The Rolling Stones

Their Satanic Majesties Request (National Album Day 2025)

  • Released: 18/10/2025
  • Label: UMR
  • Genre: Rock

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From one of the greatest rock bands in the world an exclusive for National Album Day, a zoetrope release of the album, Their Satanic Majesties Request.

Their Satanic Majesties Request is the sixth studio album by the Rolling Stones, released in December 1967 by Decca Records in the UK and by London Records in the United States. This would be the first Rolling Stones album released in identical versions in both countries with the title a play on the British passport “Her Britannic Majesty requests and requires" text.

The album saw the band experimenting with a psychedelic sound, incorporating unconventional elements such as Mellotron, sound effects, string arrangements, and African rhythms. The band members produced the album themselves as their manager/producer Andrew Loog Oldham had departed.  It was a chaotic, drawn out recording process marked by drug use, court cases and band members turning up at the studio at different times. However, from this chaos emerged songs such as ‘She's a Rainbow’ with its beautiful harmonies, piano, and strings; ‘2000 Man,’ whose lyrics speak of a future where an individual’s identity is lost, the riff-driven ‘Citadel’ and the hazy, dream-like ‘In Another Land’.

All tracks were written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, except "In Another Land" by Bill Wyman.

Tracklist

Side 1
1.           Sing This All Together
2.           Citadel
3.           In Another Land
4.           2000 Man
5.           Sing This All Together (See What Happens) 

Side 2
1.           She’s A Rainbow
2.           The Lantern
3.           Gomper
4.           2000 Light Years From Home
5.           On With The Show 

Customer Reviews

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B
Barry Sylvester

Great sounds

G
Graham Sharpe

I was thrilled when I realised the Stones had gone for psychedelia for their new LP back in the day, and equally delighted that Brian was fully involved. The cover of the LP was/is thrillingly magnificent and for me this is my favourite go-to LP by the band. I remember being in the minority, as many took against the record, accusing the group of bandwagon- jumping. That may well have been one of the motives for opting in to a style their great rivals The Beatles never fully embraced, despite 'Strawberry Fields Forever' being the greatest psych psingle of them all! Still my favourite Stones' album, I think of this record with never-dimming affection and when in the right mood Satanic Majesties takes its rightful place on the turntable, at the head of the band's output....Graham Sharpe.