It's All Over Now



"It's All Over Now" is a song written by Bobby Womack and Shirley Womack. It was first released by The Valentinos featuring Bobby Womack. The Valentinos version entered the Billboard Hot 100 on June 27, 1964, where it stayed on the chart for two weeks, peaking at number 94. The Rolling Stones had their first number-one hit with this song in July 1964.

The Valentinos version

 * Bobby Womack – lead vocals, guitar, co-writer
 * Cecil Womack – background vocals
 * Harry Womack – background vocals
 * Friendly Womack Jr. – background vocals
 * Curtis Womack – background vocals
 * Sam Cooke - producer

The Rolling Stones version
The Valentinos' original version of the song was played to the Rolling Stones during their first North American tour in June 1964 by New York radio DJ Murray the K. Murray the K had an extended series of interviews with the Stones on his WINS Swinging Soiree hit radio show following his similar success as the first radio DJ in the USA to have the Beatles with him on the air (February 1964). He played the Valentinos' song to the Stones, who "raved on it" and said "it was their kind of song". He also played the Stones' "King Bee" (their Slim Harpo cover) the same night and remarked on their ability to achieve an authentic blues sound. After hearing "It's All Over Now" by the Womack Brothers (aka the Valentinos) on the WINS show, the band recorded their version nine days later at Chess Studios in Chicago. Years later, Bobby Womack said in an interview that he had told Sam Cooke he did not want the Rolling Stones to record their version of the song, and that he had told Mick Jagger to get his own song. Cooke convinced him to let the Rolling Stones record the song. Six months later on, after receiving the royalty check for the song, Womack told Cooke that Mick Jagger could have any song he wanted.

The Rolling Stones' version of "It's All Over Now" is the most famous version of the song. It was first released as a single in the UK, where it peaked at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart, giving the Rolling Stones their first number one hit. It was the band's third single released in America, and stayed in the Billboard Hot 100 for ten weeks, peaking at number 26. Months later it appeared on their second American album 12 X 5. The song was a big hit in Europe and was part of the band's live set in the 1960s.

In his 2010 autobiography, Life, Keith Richards says that John Lennon criticized his guitar solo on this song and Richards agreed that it was not one of his best, though Bruce Springsteen and many other guitar fans rank it as one of the most inspired guitar breaks ever recorded and one that is still hard to mimic.

In 1964 Bill said, "We just liked the sound of it. We didn't think it sounded country and western until we read it somewhere. It's the 12-string guitar and harmonising that do it. Every one of our records has been different. We don't want to do the same old thing every time or people will get fed up with it."

Personnel

 * Mick Jagger – lead vocals
 * Keith Richards – electric lead guitar, backing vocals
 * Brian Jones – 12 string electric rhythm guitar
 * Bill Wyman – bass
 * Charlie Watts – drums

Other versions

 * Johnny Rivers on In Action
 * Waylon Jennings on The One and Only
 * Stack Waddy on Bugger Off!
 * Bobby Womack and Bill Withers on Womack's I Don't Know What the World Is Coming To
 * Rod Stewart on Gasoline Alley (1970); Live version recorded for MTV Unplugged in 1993 appears on the single "Reason to Believe"
 * The Chambers Brothers on People Get Ready (1966)
 * Alex Taylor on With Friends and Neighbors
 * Molly Hatchet on Flirtin' with Disaster
 * John Anderson on the 1985 album Tokyo, Oklahoma. His version peaked at #15 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart.
 * In 1989 by The Dirty Dozen Brass Band on Voodoo, featuring Dr. John on vocals and piano
 * Rebirth Brass Band, on the 1999 album The Main Event: Live at the Maple Leaf
 * Feargal Sharkey on his self-titled debut album
 * Social Distortion on Japanese edition of their self-titled album
 * Nils Lofgren on Wonderland
 * Ry Cooder on Paradise and Lunch
 * Johnny Winter on ''Captured Live! as many times since 1974 (in about 268 concerts).
 * In the 1978 live recording by the Ozark Mountain Daredevils titled, It's Alive, recorded at Western Illinois University in Macomb, Illinois.
 * Amy Correia covers the Rod Stewart "medley" of Gasoline Alley/It's All Over Now on "THE I-10 CHRONICLES 2" (2001)
 * Jerusalem (British band) covers the song on their most recent LP Black Horses (2014)
 * Grateful Dead performed the song live 154 times since 1969