The Rolling Stones
Some Girls Live in Texas '78
Eagle Rock Entertainment




During the mid ’70s, the Stones had lost
much of their raunchy, charismatic zeal.
They had released Goat’s Head Soup, It’s
Only Rock ’n’
Roll, and Black and
Blue—albums that
were commercially
successful, but tepidly
received by
critics who claimed
the rockers had
become stale and
predictable compared to the punk and disco
music that had taken over the airwaves.
However, with 1978’s Some Girls—one of
the Stone’s biggest-selling studio albums—and its resulting US tour, the band reconnected
with their gritty, groovin’, and brash
roots. Here again was the group that first
swaggered out of London in the late ’60s
and early ’70s, and the album’s songs and
attitude restored the lads to their rightful
place in rock ’n’ roll royalty. This rowdy
energy powers the DVD and Blu-ray concert
film Some Girls Live in Texas ’78.
The action starts with a burning cover of
Chuck Berry’s “Let It Rock” and an equally
overdriven rendition of Exile on Main St.’s
“All Down the Line.” On the latter, Keith
Richards uses a ’50s blonde Tele, although
for most of the concert he relies on a black
’75 Telecaster Deluxe driving a Mesa/
Boogie Mark I. From there, Live in Texas
offers up blistering takes on “Tumbling
Dice,” “Jumpin’ Jack Flash,” and “Star
Star.” During the latter, Mick Jagger ad-libs
“Jimmy Page is quite the rage, I couldn’t see
the reason why.”
Key cuts include the stone-cold classic,
“Beast of Burden,” a country-fried “Far
Away Eyes” (with Ronnie Wood on lap
steel), and a one-two combo of the phaserdriven,
art-rock “Shattered” and punkmeets-
Berry “Respectable.”
Picture quality isn’t great on Some Girls,
and bonus features are pretty much limited
to a 1978 appearance on Saturday Night
Live, but the band’s raw talent and powerful
musicianship more than make up for that.
Yes, it’s only rock ’n’ roll, but we like it, yes
we do.