Catch the Rolling Stones

The Rolling Stones hit a high note by rereleasing a movie of the 1972 concert.

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Wenn
Wenn

The Rolling Stones have hit their peak again in 2010, this time in the form of a rarely seen rereleased movie of a 1972 concert.

Ladies and Gentlemen... The Rolling Stones was originally released in late 1973 in Britain, but the film was not widely shown. The digitally remastered version, which made its global premiere recently in London, shows the Stones at their best, belting out classics like Brown Sugar, You Can't Always Get What You Want and Jumpin' Jack Flash along with "new" songs like Tumbling Dice, Sweet Virginia and Rip This Joint.

The latter songs were all on the 1972 album Exile on Main St, which was also remastered and rereleased this year to great acclaim. None of the current Rolling Stones members that are in the movie - Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and Charlie Watts - made it for the premiere, but former bassist Bill Wyman was in attendance. Wyman was with the band for 30 years but quit in 1992 to explore other musical opportunities. Although Jagger wasn't there, a short interview with the lead singer was played on screen before the movie began.

"Everyone's very together and on," Jagger said in the interview, which was recorded about six weeks earlier in London. "I can remember the Rolling Stones being very, kind of, lackadaisical, very sloppy band on stage. But this was obviously not the case on this day."

The 1972 tour saw the Stones at their peak, or at least at the tail end of it. The five-year period leading up to that year is generally regarded as the band's prime. From Beggars Banquet in 1968 through Let It Bleed in 1969 and Sticky Fingers in 1971, the Stones were the ultimate rock ‘n' roll band, playing hard and partying harder. The movie, pieced together from several different concerts played in Texas, was digitally remastered and will be shown in theatres around the world in the coming weeks. The DVD and Blu-ray versions are set to be released next month, according to Eagle Rock Entertainment chief operating officer Geoff Kempin.

This year the Stones also released Stones in Exile, a documentary about the making of Exile on Main St. "(Jagger is) very strategic about where and when he wants stuff released," Kempin said.

The movie opens with a black screen and some background noise. Soon, though, the lights come on and Watts starts banging on his drums as the band breaks into Brown Sugar.

Throughout the movie, the clothes change as the concert footage switches from show to show, but the music remains crisp and tight.

The footage also harkens back to the days when playing concerts was more intimate for the band because the stage was so small, especially compared to later tours when Jagger would constantly be on the move, sometimes even running through the crowd with security guards all around him.

"We were really close together, super close together," Jagger said.

And with no additional vocals and only some keyboards and percussion in support, the sound was more raw. "I haven't heard the Stones signing without backing vocals for years," said Mike Griffiths, a 59-year-old television director and longtime fan. "It took me back."

The movie features 15 songs without interruption, finishing off with Jumpin' Jack Flash and Street Fighting Man. "It was," Jagger said, "a good choice of songs."

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