Tumbling Dijs wrote on Feb 1
st, 2015 at 3:11pm:
Yes, they sure would have made more great albums IF they would have lived their lives like they did the first 10 years. I mean, living together, touring together, working for months in studios together, party together, writing songs together, doing drugs together, just being friends. They made the most fantastic serie of albums under those conditions. So yes, if they would have stayed a band, instead of a company, but we all know that's just impossible for all kinds of reasons.
This is so interesting, really, just in terms of band lifecycles generally. And certainly, this is applicable with, say, Guns n' Roses. That first record hit it so huge that they then stopped *having* to live/work/party together and then, well, we know what happened next. Maybe that's what bands should do is just *know* that it's time to break up when they no longer, out of necessity, have to live/work/party together. Maybe that's why, as Gazza said, in another thread, people who are solo artists are better able to keep "the muse" around (Dylan, Springsteen, and apparently Lucinda). It's just too hard to keep the juju going with so many people.
I like Angie's idea (hi angie!), about Keith and Mick being open with each other, that counts for something too, I suppose, but then, do we think Exile or any of the Big 4's songs are the result of emotional vulnerability between Keith and Mick? It's an interesting idea....I cannot abide Mick's lyrics anymore. They're painful. And maybe the process of songwriting is also to blame....does it happen anymore that Keith comes up with the riff/chorus/song structure and Mick fleshes it out? I think even if that's happening, Mick phones it in lyric-wise. He seriously should be hit over the head with a frying pan for subjecting people, much less us, his fans, to the crap he's writing lately. Sweet Neo-Con? WTF was that?
OMG, I was working at GoPro cameras when that last song came out and the "music/entertainment" guy was in the cube next to mine and he was always muttering about being backstage at Coachella or whatever the fuck and then I guess he went to London for those November '12 shows so he was always saying "The Stones" really loudly, and when that horrible "Doom and Gloom" was released, I literally had to ask him to stop playing it so much because it was painful for me.