Exile on Main St. might not be the greatest album of all time*, but it is, without a doubt the greatest rock 'n' roll album of all time. Note that I don't include any qualifier on the preceding sentence limiting it to my opinion. That's because it's an incontrovertible fact. Exile is the Great American Record**, the inevitable culmination of Berry, Charles, Richard, Lewis, ect. ect. Tom Waits put it best when he said that the album was "a tree of life...the watering hole."
I've read about ten of these 33 1/3 books and generally they're quick and entertaining reads that enhances enjoyment of records. The volume on Exile is no exception. Bill Janovitz, of the band Buffalo Tom, isn't a writer, and this both helps and hurts the book. So much of the making of the album is enshrined in legend to aficionados. Exile is one of those albums, perhaps sterling example, where the recording process is almost inseparable from the album itself. The whole, "hey let's take the band and our closest friends, move to a house, do a lot of drugs, and make some incredible music," has been often imitated but never duplicated. When Janovitz covers this it often sounds book reporty.
Where Janovitz really shines is when he starts examining the record song-by-song. I like to read these books while listening to the album, and Janovitz gives an excellent "listening tour" to Exile. He gives you the details of the recordings, who subbed in for Charlie on this track, which parts were overdubbed in L.A., which tracks Gram Parsons allegedly sung harmonies on, ect. But he's studio experience helps you notice things you might have missed after dozens of close listenings. For instance, Janowitz directing me towards Jimmy Miller's piano part on "Ventilator Blues" has forever changed the track for me. Also, I never noticed that Mick drops the C bomb in "Rocks Off."
It's hard to separate the album and the book in determining a rating. In truth the book, using the goodreads star system, is a three star book, but it makes a six star album a seven star one, so it gets a bonus star.
* But then again, it might be.
** Possible disputants: Highway 61, The Basement Tapes,Songs in the Key of Life? Any ideas?