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Shine a Light: Rockers on the Genius of 'Exile on Main Street'

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

M

ick Jagger and Keith Richards revisit the making of the Rolling Stones’ gritty masterpiece Exile on Main Street in the new issue of Rolling Stone , available now. As the band prepares for the May 18th reissue of its classic 1972 album, artists from Trey Anastasio to ?uestlove share their favorite epic Exile moments. plus, look back at the Stones’ best Exile-era photos and most incredible live shots and trace the band’s history on the cover of RS .

Phish’s Trey Anastasio:
“The song I really related to is ‘Torn and Frayed.’ ‘The ballrooms and smelly bordellos/And dressing rooms filled with parasites’: we really had a problem with that for awhile. Yet it’s so beautifully stated in that song. And then, “Joe’s got a cough, sounds kinda rough/And the codeine to fix it” [laughs]. we had one of those — the rock doctor. Every band’s got one of those.

It’s pretty affirming at the end. you pick up so much when you go through this process of playing every song on a record [like Phish did at Festival 8]. but one of the first things I noticed, even after having listened to this record over and over my entire life, is that half of the lyrics I thought Mick Jagger was singing were wrong. And the ones he was actually singing were much better than the ones I had made up in my mind.” (For the rest of Anastasio’s thoughts on Exile, visit our full story on David Fricke’s Alternate Take.)

Pearl Jam’s Mike McCready:
“I love that record like you wouldn’t believe. That one and Sticky Fingers, I always go back and forth on which one is the greatest record of all time. And I mean of all time of any band. I love ‘Loving Cup’ because I love the harmonies in the beginning. I love how the piano starts off the song. I love how he describes this beautiful buzz when he’s making out with that chick. I sound like fucking Frank Sinatra now. What a beautiful buzz, what a beautiful buzz. The soul to that song is impeccable. It’s so beautiful and it always takes me somewhere when I listen to it. I love the piano. I love Nicky Hopkins. I love Mick’s voice. I love the guitars. I love the harmonies. Specifically, when Mick does his own harmonies.”

Elvis Costello:
“I know every track. ‘Shake your Hips.’ I also like ‘All Down the Line,’ I like ‘Rip This Joint.’ ‘Tumbling Dice,’ one of the great guitar parts. ‘Loving Cup’ is great. See, I can’t even choose, that’s how great this record is! ‘Shake your Hips,’ it’s Slim Harpo. The Rolling Stones always loved rhythm & blues, and what’s not to love about that song? I remember the Rolling Stones came to Liverpool in 1972 when that record came out, and my entire school queued up to get tickets. And you know what I said? I said, ‘Rolling Stones, they’re over. you go on, I’ll go use the money to buy a record.’ And I bought a Jefferson Airplane record instead, so that shows you how much I knew! I didn’t buy Exile on Main Street back then, I discovered it about a year later. I couldn’t have afforded it at first because it was a double album.”

Beastie Boys’ Mike Diamond:
” ‘Sweet Black Angel’ is one of those cuts that are in the flow of the album. I’m sure for most people, the first songs that appeal to them are ‘Tumbling Dice’ or ‘It’s Only Rock ‘n’ Roll,’ I know those are the more accessible songs. but the thing about that album is that it’s very dense, and it obviously stands the test of time. ‘Sweet Black Angel’ is a cut you only get to after a while. Those are the cuts for me — for the heads!”

The Roots’ ?uestlove:
“I used that album as a template for Game Theory, despite people thinking Kid A was our sonic reference. ‘Loving Cup’ is probably my favorite on the album. It’s just them meshing as a group, meshing and falling apart at the same time. I tend to see the highlight of any musician’s career as sort of the beginning of the end, and I’m not saying it’s the decline. I remember one of my favorite scathing reviews for Exile actually came from Rolling Stone, from Lenny Kaye. I hung that up on my wall, because I love that record. it could have been Thriller, it could have been Purple Rain, it seems as though it’s the pinnacle. People see it as the beginning, but I see it as the end of an era.”

Brendan Benson:
“Oh my God, it’s like the Bible. That record is so instilled in me. That was like a gold mine. I don’t even know where to start. When it came out I was maybe seven years old, but I discovered it later — really truly discovered it. I was heavily into the Rolling Stones, I went chronologically. Beggars Banquet blew my mind. And then Let it Bleed, that remains my favorite. but Exile is a masterpiece. People are surprised to hear that I like the Rolling Stones. I don’t write music like that, but that’s the music that motivates me. I try to keep up with new music and there’s a ton of great new bands and stuff that I like, but you know, you put that on and you’re like, ‘Fuck yeah! This is genius! What the hell? these guys were out of their minds.’ They’re like aliens — it’s completely out of this world.”

MGMT’s Ben Goldwasser:
“It’s one of those albums that I’ve heard so many times in different settings that it’s more about like associating songs on it with experiences. It’s kind of a life experience. The album reminds me the most of the summer I spent in Athens, Georgia. it was a summer of alternating between listening to records and swimming in a pool. The band was a couple years old. we weren’t really playing out that much. That was the summer that we kinda started writing.”

The Dead’s Phil Lesh:
“My favorite song on that album was ‘Tumbling Dice.’ we did it a few times with Phil Lesh and Friends. It’s a gas to play live. I really love the flow of it — it rolls like a river.”

Bonnaroo 2010 Lineup Revealed: Jay-Z, Dave Matthews Band, Kings of …

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Photo: Winter/Getty

The lineup for the 2010 Bonnaroo Festival is very slowly rolling out as artists playing the Manchester, Tennessee fest are revealing the news via Twitter, MySpace and their official Websites. It’s all part of the Internet-wide global “virtual event” that organizers planned to drum up excitement for this year’s fest, which will take place June 10th to 13th. Tickets for the festival went go on sale at 12 p.m. EST at the official Bonnaroo Website. throughout the day, the Bonnaroo MySpace page revealed the artists playing this year’s fest one-by-one, with the last addition to the lineup, Stevie wonder, announced just before 9 p.m. EST. the full lineup is below.

Relive ‘Roo ‘09 in photos: Bruce, Phish and more.

After weeks of speculation, it was revealed that Jay-Z would be among the headliners at the 2010 fest. Hova will also headline at the Coachella festival in April. Dave Matthews Band, Stevie wonder and Kings of Leon were also named Bonnaroo headliners. Phoenix were the first band to “officially” announce they’ll be performing Bonnaroo, with Weezer coming in a close second. Jeff Beck, John Fogerty, OK go, Martin Medeski & Wood and the Avett Brothers also confirmed they’ll be on hand. as Rolling Stone previously reported, the Flaming Lips’ Wayne Coyne accidentally let slip that his band will perform Pink Floyd’s The Dark side of the Moon during a late-night set, while still-unconfirmed reports named Paul Simon as a potential headliner, which proved to be false as of now. Dave Matthews Band left a long gap in his summer touring schedule around the festival, and the band’s slot on the lineup was confirmed three hours into the announcement rollout. to celebrate his headlining gig at Bonnaroo, Matthews drew a little cartoon on his iPhone marking the announcement. Watch it below:

This “virtual event,” however, has opened the window for unknown bands and people who aren’t even musicians to tweet that they are included in the lineup. Keep it tuned all day to Rolling Stone as we sift through the truth and the fiction while updating the official Bonnaroo lineup as it is announced.

Check out all of Rolling Stone’s coverage of Bonnaroo.

The complete initial Bonnaroo 2010 lineup:

Dave Matthews Band
Kings of Leon
Stevie Wonder
Jay-Z
Tenacious D
Weezer
The Flaming Lips with Stardeath and White Dwarfs perform “Dark side of the Moon”
The Dead Weather
Damian Marley & Nas
Phoenix
Norah Jones
Michael Franti & Spearhead
John Fogerty
Regina Spektor
Jimmy Cliff
LCD Soundsystem
The Avett Brothers
Thievery Corporation
Rise Against
Tori Amos
The National
Zac Brown Band
Les Claypool
John Prine
The Black Keys
Steve Martin & the Steep Canyon Rangers
Jeff Beck
Dropkick Murphys
She & Him
Against Me!
The Disco Biscuits
Daryl Hall & Chromeo
Jamey Johnson
Clutch
Bassnectar
Kid Cudi
Baaba Maal
Kris Kristofferson
Medeski Martin & Wood
The xx
GWAR
Dan Deacon Ensemble
Tinariwen
Wale
Deadmau5
The Melvins
Gaslight Anthem
Miike Snow
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
Dr. Dog
They might be Giants
Punch Brothers
Isis
Blitzen Trapper
Blues Traveler
Miranda Lambert
Calexico
OK Go
Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue
Martin Sexton
Lotus
Baroness
Dave Rawlings Machine
Mayer Hawthorne and the County
Japandroids
Jay Electronica
Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros
Ingrid Michaelson
The Dodos
Manchester Orchestra
The Temper Trap
Cross Canadian Ragweed
Big Sam’s Funky Nation
Carolina Chocolate Drops
Tokyo Police Club
The Entrance Band
Local Natives
Brandi Carlile
Mumford & Sons
Rebelution
Diane Birch
Monte Montgomery
Julia Nunes
The Postelles
Lucero
Here we go Magic
Hot Rize
Neon Indian
B.O.B
Needtobreathe

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