Rolling Stones-Some Girls
Rolling Stones-Some Girls
Rolling Stones-Some Girls
Rolling Stones-Some Girls
Vintage Vibes 420

Rolling Stones-Some Girls

Regular price $70.00 $0.00 Unit price per
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Rolling Stones-Some Girls

Cover has normal wear and tear for the age. Cover is graded VG. Record is graded VG.

ORIGINAL BANNED DIE-CUT COVER WITH LUCILLE BALL, LIZA MINNELLI, FARRAH FAUCET, RAQUEL WELCH AND MARILYN MANROE.

Some Girls is the 14th UK and 16th US album by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, released on 9 June 1978 by Rolling Stones Records. It was recorded in sessions held between October 1977 and February 1978 at Pathé Marconi Studios in Paris and produced by the band’s chief songwriters – lead vocalist Mick Jagger and guitarist Keith Richards – with Chris Kimsey engineering the recording.

The album cover for Some Girls was conceived and designed by Peter Corriston, who designed the next three album covers, with illustrations by Hubert Kretzschmar. An elaborate die-cut design, with the colours on the sleeves varying in different markets, it featured the Rolling Stones’ faces alongside those of select female celebrities inserted into a copy of an old Valmor Products Corporation advertisement. The cover design was challenged legally when Lucille Ball, Farrah Fawcett, Liza Minnelli (representing her mother Judy Garland), Raquel Welch, and the estate of Marilyn Monroe threatened to sue for the use of their likenesses without permission. Similarly, Valmor did take legal action and were given a monetary award for the use of their design.

The album was quickly reissued with a redesigned cover that removed all the celebrities, whether they had complained or not. The celebrity images were replaced with black and punk-style garish colours with the phrase “Pardon our appearance – cover under reconstruction”. Jagger later apologised to Minnelli when he encountered her during a party at the famous discothèque Studio 54. The only celebrity whose face was not removed was ex-Beatle George Harrison. As with the original design, the colour schemes on the redesigned sleeves varied in different markets.

A third version of the album cover with the hand-drawn faces from the original Valmor ad was used on the 1986 CD reissue.