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"Maggie May"

July 1971

1970

5:50 (Album version W/ Henry Intro)
3:43 (Single version)

Rod Stewart

In 2004, Rolling Stone ranked the song number 130 on its list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.[3]


In 2017, the 1971 release of "Maggie May" by Rod Stewart on Mercury Records was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.[4]

Background[edit]

"Maggie May" expresses the ambivalence and contradictory emotions of a boy involved in a relationship with an older woman and was written from Stewart's own experience. In the January 2007 issue of Q magazine, Stewart recalled: "Maggie May was more or less a true story, about the first woman I had sex with, at the 1961 Beaulieu Jazz Festival."[5][6] The woman's name was not "Maggie May"; Stewart has stated that the name was taken from "an old Liverpudlian song about a prostitute."[6]


The song was recorded in just two takes in one session. Drummer Micky Waller often arrived at recording sessions with the expectation that a drum kit would be provided and, for "Maggie May", it was – except that no cymbals could be found. The cymbal crashes had to be overdubbed separately some days later.[7][6]


The song was released as the B-side of the single "Reason to Believe", but soon radio stations began playing the B-side and "Maggie May" became the more popular side. The song was Stewart's first substantial hit as a solo performer and launched his solo career. It remains one of his best-known songs. A 1971 performance of the song on Top of the Pops saw the Faces joined onstage by DJ John Peel, who pretended to play the mandolin.[8] The mandolin player on the actual recording was Ray Jackson of Lindisfarne.


The album version of "Maggie May" incorporates a 30-second solo guitar intro, "Henry", composed by Martin Quittenton.[6]


The original recording has appeared on almost all of Rod Stewart's compilations, and even appeared on the Ronnie Wood retrospective Ronnie Wood Anthology: The Essential Crossexion. A version by the Faces recorded for BBC Radio appeared on the four-disc box set Five Guys Walk into a Bar.... A live version recorded in 1993 by Stewart joined by Wood for a session of MTV Unplugged is included on the album Unplugged...and Seated.

– lead vocals

Rod Stewart

– electric guitar, twelve-string guitar, bass guitar

Ronnie Wood

– acoustic guitar

Martin Quittenton

– drums, cymbals

Micky Waller

Hammond organ

Ian McLagan

mandolin (listed on the album as "The mandolin was played by the mandolin player in Lindisfarne. The name slips my mind.")[26]

Ray Jackson

celesta

Pete Sears

Blur cover[edit]

The English alternative rock band Blur released a cover of Maggie May on their 1993 album Modern Life Is Rubbish.

Maggie May (folk song)

at Discogs (list of releases)

Maggie May

on YouTube

Rod Stewart - Maggie May