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'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News (Read 250,841 times)
sweetcharmedlife
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #975 - Apr 23rd, 2010 at 9:35pm
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Just watched the trailer for the first time. Good stuff.  Mty overall opinion is that it seems like the stuff recorded in Keith's basement at Nellcote is more myth than legend. Althgough it is nice to see the Stones pay heed to an album that may not be their most commercially succesful. But has legendary status among the fans.
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #976 - Apr 23rd, 2010 at 10:00pm
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LadyJane wrote on Apr 23rd, 2010 at 9:06pm:
Is that ANITA speaking at the end of the trailer???
Now THIS is haunting........SHE SPEAKS.

Yep, that's her.
She's listed in the film credits.


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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #977 - Apr 23rd, 2010 at 10:32pm
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left shoe shuffle wrote on Apr 23rd, 2010 at 10:00pm:
LadyJane wrote on Apr 23rd, 2010 at 9:06pm:
Is that ANITA speaking at the end of the trailer???
Now THIS is haunting........SHE SPEAKS.

Yep, that's her.
She's listed in the film credits.




Yep. I knew it.
This whole thing is so damned sublime.

Fuck

LJ.
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #978 - Apr 24th, 2010 at 1:46am
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Plundered Soul wrote on Apr 22nd, 2010 at 12:16pm:
Mick Taylor - Salaise - April 10-2010 - before official release of "Plundered My soul"

http://www.megaupload.com/?d=AY9KC6DP

I'd be grateful if somebody could put the link on IORR message board. somebody asked about it, but I am not registered.


Thanks!  Any chance you could post the rest of the show on the Rocks Off Bit Torrent tracker?
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #979 - Apr 24th, 2010 at 8:01pm
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The Stones and the true story of Exile On Main St


It's nearly 40 years since the Rolling Stones fled to the French Riviera and recorded their masterpiece, Exile on Main St. On the eve of its relaunch, Sean O'Hagan marvels that the album was made at all…

Sean O'Hagan
The Observer, Sunday 25 April 2010

...
The Rolling Stones, Gram Parsons and Anita Pallenberg at Villa Nellcote, France, 1971.
One of a series of evocative shots taken by photographer Dominique Tarle.
Photograph: Dominique Tarle



There is a great moment in Stones In Exile, a new documentary about the making of Exile On Main St in 1971, when Keith Richards defines the essential difference in temperament between Mick Jagger and himself.

"Mick needs to know what he's going to do tomorrow," says Richards, his voice slurring into a laugh. "Me, I'm just happy to wake up and see who's hanging around. Mick's rock, I'm roll."

On Exile On Main St, though, Jagger, for once, rolled with Richards. So, too, did everyone else involved, from Jimmy Miller, the producer, to Marshall Chess, the young Atlantic Records executive, to the rest of the group and their extended retinue of session players, studio technicians and hangers-on.

Once the decision had been made to record the album in the basement of Villa Nellcôte, Richards's rented house in the south of France, the working schedule was dictated by the irregular hours kept by the group's wayward guitarist, who also had a singularly dogged approach to composing songs.

"A lot of Exile was done how Keith works," confirms Charlie Watts in the documentary, "which is, play it 20 times, marinade, play it another 20 times. He knows what he likes, but he's very loose." Without a trace of irony, Watts adds, "Keith's a very bohemian and eccentric person, he really is."

Exile On Main St is so emphatically stamped with Keith Richards's rock'n'roll signature that it could just as easily have been called "Torn and Frayed" after one of the two gloriously ragged songs that he wrote the lyrics for. The title alone sums up his gypsy demeanour, his elegantly wasted look. Or they could simply have called it "Happy", after another track that was actually recorded in a single take when Richards woke up one morning – or evening – and gathered up the only other people who were awake, saxophonist Bobby Keys and producer Jimmy Miller, who was drafted in to play drums in place of the absent Watts. The whole record was, says Keys, a good ol' boy from Texas, "about as unrehearsed as a hiccup".

Perhaps because he was not the controlling presence on Exile On Main St, which has often been voted the greatest rock'n'roll record ever by music critics, it is not necessarily one of Mick Jagger's favourite Rolling Stones albums. He once described it as sounding "lousy" with "no concerted effort of intention", adding "at the time, Jimmy Miller was not functioning properly. I had to finish the whole record myself, because otherwise there were just these drunks and junkies."

Jagger may have been miffed that his vocals are sometimes swallowed up in the soupy mix but he sings with real passion throughout and seems galvanised by the raw rock'n'roll the group are making. If anyone should need a reminder that no one before or since has sounded as louche and limber, so raggedly majestic, they should watch the Stones playing "Loving Cup" live on their subsequent American tour. Footage of that performance is a highlight of the documentary, produced by the Oscar -winning film-maker John Battsek, which will be premiered at the Cannes film festival before screening on the BBC later in May.

Despite his former reservations, Jagger has gotten behind the planned reissue of the album, too, which comes in a deluxe package containing 10 previously unheard bonus tracks, some of which are alternative takes of familiar songs while others sound suspiciously like they have only recently had new vocals added. No one in the Stones' camp is coming clean as to whether this is the case or not.

For the purists among us, though, the original version of Exile On Main St, in all its ragged, full-on, rock'n'roll swagger, is all we need. "This is just a tree of life," said Tom Waits, when he selected it as one of his all-time favourite records a few years back. "This record is a watering hole." On the documentary, Caleb Followill from Kings of Leon is taken aback to discover the album was recorded in France. "I literally thought they were in Memphis, going out every night eating barbecue and partying." Which is exactly what it sounds like.

The creation of Exile On Main St, like so many early chapters in the Rolling Stones story, is shrouded in myth and blurred by conflicting anecdotal evidence. The American journalist Robert Greenfield, who was present briefly during the recording, wrote an entire book about — and named after — the album. Its subtitle is "A Season in Hell With the Rolling Stones". The book paints an often lurid portrait of Richards and his then partner, Anita Pallenberg. Greenfield places the couple at the centre of a spiral of sustained hard drug abuse and wilfully amoral behaviour. Among the rumours he airs, but does not confirm or refute, is the one about Pallenberg encouraging an employee's young daughter to inject heroin for the first time. Another has Jagger bedding Pallenberg while Richards has nodded out on heroin, thus reigniting an affair they were rumoured to have had while filming Performance under the direction of Nic Roeg in 1968.

Needless to say, the documentary, which has Jagger's controlling presence written all over it, does not dwell on such unsavoury and unsubstantiated matters. The French photographer Dominique Tarle, who chronicled the making of the album in a series of wonderfully evocative shots, and who was Greenfield's entrée into the Stones' milieu, had this to say about the book when I spoke to him in Paris last week: "I read only eight pages and I really felt sick. First of all, how can he not write about the music? And all this stuff about a season in hell with the Rolling Stones? No, no, it was anything but that. We were all young and it was a time of great freedom and energy and creativity. For me, it was a kind of rock'n'roll heaven."

Perhaps, though, it was both. Tommy Weber, who is described as "a racing driver, drug runner and adventurer" in the documentary, and as "a fabulous character straight out of F Scott Fitzgerald's Tender is the Night" by Greenfield, was one of Richards's inner circle at Nellcôte. His son, Jake, now a Hollywood actor, was just eight when he witnessed the decadence around the Rolling Stones first-hand. In Stones in Exile, he says, "There was cocaine, a lot of joints. If you're living a decadent life, there is always darkness there. But, at this point, this was the moment of grace. This was before the darkness, the sunrise before the sunset."

Bobby Keys, as ever, is more blunt. "Hell, yeah, there was some pot around, there was some whiskey bottles around, there was scantily clad women. Hell, it was rock'n'roll!"

Others experienced more mundane but no less pressing problems. Both Charlie Watts and Bill Wyman missed home and some of their own creature comforts. "I hated leaving England," Wyman reminisces. "You had to import Bird's custard, Branston pickle and piccalilli... you had to buy PG Tips and then deal with the French milk."

The Rolling Stones pitched up in the south of France in the spring of 1971 as reluctant tax exiles fleeing the Labour government's punitive 93% tax on high earners. The group had just extricated themselves, at some cost, from a misguided management deal with the infamous Allen Klein, who was still claiming he owned their publishing rights. In the public eye, though, the Stones were still the rock group that most defined the outlaw rock'n'roll lifestyle, their bad reputation built on an already colourful past that included high-profile drug busts, the death by drowning of Brian Jones, one of their founding members, the near death by overdose of Marianne Faithfull, Mick Jagger's former girlfriend, and the murder of a fan by Hell's Angels, who had been hired by the group's management to provide security at 1969's ill-fated Altamont festival.

Altamont was viewed by many contemporary observers as the symbolic death of the 60s dream of a burgeoning counterculture; by others as an inevitable result of the Stones' hubris and arrogance. Through it all, though, the Stones' music had echoed their turbulent lifestyle and soundtracked the tumultuous times, from the upfront sexual bravado of "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" in 1965, through the apocalyptic swirl of "Gimme Shelter" in 1969, to the swagger of "Brown Sugar" in 1971.

Sticky Fingers, the group's ninth album, nestled at the top of the British and US pop charts as the Stones, their families and extended entourage decamped to France to begin their exile. Richards sensed that the reason for their flight from Britain was not just to do with their dire financial predicament.

"There was a feeling you were being edged out of your own country by the British government," he remembers. "They couldn't ignore that we were a force to be reckoned with."

Having searched the coastline and hills around the town of Villefranche-sur-Mer for a suitable recording space, the Stones then opted to start working in the cavernous, multi-roomed basement of Nellcôte, with their mobile recording studio parked outside in the driveway. The house had once been occupied by the Nazis, and in a recent interview Richards describes working there as "like trying to make a record in the Führerbunker. It was that sort of feeling… very Germanic down there – swastikas on the staircase… Upstairs, it was fantastic. Like Versailles. But down there… it was Dante's Inferno."

In the often intense heat of the dank basement, the group struggled to get started. Musicians set up their instruments in adjoining rooms, with Bill Wyman having to play his bass in one space while his amplifiers stood in a hallway. Initially, they were hampered by guitars going out of tune due to the humidity. Basic communication, too, was a problem, with Jimmy Miller continually having to run from the mobile studio to the basement to deliver his instructions.

Then, a few weeks in, Mick Jagger announced that he was going to marry Bianca Pérez Morena de Macias, a Nicaraguan-born model, in nearby St Tropez. The international press and a clutch of the world's most famous pop stars jetted in for the very public wedding ceremony. As Jagger and his bride departed on honeymoon, the celebrations continued for a week at Villa Nellcôte. A week after they stopped, Gram Parsons, the country-rock singer who had bonded with Richards in Los Angeles a few years before over their shared love for Merle Haggard and heroin, arrived with his wife, Gretchen. The couple stayed for a month before they were diplomatically asked to leave by a Stones minion. "The atmosphere kept changing but the party kept going," says Tarle, laughing.

Interestingly, the Stones In Exile documentary does not even mention Parsons, whose closeness to Richards rattled the possessive Jagger. "Keith and Gram were intimate like brothers," says Tarle, "especially musically. The idea was floating around that Gram would produce a Gram Parsons album for the newly formed Rolling Stones Records. Mick, I think, was a little afraid because that would mean that Gram and Keith might even tour together to promote it. And if there is no room for Mick, there is no room also for the Rolling Stones. So, yes, there was tension. You could feel it and I captured it on Mick's face in some of my pictures."

The music the Stones made in Nellcôte reflected those tensions, as well as the sense of exile and uncertainty that hung heavily over the group, and the continuing encroachment of heroin on the lives of Richards and Pallenberg, and on the lives of some of those who entered their orbit. Speaking recently, Richards protested that he was not the only drug user in the group. "At the time, Mick was taking everything. Charlie was hitting the brandy like a motherfucker. The least of our concerns was what we ingested. These sorts of questions [about drugs] are predicated on what came a few years later when… I would play the game. 'Oh, you want that Keith Richards? I'll give you the baddest mother you've ever seen.'"

By October, though, heroin use seems to have been a constant in the lives of Richards and Pallenberg. "I walked into the living room one day and this guy had a big bag of smack," Pallenberg remembers, "and everything just disintegrated." Perhaps it was telling that when Richards bought himself a speedboat, he called it Mandrax.

Heroin brought with it the usual problems of supply and demand, and the usual retinue of shady characters and criminals, both local and from nearby Marseille. Villa Nellcôte was such an open house that, one day in September, burglars walked out of the front gate with nine of Richards's guitars, Bobby Keys's saxophone and Bill Wyman's bass in broad daylight while the occupants were watching television in the living room. "That's how loose and stupid it was out there," says Wyman. The crime was reputedly carried out by dealers from Marseille who were owed money by Richards. The nocturnal goings-on at Nellcôte were also starting to attract the attention of the local populace and the increasingly suspicious police force. "The music was so loud, really, really loud," Pallenberg remembers. "Sometimes I went to Villefranche during the day and you could hear the music there. And it went on all night."

Whatever the truth of the rumour about Pallenberg encouraging the teenage daughter of the resident chef to try heroin, the police eventually raided Nellcôte and, in 1973, both she and Richards were charged with possession of heroin and intent to traffic. The resulting guilty verdict meant that Richards was banned from entering France for two years, and thus the Stones could not play concerts there.

As summer turned to autumn, people started drifting away from Nellcôte and, in November 1971, Richards and Pallenberg followed suit. The album was eventually finished in Sunset Sound studios in Los Angeles. In the documentary, Jagger reveals that some of the lyrics were written at the last minute, including the album's first single, "Tumbling Dice", which was composed "after I sat down with the housekeeper and talked about gambling". The words to another gambling song, the frenetic "Casino Boogie", were created by Jagger and Richards in the cut-up mode made famous by William Burroughs, which gives a lie to the notion that the line about "kissing cunt in Cannes" refers to an episode in Jagger's notoriously promiscuous sex life.

Jagger also denied recently that "Soul Survivor" was about his relationship with Keith Richards during the making of Exile. On it, he sings the line, "You're gonna be the death of me".

In places, Exile On Main St does indeed sound, in the best possible way, like an album made by a bunch of drunks and junkies who were somehow firing on all engines. Jim Price and Bobby Keys's horns are an integral part of the dirty sound, as is Nicky Hopkins's rolling piano. Songs such as the galloping opener, "Rocks Off", surely about the effects of a heroin hit, and "All Down the Line" are messily powerful, with vocals fading in and out of focus and the group kicking up a storm underneath. "Tumbling Dice" features one of the greatest opening gear changes in rock'n'roll and a swagger that carries all before it.

In one way, the double album, housed in Robert Frank's contact sheet-style cover, is Keith Richards's swan song of sorts, a final blast of rock'n'roll energy before he descended into a protracted heroin addiction that would often make him seem – and sound – disconnected from the rest of the group during live shows. After Exile, Jagger carried the weight and, despite some great moments on subsequent albums including Goat's Head Soup and Black and Blue, the Stones would never sound so sexy, so raucous and abandoned, so low-down and dirty. Neither, though, would anyone else. By the time punk came and went and indie rock had taken hold, the mix of sexiness and sassiness that the Stones at their best epitomised had disappeared entirely from rock music. So had the kind of survival instinct that the group drew on when the going got tough.

"The Stones really felt like exiles," Richards says. "It was us against the world now. So, fuck you! That was the attitude." You can still hear it, loud and clear, on this messy, inchoate, rock'n'roll masterpiece; the Rolling Stones in excelsis.

The Observer
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #980 - Apr 24th, 2010 at 8:53pm
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good to see Sean O'Hagan saying something positive about the Stones for once.

I recall him presenting a 'J'Accuse' special on the band on Channel 4 about 20 years ago which was basically half an hour of the most twisted PC-obsessed, ageist, right-on bile I've ever had to sit through in my life.

Just to add - at the end of that newspaper article, it mentioned that "Stones in Exile" will be broadcast by the BBC on 23rd May as part of their "Imagine" series.
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #981 - Apr 24th, 2010 at 9:32pm
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COMING TO A RECORD SHOP NEAR YOU SOON – THE NEWLY AUTHORISED VERSION OF THE ROLLING STONES' BIBLE

You don't remain one of the music industry's most lucrative concerns after nearly 50 years in the business by being wasteful and the Rolling Stones are rarely profligate as far as recorded material is concerned. So while a quick internet search will reveal the usual array of bootleg out-takes and alternative versions, thus far, repeated reissues of the band's back catalogue have rarely offered more than remastering existing material and adding fancy artwork.

This is one of the reasons this month's version of 1972's Exile on Main St, released on 17 May, is news and probably why it was held back from last year's unremarkable repackaging of their 70s output. Most of the fresh songs contained among its 10 extra tracks are genuinely unheard, lost-to-the-mists-of-time rarities.

There's been some tinkering, though, with Jagger finishing the lyrics and lead vocals to "Following the River", as well as adding the odd vocal flourish to other tunes. "Keith put guitar on one or two," Jagger told Rolling Stone magazine recently, although Richards himself declared: "I really wanted to leave them pretty much as they were. I didn't want to interfere with the Bible."

The impressively slouchy blues of "Plundered my Soul" has already been aired, gaining a limited release last weekend in support of international Record Store Day. "Good Time Women" is an excellent early incarnation of "Tumbling Dice" that has been knocking about online for a while, albeit in less polished form.

Like much of Exile, it dates from the sessions for 1971's Sticky Fingers, although another new track "I'm Not Signifying" originates from the notoriously drug-addled sessions at Nellcôte in the south of France.

There's a further treat included in the £99.99 deluxe box set version, something that adds to the sense that the Exile reissue is a sign that the Stones may be catching up with their peers and beginning to direct their own mythology more firmly, in the manner of, say, Bob Dylan with his recent flurry of official bootlegs and documentaries.

Among the commemorative hardback book and postcards is 10 minutes of footage from the infamous @#$%& Blues documentary, shot on the band's particularly debauched 1972 US tour in support of Exile. Inevitably, the edit features Keith hurling a television off a hotel balcony and Mick ordering room service, rather than the infamous sex and drugs scenes that prompted the band to halt the film's full release. (The entire 93-minute version can still only be shown in the presence of the now 85-year-old director Robert Frank.)

Frank's film is named after another lost Stones track, their final single for Decca, rejected by the label because of its title. It made one brief appearance on a German compilation and hasn't been heard since. Apart from on the web, of course.

Gareth Grundy

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2010
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #982 - Apr 24th, 2010 at 10:50pm
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According tp this link http://www.amazon.com/Exile-Main-Street-Rolling-Stones/dp/B0039TD7RC/ref=sr_1_1?... an "enhanced" version is gonna have 18 additional tracks instead of 10????

1. Loving Cup 
2. Pass The Wine (Sophia Loren) 
3. I'm Not Signifying 
4. Dancing In The Light 
5. So Divine (Aladdin Story) 
6. Soul Survivor 
7. Following The River 
8. Plundered My Soul 
9. Good Time Women 
10. Title 5 
11. Turd On The Run 
12. Ventilator Blues 
13. I Just Want To See His Face 
14. Let It Loose 
15. All Down The Line 
16. Stop Breaking Down 
17. Shine A Light 
18. Soul SurvivorDisc: 2 

tracks 11 -18 are on the original version so probably is a fuck up on Amazon part or outtakes?
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #983 - Apr 25th, 2010 at 5:58pm
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Interesting read about UMG's marketing plans for the 'Exile' re-issue @ My Life In The Music Business

And they've loaded up the RS Store with new 'Exile' merch.

S.T.P. Deluxe Road Case, anyone?

http://s7d2.scene7.com/is/image/MusicToday/BGAMRS13$shadow1$&$300$&bgc=ffffff
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #984 - Apr 25th, 2010 at 6:06pm
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Yeah,interesting marketing techniques. Here's one they didn't mention. How about doing a fucking tour. Oh no! not you again
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #985 - Apr 25th, 2010 at 8:08pm
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This website from here in Australia describes the 30 min DVD from "SUPER DELUXE EDITION as "30-minute film (exclusive to this format) Contains clips from Making of Exile documentary & clip from ‘Ladies & Gentlemen: The Rolling Stones’ film & clip from legendary unreleased ‘Cocksucker Blues’ film"

So apparently it's only a "making of" DVD

http://www.jbhifionline.com.au/music/pop-rock/exile-on-main-street-remastered-su...
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #986 - Apr 25th, 2010 at 8:20pm
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left shoe shuffle wrote on Apr 25th, 2010 at 5:58pm:
Interesting read about UMG's marketing plans for the 'Exile' re-issue @ My Life In The Music Business

And they've loaded up the RS Store with new 'Exile' merch.

S.T.P. Deluxe Road Case, anyone?

http://s7d2.scene7.com/is/image/MusicToday/BGAMRS13$shadow1$&$300$&bgc=ffffff


The asking price for the case is $500.  There must be a free pistol whipping to go along with it...
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #987 - Apr 25th, 2010 at 8:23pm
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exile wrote on Apr 25th, 2010 at 8:08pm:
This website from here in Australia describes the 30 min DVD from "SUPER DELUXE EDITION as "30-minute film (exclusive to this format) Contains clips from Making of Exile documentary & clip from ‘Ladies & Gentlemen: The Rolling Stones’ film & clip from legendary unreleased ‘Cocksucker Blues’ film"

So apparently it's only a "making of" DVD

http://www.jbhifionline.com.au/music/pop-rock/exile-on-main-street-remastered-su...


That's the Japanese edition, the description is the very same. About the DVD, yes it's only 30 minutes about the "making of"; "Stones in Exile" it's 151 minutes and will be released in June and then "Ladies and Gentlemen will be on cinemas and then will be released as a DVD too

One of the coolest things that have happened since the announcement of the Exile release is YOUR RETURN!!!

Great to see you back and why not... It's EXILE
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I only get my rocks off while I'm sleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeping with your girlfriend!!
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #988 - Apr 25th, 2010 at 8:30pm
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Ginda wrote on Apr 25th, 2010 at 8:20pm:
The asking price for the case is $500.  There must be a free pistol whipping to go along with it...

Yeah, it's pricy, but imo it's also a pretty damn cool collectible, and a considerable cut above some of their odious past offerings.

Rolling Stones Pet Gear, f'rinstance...

 
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #989 - Apr 25th, 2010 at 8:49pm
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I love this one and it's only $75

http://rollingstones.shop.bravadousa.com/Product.aspx?cp=150_34383&pc=BGAMRS11#

http://s7d2.scene7.com/is/image/MusicToday/BGAMRS11$shadow1$&$300$&bgc=ffffff

This exclusive, high-end 45’s Case Box Set includes:

• Reproduction of original “Tumbling Dice/Sweet Black Angel” 45 & “Happy/ All Down the Line” 45; re-masterd and re-produced with original artwork - exclusive to this set

• Vintage Tumbling Dice White T-Shirt

• 45’s travel box featuring “Exile on Main St” album
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #990 - Apr 25th, 2010 at 9:00pm
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$60 for a T-shirt?

What?!
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Voodoo Chile in Wonderland
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #991 - Apr 25th, 2010 at 9:00pm
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Shit, this could be my option, too bad I already ordered another

http://rollingstones.shop.bravadousa.com/Product.aspx?cp=150_34383&pc=BGAMRS12

http://s7d2.scene7.com/is/image/MusicToday/BGAMRS12$shadow1$&$300$&bgc=ffffff

and it's only $125 USD

This high end, exclusive box set includes:

• Deluxe edition CD of “Exile on Main St.” with 10 unreleased tracks

• The Rolling Stones - 1972 North American Tour Book by Bob Gruen; shot during the last two shows of the tour in New York's Madison Square Garden; Legendary photographer, Bob Gruen captures the band at the peak of the tour with never before seen photos

• Recreation of the vintage early-Licks “72 Tour T-Shirt” sold on tour- exclusive to this edition

• 24in x 36in (folded) replica poster of original promo Ad from “Exile on Main St.”

• 2 replica backstage passes

• 8 replica ticket stub set of various concerts on the tour

• 3 replicas of Mick, Keith, and Charlie's 1972 STP laminate badges with custom STP lanyard

• A replica '72 hotel room keychain from LA's Continental Hyatt House where band stayed

Weight: 7 pounds
Dimensions: 12.5in W x 9.5in H x 6.5in

I already have two CDs of the original Exile, the original LPs in excelent conditions with the cards and the DVD is just "the making of" so this is the one... too late
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« Last Edit: Apr 25th, 2010 at 9:01pm by Voodoo Chile in Wonderland »  

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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #992 - Apr 25th, 2010 at 9:09pm
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Voodoo Chile in Wonderland wrote on Apr 25th, 2010 at 8:23pm:
 
That's the Japanese edition, the description is the very same. About the DVD, yes it's only 30 minutes about the "making of"; "Stones in Exile" it's 151 minutes and will be released in June and then "Ladies and Gentlemen will be on cinemas and then will be released as a DVD too

One of the coolest things that have happened since the announcement of the Exile release is YOUR RETURN!!!

Great to see you back and why not... It's EXILE


Thanks Voodoo, all this "Exile re-issue" talk brought me out of the woodwork again Wink
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #993 - Apr 25th, 2010 at 9:25pm
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Voodoo Chile in Wonderland wrote on Apr 25th, 2010 at 9:00pm:
• A replica '72 hotel room keychain from LA's Continental Hyatt House where band stayed


...

How can that keychain not be for Room 1009?
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« Last Edit: Apr 25th, 2010 at 9:27pm by left shoe shuffle »  

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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #994 - Apr 26th, 2010 at 2:21am
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This is going to be a great year!
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #995 - Apr 26th, 2010 at 8:38am
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There is some cool new Exile stuff for sale on RS.com! I'm getting some of it!!! Cheesy
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #996 - Apr 26th, 2010 at 8:48am
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left shoe shuffle wrote on Apr 25th, 2010 at 9:25pm:
Voodoo Chile in Wonderland wrote on Apr 25th, 2010 at 9:00pm:
• A replica '72 hotel room keychain from LA's Continental Hyatt House where band stayed


...

How can that keychain not be for Room 1009?


..because the people who commissioned it dont know ANYTHING about the Rolling Stones music, I'd wager. Its only 3 rooms up the corridor on the same side. Youd think SOMEONE would have noticed the marketing opportunity.

left shoe shuffle wrote on Apr 25th, 2010 at 8:30pm:
Yeah, it's pricy, but imo it's also a pretty damn cool collectible, and a considerable cut above some of their odious past offerings.

Rolling Stones Pet Gear, f'rinstance...

 



WTF?? I dont know whats worse. The idea that Stones fans buy clothes for dogs, the fact that rs.com actually sell such things or the utterly horrific reality that there are utter fuckwits out there in cloud cuckoo land who will pay $80-90 for this shite!

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« Last Edit: Apr 26th, 2010 at 8:52am by Gazza »  

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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #997 - Apr 26th, 2010 at 9:23am
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Ginda wrote on Apr 25th, 2010 at 8:20pm:
left shoe shuffle wrote on Apr 25th, 2010 at 5:58pm:
Interesting read about UMG's marketing plans for the 'Exile' re-issue @ My Life In The Music Business

And they've loaded up the RS Store with new 'Exile' merch.

S.T.P. Deluxe Road Case, anyone?

http://s7d2.scene7.com/is/image/MusicToday/BGAMRS13$shadow1$&$300$&bgc=ffffff


The asking price for the case is $500.  There must be a free pistol whipping to go along with it...


ha! no kidding, and not that anyone is holding a gun to you, but you still might feel like you're being held up at gunpoint.
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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #998 - Apr 26th, 2010 at 9:28am
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Pdog wrote on Apr 26th, 2010 at 9:23am:
Ginda wrote on Apr 25th, 2010 at 8:20pm:
left shoe shuffle wrote on Apr 25th, 2010 at 5:58pm:
Interesting read about UMG's marketing plans for the 'Exile' re-issue @ My Life In The Music Business

And they've loaded up the RS Store with new 'Exile' merch.

S.T.P. Deluxe Road Case, anyone?

http://s7d2.scene7.com/is/image/MusicToday/BGAMRS13$shadow1$&$300$&bgc=ffffff


The asking price for the case is $500.  There must be a free pistol whipping to go along with it...


ha! no kidding, and not that anyone is holding a gun to you, but you still might feel like you're being held up at gunpoint.





Gonna go downtown
Gonna get my gun
Gonna dress real sharp
Gonna beat my drum
I ain't gonna lie

Gonna walk so slow
Gonna talk just right
And my diamond ring
Gonna shine so bright
I ain't gonna lie

I've got a debt to repay
I ain't gonna cry
I put a gun in your face
You'll pay with your life

And I got my ears
And I got my eyes
And I got my narks
And my alibis
I won't waste your time

You made one false move
You made one mistake
When the juice is squeezed
That's the way it breaks
You'll pay for your crime

Your tongue lickin' way out of place
I'll rip it out
I'll stick a gun in your face
You'll pay with your life

I taught her everything I taught her how to dream
I taught her everything
I'm gonna teach her how to scream
I taught her all she knows
I taught her how to lie
I taught her everything
I'm gonna teach her how to cry

And you cause me hurt
And you cause me pain
And you turned the tap
On my burning rage
And I can't put it out

Gonna leave no sign
Gonna leave no trace
Gonna leave this town
In a state of grace
Give me the power

I got a debt to repay
I ain't gonna lie
I put a gun in your face
You'll pay for the crime

I taught her everything
I taught her how to speak
I taught her all she knows
I taught her how to eat
I half invented her
And now she acts so chic
I taught her everything
But now she's obselete

I taught her everything
How to read and write
I taught her all she knows
She was a neophyte
I taught her everything
I loved to watch her grow
I taught her everything
And now I want to see her go

I taught her everything
I got a debt to repay
I ain't gonna cry
I'll put a gun in your face
You're playing with your life

  I taught her everything
  I taught her how to cheat
  I taught her all she knows
  She was so indiscreet
  I taught her everything
  I taught her how to lie
  I taught her everything
  I'm gonna teach her how to cry   

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Re: 'Exile On Main St.' Reissue News
Reply #999 - Apr 26th, 2010 at 11:36am
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Gazza wrote on Apr 26th, 2010 at 8:48am:
left shoe shuffle wrote on Apr 25th, 2010 at 9:25pm:
Voodoo Chile in Wonderland wrote on Apr 25th, 2010 at 9:00pm:
• A replica '72 hotel room keychain from LA's Continental Hyatt House where band stayed


...

How can that keychain not be for Room 1009?


..because the people who commissioned it dont know ANYTHING about the Rolling Stones music, I'd wager. Its only 3 rooms up the corridor on the same side. Youd think SOMEONE would have noticed the marketing opportunity.

left shoe shuffle wrote on Apr 25th, 2010 at 8:30pm:
Yeah, it's pricy, but imo it's also a pretty damn cool collectible, and a considerable cut above some of their odious past offerings.

Rolling Stones Pet Gear, f'rinstance...

 



WTF?? I dont know whats worse. The idea that Stones fans buy clothes for dogs, the fact that rs.com actually sell such things or the utterly horrific reality that there are utter fuckwits out there in cloud cuckoo land who will pay $80-90 for this shite!




No kidding.  It's all too Charlie Potatoes for me.  I deal in small bills these days.
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