The Rolling Stones are working on a new album "blues", with new songs and classic versions, which could be published before the end of the year, as confirmed in an interview on BBC 6 Music. "Right now we are in the studio editing new material," Richards said, while bassist and guitarist Ronnie Wood added that the band recently recorded "eleven songs in two days." "It was a surprise to us. We did not mean to do that. I would like to touch them here right now, I am delighted (with songs)," Wood said.
The leader of the band, Mick Jagger, meanwhile reported that the four musicians came together "before Christmas" for a study session and "probably" will do so again in the near future. "It's sounding pretty good," the lead singer. The veteran British band released their last studio album in 2005, "A Bigger Bang" and included two previously unreleased tracks in 2012 on the compilation "Grrrr!".
The new group sessions in the study include new material and versions of classic themes of "blues", including songs by Little Walter and Howlin 'Wolf. "The sound is so true that scares," Wood, who said that the band did not even have to rehearse before recording said. "It just elegíamos a song that was fine with harmonica Mick (Jagger) or a 'riff' guitar and worked quite well," he said. The four components of the Rolling Stones in London yesterday inaugurated the exhibition "Exhibitionism", which reviews the group more than half a century of history through more than five hundred objects.