CLEVELAND (AP) — Over the years, curators at the Rock 
and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum have occasionally had trouble coaxing 
reluctant stars to help put together major exhibitions. Not so with 
members of The Rolling Stones, who made time in their packed anniversary 
schedule to help.
"Rolling Stones: 50 Years of Satisfaction," opening Friday and 
running through March 2014, covers two floors at the museum and contains scores 
of personal items.
"The timing was right," associate curator Craig Inciardi said. 
"Ordinarily, you would think that working on an exhibit while the 
artists are getting ready for a major tour would be a bad thing. In this case, 
it worked to our advantage in that they were all getting 
together, spending time making decisions in the same room. ... We ended 
up getting their full cooperation."
The interactive exhibit honoring Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and the 
band's other members is a tribute to their work, worldwide musical 
impact and continued relevance.
It's more than a celebration. In fact, it's a gas.
With nearly 300 artifacts on display, the exhibit chronicles the band from its 
birth in England as a blues cover band to its current "50 and 
Counting" tour. Rare guitars, stage outfits, concert posters, documents 
and personal items fill two floors.
After stepping through a doorway framed like the Stones' iconic 
tongue-and-lips logo — omnipresent in various shapes and sizes on the 
museum's fifth and sixth floors — visitors are taken back to the band's 
early days, even before founder Brian Jones, Jagger, Richards, Ian 
Stewart, Mick Taylor and Charlie Watts played their first gig.
There are gems of Stones' history interspersed throughout the 
exhibit. Impeccably mounted behind glass, the treasure trove of items 
includes:
— Fan questionnaires filled out in the early 1960s by the band. On 
his, Jagger listed his likes as "girls, eating, clothes" and dislikes as 
"intolerant people, having my hair cut."
— A silver serving tray the band "allegedly" stole from Station Hotel during a 
night of beer drinking.
— Jones' custom Vox teardrop guitar and Ronnie Wood's Zemaitis 
electric six-string, which has personalized etchings carved into the 
silver facing.
— Jagger's floor-length cape stitched out of U.S. and British flags that he 
wore on the 1981-82 tour.
— The 1970 letter the Stones sent to Santana, asking for permission 
to use footage of the band's performance at the infamous Altamont 
concert, which eventually became the film "Gimme Shelter."
— The original artwork for "It's Only Rock and Roll" and "Their Satanic 
Majesties Request."
However, this is hardly a staid stroll through display cases and wall hangings. 
With this exhibit, the hall is hoping to entertain, educate 
and enlighten.
For the first time, visitors can be included in the show with the 
launch of an interactive project where fans can share photos — the hall 
has lifted a ban on picture-taking in the exhibit — and other 
memorabilia at a multimedia display and online. Fans can upload images 
to Twitter and Instagram with the hashtag (hash)rockhallsatisfaction to 
contribute.
"This gave us an opportunity to engage the fans a little bit more," 
said Todd Mesek, vice president of communications. "'OK, show us your 
experience with the Stones. Show us your tickets, show us your set 
lists, show us your concert photos. What we're also doing with our new 
photo policy is letting fans take shots in here and send it out to the 
world, let them be a part of it."
The exhibit includes three iPad-based interactive kiosks where 
visitors can put on a pair of headphones and hear the band's early blues 
influences, explore the Jagger-Richards songwriting team and see how 
the band melded influences into its one-of-a-kind sound.
"We wanted to take visitors deeper into the sounds of the Stones and 
their music and hear it in a way they've never heard it before," said 
Jason Hanley, the hall's director of education. "... We had to think 
about 'how do we get 50 years of music into three different stations?' 
So we came up with the idea of focusing on them as real innovators who 
were always looking at the world around them and pulling in new things."

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

Post message: [email protected]
Subscribe   :  [email protected]
Unsubscribe :  [email protected]
List owner  :  [email protected]
Homepage    :  http://proletar.8m.com/Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Kirim email ke