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    • Stay with Me
    • OH La La
    • Flying
    • Bad N’ Ruin
    • Sweet Lady Mary
    • Maybe I’m Amazed
    • Had Me A Real Good Time
    • Maggie May
    • Debris
    • Cindy Incidentally

    This ‘Stay With Me’ by Faces is a great song, whatever we get. A song that raises a dead person, that raises the spirits of anyone, and that immediately makes you sing and dance. The most powerful sound of the Faces is found in songs like this, hard rock like the top of a pine tree that dances to Ronnie Wood’s guitar and the ragged voice of a subli...

    Beautiful folk-rock that offers us ‘Oh La La’, a song that also gave its name to the last and already dysfunctional album of the band. With the group broken into two parts, with a Rod Stewart in his tracks after achieving solo fame, and the rest fed up with the singer’s attitude, the album came out in fits and starts. Along the way, this is what is...

    Faces achieved magnificent halftime in this ‘’, a song that undoubtedly grows thanks to Stewart’s ability to carry out interpretations full of feeling and emotion. All this without removing an iota of merit and award for the excellent instrumental part on which the singer relies. This song opened the second face of his first album ‘First Step’ (197...

    ‘Bad N’ Ruin ’is the perfect example of what Rod Stewart could have been if he had not wanted to become the Rod Stewart we know – with all due respect. Los Faces shine with one of their best songs in the form of cañero, playful and salutary rock included in their second album ‘Long Player’ (1971). The boogie touches that would accompany them throug...

    An excellent ballad that could not be left out of this list with the best songs of Faces. There are ten, but the preselection was somewhat longer. This song is pure radio formula, pure FM. Why? Has it all. His calm rhythm, acoustic guitar, Stewart’s voice, a great mix for those classic rock stations. A theme that never fails. And if you hurry me, a...

    If this version of Paul McCartney’s Maybe I’m Amazed has made its way onto this list with Faces songs, it’s because it deserves it. Do not hesitate it for a second. The version that the Faces do is so good that they appropriate the song and make it their own. Yes, the original is very beautiful, but here Rod Stewart, Ronnie Lane, Ronnie Wood, and t...

    Another undeniable classic of the band. The song is a marvel from start to finish, a delicious boogie rock that makes its almost six minutes of the song very short. On ‘Had Me a Real Good Time’ the Faces were really having a good time and with this song they put the perfect finishing touch on ‘Long Player’. His B-side began. A very party song that ...

    Almost slum in its sound. With clear and notorious influences from the recent ‘Sticky Fingers’ released by The Rolling Stones, Faces build one of their best songs. Again I am left wondering what they would have been as a group if Rod Stewart had focused his career on the band, if “Maggie May” had been released under the group’s name as planned and ...

    We added another song with a non-Stewart voice to this list of Faces’ best songs. This is Ronnie Lane’s turn, who is accompanied by the frontman of the band making vocal harmonies that sound excellent. A beautiful ballad, magnificent halftime that works great from beginning to end. Going back to ‘Sticky Fingers’ by the Stones, it leaves me with a c...

    Magnificent blues-rock, in ‘Cindy Incidentally’ the Faces draw on pure rock and roll roots to build an excellent song. If even Rod Stewart sounds great and seems to sing with a huge reluctance. That’s how good these guys were. It reached number two on the charts in the UK, becoming their biggest hit in the country. Found on their last album, then t...

    • 'Stay With Me' From: 'A Nod's As Good As A Wink' (1971) The definitive Faces track if ever there was one, and the obvious choice for our No. 1 slot. 'Stay With Me' was the Faces biggest hit in America (breaking into the top 20) and hitting top ten in the UK.
    • 'Miss Judy's Farm' From: 'A Nods As Good As A Wink' (1971) From that opening Ron Wood guitar riff and Stewart's howl, 'Miss Judy's Farm' remains a thing of wonder.The lead off track to their 1971 classic 'A Nod's As God As A Wink To A Blind Horse,' this song's got it all!
    • 'Ooh La La' From: 'Ooh La La' (1973) Written by Ron Wood and Ronnie Lane, this country-fied ditty was actually sung by none other than Ronnie Wood. As the story goes, Stewart didn't care much for the tune so Wood gave a try at the vocals, which ended up being just what the song needed.
    • 'Had Me A Real Good Time' From: 'Long Player' (1971) A night's end, closing up the bar kind of song that no one did better than the Faces. It's another full dose of their trademark stagger and swagger that pulls you along for the ride and raises a toast while smiling ear to ear.
  2. Oct 21, 2015 · On September 5 of this year, Rod Stewart, Ronnie Wood and Kenney Jones reunited publicly for the first time in 22 years as Faces, paying tribute to their fallen comrades Ronnie Lane and Ian McLagan with a seven-song set benefiting a prostate cancer charity. The performance came on the heels….

    • Joe Marchese
  3. The discography of Faces, a British rock band, consists of four studio albums, one live album, ten singles, seven compilation albums, and two box sets.

    Year
    Title (a-side / B-side)
    Peak Chart Positions(us[1][10])
    Peak Chart Positions(ger[6])
    1969
    "Flying" / "Three-Button Hand-Me-Down" ...
    1970
    "Around the Plynth" / "Wicked Messenger" ...
    1970
    "Had Me a Real Good Time" (original 1970 ...
    1971
    "Maybe I'm Amazed" / "Oh Lord, I'm ...
  4. Aug 18, 2020 · In March 2005 McLagan joined Ronnie Wood’s band at a London show, which also featured Kenney Jones on drums for the final encore; and in December 2005 Wood joined Ian McLagan & the Bump Band for three numbers at a concert in Houston, Texas. Here are all of The Faces albums ranked.

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  6. May 24, 2013 · Consisting of five English lads possessing an earnest and touching sense of personal and musical comity, the Faces emerged in 1970 as ostensibly a reconfigured iteration of ’60s psych-pop...

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