Talk Is Cheap

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Talk Is Cheap
Talk Is Cheap cover
Studio album by Keith Richards
Released 3 October 1988
Recorded August 1987 – May 1988
Genre Rock and roll
Length 47:01
Language English
Label Virgin
Producer Keith Richards and Steve Jordan
Professional reviews
Keith Richards chronology
Talk Is Cheap
(1988)
Live at the Hollywood Palladium, December 15, 1988
(1991)

Talk Is Cheap is the solo album debut by Keith Richards of The Rolling Stones, released in 1988. Recorded and released following a brief creative and personal fallout with Mick Jagger, Talk Is Cheap received glowing reviews upon its release.[citation needed]

Relations between Jagger and Richards had grown tense over the course of the 1980s, as they began to differ on the musical direction of their famous band—"You Don't Move Me" would be written about their feud. The image-conscious Jagger was keen to follow the trends and keep The Rolling Stones current, while Richards wanted to preserve their reputation and roots. When Jagger was more interested in pursuing his solo career instead of touring for Dirty Work in 1986, Richards was stung by Jagger's move and began contemplating a solo project for the first time.

Teaming up with Steve Jordan, who had worked on Dirty Work, the pair wrote several new songs (one of which, "Almost Hear You Sigh", would be placed on The Rolling Stones' Steel Wheels in 1989 with lyrical modifications by Jagger). Recording began in August 1987 in Montreal and continued sporadically until the following May with visits to Montserrat and Bermuda. In order to assert his independence further, Richards would sign with Virgin Records, while The Rolling Stones were currently under contract with Sony Music (although they'd switch over to Virgin themselves in 1991).

Of the friends and celebrities taking part, including Ivan Neville, Sarah Dash, Bootsy Collins, Maceo Parker, and Patti Scialfa, the most famous is former guitarist for The Rolling Stones, Mick Taylor.

The songs recorded for Talk Is Cheap find Richards in a confident and carefree mood, with a very natural air to the proceedings. The only moment where the setting turns somewhat heated is in "You Don't Move Me", a thinly-veiled response to Jagger that was well-publicised by the media upon the album's unveiling.

Released in October 1988, Talk Is Cheap was released to a very receptive critical reaction (many reviewers jokingly called it the best Rolling Stones album in years) and it peaked at #37[citation needed] in the United Kingdom and #24[citation needed] in the United States, where it went gold.[citation needed]

"Make No Mistake" was later featured in an episode of The Sopranos.[citation needed]

[edit] Track listing

All songs by Keith Richards and Steve Jordan.

  1. "Big Enough" – 3:17
  2. "Take It So Hard" – 3:11
  3. "Struggle" – 4:10
  4. "I Could Have Stood You Up" – 3:12
  5. "Make No Mistake" – 4:53
  6. "You Don't Move Me" – 4:48
  7. "How I Wish" – 3:32
  8. "Rockawhile" – 4:38
  9. "Whip It Up" – 4:01
  10. "Locked Away" – 5:48
  11. "It Means a Lot" – 5:22

[edit] Personnel

Additional musicians

[edit] Sales chart performance

Album
Year Chart Position
1988 UK Top 100 Albums 37[citation needed]
1988 The Billboard 200 24[citation needed]
1989 The Billboard 200 54[citation needed]
Singles
Year Single Chart Position
1988 "Take It So Hard" Mainstream Rock Tracks 3[citation needed]
1988 "You Don't Move Me" Mainstream Rock Tracks 18[citation needed]
1989 "Struggle" Mainstream Rock Tracks 47[citation needed]
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