It can be argued that the Rolling Stones produced their most Luciferian songs at the height of their relationship with Anger. It has been argued that Anger's influence, as well as the 1930s Russian novel The Master and Margherita by Mikhail Bulgakov, led Jagger to write "that enduring infernal anthem," "Sympathy for the Devil" (Hunter 124)
Given the fact that the British Musicians Union had placed a ban on American musicians up until 1956, it is unlikely that any of the members of the band were given the opportunity to be exposed to blues music before that time. It was only after the ban was lifted that Chris Barber, a well-known jazz musician in England, began to invite American blues artists to England (Szatmary 115)