Recorded between December 1971 and March, 1972. Released on Exile On Main Street in 1972. Lead Vocal: Mick Jagger Background Vocals: Mick Jagger & Keith Richards Electric Guitars: Keith Richards & Mick Taylor Slide Guitar: Al Perkins Bass: Mick Taylor Drums: Charlie Watts Piano: Nicky Hopkins Organ: Jim Price
TORN AND FRAYED (M. Jagger/K. Richards)
Hey let him follow you down, Way underground wind and he's bound. Bound to follow you down, Just a dead beat right off the street. Bound to follow you down.
Well the ballrooms and smelly bordellos And dressing rooms filled with parasites. On stage the band has got problems, They're a bag of nerves on first nights.
He ain't tied down to no home town, Yeah, and he thought he was wreckless. You think he's bad, he thinks you're mad, Yeah, and the guitar player gets restless.
And his coat is torn and frayed, It's seen much better days. Just as long as the guitar plays Let it steal your heart away, Let it steal your heart away.
Joe's got a cough, sounds kind a rough, Yeah, and the codeine to fix it. Doctor prescribes, drug store supplies, Who's gonna help him to kick it
Well his coat is torn and frayed, It`s seen much better days. Just as long as the guitar plays Let it steal your heart away, Let it steal your heart away.
xx Written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, "Torn and Frayed" is called "a twangy, three-chord honky tonk, but not typically country... the progression of the chords brings gospel music to mind",[1] by Bill Janovitz in his review of the song. The song comes from side two of Exile, the side known for its acoustic folk and country tunes. Janovitz continues, "The music comes as close to definitive country-rock or Stax-like country-soul as anything from the era, barring Gram Parsons — an immediate influence on the Stones." Gram Parsons was present for the recording sessions of Exile at Nellcôte, and "Torn and Frayed" is perhaps the most overtly Parsons-influenced cut the Stones ever recorded, with a country-soul flavour reminiscent of the Parsons-fronted Flying Burrito Brothers' 1969 debut album The Gilded Palace of Sin.
In fact, Al Perkins, a good friend and collaborator of Parsons', appears on the track and performs the song's pedal steel guitar. Jagger performs lead vocals and is accompanied by Richards on backing. Both Richards and Mick Taylor provide the song's base of acoustic guitar. Taylor also contributes the song's bass and Charlie Watts performs drums. Organ is performed by Jim Price and piano is played by Nicky Hopkins.[2] Recording took place at Los Angeles' Sunset Sound Studios between the months of December 1971 and March 1972.
Janovitz says of the lyrics, "'Torn and Frayed' follow a vagabond-like guitar player whose 'coat is torn and frayed...'" “ Well the ballrooms and smelly bordellos, and dressing rooms filled with parasites On stage the band has got problems, they're a bag of nerves on first nights He ain't tied down to no home town, yeah, and he thought he was reckless You think he's bad, he thinks you're mad, yeah, and the guitar player gets restless. ”
"Torn and Frayed" was performed by the Stones during the 1972 tour of America and was reintroduced to setlists during the 2002 leg of the Licks Tour. In 2009, it was covered by The Black Crowes on Warpaint Live. The song was also covered by Phish during their cover of Exile on Main St on 31 October 2009. The song later appeared in another of their live shows in Cincinnati on 21 November, as well as during their Superball IX festival.