Sunday, November 8, 2015

Factory Girl (The Rolling Stones song

Factory Girl" is a song by The Rolling Stones which appears on their 1968 album Beggars Banquet.
It is very similar to an Appalachian folk tune, especially due to its minimal arrangement, featuring Mick Jagger on vocals, Keith Richards on acoustic guitarRocky Dijon on conga drumsRic Grech of Family on fiddle/violin, Dave Mason, Nicky Hopkins or Brian Jones plays Mellotron using the mandolin sound,[1] and Charlie Watts on tabla.[1].
On his performance, Charlie Watts said in 2003, "On 'Factory Girl', I was doing something you shouldn't do, which is playing the tabla with sticks instead of trying to get that sound using your hand, which Indian tabla players do, though it's an extremely difficult technique and painful if you're not trained."[2]
The song is composed of lyrics musing on the singer's relationship with a young woman, all while he is waiting for her to come out to meet him;
Richards said of the song in 2003, "To me 'Factory Girl' felt something like 'Molly Malone', an Irish jig; one of those ancient Celtic things that emerge from time to time, or an Appalachian song. In those days I would just come up and play something, sitting around the room. I still do that today. If Mick gets interested I'll carry on working on it; if he doesn't look interested, I'll drop it, leave it and say, 'I'll work on it and maybe introduce it later.'"[2]
Jagger countered, saying, "The country songs, like 'Factory Girl' or 'Dear Doctor' on Beggars Banquet were really pastiche. There's a sense of humour in country music anyway, a way of looking at life in a humorous kind of way - and I think we were just acknowledging that element of the music. The 'country' songs we recorded later, like "Dead Flowers" on Sticky Fingers or "Far Away Eyes" on Some Girls are slightly different. The actual music is played completely straight, but it's me who's not going legit with the whole thing, because I think I'm a blues singer not a country singer."[2]
The song has been performed live in 1990, 1997 and 2013. A live recording from the Steel Wheels/Urban Jungle Tour made its way onto the 1991 live album Flashpoint. The song was also featured during the 1997 Bridges to Babylon Tour It was played in Los Angeles on May 3, 2013 and then a version of the song with alternate lyrics called "Glastonbury Girl" was performed at the Glastonbury festival on June 29, 2013.

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As her fling with Russell Brand amply illustrated, she has never exactly gone for the boy next door. And it seems the latest man in Geri Halliwell’s rather chequered love life is no exception. For while the dark-haired gentleman who whisked her off to Rome only weeks after they met may not be a Russian oligarch, as first reported, he is no less intriguing. Anton Kaszubowski, the Daily Mail can reveal, is in fact an online gambling entrepreneur who grew up in a council flat in South London, won a scholarship to Oxford, counts Jeffrey Archer among his friends – and has a wife. Mr Kaszubowski, 38, married 33-year-old Russian model and dancer Zoryna Ayzenshtat in July 2010. Although they separated at the end of the following year and are described by friends as having an ‘amicable’ relationship, the couple are yet to divorce. And, judging by his social network accounts, he seems to have no shortage of female companions, including Karin Joel, star of reality television show Made In Chelsea. He also once had a reported fling with Jimmy Choo founder Tamara Mellon. His mother, Brinal Brown, said: ‘He has been linked to so many girls and I’ve only met a couple’. Mr Kaszubowski, who runs a consultancy firm called Greenlaw which specialises in online gambling, was born in South East London.