Exile on Main St. |
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Released: May 12, 1972 Peak: 14 US, 11 UK, 16 CN, 6 AU, 15 DF Sales (in millions): 1.0 US, -- UK, 7.0 world (includes US and UK) Genre: classic rock |
Tracks:Song Title (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to charts.
Total Running Time: 67:07 The Players:
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Rating:4.573 out of 5.00 (average of 25 ratings)
Quotable:“Regarded as the Rolling Stones’ finest album.” – Stephen Thomas Erlewine, AllMusic.comAwards:(Click on award to learn more). |
A Double Album“Few other albums, let alone double albums, have been so rich and masterful as Exile on Main Street.” AM This “sprawling, weary double album” AM “allowed the band to relax a bit.” CD “Greeted with decidedly mixed reviews upon its original release,” AM it is now “regarded as the Rolling Stones’ finest album. Part of the reason why the record was initially greeted with hesitant reviews is that it takes a while to assimilate.” AMHow It Stands Up to Other Stones’ Albums“At the tail end of the ‘60s the Stones evolved not just into an unbelievable album band, but really lived up to their credo as the World's Greatest Rock & Roll Band.” PK “The semi-acoustic Americana of ‘68s’ Beggars Banquet got the ball rolling, but it was really the trio of albums after Mick Taylor replaced Brian Jones as guitarist that show the Stones at their very best – ‘69s’ Let It Bleed, ‘71s’ near-perfect Sticky Fingers, and of course Exile on Main Street.” PKWith Exile, the Rolling Stones’ tenth album, the band “transcended anything they’d made up until that point.” PM They “set out to prove once and for all they were the greatest rock ‘n’ roll band in the world by recording the crowning jewel” RV that “caps the Stones’ great 1968-‘72 run.” AZ2 It “is the last great album from one of rock’s greatest bands.” RV It came “during their most decadent and hedonistic period” CQ Given those “legendarily louche circumstances..it’s a miracle this double set…contains any great songs.” EW’12 However, the “angst and tension within their personal lives during this tumultuous period were channeled musically throughout Exile, which is kinda what makes it so great.” CQ This was “some of the best work of the band’s career and the album that defined early ‘70s music.” CQ It “sets a remarkably high standard for all of hard rock” AM and has become celebrated as “one of the most essential rock records ever created.” BN With “its overall murky adrenaline,” AZ1 Exile the songs take “the bleakness that underpinned Let It Bleed and Sticky Fingers to an extreme.” AM “If the late ‘60s were the Rolling Stones’ road trip through rock’s American roots, then Exile on Main Street was the stop at the highway diner.” CDU Author Jimmy Guterman asserts that the best word to describe the album is “mud.” JG Mastering Old SoundsExile is “chaotic, loud, dirty and full of dark corners, radical mood swings.” RV It is “raucous, boozy, weary, violent and sex-obsessed.” TL It “sounds like the work of heathen outlaws, which of course it was. On the run from Fleet street mobs, narcotics officers and the Inland Revenue, the Stones…composed an epic blues that went beyond tribute and beyond blue.” TLThey don’t “leap into new worlds so much as master the old ones” AZ1 via an “excursion into back-alley Americana” EW’93 as they “speed through familiar neighborhoods of country, blues, and R&B.” AZ1 It “is a grab-bag of genius, never resting in one sound for too long.” PM For example, “no longer does their country sound forced or kitschy – it’s lived-in and complex, just like the group’s forays into soul and gospel.” AM “The album is rich with some of the same rootsy Southern sprit” BN as theSticky Fingers recording sessions in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. “In this rich assortment of gospel and blues Mick is by no means out of his element,” CDU but Exile “found the Stones sounding more like Keith Richards’ juke-joint band than ever before.” CDU At the same time, Exile isn’t just a throwback with its sound. USA Today asserted that “the band's scrappy, ramshackle blues-rock manifesto foreshadowed grunge.” UT The Band“The core of the music is the guitar interplay between Richards and Mick Taylor,” TB who are both “spinning off incredible riffs and solos.” AM “Jagger’s vocals are buried in the mix” AM leaving him “with something akin to pure singing, utilizing only his uncanny sense of style to carry him home…His performances [prove] that there’s no other vocalist who can touch him, note for garbled note.” RS He “manages to sound intently focused and deeply stoned.” TL Note: author Jimmy Guterman calls Richards “the greatest harmony singer in the history of rock and roll.” JGMeanwhile, drummer Charlie Watts “minds the store with impeccable rhythm.” TL He has “room not only to set the pace rhythmically but to also provide the bulk of the drive and magnetism” RS while Bill Wyman, whose “bass has never been recorded with an eye to clarity…fulfills his support role with a grace that is unfailingly admirable.” RS Many of the songs don’t feature all five of the Rolling Stones. JG They “assembled a brilliant set of personnel around themselves, too, with Nicky Hopkins, Billy Prestoon, Ian Stewart, Jim Price and Bobby Keys laying down some absolutely ripping ensemble pieces and accentuating the music with such unkempt gnarliness that it sounds like the antithesis of Pet Sounds.” PM The RecordingTo escape tax problems in England, the Rolling Stones headed to France, “breaking the rule that records are supposed to be made in recording studios.” TB While they did record some songs in more traditional settings in Los Angeles in London, most were via a mobile recording gig in the basement of a 19th century villa outside Nice that belonged to Richards, JG who served as the “prime architect of the material.” TB The house was “cold and damp, and overdubs were done in the kitchen while people were eating or talking.” TBThey recorded a batch of songs “written between 1968 and 1972. These legendary sessions defined the adage “sex, drugs, and rock and roll” before it became cliché.” CQ The “newly married Jagger, out to prove that he hadn’t completely made his peace with conventional mores, turned in some of the best performances of his career.” CC “In the tradition of Phil Spector, they’ve constructed a wash of sound in which to frame their songs, yet where Spector always aimed to create an impression of space and airiness, the Stones group everything together in one solid mass.” RS “Much of it sounds as if it was recorded live at a gospel revival.” CDU The SongsHere are thoughts on the individual songs from the album.“Rocks Off” This is “a proto-typical Stones’ opener…great choruses and well-judged horn bursts, painlessly running you through the motions.” RS “Ostensibly a bar-room rocker, ‘Rocks Off’ was probably closer to the Velvet Underground’s ‘White Light/White Heat,’ both in its unadulterated onslaught of sound and in its speed-driven , brain-addled reportage.” CC
“Rip This Joint” “Shake Your Hips” “Casino Boogie” “Tumbling Dice”
“Sweet Virginia” “Torn and Frayed” “What could have been a throwaway was elevated by some splendid gteel guitar, courtesy of Al Perkins, atmospheric organ from horn player Jim Price, and Jagger providing just the right featherlight touch the song required.” CC “Sweet Black Angel” “Loving Cup” “Happy” It “was basically cut as a warm-up, hence the impromptu backing group of just Jimmy Miller on drums and Bobby Keys on sax.” CC
“Turd on the Run” “Ventilator Blues” “I Just Want to See His Face” “Let It Loose” “All Down the Line”
“Stop Breaking Down” “Shine a Light” “Soul Survivor” Notes:The 2010 reissue added another disc of other songs from that era: “Pass the Wine,” “Plundered My Soul,” “I’m Not Signifying,” “Following the River,” “Dancing in the Light,” “So Divine (Aladdin Story),” “Loving Cup (alternate take),” “Soul Survivor (alternate take),” “Good Time Women,” and “Title 5.”
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Other Related DMDB Pages:First posted 3/23/2008; last updated 7/22/2024. |
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