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Dear Doctor - The Rolling Stones



     
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Dear Doctor Lyrics


Oh help me, please doctor, I'm damaged,
There's a pain where there once was a heart.
It's a beatin', It's a bleedin'. Won't you please tear it out
And preserve it right there in that jar?
Oh help me, please momma, I'm sickenin'
For today is the day of the plunge.
And the gal I'm to marry is a bow-legged sow;
I been soakin' up drink like a sponge
"Don't worry, get dressed" cried my momma
As she plied me with bourbon so sour.
"Put your suit on. Pull your socks up. Comb your long hair down
For you will be wed in the hour."
So help me, please doctor, I'm damaged,
There's a pain where there once was a heart.
It's a beatin', it's a bleedin'. Can't you please tear it out

And preserve it right there in that jar?
I was tremblin' as I put on my jacket;
It had creases as sharp as a knife.
I put the ring in my pocket but there was a note,
And my heart it jumped into my mouth
It read "Darlin' I'm sorry to hurt you,
And I don't know exactly how to say
That I'm down in Virginia with your cousin Lou.
There'll be no weddin' today."
So help me, please doctor, I'm damaged,
You can put back my heart in it's hole.
I'm cryin', dear momma, for poor cousin Lou
And my heart is now under control.
---
Lyrics submitted by Daniel.

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The Rolling Stones are an English rock group, formed in London in 1962. First popular in Europe, they quickly became successful in North America during the "British Invasion" of the mid 1960s. Since then, their worldwide sales are estimated at more than 200 million albums. In 1989, they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and in 2004, they ranked number 4 in Rolling Stone magazine's 100 Greatest Artists of All Time. In 2008, Billboard magazine ranked the Rolling Stones at number ten on "The Billboard Hot 100 Top All-Time Artists", and as the second most successful group in the Billboard Hot 100 chart.

The group was formed by Brian Jones, Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and Ian Stewart, who met as schoolmates in Dartford, Kent. They took their name from a Muddy Waters song called "Rollin' Stone Blues", and made their live debut at London's Marquee Club (minus Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts). They start playing pubs and clubs around the city and suburbs. Bill Wyman joined later that year (the popular story is that he was asked because he had his own amplifier).

In January 1963, Charlie Watts joined the Stones. The band gigged constantly, with residencies at venues like Ealing Jazz Club, Ken Colyer's Studio 51, and Eel Pie Island in Twickenham. Their weekly performances at the Crawdaddy at Richmond's Station Hotel resulted in ecstatic press reviews, and in April Andrew Loog Oldham saw them there and signed them to his management company the next day. He started the "Would you let your daughter marry a Rolling Stone" press campaign, which set the tone for their career.

In May 1963, the Stones were signed to Decca Records by the same man who had turned down the Beatles. A month later "Come On", the first Rolling Stones single, was released, and reached number two in the U.K. charts.

The fifth member of the group, Brian Jones, left on 8th June 1969, saying that he wanted to form a new group. He was replaced by Mick Taylor, formerly in John Mayall's Bluesbreakers.

In 1971 the Stones, whose contract with Decca had expired, launched their Rolling Stones Records label. In December 1974 Taylor left the group in order to pursue a solo career. He was replaced in 1975 by Ronnie Wood.

Since Wyman left the Stones in 1993, the band has consisted of Jagger, Richards, Watts and guitarist Ronnie Wood. In studio and live performances, Darryl Jones (bassist) and Chuck Leavell (keyboardist) also serve as a regular contributors.

All the members have also undertaken solo projects of various kinds.

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The Rolling Stones