Marianne Faithfull (1946-2025)


The singer and actress has died at the age of 78.

I only know of only one song by her but it is one that I like a lot, mainly because of the musical arrangement with the English horn (a member of the oboe family) that accentuates the plaintiveness of her vocals. It is As Tears Go By, released in 1964, when she was just 17 years old.

The song was composed by Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, and Andrew Long Oldham, who was the manager of the Rolling Stones. In 1965 the band released their own version of the song with the English horn being replaced by guitar but still capturing the plaintiveness of the melody. Both versions used an acoustic 12-string guitar.

Interestingly, while the song evokes the feeling of an old person looking back on life, at that time Faithfull was just 17 and Jagger and Richards just 20.

Comments

  1. wooloohoo says

    Damn, that’s heartbreaking… I love her music so much, I hope you’ll take some time to explore more of her recordings.

  2. Ridana says

    I don’t know much about her discography, but I learned of her song “Broken English” from its use in the anime Hellsing Ultimate. She wrote it after seeing a documentary about Ulriche Meinhof of the Baader-Meinhoff Gang (Red Army Faction) in West Germany. Here’s her version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gHrsv0NVa6k

    And here’s the Hellsing version by Schaft.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NtO__69R9J0

    And the Hellsing trailer with the Schaft version if anyone’s curious (content warning for war, guns, blood, demons, etc. -- the anime is about Nazi zombies vs Dracula & the Hellsing Org. vs the Catholic Church. :)) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TY6jDceaBZo

    Lyrics
    Could have come through
    Anytime
    Cold lonely
    Puritan
    What are you
    Fighting for?
    It’s not my
    Security
    It’s just an old war
    Not even a cold war
    Don’t say it in Russian
    Don’t say it in German
    Say it in broken English
    Say it in broken English
    Lose your father
    Your husband
    Your mother
    Your children
    What are you
    Dying for?
    It’s not my
    Reality

    The speech used to open Schaft’s version is from Goebbels’ speech marking the official start of the anti-Semitic campaign (nor sure if the middle part is). If anyone can translate it, I’d be grateful.

  3. Silentbob says

    Her husband, he’s off to work
    And the kids are off to school
    And there are, oh, so many ways
    For her to spend the day
    She could clean the house for hours
    Or rearrange the flowers
    Or run naked through the shady street
    Screaming all the way

    Lol. Powerful stuff.

  4. jenorafeuer says

    The Ballad of Lucy Jordan is a song I first heard covered by Canadian band The Barra MacNeils. Definitely stuck with me.

    Looking it up, I see the Faithfull version is a cover as well: the song was originally written by Shel Silverstein of all people, and first recorded by Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show. I think it just fundamentally works better with female vocals, though.

  5. M. Currie says

    She also did the theme song for the movie “The City of Lost Children,” which is pretty catchy.

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