Start Me Up

Start Me Up

The Rolling Stones

From the album

Tooth and Nail (1994)

Written by

Mick Jagger, Keith Richards

Key:F major
Duration:3:26

Listen to the Song

Summary

Released as the lead single from the Rolling Stones' 1981 album Tattoo You, 'Start Me Up' distills the band's blues-rock essence into a relentless, groove-heavy track powered by one of rock's most famous guitar riffs. Originally conceived as a reggae number in 1975, the song was resurrected six years later as a straight-ahead rocker and went on to become a perennial concert opener, sports anthem, and cultural touchstone.

classic rockguitar riffarena anthemRolling Stones80s rock

Musical Analysis

The harmony of 'Start Me Up' is deceptively simple — a I-IV-V framework stripped to its essentials and driven entirely by the guitar riff. What makes it distinctive is not harmonic sophistication but the raw energy of Keith Richards' open G tuning, which produ…

Chords

verse:F - Bb/F - F
chorus:F - Bb - C - Bb - F

History

The song originated in March 1975 during sessions for the album Black and Blue as a reggae-rock track titled 'Never Stop.' After dozens of takes the band abandoned the reggae approach and shelved the recording. It was revisited during January and March 1978 se…

“Bob Clearmountain achieved the song's distinctive thump using his 'bathroom reverb' technique — recording vocal and drum tracks through a miked speaker placed in the Power Station…”

Full Musical Analysis

The harmony of 'Start Me Up' is deceptively simple — a I-IV-V framework stripped to its essentials and driven entirely by the guitar riff. What makes it distinctive is not harmonic sophistication but the raw energy of Keith Richards' open G tuning, which produces partial chords with open strings ringing sympathetically. The ambiguity between full triads and power chords gives the riff its aggressive, open character. The blues influence is evident in the reliance on plagal (IV-I) motion and the overall riff-centric approach rather than functional chord progressions.

The song originated in March 1975 during sessions for the album Black and Blue as a reggae-rock track titled 'Never Stop.' After dozens of takes the band abandoned the reggae approach and shelved the recording. It was revisited during January and March 1978 sessions for Some Girls but still did not make the cut. In 1981, engineer Chris Kimsey proposed building a new album from archived material and discovered two rock-oriented takes of the song buried among roughly fifty reggae versions. Mick Jagger changed the central lyric from 'start it up' to 'start me up' during the final overdub sessions.

Released as the lead single from the Rolling Stones' 1981 album Tattoo You, 'Start Me Up' distills the band's blues-rock essence into a relentless, groove-heavy track powered by one of rock's most famous guitar riffs. Originally conceived as a reggae number in 1975, the song was resurrected six years later as a straight-ahead rocker and went on to become a perennial concert opener, sports anthem, and cultural touchstone.

Deep Analysis Available

Detailed analysis of this section is not yet available for this song.

Song DNA

Genre

Rock

Era

80s

Mood

Uplifting

Tempo

Upbeat

Key

Major

Texture

Full Band

Sound

Guitar-driven

Feel

Groovy

Explore More

Listen & Learn

Statistics

3.0M

Plays

643K

Listeners

318K

Genius Views

5

Annotations

100%

Popularity

3:26

Duration

4/4

Time

Credits

Written by

Mick JaggerKeith Richards

Produced by

The Glimmer TwinsMick JaggerKeith Richards

From the album Tooth and Nail