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drewmaster
“A dream song”, Mick said in 1978, and what a wrenching and heartbreaking dream. Moonlight Mile is perhaps the most ravishingly beautiful piece of music the Stones have ever recorded. Starting with those first quavering acoustic guitar notes, joined by the chimes of Jim Price’s piano and Mick’s soft falsetto, Moonlight Mile begins with the delicacy of a breath of wind, and slowly builds to an utterly devastating climax.
Mick himself has never sounded more direct, more open and sincere, than he does here, pouring his heart out with eerily zonked-out lyrics that are actually poetry of the highest order, brilliantly capturing the loneliness and desperation that anyone, even the most lauded rock star, may feel on the road. And Charlie’s drumming, with those echoing cymbal flourishes, deepens the sense of wonder and awe.
The way the song gradually builds is nothing short of miraculous. It so organic, man, like watching a small leaf catch fire and spread until the entire forest is engulfed in flames. A lot of the credit for this belongs to the great Paul Buckmaster, who knows precisely how to use orchestral stringed instruments that in lesser hands would sound bombastic, to create majestically soaring music. The cresting of these strings, together with Mick’s exhortations (… let it go now, yeah, come on up … flow now baby…) has brought this usually-stoic listener to tears of ecstatic release.
The climax, of course, is that searing last verse, with Mick defiantly howling that he’s coming home, cause he’s just about a moonlight mile on down the road. Absolutely electrifying. And after that, we are bathed in the warm afterglow of Mick Taylor’s shimmering electric guitar, Jim Price’s tinkling piano, and some wonderful additional orchestral flourishes from Paul Buckmaster.
A staggering work of genius that makes me glad to be alive and proud to be a Stones fan.
Drew
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Silver Dagger
Wonderful description Drew.
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whitem8
A stunning rock orchestra of road weary junkie regret. Mick mines deep for this one, to his heart, with rare honesty. The gentle opening surprises, with the eastern sound of a traveling soul, that is restless and yearning for connection. Mick has been in the grind since the early sixties. Traveling from hotel to hotel, surrounded by sycophants with vacuous souls lapping at their heels. Mick is on a journey, searching, and yearning for a connection. The strings are beautiful, and propel the song on a zen journey of discovery. Mick Taylor adds gentle then searing layers that punctuate Jagger's emotional delivery. A perfect way to end a concept album about decay and debauchery. One of their crowning achievements. And yet, Keith is no where to be found.
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whitem8
A stunning rock orchestra of road weary junkie regret. Mick mines deep for this one, to his heart, with rare honesty. The gentle opening surprises, with the eastern sound of a traveling soul, that is restless and yearning for connection. Mick has been in the grind since the early sixties. Traveling from hotel to hotel, surrounded by sycophants with vacuous souls lapping at their heels. Mick is on a journey, searching, and yearning for a connection. The strings are beautiful, and propel the song on a zen journey of discovery. Mick Taylor adds gentle then searing layers that punctuate Jagger's emotional delivery. A perfect way to end a concept album about decay and debauchery. One of their crowning achievements. And yet, Keith is no where to be found.
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whitem8
Sliver Dagger Get me the Home Office. He's wrecking my home!
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R
Moonlight Mile is no small way a masterpiece because of Mick Taylor.Did he get any additional recompense? Any credit, really? Within three years he would be tired of being used and abused.
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2000 LYFHQuote
R
Moonlight Mile is no small way a masterpiece because of Mick Taylor.Did he get any additional recompense? Any credit, really? Within three years he would be tired of being used and abused.
Hear, Hear, I second that. OTOH, here comes DandelionPowderman to set us straight!
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DandelionPowdermanQuote
2000 LYFHQuote
R
W
Moonlight Mile is no small way a masterpiece because of Mick Taylor.Did he get any additional recompense? Any credit, really?ithin three years he would be tired of being used and abused.
Hear, Hear, I second that. OTOH, here comes DandelionPowderman to set us straight!
Whaaaaaaaaat?MM is by far my favorite Stones track. It is indeed a masterpiece, much because of the two Micks' performances. Remember, it is Jagger who plays the main riff so beautifully, and it is indeed Mick Taylor who is filling in with the missing pieces in the soundscape, the icing on the cake - with beautiful, yet subtle textures. Simply wonderful. So is Paul Buckmaster's strings.
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His Majesty
Amazing track!
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marcovandereijk
Nothing I could add to what others have said better than I ever could. So yeah, I will
join the chorus: great song!
Keith has once made a remark that, although at first he said he had nothing to do with
this song (and later he would write this again in his autobiography, but) somewhere
he had recorded the main riff of the song before Mick and Mick took it in their hands.
If I remember well, he called it his "eastern thing" or something like that (the Department
of Historical Accuracy will know). So there might be something right about the Jagger/Richards
credits?
(Edited for a writing mistake I even noticed myself)
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2000 LYFHQuote
DandelionPowdermanQuote
2000 LYFHQuote
R
W
Moonlight Mile is no small way a masterpiece because of Mick Taylor.Did he get any additional recompense? Any credit, really?ithin three years he would be tired of being used and abused.
Hear, Hear, I second that. OTOH, here comes DandelionPowderman to set us straight!
Whaaaaaaaaat?MM is by far my favorite Stones track. It is indeed a masterpiece, much because of the two Micks' performances. Remember, it is Jagger who plays the main riff so beautifully, and it is indeed Mick Taylor who is filling in with the missing pieces in the soundscape, the icing on the cake - with beautiful, yet subtle textures. Simply wonderful. So is Paul Buckmaster's strings.
LOL, sorry forgot to highlight R's quote. Talkin about the MT credit....
But you are right, never get tried of this masterpiece after 41+ years of listening to it.