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Choose an option, Unframed print on paper 13x19 inches. Grab a seat and watch as every one in the bar is hit in the face by Richard and Taylor’s guitars. Morgan Howell: Supersize Single, The Rolling Stones, Tumbling Dice.
![the rolling stones tumbling dice the rolling stones tumbling dice](https://i.etsystatic.com/19350089/r/il/fe20fc/1793405673/il_570xN.1793405673_2z9l.jpg)
7 on the top 500 albums of all time, is wall to wall honkey-tonk, blues and rock, and “Tumbling Dice” is the epitome of all three. The entire album, named by Rolling Stone Magazine in 2003 as No. The song is one of the standout tracks on Exile on Main Street, the 1972 classic from the band. He seems happy with being just a pair of “tumbling dice.”
![the rolling stones tumbling dice the rolling stones tumbling dice](https://i.etsystatic.com/11963592/r/il/572aec/1404336355/il_fullxfull.1404336355_3dbu.jpg)
Jagger is a broken hearted protagonist that knows he is the “rank outsider,” yet, there is no trace of sadness or resignation in his voice. With a blues shuffle that never lets up and a chorus that is easy to sing along with, it has all the elements of a great barroom ballad. From the first whiskey soaked twang of Keith Richards’ guitar and Mick Taylor’s slide to Mick Jagger’s signature growl crooning about cheating women who, “think I’m tasty, but they always tryin’ to waste me,” this song is the embodiment of the roadhouse. While The Rolling Stones do have more popular songs than “Tumbling Dice,” there are none so tailor made for a night of drinking. To fill these qualifications, I offer for your consideration The Rolling Stones’ “Tumbling Dice.” The key is to go for a track that both belongs in a bar (so no club jams) and makes you feel like pumping your fist (while not being a jock-rock song). If you throw on something like Journey, you might get everyone in the bar singing all together, but they would be singing Journey and that would be terrible. You hit your favorite watering hole to start your evening and you want to find the perfect song to listen to as you pound cocktails. So your night out has begun, and now you’re in the mood to party. In the first week, we gave a shout out to Janelle Monae, this week, get “stoned” with The Rolling Stones. To assure yourself that your night was worth waiting for all week, The Metropolitan has selected five songs, which will be highlighted during the next month, to help put you in the right frame of mind. No matter how high you are going to make it, you have to start with the right foundation. Stevie and Mick Jagger made music on the road, sharing the microphone for renditions of “Uptight” and “Satisfaction.” The New York Times, Don Heckman reported, “Spectacular as the Stones were…my most vivid memories are of the charged-up playing and singing of the blind soul singer/musician Stevie Wonder and his crisp little band, Wonderlove.” While most of Wonder’s set was made up of songs that were hits from 1960s, he ended the set with a show-stopping extended preview of “Superstition,” three months before the single was released by Motown.A night out is like a building. Meanwhile, opening for the Stones was 22-year old Stevie Wonder who was seen and heard by an estimated 500,000 fans on the tour. Pies were also wheeled in, leading to a pie fight between the Rolling Stones and the audience. The last show was on July 26th, Jagger's birthday, featured balloons and confetti falling from Madison Square Garden's ceiling and Jagger blowing the candles off a huge cake. There were also huge clashes between fans and police throughout the tour as the authorities tried to arrest people for using drugs. The tour itself was marked by voracious partying and repeated clashes between police and concert-goers starting with the very first show in Vancouver when 31 policemen were injured as 2,000 people without tickets tried to crash the concert. This poster was designed by Randy Tuten, one of Bill Graham’s regular stable of artists. The Stones played two shows at each of these dates at the rather intimate (5,000 people) Winterland Ballroom, with San Francisco being the third stop on their tour. 1972 saw the Rolling Stones returning to play the United States after their 1969 tour ended with the disaster at Altamont.