Wild Horses couldn't hold them back: The Rolling Stones will
return with Hackney Diamonds, their first album of original songs since 2005,
reports BBC.
The band will launch the record on Wednesday at a special event
in Hackney, a place that is "at the heart of the new album", per a
press release.
Hosted by Jimmy Fallon, the event will be streamed live on
YouTube.
The album is rumoured to feature a number of guest stars
including Paul McCartney, Stevie Wonder and Lady Gaga.
The announcement follows a teaser campaign that began with
an unassuming advert in the Hackney Gazette - a free newspaper distributed in
corner shops and supermarkets that covers the London borough.
Ostensibly for a local glazing firm, the blurb contained
several references to Rolling Stones songs, and a phone number where fans could
register interest.
Over the weekend, the band also shared a preview of one of
the songs, via a website called dontgetangrywithme.com.
However, it was another elaborate ruse: after a prolonged
loading screen, the site only played a short snippet of music before appearing
to crash.
The band responded to supposed difficulties on social media
with the message, "Sorry, don't get angry with me" - a reference to
the song's opening lyric.
But all will finally be revealed in Hackney on Wednesday
afternoon, with all three remaining Stones - Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and
Ronnie Wood - due to attend.
"New album, new music, new era," a trailer for the
livestream promised.
The album will be their first since 2016's Blue &
Lonesome, which featured covers of the songs by Little Walter and Howlin' Wolf
that first inspired them to form a band in the 1960s.
Before that, their last album of original material was
2005's A Bigger Bang, trumpeted as a return to basics, but which failed to
reach the heights achieved by classics like Sticky Fingers and Exile On Main
Street.
Hackney Diamonds will be their first record without drummer
Charlie Watts, who died in 2021 prior to the band's 60th anniversary tour,
after suffering from throat cancer.
The star is known to have recorded new drum tracks before
his death; and Richards has already confirmed his playing will form part of the
new record.
"Let me put it this way," the guitarist told the Los Angeles Times, "you haven't heard the last of Charlie Watts."
On other songs, the band are likely to be accompanied by
Steve Jordan, who filled Watts' seat on tour this summer.
Unconfirmed reports suggested that Ringo Starr also took
part in the recording sessions, but those rumours have been downplayed.
/KN/
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