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Westway (The Glitter & the Slums) is the third studio album by Australian rock band Sticky Fingers, released through Sureshaker on 30 September 2016. [1] It was produced by Dann Hume, who produced the band's second album, Land of Pleasure, and co-produced their debut album Caress Your Soul.
Sticky Fingers originally included 10 tracks. The music has been characterised by commentators as hard rock, [5] roots rock [6] and rock and roll. [7] According to Rolling Stone magazine, it is "the Stones' most downbeat, druggy album, with new guitarist Mick Taylor stretching into jazz and country".
"Sway" is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones from their 1971 album Sticky Fingers. It was also released as the b-side of the "Wild Horses" single in June 1971. This single was released in the US only. Initial pressings of the single contain an alternate take; later pressings include the album version instead.
Sticky Fingers, the ability, or "Stand" of Bruno Bucciarati, a character in the manga Golden Wind Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Sticky Fingers .
The Marquee Club and Roundhouse Gigs have also surfaced on various bootleg records. Whilst the bonus material from the 2015 re-release of Sticky Fingers contains five tracks from the performance at the Roundhouse (as well as studio outtakes from the album). Subsequently the Marquee Club has been released separately on 19 June 2015 in CD and ...
Yours to Keep appeared in February 2019, more than two years after Sticky Fingers' third studio album, Westway (The Glitter & the Slums) (2016). [3] Yours to Keep peaked at number four on the ARIA Albums and on the ARIA Top 100 Physical Albums charts, number three on the ARIA Digital Albums chart and number one on the ARIA Australian Artists Albums chart. [3]
Exile on Main St. is the tenth studio album by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, released on 12 May 1972, by Rolling Stones Records. [3] The 10th released in the UK and 12th in the US, it is viewed as a culmination of a string of the band's most critically successful albums, following Beggars Banquet (1968), Let It Bleed (1969) and Sticky Fingers (1971). [4]
Written primarily by Mick Jagger, it is the opening track and lead single from their ninth studio album, Sticky Fingers (1971). It became a number one hit in both the United States and Canada. In the United Kingdom and Ireland, it charted at number two. In the United States, Billboard ranked it as the number 16 song for 1971.