So far over the course of this series, we've examined the madness and socio-political movements that made the Rolling Stones' 1972 North American tour a singular moment in pop culture. But very little attention has been paid to the music — especially the album that the Stones were on the road to promote: their moody double disc epic 'Exile on Main St.' To remedy this, host Jordan Runtagh and executive producer/co-composer Noel Brown sit down with legendary Georgia-based record maker David Barbe, a veteran of the band Sugar (with Hüsker Dü's Bob Mould) and the producer of albums from the likes of Drive-By Truckers and Son Volt. Together they throw down about all things Stones and discuss why the sound and style of 'Exile' continues to endure.
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TWELVE: The End of the Road in New York City
ELEVEN: Bombings, Busts, and Boston Burning
TEN: Sex, Drugs and Motel Mayhem in the Midwest
NINE: Culture Clash in the South
EIGHT: Up All Night in Chicago's Playboy Mansion
SEVEN: Madness and Manson in the Hollywood Hills
MID-TOUR PITSTOP: Chris O'Dell Recalls Life on the Road as the Rolling Stones' Right Hand Woman
SIX: Ghosts of Altamont in San Francisco (Part 2)
FIVE: Ghosts of Altamont in San Francisco (Part I)
FOUR: Vancouver Venue Invasion
THREE: Deadlines, Detox and the L.A. High Life
TWO: 'Exile' and Drug Runners in the French Riviera
ONE: America in Flames, Stones in the Crosshairs
Introducing: Stones Touring Party
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