

Watching The Stones at Altamont. December 6, 1969.

The Angels vs The Airplane.


Watching The Stones at Altamont. December 6, 1969.

The Angels vs The Airplane.
I watched the Rolling Stones’ Rock and Roll Circus the other night. It was pretty good with the Stones’ performance being the one I’d say I dug the most. The real treat for me was on the DVD’s extras, commentary by director Michael Lindsay-Hogg. After spending last summer listening to the dozens of hours of audio of the fabs’ Let It Be sessions, which heavily feature Lindsay-Hogg who directed the film (see “critics” post below), it was great hearing that guy’s voice again. His Rock and Roll Circus commentary had to be recorded thirty years after the event but his winning mix of pretentiousness, name dropping (often unfamiliar name dropping), charm, cluelessness and a least one instance of his habit of referring to people by their initials, remained intact. Below is a screen grab of M.L-H. taken from the Let It Be film. Below that is a Stones performance from the film.

Stay tuned for more on Brian Jones and the fabs.

The generic Rolling Stones Records 45 sleeve really kills the competition. Circa 1972.
Posted in Jagger, music, on your sleeve, record labels
Record shopping today I bought another copy of the Stones’ Exile on Main Street LP. This copy included some (but sadly not all) of the postcards that came with the first run of record and here they are:




A 1990s CD booklet included reproductions of these cards. My reaction to them then is pretty much the same as my reaction now, “what the fuck is this all about?” Must’ve had to have been there.




“Brothers and sisters, brothers and sisters, brothers and sisters, why are we fighting?”


Gimme Shelter. 1970. David Maysles, Albert Maysles and Charlotte Zwerin.
“Altmont was the culmination of a long series of bad trips in the Rock world and its perhaps perfect matching of the most sinister figures in American and British Pop cultures, The Hell’s Angels and the Rolling Stones is one of those master strokes of history beyond the invention of any fiction writer or film-maker…Bravo, you measly brothers! You’ve captured on film the epic of a self-destructive generation.”
– Albert Goldman, The New York Times
Posted in cinema, dig the critics, Jagger, music