment. I think the fact it captured the turmoil of the period is what elevates it as their best song. I'm hard pressed to come up with a better one from them. Can't you hear me knocking, Monkey man, You Can't always get..., Jumping Jack Flash (and I'm probably forgetting one or two others) are just a hair under this one.
A great guitarist and a great legacy.
Wikipedia says that Mojo included it in the top 10 most used songs in film scores and advertising - all I remember is one ad (automotive industry, I think) that used the intro and even then I'm not sure how I worked out that it was Gimme Shelter.
Can any of the Brit listeners comment? Was there any reason why this was rarely played on Radio 1 during the 70s and 80s?
I did manage to pick up many other bands' noteworthy album tracks just by listening to the radio. Amazing that this one slipped through the net.
yep, this is a rare one
I think we can safely say it's in the running.