"All I Want Is My Baby" Bobby jameson and Mick Jagger 1964

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Uploaded by on Jun 8, 2010

1964 Decca release of Bobby Jameson's All I Want Is My Baby...Mick Jagger and Andrew Oldham backup vocals. Keith Richards or Jimmy Page fuzz guitar solo. Kieth Richards musical director. Recorded in London in 1964. At the time of this session Andrew Oldham told me it was Jimmy Page who played the fuzz guitar solo. He said Page had been with a group called the Poets. Over the years there has been confusing statements made by some saying it was Keith Richards who played the solo... I only know what I was told by Andrew Oldham in 1964 when I made this recording in London.

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  • @antioxidantsguide I'd like to think I know my sixties music pretty well..but had never heard this song before..a real gem!

  • Just heard this song on Sounds of The Sixties with Brian Matthew who said that when Bobby made appearances on the television pop show 'American Bandstand', he caught the attention of Stones producer Andrew Oldham who flew in to London to record this song, that he co-wrote with Keith Richard. Mick Jagger and Andrew Oldham were on backing vocals.

  • V. Good

  • Keef only used the Gibson Fuzztone to make the Satisfaction demo sound like a saxaphone which should have been used in the final mix. I agree, not Keef in this record.

  • I can listen to this over and over.

  • Yeah it could very well be Page, because it has been said Richards did not record with Fuzz tone until he went to USA to record 'Satisfaction'

  • According to an article in this week's N.M.E (The 25 Rolling Stones songs you want in your life) It's Jimmy Page on Guitar, Jagger and Andrew Loog Oldham on backing vocals with Keith producing it. They put this song at number 24.

  • Keith Richards' biography brought me here. Great book.

  • thats some crazy guitar, man.. cooooolllio

  • I'm very familiar with both early Stones, and Jimmy Page's work. Sounds a lot more like Keith, than Jimmy, to my ears. The fuzz tone aside, it's got Keith's simple Chuck Berry style, and not Jimmy's more accomplished blues styling, which he exhibited, even back then...

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