Fifty-four years ago today, The Rolling Stones put out Exile on Main St.
Critics in 1972 didn’t know what to make of the 18-track double LP and weren’t quite sure what they had on their hands. Today Exile sits near the top of just about every “greatest rock album” list. The band is headed back into headlines this week with a fresh record on the way.
Exile hit U.S. shelves May 12, 1972. It was the Stones’ tenth U.K. studio album. The LP birthed Tumbling Dice, which peaked at number seven and was the only Exile single to crack the U.S. Top 10.
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The Tax Exile That Shaped a Classic
Half the legend lives in the recording. To dodge a sky-high British tax bill in 1971, Keith Richards rented Nellcote, a sprawling villa on the French Riviera near Nice. The band cobbled together a makeshift basement studio. Hallways, the kitchen, and side rooms all got drafted in as recording spaces. Summer heat down there was brutal. Sessions stretched on for months while Mick Jagger, Charlie Watts, Bill Wyman, and Mick Taylor came and went, and visitors drifted through Nellcote at all hours.
That lived-in chaos gave Exile its ragged, smoky sound.
From Mixed Reviews to Masterpiece
Reviewers split when Exile first arrived. Muddy, said some. Overlong, said others. A few years on, that view flipped, and Exile climbed every best-of-the-decade ledger going. Rolling Stone magazine slotted it at number seven on its first 500 Greatest Albums of All Time list.
The 54-year mark lands just as the Stones prep their next album, Foreign Tongues. Richards confirmed Foreign Tongues this week in New York. The record will feature guest spots from Paul McCartney, Robert Smith, Steve Winwood, plus tracks featuring late drummer Charlie Watts. Richards also told reporters a 2026 tour isn’t happening.
Then he added, “we can talk next year.”

