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Rockman
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treaclefingers
But people are merely disagreeing with you, just as you're disagreeing with them.
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treaclefingers
But people are merely disagreeing with you, just as you're disagreeing with them.
No, they're being patronizing about it. That was my objection, and I was not being insulting in my posts by claiming that they lack comprehension or should be pitied because they don't see things the way I do--and their subsequent posts only prove my point about their patronizing attitudes. I mean, grow the @#$%& up already! Are they still in grade school? "I suggest you get over it". Yeah, how about they just get over themselves and we'll consider the problem solved? Disagreement is one thing, but being childish about it just gets up my nose.
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sonomastone
and to think that StonesTod/GRNRBITW is missing all this!
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treaclefingers
But people are merely disagreeing with you, just as you're disagreeing with them.
No, they're being patronizing about it. That was my objection, and I was not being insulting in my posts by claiming that they lack comprehension or should be pitied because they don't see things the way I do--and their subsequent posts only prove my point about their patronizing attitudes. I mean, grow the @#$%& up already! Are they still in grade school? "I suggest you get over it". Yeah, how about they just get over themselves and we'll consider the problem solved? Disagreement is one thing, but being childish about it just gets up my nose.
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71Tele
When people express opinions like Exile contains "filler" or should have been a single album, I do think they lack comprehension.
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71Tele
I think the problem some people have with Exile (though I am not claiming to speak for any particular person here) is that perhaps they are more used to classic "rock" music and therefore the soulful black vibe of songs like Casino Boogie, Hip Shake, Just Want To See His Face, and Turd don't resonate with them. These songs are a juke joint swampy summer night, with a flask in the back pocket and a blade in the boot. The music at times can barely be heard over the crash of pool balls, bottles breaking, and the shouts of joy (or anger). But the beat is always there: churning, throbbing, incessant. The air is full of sex, menace, and possibilities. So yeah, if you don't dig that and want "rock hits" served to you on a platter, I can see how you would mistake these essential songs as "filler" and yearn for the safe harbor of more familiar musical territory...If that makes me a "snob", so be it.
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Rockman
When people express opinions like Exile contains "filler" or should have been a single album,
Jagger stated way back .. that Exile the double album was meant to be listened to as four separate sides/albums ... something that was lost with the release on CD
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Greenblues
... the latest one (for quite a long time) -
meaning that since Tattoo You we've seen many, many reviews praising the various latest albums as "their best album since Exile On Main Street" or using siminlar terms ;-) Which doesn't mean those albums were bad ones at all, but speaks volumes nevertheless in terms of high expectations.
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Stoner72
Gotta confess I'm shocked at the number of people who cite Some Girls as the most overrated Stones album.
I was 21 when that album came out, and after the mildly disappointing Goat's Heads Soup, the-good-but It's Only Rock N' Roll and the not-yet-ripened Black & Blue, Some Girls sounded fresh, invigorating and most-importantly, a bit dangerous.
Don't forget the execrable Love You Live had also recently been released, and up until June of 1978 many of my friends were wondering if the Stones shouldn't just hang it up.
Needless to say, Some Girls blew those concerns right out of the water.
Yes, there's a clinker or two (namely the cover of Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me)), but on balance this is a great Stones record.
In fact, it's so great some of you may have heard it far too often, which might account for the numerous most-overrated citations.
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Green Lady
The ones that don't entirely live up to their reputation for me are:
Some Girls - it did the job it was made to do at the time, giving the Stones an answer to the challenges of punk and disco, and there are some great things on it, but after Miss You my ears just switch off through Whip/Imagination/Some Girls/Lies. Faraway Eyes is a nice bit of fun, and the rest is wonderful, but it's not on a par with any of the Big 4. The outtakes album shows that some quality tracks were left out in order to include the punky stuff.
Aftermath - gets all the attention for this era because the Stones wrote all the songs for the first time, but some of them aren't that brilliant, and the famous long jam on Going Home is fun to listen to but probably didn't really deserve to be included in full. I think I prefer Out Of Our Heads.
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71Tele
Those who think Exile has "filler" just don't understand what Exile is all about. I pity them.
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Silver Dagger
Welcome back to the IORR saloon Doxa. The discussion's become rather lively.
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Greenblues
... the latest one (for quite a long time) -
meaning that since Tattoo You we've seen many, many reviews praising the various latest albums as "their best album since Exile On Main Street" or using siminlar terms ;-) Which doesn't mean those albums were bad ones at all, but speaks volumes nevertheless in terms of high expectations.
Well said. I think SOME GIRLS was the first album that was actually, and with a justification, described "best since EXILE" (look at the ROLLING STONE review above). That was accurate then, since (a) EXILE's greatness was widely recognized by then, and partly because (b) they had released a couple of not so great albums betweeen EXILE and this new product. The quality of both EXILE and SOME GIRLS was easily recognizable against teh three records between them. The improvement could easily seen then, which probably makes SOME GIRLS a bit difficult one to rate 'objectively'. For that reason I also kind of agree with the people who say that SOME GIRLS is a bit over-rated. It is easily better than, say, BLACK AND BLUE and IORR, and since the band hasn't been able to anything as strong ever since, it kind of stands alone in their 'latter' output, after golden era records. And the album being their best seller ever. But I don't think it actually is in same level in quality as the 'big four', probably not even close. That creativity peak when Jagger/Richards and the band were touching a kind of immortal transcendency in quality, was gone. (I would say that GOATS HEAD SOUP is a bit underrated due the very reason that it starts the recognizable creative downhill, and is compared too easily to those four masterpieces it follows. But is it actually weaker than, say, celebrated SOME GIRLS, pretty hard to say).
Anyway, the cliche "best since EXILE" seems to be the epitaph we are too often confronted in the hype of latest Stones record. And since TATTOO YOU, a bit more critical and realistic reviews add the remark "at least best since SOME GIRLS"... By that logic the Stones are just getting better and better by every new record, even though never reaching the EXILE/SOME GIRLS quality...
- Doxa
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Stoner72
Gotta confess I'm shocked at the number of people who cite Some Girls as the most overrated Stones album.
I was 21 when that album came out, and after the mildly disappointing Goat's Heads Soup, the-good-but It's Only Rock N' Roll and the not-yet-ripened Black & Blue, Some Girls sounded fresh, invigorating and most-importantly, a bit dangerous.
Don't forget the execrable Love You Live had also recently been released, and up until June of 1978 many of my friends were wondering if the Stones shouldn't just hang it up.
Needless to say, Some Girls blew those concerns right out of the water.
Yes, there's a clinker or two (namely the cover of Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me)), but on balance this is a great Stones record.
In fact, it's so great some of you may have heard it far too often, which might account for the numerous most-overrated citations.
Even though I to an extent accept SOME GIRLS is a bit over-rated account, I really dig your view. For me it shows why SOME GIRLS is so important album. There was another thread recently in which I talked about 'relevance', and I thnk it applies very well to SOME GIRLS. After rather irrelevant releases, LOVE YOU LIVE included, the album made them look relevant again, showing that they weren't locked into their idiosyncratic musical sphere, which didn't sound resonate with the trends any longer, but could actually still had a say in the contemporary musical world. One shouldn't count them out yet, was the message. But still I think SOME GIRLS have not passed the test time so well as their golden era masterpieces. I think the rather lame reception, compared to EXILE, of SOME GIRLS re-edition (including the awesome TEXAS film), not among die-hards, but wider audience, shows that the then so popular era is not so 'sexy' or 'exciting' as their earlier peaks. But this is not to say that SOME GIRLS is not a very good, awesome album. It is!
- Doxa
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71Tele
I think the problem some people have with Exile (though I am not claiming to speak for any particular person here) is that perhaps they are more used to classic "rock" music and therefore the soulful black vibe of songs like Casino Boogie, Hip Shake, Just Want To See His Face, and Turd don't resonate with them. These songs are a juke joint swampy summer night, with a flask in the back pocket and a blade in the boot. The music at times can barely be heard over the crash of pool balls, bottles breaking, and the shouts of joy (or anger). But the beat is always there: churning, throbbing, incessant. The air is full of sex, menace, and possibilities. So yeah, if you don't dig that and want "rock hits" served to you on a platter, I can see how you would mistake these essential songs as "filler" and yearn for the safe harbor of more familiar musical territory...If that makes me a "snob", so be it.
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RollingFreak
Exile. An incredible album, but its never my number 1 despite the fact that many others consider it theirs. Whether you like it or not, its got a few songs that are filler whereas their other 40 minute albums are concise masterpieces.
Sorry. Someone had to say it.
Well said (written) and I completely agree.
Just to give this balance, I think you're both completely missing the point of EOMS. If you remove those songs, it just doesn't compete with the other Big 3...it's because of those songs that this is a top album, possibly the best double album of all time, certainly better than the Beatles White album.
EOMS is the exception to the rule, less is more.
Spot on. A man with good taste and good sense.
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RollingFreak
Exile. An incredible album, but its never my number 1 despite the fact that many others consider it theirs. Whether you like it or not, its got a few songs that are filler whereas their other 40 minute albums are concise masterpieces.
Sorry. Someone had to say it.
Well said (written) and I completely agree.
Just to give this balance, I think you're both completely missing the point of EOMS. If you remove those songs, it just doesn't compete with the other Big 3...it's because of those songs that this is a top album, possibly the best double album of all time, certainly better than the Beatles White album.
EOMS is the exception to the rule, less is more.
Spot on. A man with good taste and good sense.
Yep. Spot on, Treacle. Very well put. A great EXILE discussion is over-all going on this thread, so let me take part a bit too. I take teh issue why it turned to be like it is, a double album.
I think we have to remember that the Stones had just released a couple of perfect 'single' albums, each showing an artistic progression, and in which the quality of song-writing have been extremely high. It wasn't that easy to come up with another 'best of' kind of album. I think especially STICKY FINGERS was almost too perfect album, setting the bar too high - like EXILE would show, the band was not any longer changing too much in sound - the Taylor band sound was kind of fixed by then, and Jagger/Richards workshop was not taking such huge steps forwards in difference any longer. How to follow such a perfect album in which each track is artistically speaking spot on, a perfect artistic statement of its own? If you have a hit material like "Tumbling Dice" to compete with "Brown Sugar", country songs like "Sweet Virginia" and "Torn & Frayed" to compete with "Wild Horses" and "Dead Flowers", what would happen?
I think the Stones actually recognized the problem - that of them not probably couldn't meet the challenge of STICKY FINGERS in its own field, not having enough of top-class material - and decided to change the tactics - to do something completely different, but still great. Remember, they still then were damn ambitious artistically, and each new record was treated as a artistic statemnt that needed to show some sort of progression, or at least something 'novel'. (Those were the days).
So, they decided to give us a more deeper, thorough-going exhibition of their sound and music in its all richness. Them looking more 'inside' than 'outside'. In where we could see the nuances and sides that probably were not so recognizable in their masterful individual songs earlier. The songs themselves didn't matter so much any longer, it was the way they were presented, each completing each other, and since there was enough of room for everything, there was no forced feeling that like 'every track needs to be radio-friendly, easily accessible'. It was more like let us play, and damn relaese, anything we seem to like, things we play by instinct, relying solely on our taste in good music. That turned to be their most ambitious, daring artistic statement ever. And greatest rock and roll album ever released.
To put it simply, and to repeat myself to emphasize the point, I think the uniqueness of EXILE is that it was not any longer the songs themselves, or their greatness, that was driving them. It was more the way they were presented. It was the total sound of the songs (taking alone or together), of which the 'written' songs themselves were just one component, that took command. In EXILE the Stones put all their creative energy and passion into performing, to the delivery. With that dedication, no matter what they played, it was perfect all the same. The timeless star of EXILE is the performance itself. Rock and roll cannot be played any better - it is the ultimate ideal of that. There is so much passion, incredible little nuances, odd choices - but taking together, it is a damn cohesive, strong musical statement by a precise vision. But to 'get' it, we need to hear the whole album, even though each track still represents the whole album - each having an "EXILE feel". STICKY FINGERS sounded very professional, but a bit uptight - The Stones showing that they are not just great song-writers, but masters in any given genre of modern rock, like a master thesis of rock band credibility. EXILE, by contrast, couldn't care less of the 'form' any longer, but just showing the band relying on their own insticts, and being damn proud of it. The result is much more relaxed than STICKY FINGERS.
But I can easily understand the the frustration the band had after EXILE. In that record they actually had used about the last card what they have offer, by letting us to see their musical intuition in its purity, playing anything they know from their heart. A bit like a stripper finally getting rid of last of her/his clothings, and knowing that after that it is impossible to excite the audience more any longer, and even repeat the act again so excitingly again... After using that card, they must have felt artistically empty. I think EXILE is a kind of thing one can honestly do only once. You can't fake that. To reveal your soul. It could be their biggest win ever, but probably a kind of Pyrrho's win in a long run artistic-wise.
- Doxa