7/10
Exile to a stuffy basement on the Riviera
4 August 2020
The Stones' Exile on Main Street is rightly considered to be one of the greatest rock & roll albums of all time. It is a sprawling, sloppy affair, studded with surprises and moments of brilliance. Much of the album is raw and bluesy, so that is why this documentary of how it was made has some unexpected facts to share. They may have been in exile, but they weren't on any Main Street that I can think of. You might think that something like this was recorded in the American South, or New York City, but no--it was made in the hot, stuffy basement of a rented villa in the French Riviera (that capital of rough-hewn blues rock).

It was not thrown together in a few weeks, something you might imagine given some of the tracks included on it, but in fact took several months of work to complete. Apparently the boys would head over to Keith's house night after night, bringing their drugs and booze, and work on their music, despite at least some of them feeling homesick. The results, which most of us have heard by now, were spectacular.

Where this doc falls short is when they producers decided to stretch out the good material they had by putting in interviews with musicians and show biz people who had nothing to do with this album. Don Was. Benicio Del Toro. Sheryl Crow. What was the point of that? They could have just as easily included interviews with fans, people who really loved the music--that might have been more interesting.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed