In 1981, the band led by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards released their sixteenth album, "Tattoo You" (their eighteenth in the American market). It was composed of unfinished tracks discarded from previous albums, given a precise reinterpretation for this release. Besides Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, the rest of the lineup remained the same as in recent years: Ron Wood, Mick Taylor, Bill Wyman, and Charlie Watts, along with guest appearances from Billy Preston, Nicky Hopkins, Ian Stewart, Pete Townshend, and Wayne Perkins, among others. The repertoire included here departs from the eclectic styles of their latest albums, maintaining a musical foundation rooted in the most organic and robust sounds of rock and roll, beginning with one of the band's anthems, the infectious "Start Me Up". The rest of the album showcases an effective collection of catchy, rhythmic songs like "Hang Fire", "Little T&A", and "Neighbours", nods to 80s sounds in "Heaven" and "Worried About You", vintage blues in "Black Limousine", and dusty, nostalgic tunes like "Waiting on a Friend". Despite being composed of songs that would have been considered dispensable in previous years, "Tattoo You" would go on to sell over eight million copies worldwide.


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