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Gimme Some Neck
1979 studio album by Ron Wood From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Gimme Some Neck is the third solo album by English musician Ron Wood, released in 1979.[1] It was a minor hit and his best performance on the US charts to date, peaking at number 45 on Billboard during a 13-week chart run. The album artwork features illustrations drawn by Wood, with a self-portrait in the center of the front side.
To tour the United States in support of the album, Wood formed the New Barbarians with musicians including Keith Richards, Ian McLagan and Bobby Keys, all of whom contributed to the recording. The Landover concert from this tour was recorded and released as Buried Alive: Live in Maryland in 2006.
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Critical reception
Newsday wrote that "there is no first-rate rock and roll playing of any kind ... the songs are mostly bland filler."[6]
Track listing
All tracks composed by Ron Wood; except where noted.
- Side one
- "Worry No More" (Jerry Lynn Williams) – 2:34
- "Breakin' My Heart" – 4:17
- "Delia" (Traditional) – 0:42
- "Buried Alive" – 3:37
- "Come to Realise" – 3:52
- "Infekshun" – 4:03
- Side two
- "Seven Days" (Bob Dylan) – 4:10
- "We All Get Old" – 4:09
- "F.U.C. Her" – 3:15
- "Lost and Lonely" – 4:14
- "Don't Worry" – 3:26
Personnel
- Ron Wood – lead vocals, guitar, pedal steel, Dobro, bass
- Keith Richards – guitar, backing vocals
- Dave Mason – guitar
- Robert Popwell – bass
- Harry Phillips – piano
- Jerry Lynn Williams – piano and backing vocals on "Worry No More"
- Ian McLagan – keyboards
- Bobby Keys – tenor saxophone on "Don't Worry"
- Mick Jagger – backing vocals
- Jon Lind – backing vocals
- Charlie Watts – drums
- Mick Fleetwood – drums on "Seven Days"
- Jim Keltner – percussion
Technical
- Geoff Workman – engineer
- Tony Lane – design
- Ron Wood – paintings
Charts
Studio and road crew
- Royden "Chuch" Magee
- Gary Schultz
- Ernest Cain Salgado
- Johnny Starbuck
References
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