keith richards, anita pallenberg and gram parsons in grand flophouse mode at the 16-bedroom villa, where they recorded exile on main st. in 1971 by dominique tarlé.
jagger and richards. 'there was a friction at that time,' says marshall chess, who ran the stones's own record label. 'mick didn't like exile; it was being made in keith's domain. and then there was the drug issue'.
the rolling stones, pallenberg, parsons and kids lunch at the south of france villa, where they spent six months in 1971 avoiding the english taxman.
mick jagger gets some headspace outside the villa on the côte d'zzur. 'people appeared, disappeared, no one had a last name, you didn't know who anybody was,' remembers robert greenfield.
richards and parsons. 'keith and gram were two peas in a pod,' says gretchen carpenter, then married to parsons. 'they were best friends, exploring music. They were instantaneous friends, and instantaneous troublemakers.
richards and pallenberg, who had rented the villa with their son marlon, shortly after anita had come out of rehab.
photographs of the rolling stones at villa nellcôte (where they recorded exile on main st.) by dominique tarlé will be on display at the atlas gallery, in association with raj prem fine art photography from 15 july to 31 august 2010 in london.
Don't know if it went through the first time... Thanks for a terrific post, Candy. Would have loved to be there!!
ReplyDeleteyou and me both! not only for the stones but <3 gram parsons!
ReplyDelete....posting on here is odd - not sure why but you have to do it twice! i can't figure out how to correct it. argh.
I saw some prints in a small gallery in Paris a few months ago, the photos are truly beautiful !
ReplyDelete