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Rock / Pop

Rod Stewart - Maggie May mp3

Rod Stewart - Maggie May mp3

Performer: Rod Stewart
Title: Maggie May
Country: Brazil
Catalog Number: 9279 134
Label: Mercury
Released: 1980
Rating: 4.5
Votes: 634

Tracklist

1you wear it well3:45
2Farewell4:31
3Mine is for me
4Maggie May5:12
5Girl of the north country3:44
6Handbags and gladrags3:58
7Reason to believe (find a reason to believe)3:45
8Bring it on home to me / you send me4:02
9I'd rather go blind3:53
10Street fighting man4:59

Barcodes

  • Label Code: 9279 134
  • Matrix / Runout: 9279 134 1 01 1980 200 -1-

Companies

  • Distributed By – Polygram Discos
  • Manufactured By – Polygram Discos

Album

Maggie May - Rod Stewart. Лента с персональными рекомендациями и музыкальными новинками, радио, подборки на любой вкус, удобное управление своей коллекцией. Текст песни: Wake up Maggie, I think Ive got something to say to you Its late September and I really should be back at school I know I keep you amused, but I feel Im being used Oh, Maggie, I couldnt have tried May was Rod Stewart's first big hit as a solo performer. The song went to 1 in the UK Singles Chart in October 1971, and at the same time topped the. Maggie May is a song written by singer Rod Stewart and Martin Quittenton and recorded by Stewart in 1971 for his album Every Picture Tells a Story. Most versions of Maggie May incorporate a 30-second solo guitar intro, Henry, composed by Martin Quittenton. Maggie May expresses the ambivalence and contradictory emotions of a young man involved in a relationship with an older woman, and was written from Stewart's own experience. Wake up Maggie I think I got something to say to you it's late September and I really should be back at school. I know I keep you amused but I feel Discuss these lyrics on MetroLyrics. Maggie May is a song co-written by singer Rod Stewart and Martin Quittenton, and performed by Rod Stewart on his album Every Picture Tells a Story, released in 1971. In 2004, Rolling Stone ranked the song number 131 on its list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. Maggie May expresses the ambivalence and contradictory emotions of a boy involved in a relationship with an older woman and was written from Stewart's own experience. In the January 2007 issue of Q magazine, Stewart recalled: Maggie. Songs in album Rod Stewart - Maggie May: The Essential Collection 2012. Rod Stewart - Good Morning Little Schoolgirl. Rod Stewart - I'm Gonna Move To The Outskirts Of Town. Rod Stewart - Dirty Old Town. Rod Stewart - Man Of Constant Sorrow. Rod Stewart - Every Picture Tells A Story. Rod Stewart - Handbags & Gladrags. Rod Stewart - Street Fighting Man. Rod Stewart - Gasoline Alley. Rod Stewart - It's All Over Now Single Version. Rod Stewart. Maggie May Remastered Version. Preview Preview. 699 tracks699. In The Number Ones, Im reviewing every single 1 single in the history of the Billboard Hot 100, starting with the charts beginning, in 1958, and working my way up into the present. Rod Stewart Maggie May. HIT 1: October 2, 1971. STAYED AT 1: 5 weeks. In the summer of 1961, Rod Stewart climbed into a drainage pipe in the south of England. Stewart, a 16-year-old London dropout and aspiring footballer, was with a few friends, and they were all sneaking into the Beaulieu Jazz Festival, one of the first big festivals in the UK. Stewart later said that this was when he just coming ou. Maggie May' cemented Stewart's marketability as a solo performer, which complicated relations with his bandmates in the Faces although he remained in the group until its split in 1975, they were occasionally marketed as The Faces with Rod Stewart, driving a wedge into what was already a volatile mix. For Stewart, however, it kicked off a torrid string of hit singles and albums in fact, he wouldn't place a solo LP outside the Billboard Top 40 for another 27 years, with 1998's 'When We Were the New Boys. As for Maggie herself. The name Maggie May does not occur in the song Rod borrowed the title from Maggie Mae, a Liverpool folk song about a Lime Street prostitute which the Beatles included on their Let It Be album. Stewart liked the play on words the title created, sometimes introducing the song by saying, This is 'Maggie May' - sometimes she did, sometimes she didn't. In his memoir Rod: The Autobiography, Stewart provided details of the experience that led to this song. Wrote Stewart: At 16, I went to the Beaulieu Jazz Festival in the New Forest. I'd s

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