"It was the first work to show that a rock act could reinvent itself in the face of irrelevance, the first great 'comeback' album of the genre, and the earliest indication that rock 'n' roll lives might be capable of something like second acts. At the end of a year that saw an explosion of double albums and single tracks that took up the better part of an LP side, all adorned with ever-newer forms of sonic gadgetry that promised musical corollaries to other consciousness-expanding materials of the day, it was a mostly acoustic album steeped in blues, folk, rockabilly, and other, more inscrutable influences that it felt like the band had conjured from some ragged musical beyond. It was mature, painstaking, and ferociously intelligent, all things the Stones had rarely been previously accused of being. It was, weirdly, from a band who'd spent their early years as the music's foremost exemplars of incorrigible youth, a road map toward something like adulthood that didn't involve quitting the road and gradually disintegrating, a route their more-famous countrymen had recently taken."
Jack Hamilton at Slate argues that "the most consequential" album of 1968 was Beggars Banquet.
Friday, December 07, 2018
"The First Work That Rendered This Claim Credible"
Labels:
1960s,
Britain,
cultural history,
music,
twentieth century
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