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The Rolling Stones ‘Dirty Work’ … How Bad is This Album? Can it be saved?

Classic Album Review | July 11, 2026



The Rolling Stones’ Dirty Work is seen as their worst album, and a pretty poor album in that Pantheon of Classic Rock Stinkers. But in this video I explain why it was so bad, and more importantly, can it be saved?

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DISCLAIMER: This video features materials protected by the Fair Use guidelines of Section 107 of the Copyright Act. Clips are used with commentary for educational purposes.

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Written by Classic Album Review

Comments

This post currently has 32 comments.

  1. @MrPeterburns

    July 11, 2026 at 7:49 am

    I've always liked Dirty Work for it's angry violent feel. Too Rude is a great tune that nobody mentions but you're right about Back to Zero it sucks. All in all I'd say Dirty Work is vastly superior to She's the Boss.

  2. @kevinlee3182

    July 11, 2026 at 7:49 am

    I think you’re spot on that this album deserves a remix. The harsh 80s production was kind of detrimental, but that being said it was a prime example of the guitar weave between Keith and Ron Wood, and that is the highlight the album to me as a guitar interplay. I always thought it was better than the public let on. There are bootlegs of the sessions for dirty work, crushed pearl comes to mind so perhaps a re-release to this album with a companion disc would be in order. I also think that just another night was at one point demote as a stone song so perhaps if the band finished that. One thing that album also was known for was how Steve Lily White brought Charlie‘s drums out front. we need more of that.

  3. @PureTutone

    July 11, 2026 at 7:49 am

    Have a promo copy of it—unsurprisingly in fantastic shape. 😅. One Hit, Harlem, and those two Keith/Wood tracks you mentioned are really solid. And I agree, Barry, a slick Moroder like production does not work here—granted, Moroder was brilliant enough to incorporate more guitar & drums when needed because he knew how to compose/produce around every band’s strength. Lilywhite went too clean.

  4. @johnryan3913

    July 11, 2026 at 7:49 am

    I always thought this album was difficult but highly rewarding – with conflicted lyrics and deep chewy grooves it captures the fractious state of the Stones and pushes against the cultural/political zeitgeist, but is laden with excessive synths and backing vocals by guests that are distractions rather than enhancements.
    But it honestly captures, as you said, the internal dynamics of the band at what was then seen as likely the bitter end of their great career, as well as the dark Reagan/Thatcher era of realpolitik and nationalism as a justification for greed and other bad behaviour around the world. The songs nudge listeners away from violent escapism and "the spectacle" of corporatism and TV wars. The history-inspired 'Hold Back' is as didactic and furious as any Stones song, with a churning funk groove and an amazing jam at the end. The title song likewise advocates against the kind of corrupt leaders we have only grown more comfortable with, driven by a punky yet jazz-like rave up near the fade. Several songs carry a nuclear anxiety that was in the air at that time. And the closing 'Sleep' is a beautiful, calming ballad that offers deep respite after all the backstabbing and doom that precedes it
    So, despite some production lapses, I'll take it over the relatively bland Steel Wheels any day! A unique record in the Stones' ouevre, that carries a lot of seriousness and passion with the ennui.

  5. @hitfan2000

    July 11, 2026 at 7:49 am

    I listened to the entire Stones discography a few years ago and I thought Dirty Work is not as bad as what others have said about it. I certainly like it more than Steel Wheels and Undercover.

  6. @stonytark1987

    July 11, 2026 at 7:49 am

    My first concert was 1981 the Stones at the LA Coliseum. The tattoo you tour. I was 10 years old, my mom was a 28 years old hippie. Steve Miller was the main opening act. I have a copy of tattoo you on LP. This record Dirty Work, I am completely unaware of. Did like steal wheels a few years later.

  7. @Marshall_Will

    July 11, 2026 at 7:49 am

    Quick scroll thru a Wiki list of 1986 albums and guys it is NOT GOOD! Lol, wow, and the whole world seemed so "fresh and exciting..!" Lots of Bananarama, Frankie Goes To Hollywood and those are some of the better names today. Although '86 would be a treasure trove for Trivia Night? Oh and the guy from The Cars AND David Lee Roth among countless others were throwing their hat in the solo ring as well. Just a MESS of a year. Dirty Work just SHOT up the charts! At least with the Stones you knew who TF they were.

  8. @LawrenceDeleau

    July 11, 2026 at 7:49 am

    Is it Sticky Fingers, .Let it Bleed..Beggars Banquet..of course not..those are some of the greatest albums of all time..But its 1986…the Stones are on life support..Mick doing Solo..fighting with Keith…is this album deep with any real meaning…hardly…but it's not bad..cool riffs. Fun beats. .I never understood all the hate.

  9. @revporl2

    July 11, 2026 at 7:49 am

    I bought this on cassette when it came out and I loved it. It's a huge and angry sounding record. It kind of lacks the ramshackle charm of the 70s stuff but it's really good in an OTT way.

  10. @patricksullivan7140

    July 11, 2026 at 7:49 am

    There was some great guitar work on this album. Mick and Keith were at each other's throats. Charlie was strung out. Yes, on heroin at that time. Charlie kept his drug use under the radar. He survived tours up to this point on amphetamines. He was tired and heroin gave him an out. I would have never believed it until he came clean in a candid interview years later. That is probably why Mick didn't want to tour behind this album. Keith and Ronnie were drunk and coked up. Bill was just Bill. Same with Mick being Mick. It came out in the music. That, in itself, makes it art. Like all of their music. Honest portrayals of who they were at the time. It has mapped who they were from the beginning. Whether they knew it or not. The Greatest Rock and Roll Band in the World.

  11. @lonegroover

    July 11, 2026 at 7:49 am

    Dirty Work was a huge step up from their previous couple of records – a serious improvement. Reviewed it three years ago and wrote this:

    From the first few seconds of One Hit (To the Body) it's clear that this is a different proposition from the last few Stones albums. It's much better recorded. The guitars sound really good, the bass is powerful and full, bass and drums are tightly locked together, it sounds slick and well-produced.

    Clearly, someone identified a problem and it was fixed on this record. Steve Lillywhite was brought in to produce it, so I have to assume that's where the credit lies.

    Only one tune sounds a bit slapdash – Sleep Tonight, which Keith sings. There's an obvious Dire Straits influence on this one; it was clearly a highly infectious sound – I recall that even Jethro Tull added a Knopfler-sounding tune to their repertoire around this time.

    Bill Wyman is credited as playing bass throughout, except for Winning Ugly on which John Regan (in Frehley's Comet at the time) is credited with four string duties. However, unless Bill took bass lessons and possibly some amphetamines before recording this album, I simply don't believe it. The bass sounds right in the pocket through the whole album and there's at least one tune with some very nice funk bass that he simply wasn't capable of.

    Wouldn't be the first time that a producer brought in a session man (or several) to cover the inadequacies of one (or more) of the band.

    Jimmy Page plays on One Shot (To the Body).

    Good record! I especially liked the dub reggae tune, a cover of Half Pint's Too Rude (with Ronnie Wood on drums!) and the cover of Harlem Shuffle, which swings beautifully. But it's all good, even if there are no classics.

  12. @b.g.5869

    July 11, 2026 at 7:49 am

    I don't think anyone actually likes Dirty Works (except for a few kooks perhaps).

    It's just that with legacy bands like this to people first love the band because they love their music, and once they pass their peak or jump to the shark, they're committed to "liking' their stinkers not my because they actually like them but because they love the band. It's like supporting your favorite sports team even when they're losing.

    The Stones did turn it around later at least but they went to through a long period of suck.

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