The Rolling Stonesโ songs have consistently pushed the envelope since they first got together in 1962. Some of those songs havenโt aged well, but even if they have, they definitely were considered very controversial when they were first released. Letโs look at just four examples!
1. โStar Starโ
This 1973 track is a shameless tribute to the groupies that followed The Rolling Stones around for years. The original title was โStarf***erโ, after all. Itโs a bit on the nose, and not entirely a flattering way to describe a particular group of fans.
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A lot of people were shocked by the songโs vulgar lyrics, as well as the pretty casual misogyny in the song that was very much a product of its time. This one hasnโt been performed live in quite a few years.
2. โSome Girlsโ
The Rolling Stonesโ songs werenโt always rooted in sexism. Again, their tunes were a product of their time; not that itโs any excuse. Still, one canโt deny that less-than-flattering descriptions of women made up a lot of their lyrical content, particularly in the 1978 song โSome Girlsโ.
Itโs a pretty rough song that is made worse by its casual racist descriptions of black and Asian women. They got a lot of backlash for it, but Mick Jagger was insistent that the song was entirely rooted in satire and parody.
3. โI Go Wildโ
A later-career song from 1994, โI Go Wildโ is another song with some pretty not-great language directly toward women, complete with slurs and derogatory lyrics. Despite being so controversial, the song charted pretty high in the UK.
4. โLetโs Spend The Night Togetherโ
The average modern-day music-enjoyer could listen to โLetโs Spend The Night Togetherโ and not really feel any negative feelings about it. However, this tune from 1967 was one of The Rolling Stonesโs most controversial songs for a hot minute.
It was a very scandalous tune in the 1960s, and the band had to famously change the songโs title lyric to something different (โLetโs spend some time togetherโ) in order to perform it on The Ed Sullivan Show. Jagger made sure to roll his eyes throughout the song and even left in a few โnightsโ just to make the producers mad. They were subsequently banned from the show for two years.
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The Beatles at the press launch for their new album 'Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band', held at Brian Epstein's house at 24 Chapel Street, London, 19th May 1967. Left to right: George Harrison (1943 – 2001), Ringo Starr, John Lennon (1940 – 1980) and Paul McCartney. (Photo by John Downing/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)







