The Rolling
Stones – Could You Walk On The Water?
(soniclovenoize
reconstruction)
Side A:
1. 19th Nervous Breakdown
2. Sad Day
3. Take It Or Leave It
4. Think
5. Mother’s Little Helper
Side B:
6. Goin’ Home
7. Sittin’ On A Fence
8. Doncha Bother me
9. Ride On, Baby
10. Looking Tired
Happy
Easter! In honor of this bunny-hopping
holiday, I give you a reconstruction I’ve actually been sitting on for nearly
three years now. This is a reconstruction
of the unreleased 1966 Rolling Stones album Could You Walk On The Water. After Decca Records refused to release such a
blasphemous album title, the band restructured the album into their seminal
Aftermath album. This reconstruction gathers
all of the best sounding masters of the source material and is presented all in
mono, as it was meant to be heard.
By 1965, The
Rolling Stones had become one of the biggest rock bands in the world, proving
their value with innovative British interpretations of American R&B music. In an attempt to keep up with their contemporaries—self-contained
bands that wrote their own songs—manager Andrew Loog Oldham pushed the band to compose
their own material. Specifically focusing
on creating a song partnership between Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, the
tactic proved successful as Jagger/Richards-penned singles “(I Can’t
Get No) Satisfaction”, “Get Off Of My Cloud” and “As Tears Go By” were all major
hits. But what of their albums? Up until then, the Rolling Stones’ albums had
been a mixed bag of rock and blues standards with only a sprinkling of their
own material. Possibly taking a cue from
The Beatles, The Rolling Stones set out to record an album by the end of the
year consisting of all original material.
While on their
fall North American tour in 1965, the band filed into Hollywood’s RCA Studios in
December to record the new material they had been composing. At least nine songs were finished during
these fruitful sessions, including: “Doncha Bother Me”, “Goin’ Home”, “Mother’s
Little Helper”, “19th Nervous Breakdown”, “Ride On Baby”, “Sad Day”, “Sittin’
On A Fence”, “Take It Or Leave It” and “Think”.
Not only was the band impressed they were able to record nearly a full
album of solid, original compositions in a week, but the songs themselves
featured impressive exotic adornments by guitarist Brian Jones. Growing bored of simply playing guitar, Jones
literally picked up a number of unusual instruments to contribute, such as an autoharp, harpsichord and
koto, giving the songs a colorful, proto-psychedelic flavor. Finally "Goin Home" was noteworthy as one of the longest continuous performances in recorded rock music thus far, spanning over 11 minutes! Two tracks from the sessions were selected as
a single to be released in February, “19th Nervous Breakdown” b/w “Sad Day”.
Marveling at
the results of the RCA sessions, Oldham and the band vied to rush-release all nine
finished songs plus a tenth track (the quaint Out Of Our Heads outtake “Looking
Tired”, recorded three months prior) in March as Could You Walk On The Water. Featuring entirely original compositions—as well
as the current hit “19th Nervous Breakdown”—the album was supposed to feature cover
art from a California reservoir photo shoot and
a deluxe gatefold with pictures taken from their recent American tour. Unfortunately,
Decca Records balked at the title, afraid that the name of this decidingly
American album would offend the American religious, allegedly stating, “We
would not issue it with that title at any price!” As Oldham negotiated the release of the
album, The Rolling Stones continued to tour relentlessly while continuing to
compose new material. As the proposed album
release date of March 10th began to close in, it was obvious Could You Walk On
The Water would not rise above its own title; with Oldham finally giving in to
Decca, it was decided the compilation Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass) would
be released in its place in the United States and The Stones reevaluated the shelved album.
Fortunately,
there was a silver lining in the failure of Could You Walk On The Water to launch,
as the day before its scheduled release date the band returned to RCA Studios
to cut another batch of original material.
This second set was more impressive than the first, which included: “Flight
505”, “High and Dry”, “I Am Waiting”, “If You Let Me”, “It’s Not Easy”, “Lady
Jane”, “Long Long While”, “Out Of Time”, “Paint It Black”, “Stupid Girl”, “Under
My Thumb” and “What To Do”. Brian Jones again adorned The Stones' brand
of rock with such exotic instruments as a dulcimer, marimba and a sitar. Now with 21 new songs in total, The Stones
combined the best of the December 1965 and March 1966 sessions into one
14-track album. With “Paint It Black” the
lead single in the US market and “Mother’s Little Helper” the lead single in
the UK market (both backed with “Lady Jane”), the album—now titled Aftermath—was
released in April to critical and commercial acclaim, marking The Rolling Stones’
first masterpiece. Aftermath not only became
one of the greatest albums from the British Invasion era, but stood head-to-head
against other legendary rock albums of the time, including Highway 61 Revisited,
Rubber Soul and Pet Sounds. But is it possible
to resurrect Could You Walk On The Water, the album that was 'passover' by both
Decca and ultimately The Stones themselves?
Luckily the
tracklist of Could You Walk On The Water has been published and nearly all of
the tracks have been released, allowing many listeners to reconstruct the album. The difference here is that we will exclusively
be using the original mono masters for all songs, as the stereo mixes of the
material leave much to be desired, featuring an antiquated
soundstage. Side A opens with “19th Nervous
Breakdown” taken from Singles 1965-1967, since The Rolling Stones in Mono
boxset used an inferior master with excessive noise floor in-between vocal
lines. Following is “Sad Day”, taken
from the Stray Cats discs of the In Mono box set. “Take It Or Leave It”, “Think” and “Mother’s
Little Helper” close out Side A, all taken from the Aftermath disc of In
Mono.
Side B opens
with the full-length mix of “Goin Home” from Aftermath. Although some sources claim there would have
been an edited version of the track on the actual Could You Walk On The Water
album, I chose to include the full 11-minute version, making Side
B about 6 minutes longer than Side A.
While that may seem in err, remember that Side B of the US version of
Aftermath was also 6 minutes longer than its side A! Next is “Sittin’ On a Fence” taken from the Flowers
disc of the In Mono box, followed by “Doncha Bother Me” from Aftermath. “Ride On, Baby” again from Flowers follows,
with the album concluding with the as-yet-unreleased “Looking Tired” taken from
the bootleg More Stoned Than You’ll Ever Be but collapsed to mono and EQd to match the rest of the album.
Sources used:
More Stoned Than You'll Ever Be (bootleg CD, Scorpio Records)
The Rolling Stones in Mono (CD boxset, 2016 ABKO Records)
Singles 1965-1967 (CD 2004 ABKO Records)
flac --> wav --> editing in
Goldwave --> flac encoding via TLH lv8
*md5, artwork and tracknotes included
*md5, artwork and tracknotes included