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Message started by Gazza on Nov 29th, 2011 at 6:28am

Title: New issue of MOJO (January 2012)
Post by Gazza on Nov 29th, 2011 at 6:28am




In this issue

FREE CD! STICKY SOUL FINGERS: The Rolling Stones’ classic 1971 album re-grooved by Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings, Aloe Blacc & Joel Van Dijk, Black Joe Lewis, The Bamboos, Naomi Shelton & The Gospel Queens, Alice Russell, The Sugarman 3, Ren Harvieu and more!

THE ROLLING STONES: What was it like to be a Stone in the ‘70s? Mick, Keith, Charlie, Ron, Bill and Mick speak to MOJO about life in exile and on the run, from the new era of Sticky Fingers to the grand comeback of Some Girls.

TODD RUNDGREN: He was a ’70s powerpop wunderkind, the superproducer behind Bat Out Of Hell who went prog in an age of punk and is still refusing to make the right choices. Barney Hoskyns gets The Hermit Of Mink Hollow to fess up.

THIS MORTAL COIL: They were the 4AD studio supergroup, comprising members of Pixies and Cocteau Twins, who created a new ’80s psychedelia out of one man’s dreamlike vision. Martin Aston speaks to the sonic architects.

THE BEST OF 2011: Radiohead, Keith Richards, The Horrors and PJ Harvey join MOJO in saluting the musical highs of the last 365 days, we pick the albums of the year and Chris Martin, Laura Marling, Paul Weller, Kate Bush, Salman Rushdie and more reveal The Best Thing I’ve Heard All Year.

CAN: Children of the Nazi era, schooled in the European avant-garde, Can were the root source of a ’70s ritual groove that still resonates today. On the eve of new box set of unearthed tracks, Ian Harrison speaks to the magicians themselves about their mysterious, hypnotic sound.

REVIEWED: The Black Keys / Amy Winehouse / White Denim / Roy Wood / Darondo / Jimmy Cliff / Gorillaz / Ray Charles / Roy Harper / Paul Simon / King’s Daughters & Sons / Leonard Cohen / Barbara Lynn / Dan Michaelson / Sun Ra / Randy Newman and many more.

PLUS!: The La’s Lee Mavers speaks! His first magazine interview since 1995 / Charles Bradley / In the studio with Garbage, Siouxsie Sioux & Swans / DJ Shadow reveals his Self Portrait / Nile Rodgers / New MOJO Special Edition unveiled: The Smiths, The Stone Roses & The 100 Greatest UK Indie Records Of All Time.

AND FINALLY... we reveal the best unreleased tracks from the Stones in the ‘70s!

Cover date :  January 2012. Out today in the UK.


Also : there's a chance to download a free audio book of Keith Richards' 'Life' (as narrated by Johnny Depp). Log on to www.audible.co.uk/mojo for info. It's a free download which is available as part of a free trial of Audible, during which you pay nothing asnd can choose to download any audiobook for free.

Title: Re: New issue of MOJO (January 2012)
Post by Gazza on Nov 29th, 2011 at 7:01am
Stones In The '70s: Inside Sticky Fingers!

10:59 AM GMT 25/11/2011



Photo: Getty Images

"They were tough hombres, man. But they were tough on each other too."

This month, MOJO's cover CD salutes the Stones' 1971 classic. Engineer Andy Johns oversaw the original, and affords MOJO an exclusive peek behind the curtain...

"I'd known the Stones since I was a teenager. My brother [Glyn Johns] had worked with them before they'd even gotten a record deal. So I was just kind of around it. Later, I came to know their producer, Jimmy Miller. We did a few projects together and got on really well.

"The band had gotten about halfway through Sticky Fingers. They'd done the Muscle Shoals sessions and Sister Morphine and had taken a break. Jimmy asked if I wanted to come and finish the record with him. Of course, I jumped at the chance. They'd just built their mobile studio. It was a neat little unit and we were working at [Jagger's house] Stargroves.

"To begin with, they just sat and played for a couple days. And as usual with the Stones after a break they played really badly - until they got into the groove. So they're banging around and after two days they come in to hear the playback in their brand new mobile, with a lot of hangers-on and weirdoes laying about.

"The playback happens and it wasn't very good. Jagger says: 'What the fuck do you think that is? I could do better than that with my Sony cassette machine.' I told him, 'Look, this is a very small space. If you got rid of all these bloody ego boosters, these hangers-on, we might be able to hear a little better. They're soaking up the sound and just about everything else around the house.' He says: 'Oh, you're worse than your brother.'

"I saw him the next morning, and said, 'If you don't think I'm any good I'll bugger off.' He said, 'No, no - you're in.' It was like a test or something. They were tough hombres, man. But they were tough on each other too. I remember one time Charlie actually ventured a suggestion. Mick goes, 'Keith - guess fucking what? Charlie's had an idea! What do you think of that? Come on Charlie - what is it?'

"Keith could be very intimidating himself. It turns out he's actually just an old sweetie; we became very good friends when we went to Jamaica [to record Goat's Head Soup]. I would spend a lot of time in his room, he'd spend a lot of time in my room. I think it had something to do with drugs as well (laughs). But to start with I was really wary of Keith - all that kohl makeup and he was so quiet. He really ran the band, though.

"For example, they were doing Bitch and he was late that day for some reason. And Jagger and Mick Taylor were playing it - and it was kinda limp-wristed. Not happenin', y'know? I walk out into the main room where we were doing most of the recording - this big baronial-type hall - and there's Keith with no shoes on leaning up against the wall with a bowl of corn flakes, looking kinda pissed off.

"He says to me: 'Oi, Andy - gimme that Dan Armstrong guitar.' I give it to him and he straps it on and starts playing the riff and suddenly the whole thing just came alive instantly. It went up about five notches. I thought, Fucking hell - what a difference!

"But Mick Taylor really changed the direction of the band; the music got a lot bluesier. He was a phenomenal player, phenomenal slide player especially. He was doing all these gorgeous melodic blues things. The kind of material on Sticky Fingers and Exile..., that's the direct result of them having Mick Taylor and realizing what his talent was.

"Of course, Charlie's still the backbone of everything. And Bill is a very underrated bass player, too. Keith was often redoing Bill's stuff, although on Sticky Fingers he didn't do it so much. Bill worked really well with Charlie - obviously, they'd been playing together for years and years. It was just the usual thing: there's nothing totally unique about the Stones except the particular chemistry that those guys had together.

"At that point, Jimmy Miller still had some influence too. Initially, when he first got with them he was coming up with all kinds of innovative ideas and sounds and ways of working. But they'd kinda stopped listening to him a bit because he'd shown them his bag of tricks, and they'd sorted through them. Like, 'We know what Jimmy does and we've learned it.' By the time it got to Sticky Fingers they'd pretty much set up and play and I'd catch it. Mick and Keith would then make the main decisions.

"I eventually got them to go to Island studios, where we might've cut some stuff. I remember doing the string dates there with Paul Buckmaster. He was Elton John's arranger. I mixed quite a bit of the album at Olympic. In fact, I remember I'd just flown all the way from Los Angeles, which is a fair old hike, and I'd been up the night before, and for some reason I called the studio and there was a message saying, 'You gotta get here quick, Jagger wants to start mixing.' I thought, F***in' hell, I've been up for 36 hours! I think we mixed Dead Flowers, Wild Horses, and one or two other things that afternoon.

"From the time I came on, it was probably about two months before we were finished. At the end of the day, it's a great piece of work. Although it was done over a few separate periods, it all seems to fit. Sometimes it's just synchronicity and it all falls together."

As told to: Bob Mehr

http://www.mojo4music.com/blog/2011/11/stones_in_the_70s_inside_stick.html

Title: Re: New issue of MOJO (January 2012)
Post by philgood on Nov 29th, 2011 at 8:01am
Interesting read Gazza. Thanks for posting!

Title: Re: New issue of MOJO (January 2012)
Post by Gazza on Nov 29th, 2011 at 9:57am
Just bought this and it's really excellent. The main feature 'Soul Survivors' which recalls the entire 70's decade, runs for 16 pages with some nice interview snippets, including a couple of new ones with Mick Taylor and Bobby Keys (who is publishing his memoirs in March 2012, entitled 'Every Night Is A Saturday Night : The Rock 'n' Roll Life of Legendary Sax Man Bobby Keys') and a summary of the 'unlucky applicants' to replace Taylor by Bill Wyman.

Title: Re: New issue of MOJO (January 2012)
Post by Lazy Bones on Nov 29th, 2011 at 9:58am
Here's hoping SF is their next remastered set...

Title: Re: New issue of MOJO (January 2012)
Post by mojoman on Nov 29th, 2011 at 11:58am

Lazy Bones wrote on Nov 29th, 2011 at 9:58am:
Here's hoping SF is their next remastered set...


ditto dat!!!

Title: Re: New issue of MOJO (January 2012)
Post by sweetcharmedlife on Nov 29th, 2011 at 12:10pm

Lazy Bones wrote on Nov 29th, 2011 at 9:58am:
Here's hoping SF is their next remastered set...

Sounds like it. :willya

Title: Re: New issue of MOJO (January 2012)
Post by uncleson on Dec 2nd, 2011 at 4:26pm
Thanks for posting this!

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