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WilliamPatrickMaynard
More experimental sounds would never have stayed as raw as "Middle Sea," it would have been closer to BRIDGES TO BABYLON. That's the album that stretched the formula as much as VOODOO LOUNGE was all about the formula.
Personally, I love both albums but I realize most here are at least critical of one or both.
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Justin
Mick on Voodoo Lounge (as quoted from the Jagger Remembers article):
WENNER:
You told me when you started to make the record that you were going to spend a lot of time on this one, making as good a record as you could possibly make, making sure you’ve got the songs written in advance. You hired a producer, which you hadn’t done for a long time. Do you feel that you’ve met that expectation?
JAGGER:
Not completely. But may be we should list the positive things rather than the negative. I think there is a really good feeling of the band on it – that the band is playing very much as a band, even though it’s got one new member [bassist Darryl Jones]. There’s a good variety of songs. It’s not overelaborate. You get a feeling of really being there, and it’s quite intimate in nature. The ballads are rather nice, and then the rock & roll numbers kick quite well and sound enthusiastic – like we’re into it. I think it’s a good frame of reference of what the Rolling Stones were about during that quite limited time in Ireland in that year.It’s very much a kind of time-and-place album. In that way I was quite pleased with the results. But there were a lot of things that we wrote for “Voodoo Lounge” that Don [Was, the record’s producer] steered us away from: groove songs, African influences and things like that. And he steered us very clear of all that. And I think it was a mistake.
When I hear outtakes like "Middle Sea"...(which is one of my favorite outtakes) it's easy to hear the African influence that Mick is suggesting. Had this been included on Voodoo Lounge...along with other more grounded grooves...could this album been much more than it was? I think if Mick went with his instincts and not listen to Don Was...and added 1 or 2 of Keith's solo acoustic performances...Cocaine probably being the obvious choice..we could've gotten quite the eclectic album.
In one of the Voodoo Brew outtakes you can hear Mick answer to the question "How many songs do you have?" with "Oh loads! Box set loads!" Could VL have been a double album? We have a whole disc of instrumentals--no vocals recorded...songs from "Alright Charlie" to a bunch of Untitled ones. Was Voodoo Lounge going to be bigger than it was?
With a deletion of a couple clunkers on the album and the inclusion of this outtake plus a few other songs...I think we could've gotten-- dare I say it...a possible late-career masterpiece?
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The GR
Voodoo Lounge was a double album on vinyl.
If they'd got too experimental how could they have reproduced it live and kept a stadium crowd interested? LIke all recent albums VL was an excuse to tour behind and make money not an artistic exercise, probably one of Micks frustrations which is why he's done Superheavy.
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DragonSky
Love Is Strong
You Got Me Rocking
Sparks Will Fly
The Worst
Out Of Tears
I Go Wild
Moon Is Up at least one show... any else? Didn't they play Jump On Top Of Me once on the 1995 tour?
How many for the Exile tour? I dunno.
Rocks Off
Rip This Joint
Happy
Tumbling Dice
Sweet Virginia
All Down The Line
Any more?
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Redhotcarpet
Rubin probably saved that record from more embarrassments. It could not have been a double album, IMO. Love is strong is really the only "real" and "new" song. Maybe Rubin went thru the vaults and suggested a remake of Wicked as it seems combined with Gold painted nails.
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Blueranger
It could have been quite an eclectic album, yes. But maybe not quite as substanstial, and that's what I think Don Was went for: a good over-all album.
The result is a middle-of-the-road album for sure, without wild experiments, but focusing on song-writing. For me, it's still their best later-carreer album. For all things about the Stones, I care most for their songwriting.
Maybe Middle Of The Sea is a nice groove, but there is not very much "composition" to it.
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The GR
Voodoo Lounge was a double album on vinyl.
If they'd got too experimental how could they have reproduced it live and kept a stadium crowd interested? LIke all recent albums VL was an excuse to tour behind and make money not an artistic exercise, probably one of Micks frustrations which is why he's done Superheavy.
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retired_dog
VL was a kind of bastard, it started with a "back to the roots"-approach, but in the end the production and choice of songs were commercialized, probably under the pressure of representing their first album under the multi-million $ Virgin-deal. They were just not brave enough to produce "Exile II" (or whatever you may label it) at this point.
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retired_dog
I'd like to add that I don't believe for a minute that Don Was ever had the power to steer away the Stones from anything they really want to do. Let's not forget that an album like Exile which presents a whole musical universe with it's variety of styles and richness of sounds took years in development when unused song ideas dating back to as early as 1969 and freshly written and recorded material finally fell together and gelled in the finished piece of art.
The VL outtakes show that the Stones were onto something at the time, but probably the time frame was too short to let it develop into something really big. It's probably just impossible to recreate an Exile-like experience in the relatively short time frame of a couple of weeks of writing and recording sessions. Whatever, in the end they played safe and delivered an album that did not fulfil what was in them at the time.
Had they started work on VL a couple of years earlier, things might have turned out different, in particular when one considers the fact that some great songs that ended on solo albums like Hate It When You Leave or Evening Gown (to name just two!) could have propelled VL into the stratosphere of all-time classic Stones albums. As it is, it's not bad, but a wasted opportunity nonetheless.
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JustinQuote
retired_dog
I'd like to add that I don't believe for a minute that Don Was ever had the power to steer away the Stones from anything they really want to do. Let's not forget that an album like Exile which presents a whole musical universe with it's variety of styles and richness of sounds took years in development when unused song ideas dating back to as early as 1969 and freshly written and recorded material finally fell together and gelled in the finished piece of art.
The VL outtakes show that the Stones were onto something at the time, but probably the time frame was too short to let it develop into something really big. It's probably just impossible to recreate an Exile-like experience in the relatively short time frame of a couple of weeks of writing and recording sessions. Whatever, in the end they played safe and delivered an album that did not fulfil what was in them at the time.
Had they started work on VL a couple of years earlier, things might have turned out different, in particular when one considers the fact that some great songs that ended on solo albums like Hate It When You Leave or Evening Gown (to name just two!) could have propelled VL into the stratosphere of all-time classic Stones albums. As it is, it's not bad, but a wasted opportunity nonetheless.
Agree completely. Your last line is something I'm just "coming to terms" with now. Sure we can say a few other albums were "missed opportunities" but here with VL, we have the evidence, we can hear the other stuff that was recorded/unfinsihed. It's clear just how much work they had put into VL before they abandoned/scrapped their original vision.
Even with all these changes and the finished product being this wonderful array of different sounds I do not believe it could really have been "the next" Exile. It's clear Exile is on a world on its own---unmatched even by them. But at least, VL could have been a moment where they actually TRIED something fresh again...maybe with the intent to rival Exile. That's really all I'm looking for with these guys. The intent/motivation to write something substantial. My looking at the finished VL coupled with the the unfinished tracks they left behind tells me for once that like you said: they "were onto something." Maybe even a small "creative explosion"? Who knows.
It's funny how one's opinion on an album can change over time. Like I said, VL is a strong album. It fascinates me that the album could have been something quite different. It's true...where there's smoke..there's a fire. They almost made something really special with VL...but in the end they copped out.