The greatest Rolling Stones album deserves the most creative record store display.

I’m happy to say I’ve once again acquired my favorite Rolling Stones record store display.
Standing close to 48″ tall with near naked Mick in black an blue covering himself with nothing more than Andy Warhol’s now infamous record design.

Incredibly striking for the time, remember this was 1971, as out there as you get.
The Stones never afraid to push the boundaries of what might be considered as “bad taste.”
But, that’s why we love ‘em.

I also learned or realized something that perhaps I should have known already.
This Mick figure often turns up without the back part of the display.
It’s often sold as just the figure described as a variation of the display.

Wrong.

It’s more than likely the figure with the tabs cut off.

This Mick is die cut and stands away from the back of the display with various tabs that insert into slots on the back of the display, giving him a 3-D look.

The one I previously owned had the Mick stuck to the back of the display.
I could see the slots the tabs were supposed to fit in, but they weren’t there.

I can now thankfully cross this off the want list.
Thanks Ken.

Some Girls Standee. How rare is it? How much is it worth? Really.

Plug in “Rolling Stones display” into the ebay search bar and you’ll likely see these listings.
The top 5 are all the Some Girls standees from 1978.
Prices ranging from a whopping $3800.00 down to $450.

The least expensive condition being only fair.
This piece has become a pretty commonly seen display on ebay.
Despite being one of the most collectible of all Stones albums, Some Girls displays are not all that rare.
Unlike the amazing English posters.
One produced for each Stone.

Shown is the English in-store poster promoting the new album.
Examples of both Mick and Keith from the individual series.

In 1978 when the album was released the Stones as always broke the rules, and pushed the boundaries of design yet again.

This piece stands roughly 52″ tall.
Meant to stand on the floor of a record store, there was also a counter display version.

The point of this post is to say, prices vary wildly on ebay, you should shop around before you jump and buy.
My advice would be to never pay more than $750 for this particular piece.
If you’re going to drop $3000 on piece for your collection, spend your money on a nice set of 60′s signatures.

You’ll even save yourself a few bucks.

Another rarity from the “Love You Live” album surfaces. Never before seen store display.

This is the kind of thing that gets my blood boiling and keeps me on the hunt.

Rolling Stones collector, Ira Korman from California scored a never before seen display promoting the extremely collectible, Warhol designed “Love You Live” album from 1977.

The display measures 22.5″ x 15″ and is easel backed
That’s a full size LP cover in Mick’s mouth. It’s believed to be English and came out of Europe.

Photo courtesy of Ira Korman and from the Ira Korman collection.

The Rolling Stones first US single, “Not Fade Away.”

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In 1964, The Rolling Stones’ cover of “Not Fade Away”, with its strong emphasis on the Bo Diddley beat, became a major hit in Britain and served as the A-side of the band’s first US single.

The Rolling Stones version of “Not Fade Away” was one of their first classic hits. Recorded in late January of 1964 and released by Decca on February 21, 1964, with “Little by Little” as the B-side, it was their first Top 5 hit in Great Britain, reaching #3. In March 1964 it was also the Rolling Stones’ first single release in the United States, on the London Records label, with “I Wanna Be Your Man” as the B-side (briefly preceded by “Stoned”, which had immediately been withdrawn). The single reached #48 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 singles chart. “Not Fade Away” was not on the UK version of their debut album, The Rolling Stones, but was the opening track of the US version released a month later as England’s Newest Hitmakers.

A early group of promo items a full page trade ad and a mailer/poster promoting their newest hit.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Not_Fade_Away_(song)

The greatest Rolling Stones album ever, about to get released again. Exile on Main Street.

A billboard on Sunset Blvd promoting the new album. As you can imagine, not without controversy.

A billboard on Sunset Blvd promoting the new album. As you can imagine, not without controversy.

Universal Music Group recently announced that the Rolling Stones’ masterpiece album Exile on Main Street is being re-released on May 18, with 10 never-before-heard tracks.

The classic album is ranked seventh on Rolling Stone Magazine’s “Greatest Albums of All Time” list. Though he thought all the material had already been used for the album, Rolling Stones’ frontman Mick Jagger was asked by Universal to find some bonus songs.

Lucky for us, he was able to get his hands on 10 new tracks for our listening pleasure. Lead guitarist Keith Richards and Jagger also revamped some of the old tracks.

“I added some percussion and some vocals. Keith put guitar on one or two,” Jagger told Rolling Stone.

Richards and Jagger were cautious not to change too much about the album

“I didn’t want to interfere with the Bible,” said Richards. “They still had that great basement sound.”

The 18-track double-album was originally recorded in a few different locations, in a non-consecutive manner. Locations included Olympic Studios in London, Richards’ mansion in France, and Los Angeles, where the real Main Street inspired the album’s title. It was originally released in 1972.

“Every song on Exile on Main Street is elevated by its relationship to the music that comes before and after it. The album’s irresistible power is unlikely to diminish any time soon,” said author Anthony DeCurtis, who is now a contributing editor for Rolling Stone. Clearly, he knew what he was talking about, as Exile’s musical draw has not languished the slightest bit with time.

Along with the album, The Rolling Stones will be releasing a newly filmed documentary titled “Stones in Exile,” which was made especially for this occasion. Directed by Stephen Kijak, the documentary follows the making of Exile, and includes exclusive footage of past concerts and studio sessions.

“I must not have noticed all the cameramen while I was making the record,” Richards told Rolling Stone. “I was amazed at how much footage they actually found.”

The documentary will be sold as part of a package, which will include a vinyl record, the deluxe CD edition with the 10 bonus tracks and a 50-page collector’s book with old photos from the Exile on Main Street days.

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Super rare promo poster featuring 3-Ball Charlie.

Exile on Main Street was a 1972 release (on Atlantic Records) by The Rolling Stones, with cover artwork & design by John Van Hamersveld. When the Rolling Stones released Exile in 1972 – a double album of songs representing the many different genres of music that shaped Stones music at the time – fans and critics found themselves having to spend a lot of time trying to “get it”. It required a number of listens to gain an appreciation of what, on the surface, often seemed to be a collection of studio out-takes and Richards/Taylor/Watts jams than a freshly-recorded musical offering.

Many critics of the era failed to appreciate the Stones’ explorations of R&B, Soul, Country and roots Rock that were spread over the 4 album sides. In fact, the record was comprised of a series of recordings done during the previous four years and, as such, they featured a variety of mixes (some better than others) and showed the band building on top of these influences in their own inimitable style to the point that, now over 35 years later, the package is considered by many to be the band’s most-authentic offering. It is always listed near the top of most of the “Best Of” and “Greatest” lists (#7 on the Rolling Stone Magazine 2003 list of the “500 Greatest Albums of All Time”, #22 on VH-1’s survey, and even impressed the younger generation enough to be ranked #11 on Pitchfork’s 2003 list of Best Albums of the 1970s).

In a similar fashion, when the buying public took their first look at the design and imagery of the sprawling record cover, most people admitted that they didn’t “get it”. Having just soaked in Warhol’s ultimately-iconic zipper cover for Sticky Fingers, fans should have been ready for anything, but John Van Hamersveld’s designs seemed to confound them, asking them to digest a rough, anti-establishment, punk-before-there-was-punk collage of images that may have, initially, combined with the unfamiliar musical stylings to impact sales (don’t worry, as the record was supported by the now-famous 1972 American concert tour and songs such as “Happy” and “Tumbling Dice” got some significant radio play, the record went on to top the charts in the U.S. and the U.K.).

And so when Van Hamersveld, who’d established his industry cred via his poster and package designs for Hendrix, The Beatles (Magical Mystery Tour), Jefferson Airplane (Crown of Creation) and others, was approached by the Rolling Stones (who were in a studio in LA putting the finishing touches on this new album) to work on the graphics and packaging for a songbook project the band wanted to release, an interesting series of events on the day of their initial meeting had a profound impact on the course of album art history.

Bill Janovitz' book on Exile. A must read.

Bill Janovitz' book on Exile. A must read.

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Above is the ultra rare Exile Store Display.

Read the complete story behind this great work of art on our RockPoP Gallery/”Cover Story” blog -

http://rockpopgallery.typepad.com/rockpop_gallery_news/2008/04/cover-story—t.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exile_on_Main_St.

I’m a drummer. What could be better than hanging with other drummers?

A quick story about a hack drummer’s dream. Hanging out at the Zildjian cymbal booth at the NAMM show in Anaheim last week.
NAMM is the premier music industry show.
Covering 800,000 square feet in 4 days was not easy. I tried, but found I was most comfortable just hanging out with some of the best drummers in the world at the Zildjian booth.

Here left to right…. John DeChristopher, Vice President, Artist Relations &
Event Marketing Worldwide at Zildjian, me, and Max Weinberg of the famed Bruce Springsteen E Street Band.

Max Weinberg is a Zildjian artist as is Charlie Watts of the Rolling Stones. Danny Seraphine of Chicago, Kenny Aronoff, Steve Smith, Alan White, Sheila E., and Hal Blaine to name a few.

Here’s a list of the drummers that showed up at the Zildjian booth to sign autographs for the thousands that lined up on Friday and Saturday.
The best of the best.

I got to meet Max again when he played with his Big Band in Cambridge this past summer.

Early Rolling Stones Handbills. They weren’t always the opening act.

There was a time, believe it or not, when the Rolling Stones opened for or shared the bill with some acts most of us have never hear of.
These English handbills are rare examples of the early advertisements and posters promoting the band back when.
When they needed people to show up.
Printed on thin paper and posted on walls or handed out, these rarities were quickly tossed away and torn down after the shows.
It’s a history of the venues as well as acts the Stones played with in their early days.
Almost impossible to find today.
Most carry a pretty hefty price, usually somewhere in the thousands.

The selling of Mick, Keith, Brian, Bill and Charlie. 1964-1965.

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Selling merchandise has long been associated with any kind of music/artist marketing effort.
Make something with their image on it, someone will buy it.
Simple right?
Even back when they were marketing the first “Rock and Roll Icon” of all time, Elvis Presley, you could buy
Teddy Bear perfume, hankies, guitars, record players, hound dog stuffed animals, you name it.

The Colonel made it, and made sure it sold.

It was then a precedent was set that has carried through till today.

No shortage of Hannah Montana dolls, guitars, wigs, or games on the shelves these days heh?

The selling of the Rolling Stones, “The Not So Lovable Mop Tops,” presented its own set of problems and challenges for Andrew Loog Oldham and his team.
What do we create and manufacture that fits their image?
And more importantly, will anybody buy it?
The primary audience for this kind of merchandise was usually young girls, the majority of the fan base.
And although the Stones had their fair share of female fans, The Beatles were probably easier to sell anyone and everyone.

The Rolling Stones were the first band of their time where you
could actually find boys screaming at their shows.

Though The Fab Four had it all.
Dolls, wigs, hairspray, combs, notebooks, pencils, ice cream bars, gum cards, record players, guitars, drums, candy, games, you name it.
Literally thousands of items.

The Rolling Stones ended up with but a handful.
I guess Andrew found that their “bad boy” image in the end wasn’t all that marketable.

Hell, I would bought the stuff.
And fans and collectors are still buying it now.

Only it’s a tad more expensive these days.

Here’s a few of the items from the 60′s.
These are the rarest of all Stones collectibles.
And believe it or not, would command in the thousands if sold today.

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Micks Maracas. WTF?!!!!

Mick's Maraccas. WTF?!!!!

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This guitar has and will sell for $2500 in auction is very good condition.

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