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'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News (Read 251,039 times)
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1150 - May 7th, 2010 at 2:22pm
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May 7th, 2010

MAY 10TH~ TAJ MAHAL JOINS LATE NIGHT WITH JIMMY FALLON FOR ROLLING STONE TRIBUTE!

...

For Immediate Release:
Monday May 10th
Taj Mahal joins Jimmy Fallon's Late Night studio band The Roots, as special musical guest.
Taj will be performing Rolling Stone classic "Shine A Light" as part of Jimmy Fallon's week long tribute to rock-n-roll legends The Rolling Stones.
For more information visit: Late Night with Jimmy Fallon

http://tajblues.com

Cool
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1151 - May 7th, 2010 at 2:25pm
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Green Day to do Rip This Joint!!!
Per Jimmy Fallon on Good Morning Los Angeles.

LJ.
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1152 - May 7th, 2010 at 2:48pm
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They actually taped it last night because they can't be there Monday.
They offered NY-area fan club members a shot at the 20 pairs of tix they requested from Jimmy so they could watch the taping.
(I didn't win)
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1153 - May 7th, 2010 at 4:25pm
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Circuit City is selling it at midnight next Monday 17th. I'm camping out.
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1154 - May 7th, 2010 at 5:40pm
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Jimmy Fallon Talks Rolling Stones Week With See & Be Seen


By: Carly Noel, WPXI.com

Posted: 3:22 pm EDT May 7, 2010
Updated: 4:30 pm EDT May 7, 2010

PITTSBURGH -- “Late Night with Jimmy Fallon” will kick off Rolling Stones week on Monday in celebration of the re-release of the Stones’ classic 1972 album “Exile On Main St.” and the band’s new documentary “Stones In Exile.”

On Friday, I chatted with Jimmy about how this came about.

“I was at a charity event, and I saw Mick Jagger. I know Mick from and old sketch I did on ‘Saturday Night Live.’ I said, ‘Hi, what are you working on?’ He said he was working on the album ‘Exile On Main St.’ I said, ‘If there’s anything I can do to help, let me know, and I’ll put you on the show,’” said Jimmy.

Mick suggested that Jimmy premiere the ‘Stones In Exile’ documentary on his show, so that’s what Jimmy is going to do and more.

On Friday, Jimmy will screen the 44-minute documentary in its entirety.

Rolling Stones week will also include musical guests Green Day, Sheryl Crow, Keith Urban and Phish. The newly reformed Phish will make its first television appearance since 2004.

“People went nuts as soon as we announced Phish. People went crazy. Phish fans are the best fans in the world,” said Jimmy.

All of the musical guests will cover songs from “Exile On Main St.”

Will any of the Stones’ members appear on the show? The answer is yes. Jimmy told me he was actually with Mick Thursday night. They’re working on some pre-taped sketches. And, Jimmy said Mick will probably be live on the show on Friday.


Jimmy is a big Stones fan, so I asked him what he thinks has set the band apart from the rest over the years.

“I don’t think they settle. They just don’t do any gig. When they do something, it’s a giant tour. They kind of started the stadium tours. They blow it out. They know how to party,” said Jimmy.

www.wpxi.com

Retarded post

Check out the video.
Fallon hints at appearances by Keef and Charlie, and says Keith Urban will be doing 'Tumblin' Dice' (with horns) and Phish will be doing 'Loving Cup'... Cool
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1155 - May 7th, 2010 at 6:18pm
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Some Guy wrote on May 7th, 2010 at 4:25pm:
Circuit City is selling it at midnight next Monday 17th. I'm camping out.


Didn't they close all the Circuit City's?
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1156 - May 7th, 2010 at 7:08pm
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buddhabone wrote on May 7th, 2010 at 6:18pm:
Some Guy wrote on May 7th, 2010 at 4:25pm:
Circuit City is selling it at midnight next Monday 17th. I'm camping out.


Didn't they close all the Circuit City's?

there's a couple open in Atl.
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1157 - May 7th, 2010 at 7:41pm
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Track-by-track review of the whole glorious thing - all 28 songs of it.

http://www.musicradar.com/news/guitars/the-rolling-stones-exile-on-main-st-reiss...
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1158 - May 7th, 2010 at 8:40pm
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Interesting review.

I have a hard time believing that "Tumbling Dice" has had it's grit removed. I don't think Jagger would ever do that. The reviewer sounds a bit too full of himself, but that's just my opinion.
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1159 - May 8th, 2010 at 12:49pm
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KR interview from Tribune de Genčve.
French translation is a little rough in spots, but you'll definitely get Keef's gist...

Keith returns to the Exile Stones





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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1160 - May 8th, 2010 at 6:02pm
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The Rolling Stones return to Exile


In 1971, the Stones decamped to France as tax exiles. The result? One heck of a house party and their greatest LP. Paul Sexton hears the inside story of the reissued Exile on Main St from Mick, Keith and Charlie

...
Torn and frayed: Jagger and Richards at Nellcote villa in the summer of 1971


May 9, 2010
Paul Sexton

Most of us, if we were given some random reminder of a personal, far-off temps perdu, would wax nostalgic about the loss of innocence, love, youth or hair. Keith Richards is not most of us. Reflecting on the making of Exile on Main St, the newly reissued album that has come to represent the Rolling Stones at their bacchanalian pinnacle in the early 1970s, the unrepentant buccaneer is telling me how odd it is to be reliving his twenties. “It is a bit weird,” he says. Then he adds, with that familiar, conspiratorial smile: “I feel like taking up the stuff again.”

Exile, the rambling, rocking, substance-soaked double album made primarily when the Stones decamped to Nellcôte, Richards’s villa in the south of France, is back. Thus, the record that confirmed them as rock’s first tax exiles is passed down to the latest generation to observe the band’s triumph over the purely shambolic circumstances in which it was created.

Now here’s Mick Jagger, in what, for him, is an almost unheard-of retrospective mood. “Everyone’s life was full of hangers-on,” he says, more like a sociological observer of the era than its most famous rock god. “Some of them were great fun, they’re all good for a bit, but when you really come down to it, you don’t want them around, because they just delay everything.

“But that was the lifestyle then,” he goes on. “It was just another way of living. There’s a lot of people with a lot more hangers-on now than we ever had. There was lots of drugs and drinking and carrying on. But, you know,” — now with mock indignation — “it’s not a factory. It’s not a mill in the north of England. It’s a rock’n’roll environment.”

As it re-emerges, now with an optional second disc of unreleased collectibles and newly reclaimed scraps from the Nellcôte basement, the story of how Exile on Main St was conceived — and how it was almost stillborn, as the French summer of 1971 turned colder and even those hangers-on and drug-dealers moved out — seems more improbable than ever.

Tellingly, over my 15 years of countless interview encounters with the Rolling Stones, the re-release affords the first extensive opportunity to talk to them about something they’ve sometimes acknowledged only reluctantly: their own history.

Every previous meeting has been about now and next, the latest album, the upcoming tour. That remains admirable, underlining an appetite for discovery that would shame some bands a third of their ages. Not to mention that it trashes the idea that their only motivation has a minimum seven-figure fee next to it.

At these latest long-form meetings with Richards, Jagger and Charlie Watts, however, I’m finally feeling a greater willingness to acknowledge their collective achievements and to realise that the past doesn’t have to be an uncool country. Especially in the case of an 18-track album rightly regarded as a luminous coalition of everything the Stones had represented in their first decade of success and much more besides, returning them to their blues roots and adding toothsome slivers of country, R&B and gospel.

That spontaneous mixture was at the root of Jagger and Richards’s friendship in the first place. “Mick and I, as much as we loved blues and R&B and black music, we were colour-blind,” Richards says. “We both loved Appalachian music, bluegrass, and we didn’t ever really see that much difference, you just found out this guy was white and this guy was black.”

Exile stands as a distillation of all those American influences. “I wouldn’t disagree with that,” Richards says, “although it wasn’t intentional. We always considered ourselves an American band. In fact, we used to be exclusively Chicago. We were very arrogant at the time, making no money, but we were R&B, we were Chicago bluesmen, all of 18 years old and white. That’s the way music speaks to everybody, it can transport you and transform you.”

We’re speaking at his hotel of choice in New York, where he wears one of Ronnie Wood’s latest art creations on a long-sleeved T-shirt. Like Jagger, five months his senior, Richards is 66, and perhaps it’s only the wisps of grey poking out from under his hat that make him seem a touch older than when last I saw him. “Talk about déjŕ vu,” he cackles. “Here I am trying to sell Exile again.”

Jagger, holding court at the Dorchester, is as chatty as I’ve known him, chuckling as he tries to remember the minutiae of the album sessions. “I had to go into all these logs,” he says, ever in the unofficial role of the Stones’ player-manager, mindful that the sessions for the album started as early as 1969. “I had to make up my version of when Exile started and when it finished.”

Watts, soon to be 69, is waiting politely at my suggested studio location, nursing a cup of coffee, as delightfully downbeat and absent-minded as always. “It’s 40 years, some of the tracks,” he says. “No wonder I can’t remember a lot of it. It’s like, ‘You had red socks on.’ ‘No, I had blue socks on.’”

“You ask any of us, we’ll all tell you something different,” Jagger smiles. “Charlie and I had a really good josh around the other day, because we were trying to remember. He says, ‘Oh, that was recorded at Olympic.’ I said, ‘No it wasn’t, it was the south of France.’ ‘No it wasn’t.’” Maurice Chevalier singing “Aah remember eet well” has nothing on this.

Each time word arrives that one is about to receive a temporary guest pass into the world of the Rolling Stones, the chief reaction is not nervousness, but renewed anticipation. No group of musicians I’ve met come close to their collective weightiness or individual charisma, even if it’s a given that the meetings will take place separately.

Stones time may be something of a parallel universe, but not as journalists tailing, say, Stevie Wonder have reported, where entire weeks of their lives have evaporated just waiting. The band are surprisingly good timekeepers — Jagger sometimes too consciously so, in that an interview can be over the second he says it is. Not this time, though, as we small-talk improbably about recording devices and memory sticks.

Richards probably doesn’t know what one of those newfangled things is: “I don’t do mice,” he once told me about computers. His modus operandi, as usual, is to shred the day’s carefully planned itinerary with his sheer, good-natured love of a long natter about music. So we fall easily into talking about those earliest Exile sessions, which began at Jagger’s Stargroves estate, in Berkshire, then moved to Olympic, their southwest London haunt.

At the time, the Stones were still in thrall to Decca Records and beginning to doubt that their business manager, Allen Klein, had their best interests at heart. “Klein and his various cohorts claimed they owned a lot of [our] stuff,” Jagger explains. “So we wanted to get out of that contract with him. Also, we didn’t have any money, because Klein had basically taken it all. Or you could say we mismanaged it. So we had to get ourselves into a position that we could keep alive.

“It was a difficult period for the band to get different management, get financially on [our] feet, and we had to get out of England, because taxes were very, very high. Even though we were pretty crazy, we had a settled lifestyle, in our own way. We went to Olympic, it was a nice little drive, you knew where you were, we all had houses in Chelsea, it was all nice and cosy. Everyone was settled, lots of friends. To be transported to France, it was a bit of a wrench.”

“We [had] stupidly signed with Allen,” Watts recalls. “He waved dollar signs at everyone, particularly at Mick and Keith. He had a tough, American manager way of looking at things, and, in a way, it was not right for us, but it taught you a lot.”

Richards is more blunt. “You were very resentful about having to leave your own country, because that’s really what it came to. Yeah, you could have stayed and made tuppence out of every pound. Thanks a lot, pals.

“At that time, they wanted us in jail. They couldn’t manage that, so the next best thing was put the economic pressure on. In order to leave, you had to rent out all of your property and promise never to go through your own front door. You’d immediately broken the rules if you’d done that. I always imagined hordes of IRS men in the trees — ‘He’s opening the gate!’ ‘Has he walked inside yet?’ They would go that far.

“It was bizarre. I rented my house out and [for] about 14 years I didn’t go back. Talk about an Englishman’s home is his castle, forget that one. It turned into the Sheriff of Nottingham.”

So an Englishman’s home became his French castle, with his bandmates along for the ride. “Suddenly,” says Watts, managing to sound as outraged as he would have done four decades ago, “you have to sell the house you live in and leave the country. ‘Bye-bye, Mum, bye-bye, Dad.’ And you think, ‘I’m not doing that.’ It went on another six months, and it was the only thing to do — what do they call it, a break in earnings? It worked out, thank goodness. My family were very happy there, and I was.”

When the Stones finished a UK tour in March 1971 with a gig at the Roundhouse, the press reported on it as if the Stones would never be seen in Britain again. “What we will miss particularly, if they do not tour here again,” wrote the Financial Times, “is their showmanship. The Stones are a piece of social history.”

They made their break as the tax year ended. “It was like ‘Farewell, Albion,’” Richards says. “‘Okay, where to, Bulgaria?’ ‘France’ll do, it’s just across the Channel.’ And it was just the determination of the boys at the time to say, ‘Hey, whatever it takes, we’ll do it on the lam.’ Hence Exile.”

Early searches for recording locations came to nought. The answer, albeit rife with technical challenges, lay close to home: Richards’s newly rented one. Watts, — who would spend his weeks at Nellcôte and weekends at the farm he and his wife had bought six hours away, while Bill Wyman commuted from a mere hour’s distance — remembers that part clearly. “It was very Mediterranean, and very beautiful, on top of this point with its own boat. When Keith rented it, the garden was overgrown, so it was magical. It was fantastically exotic, with palm trees. We had to saw a couple down to get the truck [the Rolling Stones Mobile Studio] in to record. We ran the cables down into various rooms that we tried sound in.”

“The basement was the strangest place,” Richards says. “It was large, but it was broken up into cubicles. It kind of looked like Hitler’s bunker. You could hear the drums playing, for instance, but it would take you a while to find Charlie’s cubicle.”

“The engineers found it very difficult,” Jagger continues. “Also, Keith was living over the shop all the time, so all his friends were there, and all our friends were there, so it was all a bit of a madhouse. It was a big lifestyle thing going on in the house. When you see all the photos of it, it was full of people. It was fun and crazy.

“But it’s a very steady band.You’ve got Mick Taylor on guitar, you’ve got Bill and you’ve got Nicky Hopkins on piano, and you’ve got a horn section [Bobby Keys and Jim Price], who were sort of permanently hanging around, so they were very much an integral part of it.”

As the detail of the ramshackle sessions unfolds, the album itself provides the perfect soundtrack, with the hell-for-leather Rocks Off and Rip This Joint, the swagger of Tumbling Dice and Happy (“The jolliest song I ever wrote,” as Richards calls it), bluesy tips of the hat to his heroes Slim Harpo and Robert Johnson, the nouveau-country of Sweet Virginia, strung-out but seductive grooves like I Just Want to See His Face and the gospel power of Shine a Light.

Yet listening to Watts describe a typical “schedule” only makes you marvel all the more that anything came of the entire adventure at all. “A day would become a week, or a week would be all in a day. That’s why you had to be there to play. It used to drive Bill mad.

“He’d drive down at 10 o’clock in the morning, and nobody, including me, would be up till about three in the afternoon, because we didn’t go to bed until nine that morning, an hour before Bill arrived. So Bill would go home at six, and Keith would be getting up,” he laughs. “That was the kind of timetable. We used to work like that a lot in those days. We don’t now so much.”

Richards refutes the idea that he was ever the cause of missed sessions. “I was the first one in the studio and the last one to leave, I was no more notoriously reliable or unreliable than anybody else. I hate to disabuse people, but I was never unreliable about recording or making sessions. I’m always there at showtime, always will be. I had too many songs I wanted to record, dammit.

“Nobody gave a damn who was doing what. People were dabbling, everybody was. Mick is not the squeaky-clean little mother you think he is or he likes to portray himself as. The fact is that Mick doesn’t hold stuff as well. Sometimes, I wish I could have a drink or two, or a hit of this or that, and I’d be out of it, but it doesn’t affect me that way. I’ve always looked upon drugs as a bit of a tool, actually, and I’m the laboratory.

“Probably the most out-of-it record I can think of was Satanic Majesties, which was already like three or four years in the past. That was the one where nobody was straight. Artistic temperament came into Exile to a certain point, but no more than any other record. The fact is, at that time, Charlie Watts was a hell of a lush, he did a good dent in the cognac industry.

“So I don’t think anybody really considered who was taking what to any great degree, as long as you came up with the results. You can take everything you want, as long as something good comes out on tape, it was basically that. It still is.”

Many Stones fans cherish the idea of Richards stumbling about his estate with his friend and fellow chemistry student Gram Parsons, like a couple of Romantic poets hitting the laudanum. Ironically, he says it wasn’t until the album was completed that he willingly reintroduced himself to heroin. “I was squeaky-clean when I got to France. It was after it was over that I went back on the stuff again, as a present to myself. But the work was first.”

If the modern-day “Keef” image was being nurtured around this time, he regards that largely as a media creation, if one made with a little inside help. “A lot of that is impressions, and they’re outside impressions. Not to say that I didn’t occasionally play up to it. If that’s the kind of Keith Richards you want, you made him, you got him.

“But I was a very conservative junkie. I was far more discerning. Some guys that get on the stuff, they’ll take it, sight unseen, and you find out later it’s whacked with strychnine or something. Once you’ve been on the inside of it, it’s not that fascinating. I wouldn’t recommend it. If you want to find out what’s real, there’s other ways to do it. But that was my way.”

“Keith’s a bit of a one-off,” Watts says. “He virtually got himself off it, that’s not an easy thing to do. He’s a tough guy in that way. You couldn’t hold him up as an example, because the person who copied that example would die, I should think.

“I met most of the drug-dealers around at the time, but only through association. I knew them, but I never bought a thing off them. That’s one of the problems of being like that. It’s never-ending, and you have to do all this buying off dodgy people, or sending people out. It’s a bit like having the off-licence down on the corner.”

“Maybe when we were in France, it just went a bit too far,” Jagger reflects. “Keith and I looked at each other and said, ‘I think we’ve done it here, this is it, we’ve had enough.’ Then we went to Los Angeles to do the mixing, and we did a lot of overdubbing, a lot of the things that make the album sound slightly gospelly, like girl background vocals.

“I felt a bit out on my own at some points, then it all started to come back together again, and then you’re doing the album cover with Robert Frank, and before you know where you are, we’re rehearsing for the tour.”

Whatever the distractions, Watts sees the completed album as a creative zenith. “I think it’s a peak period for our band. We had everything covered. We had a wonderful producer, Jimmy Miller, and you were playing with Nicky Hopkins, who could play blues as well as the prettiest piano. We had Mick Taylor, who for me was the most lyrical player we had, and we had Mick and Keith writing.”

“It’s a great piece of period music that’s stood the test of time,” Jagger says, almost reluctantly.

Richards is quicker to acknowledge that, nearly 40 years on, Exile on Main St still kicks like a drunken mule. “I was always proud of it. It showed the boys at their best, not just the music, which is obviously very important, but the way the band itself hunkered down and circled the wagons.

“All negative thoughts were put aside, not that the Stones have many negative thoughts. If there are, they’re usually all over in a flare-up. ‘I hate you, I’ll never see you again.’ ‘Okay, but tomorrow we’ll be in the studio.’”


Ripping the joint

The bonus tracks on the rarities disc in the Exile on Main St reissue are a mixture of unreleased outtakes and incomplete tracks to which Mick Jagger has added new vocals and lyrics, with the latter-day Stones producer Don Was.

“I automatically assumed,” Keith Richards says, “that anything good would automatically roll over to, what was the next one, Goats Head Soup? I hadn’t realised there were still some interesting tracks left over. I thought we’d drained the barrel, actually.”

“I knew there was loads of stuff lying around,” Jagger explains. “I tried to take things that I didn’t think people had bootlegged very much, or perhaps not at all. Some of it’s stuff that’s never been out. There’s a couple that would compete with anything on Exile, I think.”

Pass the Wine (Sophia Loren)
Mid-tempo and slinky, with sultry horns by Bobby Keys and Jim Price, and funky detail by Jagger on maracas and harmonica. “You think of Mick Jagger as Mick Jagger, the stereotype image that you’re bound to get as you go along,” Richards says. “But his harp playing has always stood out to me. That’s what makes him a musician.”

Plundered My Soul
Already being played on radio worldwide, another newly completed piece, one of several with new backing vocals by Lisa Fischer and Cindy Mizelle. It features both the original Richards guitar and new lines added by Mick Taylor.

I’m Not Signifying
Bar-room piano by Nicky Hopkins introduces period Jagger vocals on a rolling blues tune.

Following the River
Perhaps the strongest of the “new” songs, a break-up ballad freshly vocalised by Mick, with real passion, over an evocative original track by Hopkins. “I’ve always liked it, but I never quite knew what was going to happen to it,” Jagger says.

Dancing in the Light
Slightly countrified and mid-paced, with percussion by Jagger and the producer Jimmy Miller, and keyboards by the “sixth Stone”, Ian Stewart.

So Divine (Aladdin Story)
For the first three seconds, you swear it’s Paint It Black, then it develops its own groove and a nice Middle Eastern sax motif by Keys.

Loving Cup (alternate take)
A sparser version, with Richards much more to the fore on guitar than on the finished Exile take.

Soul Survivor (alternate take)
An interesting flip side to the version that closes the original album. Keith takes lead vocals instead of Mick and, ultimately, messes with the lyrics in true demo style.

Good Time Women
The fascinating origin of what became Exile’s big hit single. “Suddenly, I realised it was Tumbling Dice,” Richards says. “Some songs, you have the basics, but it’s not really formed yet. You just wait for that day where suddenly it’s like it’s been there for ever.”

Title 5
A fun, fast-paced minute-and-a-half instrumental that throws back to the Stones’ R&B roots, featuring only Keith, Charlie and Bill. They could almost be back at the Crawdaddy Club.


Exile on Main St is reissued by Polydor on May 17. Paul Sexton’s documentary Exile of the Stones is on BBC Radio 2 at 10pm on May 19

The Sunday Times
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1161 - May 8th, 2010 at 6:28pm
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sweet review, I'm stoked!
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1162 - May 8th, 2010 at 7:18pm
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We need a fucking tour. Fuck you Gazza, Will ya? You rock!
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1163 - May 8th, 2010 at 7:21pm
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10 fucking days to go.
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1164 - May 8th, 2010 at 7:49pm
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1165 - May 9th, 2010 at 3:41am
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thanks lefty!!
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1166 - May 9th, 2010 at 9:09am
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Now THAT's chiba face!
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1167 - May 9th, 2010 at 10:15am
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left shoe shuffle wrote on May 8th, 2010 at 7:49pm:


Very disappointing news.
WHERE THE HELL IS KEITH IN ALL THIS??
I'm feeling future Tour chances are getting slimmer and
slimmer
and
slimmer
 Cry  Cry

LJ.
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1168 - May 9th, 2010 at 11:14am
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Agreed LJ.

Was Mick already in Europe?

The Iceland volcano is disrupting flights again.  Maybe Keith couldn't get there from the US if he waited til the last minute to go.

Maybe?  I hope there's a logical explanation.  Undecided
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1169 - May 9th, 2010 at 11:28am
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Mick was at a couple of events in NYC last week.
And if Jimmy Fallon is correct, he'll be guesting Friday night for the the 'Stones In Exile' premiere.

The Cannes showing of 'Stones In Exile' is scheduled for May 19th.
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1170 - May 9th, 2010 at 11:44am
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left shoe shuffle wrote on May 9th, 2010 at 11:28am:
Mick was at a couple of events in NYC last week.
And if Jimmy Fallon is correct, he'll be guesting Friday night for the the 'Stones In Exile' premiere.

The Cannes showing of 'Stones In Exile' is scheduled for May 19th.



Ok, so much for logic.

Where are Keith and Charlie?  One would think they would be there.
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1171 - May 9th, 2010 at 11:51am
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AngieBlue wrote on May 9th, 2010 at 11:44am:
left shoe shuffle wrote on May 9th, 2010 at 11:28am:
Mick was at a couple of events in NYC last week.
And if Jimmy Fallon is correct, he'll be guesting Friday night for the the 'Stones In Exile' premiere.

The Cannes showing of 'Stones In Exile' is scheduled for May 19th.



Ok, so much for logic.

Where are Keith and Charlie?  One would think they would be there.



let's hope for a surprise... with Keith, i'm sure everyday he wakes up, he's surprised...
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1172 - May 9th, 2010 at 11:55am
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Keith's print interviews were done in December.

He also did a phoner for Xfm that aired last night.
Don't know how recent it is.

Mick did print interviews around the same time as Keith, but it seems that he's doing all the heavy lifting in the weeks leading up to the 'Exile' re-issue and documentary...
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1173 - May 9th, 2010 at 1:49pm
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left shoe shuffle wrote on May 9th, 2010 at 11:55am:
Keith's print interviews were done in December.

He also did a phoner for Xfm that aired last night.
Don't know how recent it is.

Mick did print interviews around the same time as Keith, but it seems that he's doing all the heavy lifting in the weeks leading up to the 'Exile' re-issue and documentary...


I understand why Mick put off doing this crap before... He knew he would be doing all the work. God bless him too...
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #1174 - May 9th, 2010 at 2:41pm
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The making of the Rolling Stones' 'Exile on Main Street'


Cotton candy heroin. Wild sex. A Nazi palace. Everything they needed.


By TYLER GRAY
Last Updated: 9:03 AM, May 9, 2010
Posted: 12:26 AM, May 9, 2010

Sex, drugs, rock ’n’ roll. The Rolling Stones didn’t invent the formula. But they lived it like no other band in history. And when the rapacious taxmen of England came demanding more cash than Mick Jagger and Keith Richards — not to mention bandmates Charlie Watts, Bill Wyman and Mick Taylor — had or cared to pay in the spring of 1971, the Stones moved their party to the South of France.

When they couldn’t find a suitable French Riviera studio to record their 10th album, the Stones set up in the basement of Villa Nellcote, Richards’ rented 16-room mansion on the coast in Villefranche-sur-Mer. All marble and wrought iron, Richards said it looked like it was decorated for “bloody Marie Antoinette.”

He also liked to recount its history as a Gestapo headquarters, where Nazis did nasty things in the same basement the Stones used to jam all night. The hallways still had swastika-shaped air vents. “But it’s all right, we’re here now,” he assured recording engineer Andy Johns.

By making the record in Richards’ own house, band members figured they could get the famously ramshackle guitarist to show up for the sessions. They were wrong. And Richards wasn’t the only one living on the edge. For a six-month stretch, the Stones swapped partners, ingested every available drug, set fires and nearly drove each other mad while crafting rock’s most decadent record, 1972’s “Exile on Main Street.”

On May 18, Universal is reissuing “Exile” in several forms: an 18-track CD; a deluxe edition with 10 previously unreleased songs; and a super-deluxe package with vinyl, a 30-minute documentary DVD and a 50-page photo book.

The Post got an early copy of the music and the “Stones in Exile” documentary, which will premiere Friday on “Late Night with Jimmy Fallon.” From these, fresh interviews and Robert Greenfield’s “Exile on Main Street: A Season in Hell with the Rolling Stones,” we assembled the most debauched stories of sex, drugs and rock ’n’ roll from the people who actually lived in “Exile.”

SEX

Gone was the Stones’ usual stream of adoring female fans. For six months, the groupie-gobbling rockers were housebound with significant others. Jagger even got married to Nicaraguan girlfriend Bianca, then pregnant with daughter Jade, during the stretch. Richards shacked up at Nellcote with Italian actress Anita Pallenberg, close pal of Marianne Faithfull and former flame of late Stones guitarist Brian Jones. Fresh from rehab, she arrived with their toddler son, Marlon, in tow.

While the recording went on, she managed to fool around with Jagger and have half-conscious, stoned sex with drug dealer Tommy Weber on a Louis XIV bed while Richards was passed out next to them.

“It was like a royal court where the nobles were sleeping with each other’s women,” says Greenfield, who spent two weeks living at Nellcote — and a third just hanging around — while on assignment for Rolling Stone that May. He wasn’t the only one to notice the band’s exploits.

“Everyone screwed everyone else’s wives and girlfriends,” Johns says. “That’s just the way it was, and you didn’t think too much about that.”

After Jagger married Bianca, Pallenberg did her best to break them up, even starting grade-school-style rumors that Bianca was born a man. Pallenberg got pregnant, too, but kept using heroin. She sought a secret abortion, not because of the drugs, but because she thought the child was Mick’s.

Richards, meanwhile, wasn’t interested in sex at the time, probably due to his heavy drug abuse. One studio regular recalls Pallenberg complaining, “All he wants is the wanking — he never f - - - s me!”

The Stones weren’t the only ones fooling around. Their sidemen were kept busy, too.

“I didn’t mind living between Nice and Monte Carlo, didn’t mind that a bit,” says Bobby Keys, the Texas-born, libertine sax man famous for honking on “Brown Sugar” and every Stones record from 1969 to 1974. “I didn’t mind all them pretty girls around the countryside. Yes sir, buddy! That’s when you’re sh - - - in’ in tall cotton!”

DRUGS

Fueling the excessive behavior at Nellcote was a huge stash of drugs, many smuggled in by Weber, a former Formula One racer turned Afghani hash runner. That May, Weber traveled from England to the Cote d’Azur via Ireland — “in case he was being followed,” Greenfield says — with a pound of coke strapped to the waists of his preteen sons, Charlie and Jake. At age 7, “my function in life was [to be] a joint roller,” says Jake, who grew up to star in the CBS drama “Medium.”

Everyone who visited the house seemed bent on self-destruction. John Lennon threw up at the foot of the stairs one day while touring the premises with Yoko Ono. Richards blamed it on too much sun and wine, but it was more likely the ex-Beatle’s methadone habit.

As Richards was picking up Marlon’s toys in the living room one night, Greenfield watched him grab a mystery pill off the floor. “Bam! He throws it down his throat,” Greenfield says. “Who knows what he put in his mouth, but that’s Keith. Could have been a vitamin, but I don’t think so. Not in that house.”

Jean de Breteuil, the so-called “dealer to the stars” who supplied Jim Morrison with a lethal dose, bought his way into a two-week residence with a toot of ultra-pure pink heroin from Thailand. Richards snorted it from a gold tube he wore around his neck and promptly passed out. Later, Richards paid $9,000 cash ($50,000 today) to a couple of cowboy boot-wearing dealers known as “the Corsicans” for more of the pink junk.

The smack arrived in a plastic bag the size of a two-pound sack of sugar, Greenfield writes, and was so potent it had to be cut with three parts glucose — hence its nickname, “cotton candy.” It lasted a month.

“With a hit of smack,” Richards says, “I could work through anything and not give a damn.”

One night, Richards passed out upstairs after “putting Marlon to bed” — his code for getting loaded. Johns found him with the needle still in his arm, blood spattered on the walls. The studio whiz poked the rock legend to see if he was still alive.

“Of course he picks up the guitar, which he was in bed with, goes, ‘Oh, yeah,’ and starts playing,” Johns says.

Another time, a chauffeur had to pull Pallenberg and Richards, naked and unconscious, from a bed they’d accidentally set on fire. But the rest of the help wasn’t so useful. The couple’s errand boys, local hoods they called “les cowboys,” were suspected of stealing at least nine vintage guitars and Keys’ engraved saxophones when drug debts went unpaid.

By December, French authorities caught wind of the scene and charged the Stones and their pals with heroin possession. As a bonus, Richards and Pallenberg were issued warrants for trafficking. But all of the Stones had high-tailed it to LA a month earlier.

Jagger, Taylor, Wyman and Watts eventually returned to France to face the charges, but a combination of fame, luck and bribes got them freed with mere slaps on the wrists.

Richards and Pallenberg were banned from France for two years, but they had no plans to return, anyway. They’d fled Nellcote in such haste that they abandoned Marlon’s toys, Pallenberg’s wardrobe, Richards’ record collection, a speedboat, a Jaguar E-type sports car and two pets, Boots the parrot and Okee the dog.

ROCK' N' ROLL

Many “Exile” songs were recorded during earlier sessions in London, but the album found its soul at Nellcote, informed by the dark habits that had sprung up around the band.

“The writing process was very, very loose,” Jagger says. “There wasn’t a sort of master plan. We just accumulated material knowing we would use it one day.”

The drugs and infidelities were never discussed, but ego battles ground songwriting and recording to a halt. Jagger would be in Paris with Bianca. Richards would be off somewhere with drug buddy and songwriting pal Gram Parsons, or passed out upstairs. “Sometimes I would just hear this weird rumbling coming from the basement and then realize that I’d slept for almost a whole take,” Richards says.

When he did show, Richards preferred a spitball approach to tracking, drummer Charlie Watts says. “A lot of ‘Exile’ was done how Keith works, which is, play it 20 times, marinade, play it another 20 times.”

One of the album’s best tracks, “Tumbling Dice,” was typical of the laborious sessions.

“We must have had about 40 reels of tape on that one,” Johns says. “But the night we actually got the track, you could tell it was about to happen. If Keith’s looking at Charlie and Bill stands up, you’re going to get something in the next 20 minutes.”

While recording a guitar track for what would become the album’s opener, “Rocks Off,” Keith nodded off, prompting Johns to leave for some dearly needed sleep at his own villa, 35 minutes up the coast. When he arrived home, he walked in to hear the phone ringing.“I pick it up, and it’s Keith — ‘Oy, where are you?’ ” Johns says. “I said, ‘Wait a minute. I thought you went to sleep,’ and he said, ‘Well, I’m up now. I’ve gotta do this guitar part. Get back here quick.’ ”

Johns obeyed, and was pleased. “He played — and I’m so glad this happened — this sort of counter-rhythm against the original guitar that just made the whole thing move up about three notches. If you sit down and listen to that interplay between the two rhythm guitars, it’s Keith at his very best.”

Another fine Richards moment was inspired when he learned Pallenberg was pregnant. He hit the basement to celebrate with a jam. Bassist Wyman, fed up with waiting on Richards and Jagger to show, was on a rented yacht, and drummer Watts was nowhere to be found. So producer Jimmy Miller played drums. Bobby Keys played baritone sax. Out came Richards’ signature song, “Happy.”

“We were basically doing the sound check, making sure everything was set up for the session,” Richards says, “and the track just popped out.”

After the band left France that December, production on “Exile” continued in LA, where Jagger took over. “I had to finish the whole record myself, because otherwise there were just these drunks and junkies,” he says. Richards does not dispute this.

“I never plan anything,” Richards says. “Mick needs to know what he’s going to do tomorrow. Me, I just wake up, see who’s around. Mick’s rock, I’m roll.”


Shining a light on new ‘Exile’ songs

Tuesday’s new “Exile on Main Street” bonus tracks are touted as unearthed gems from Nellcote, but that’s not entirely true. Mick Jagger and Keith Richards re-recorded vocals and guitars, which producer Don Was deftly blended with old tracks. We sifted the classic from the contrived.

1. Pass The Wine (Sophia Loren)
“Pass me the wine, let’s make some love” is the refrain — right in line with the Nellcote era. Horns sound like Bobby Keys’. Guitars are authentically out of tune.
* Vintage: 90 percent

2. Plundered My Soul
It’s present-day Mick singing, “I smell rubber and soon discover that you’re gone for good. My indiscretions made a bad impression. Yes, I was misunderstood.” Stones historian Robert Greenfield says the song itself is old, though, and there’s some satisfying soul here.
* Vintage: 50 percent

3. I’m Not Signifying
It’s ragtime! “Have you ever had the feeling baby, that you’ve been here before?” young, nasally Mick sings. The bass sounds rubber-band-like and old, as does a harmonica and tinkling Dixieland piano.
* Vintage: 95 percent

4. Following the River
Mick’s voice is throaty, not like it was in ’71. He sings: “My cards are on the table, but the drinks have all run out,” which doesn’t jibe with the vibe back then. But when a lady chorus comes in, he’s almost crying, and it starts to sound like young Stones.
* Vintage: 40 percent

5. Dancing In the Light
Mick’s loud, out front and elderly — everything he wasn’t at Nellcote. The guitars are too crisp to have come from a humid basement in the South of France.
* Vintage: 10 percent

6. So Divine (Aladdin Story)
Young-sounding Mick sings, “You think your life is so divine. You think I’ll drink it like it’s heaven-scented wine.” Snake-charmer guitars are reminiscent of “Paint It Black.”
* Vintage: 100 percent

7. Loving Cup (Alternate Take)
It’s the drunken honkey tonk version. The band has had more than one drink from the proverbial loving cup. Guitars and bass fall out with the lazy rhythm. Mick Taylor’s riffs sync sweetly with Keith’s vocals.
* Vintage: 100 percent

8. Soul Survivor (Alternate Take)
Wonder why Keith’s not the lead singer? Lacking real lyrics, he sings, “I just can’t f - - - it. I just can’t suck it!” Later, he just groans, “Et cetera!”
* Vintage: 100 percent

9. Good Time Women
It starts with screeching harmonica. Mick sings, “Good time women, don’t keep you waiting around,” then mumbles about cocaine and “dry white wine.” This chorus was cannibalized for “Tumbling Dice.”
* Vintage: 100 percent

10. Title 5
“Title five, take one,” says an engineer, likely Andy Johns. Then begins an instrumental “Radar Love”-like boogie with a guitar that sounds like a didgeridoo. Pure scraps.
* Vintage: 100 percent

New York Post
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