Had It With You

Album: Dirty Work (1986)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • Stones guitarist Keith Richards wrote this fed-up declaration of a love gone sour about his contentious relationship with frontman Mick Jagger. "I wrote 'Had It with You' in Ronnie [Wood]'s front room in Chiswick, right on the banks of the Thames," Richards recalled in his 2010 autobiography, Life. "We were waiting to go to Paris, but the weather was so dodgy that we were stranded until the Dover ferry started rolling again. Peter Cook and (my father) were hanging about. There was no heating, and the only way to keep warm was to turn on the amps. I don't think I'd ever written a song before, apart maybe from 'All About You,' in which I realized I was actually singing about Mick."
  • This features no extra musicians. Says Richards: "Yeah, the basic track was cut with Charlie on drums, me on guitar and Mick on vocal and harp. We tried it with the full band and we realized we were just sounding like the Rolling Stones doing the Rolling Stones' favorite sort of 'Ye Olde Famous Rolling Stones Sound.' But then, when we took the bass and the piano and the extra guitars off, it just sat right on the button. It came off sounding like a live radio broadcast that way. And at a slightly later date Ronnie and I did one overdub at the same time. But, I mean, there's nothing in the RULE BOOK that says you've GOT to have a bass on there. And then there's that middle breakdown part that almost trips over itself (laughs). Cutting a good blues track is not easy: it's all been done a million times, and to add something new to it is not so much a matter of THOUGHT as FEEL."
  • Ron Wood didn't play on the track, but the guitarist recalled the recording session: "'Had It with You' was... just a couple of takes. I went in the control room and said, 'I'm not playing on this one, you lot get in there' - the original band - and it was great. Mick did that live harp, and I just put a little sax in the background, like a rhythm sax."
  • Guitar technician Alan Rogan: "That thicker, overdriven (guitar) sound on 'Had It with You' comes from changing the settings on the Fender Twin, that's all." >>>
    Suggestion credit:
    Bertrand - Paris, France, for all of the above

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Randy Newman

Randy NewmanSongwriting Legends

Newman makes it look easy these days, but in this 1974 interview, he reveals the paranoia and pressures that made him yearn for his old 9-5 job.

Ralph Casale  - Session Pro

Ralph Casale - Session ProSongwriter Interviews

A top New York studio musician, Ralph played guitar on many '60s hits, including "Lightnin' Strikes," "A Lover's Concerto" and "I Am A Rock."

Gary Louris of The Jayhawks

Gary Louris of The JayhawksSongwriter Interviews

The Jayhawks' song "Big Star" has special meaning to Gary, who explains how longevity and inspiration have trumped adulation.

Tim McIlrath of Rise Against

Tim McIlrath of Rise AgainstSongwriter Interviews

Rise Against frontman Tim McIlrath explains the meanings behind some of their biggest songs and names the sci-fi books that have influenced him.

Is That Song Public Domain?

Is That Song Public Domain?Fact or Fiction

Are classic songs like "Over The Rainbow" and "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" in the public domain?

George Harrison

George HarrisonFact or Fiction

Did Eric Clapton really steal George's wife? What's the George Harrison-Monty Python connection? Set the record straight with our Fact or Fiction quiz.