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Tuesday Afternoon

(56,912 posts)
4. like songs off all of them. favorite is Sticky Fingers ...
Wed Apr 10, 2013, 06:28 PM
Apr 2013

Wrangling with the history of any five-decade long institution is an inherently thorny business, but the Rolling Stones’ story is particularly challenging. Of the roughly five distinct periods that comprise the epic history of what is perhaps the greatest ever rock and roll band, the current one — in which the Stones as moneyed rock royalty occasionally reunite to milk a seemingly endless cash cow through intermittent reissues and greatest hits albums, just okay new releases, and extortionately priced stadium tours, is by far the longest. It has been 32 years since the band’s last great (or great-ish) release Tattoo You, 35 since its last inarguable bonafide masterpiece, 1978′s Some Girls. How strange this must understandably seem to a certain demographic. For rock music fans under the age of 30, this is the only version of the band they have ever known.

By comparison, the group’s high water mark lasted only four years, between 1968 and 1972, and comprised four studio records that represent perhaps the greatest distillation of rock, blues, country, and soul ever achieved. Untroubled and even enhanced by the passage of time, those four albums — the militant and populist moral quagmire of Beggars Banquet, the epochal, frightening, funny, and depraved Let It Bleed, the druggy, harrowing, staring-death-in-the-eyes stupor of Sticky Fingers, and the simply perfect Exile On Main Street — are by themselves a veritable Mt. Rushmore of the rock and roll genre. Anyone who wants to know anything about what came before and after would be well-advised to start here — where Robert Johnson casts a lurid eye at Liz Phair while shaking hands with Pussy Galore.

Most music fans are by now acquainted with the high and lowlights of the Stones’ insane journey — the early rise to prominence as hard-core interpreters of the American blues and the “anti-Beatles,” the full flowering of the Jagger-Richards song machine, which was ultimately to yield countless classics, the flirtation with psychedelia, the early death of the unanimously unliked band founder and original guitarist Brian Jones, the hiring of Mick Taylor as replacement resulting in vaulting heights nearly unimaginable, the stunning apocalypse of Altamont, Taylor’s eventual, regrettable departure, replaced by Ronnie Wood of the Faces. And on and on. Certain turns of phrase evoke whole, mythic tales that made the Stones early leaders in the clubhouse of rock debauchery: cocksucker blues, junkie nurses, poor Marianne Faithfull, and the apocryphal chocolate bar. To give any sort of comprehensive overview here would be nigh well impossible — fifty years to tell in a few short lines, to bastardize a lyric from Merle Haggard. (For interested parties the band’s history has been assiduously and expertly covered in a series of publications ranging from Stanley Booth’s brilliant memoir The True Adventures Of The Rolling Stones to Bill Janovitz’ terrific 33 1/3 consideration of Exile On Main Street.)

Over the years, many once-seemingly unimpeachable classic rock warhorses have experienced at least some amount of downward critical revision. Most people still probably wouldn’t argue that Who’s Next or Dark Side Of The Moon are not seminal records in the history of rock and roll, but elements of those albums which once seemingly marked them as groundbreaking or thoroughly novel can feel a little dated or silly. The point is not to denigrate these albums or artists, but rather to recognize that with the best Stones records, this kind of reevaluation has never been needed. No one really argues that Beggars Banquet isn’t as great now as the day it was released, or even more impactful. Besides being brilliant songwriters, the vintage Stones largely insulated themselves from the rigors of time by studiously avoiding the trends — or at least niftily navigating the line between commercially viable and traditionally minded (Their one early misstep in this regard being the too eager to follow-the-leader ersatz-Beatlisms of Their Satanic Majesties Request).

more at link:
http://stereogum.com/1251612/the-rolling-stones-albums-from-worst-to-best/top-stories/lead-story/

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

"Begger's Banquet" Moondog Apr 2013 #1
begger's banquet olddots Apr 2013 #2
Used to play a couple songs off that album..... cliffordu Apr 2013 #5
Let it Bleed Loryn Apr 2013 #3
like songs off all of them. favorite is Sticky Fingers ... Tuesday Afternoon Apr 2013 #4
"...the unanimously unliked band founder and original guitarist Brian Jones"? calimary Apr 2013 #8
You are right in every aspect except one: cliffordu Apr 2013 #20
I had a mad crush on him that actually rivaled that for my "other husband," Paul McCartney. calimary Apr 2013 #26
The Hot Rocks compilation is my fave. edbermac Apr 2013 #6
"Beggar's Banquet" by FAR! calimary Apr 2013 #7
GREAT album. ONe of the best of all time, IMNSHO cliffordu Apr 2013 #21
I don't like the way they have treated their bass player as a non member of the band. olddots Apr 2013 #9
Sticky Fingers is my favorite. MrSlayer Apr 2013 #10
Yep. cliffordu Apr 2013 #12
Not sure about best album, but I rediscovered this song in a movie R B Garr Apr 2013 #11
Their Satanic Majesties Request Blue_In_AK Apr 2013 #14
A Bigger Bang Generic Brad Apr 2013 #13
I'll never forget the year I graduated high school, left home in '66. In_The_Wind Apr 2013 #15
OMFG, YES!! cliffordu Apr 2013 #19
"Aftermath" was a terrific album!!! "Going Home"!!! calimary Apr 2013 #27
Exile on Main Street, Let It Bleed. kwassa Apr 2013 #16
Ventilator Blues is just plain dirty pscot Apr 2013 #17
"Torn and Frayed" is one of the most underrated songs I can think of. nomorenomore08 Apr 2013 #23
Some Girls 1978 AtomicKitten Apr 2013 #18
IMO 'Goats Head Soup' and 'Some Girls' are both great albums (9.5/10 level) with multiple nomorenomore08 Apr 2013 #24
I saw the Stones, my only time, on the Some Girls tour. kwassa Apr 2013 #29
I saw them that same summer in So Cal. AtomicKitten Apr 2013 #30
'68-'72 was their pinnacle, and in fact, quite possibly the pinnacle of rock, period. nomorenomore08 Apr 2013 #22
"Junkie Gospel Rock" cliffordu Apr 2013 #25
All four studio albums from '68-'72 are to die for. CrazyOrangeCat Apr 2013 #28
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