It's October 1977, and the Rolling Stones are in a Paris recording
studio. They're under siege. Keith Richards's legal troubles after his
arrest for heroin possession threaten the band's future, and the broad
consensus among rock aficionados is that the band will never again reach
the heights of Exile on Main Street.
But Mick Jagger is writing lyrics inspired by the year he has just spent
in New York City, where he was hanging out with the punks at CBGB and
with the glitterati at Studio 54. And new bandmember Ron Wood is helping
Richards recapture the two-guitar groove that the band had been missing
since the Brian Jones era. The result? Some Girls, the band's response
both to punk rock and to disco, an album that crackles with all the
energy, decadence, and violence of New York in the 1970s. Weaving
together the history of the band and the city, Cyrus R. K. Patell traces
the genesis and legacy of the album that Jagger would later call the
band's best since Let It Bleed.