Them: 'Baby Please Don't Go' (1965)
Greil Marcus, 'When That Rough God Goes Riding', June 2010
IN 1965, THEM'S 'Baby Please Don't Go'–usually cited as a rock 'n' roll update of a song first recorded by the Mississippi blues singer Joe Williams–had the virtue of sounding as if it had emerged full-blown from Van Morrison's forehead. After a twenty-five-second lead-in–knife-edge notes on a guitar, following footsteps from a bass, drums and organ kicking up noise, harmonica curving the rhythm–Morrison leaps into the song as if he hasn't noticed the musical horde racing ahead, and as with 'Mystic Eyes' in an instant the band is chasing him. There's a desperation in his hurry that all but rewrites the song: he's singing "Well, your man done gone," but you can hear it as "Your mind done gone" and believe it.
Total word count of piece: 996
Best Databases: RBP is Runner-up in Best Niche category
Video: Johnny Marr talks about Rock's Backpages
RBP on Spotify: The Absolute Best o' Burt
RBP Album Club, June 13th: Miki Berenyi and Lucy O'Brien celebrate a Blondie classic
Essential Listening: Mick Gold meets Patti Smith in '76
Essential Reading: RBP's awesome Ozzy anthology
Essential Reading: Nina Antonia introduces her new poetry collection
RBP Album Club, July 11th: Nick Hornby and Nick Coleman celebrate Southside Johnny's debut