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  1. The guys sing along to a song while on the bus and eventually arrive at Barry's grandparents' house. I See You Baby. Groove Armada. 1h 9m. While Barry's grandfather watches TV, the guys show up. Kyle's parents inquire at the hotel if anyone has seen their son. Lovin' Machine. The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion. 1h 15m.

    • “Doom and Gloom” in Avengers: Endgame
    • “Gimme Shelter” in The Departed
    • “(I Can’T Get No) Satisfaction” in Apocalypse Now
    • “Sweet Virginia” in Knives Out
    • “Ruby Tuesday” in The Royal Tenenbaums
    • “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” in Mean Streets
    • “Out of Time” in Once Upon A Time in Hollywood
    • “2000 Man” in Bottle Rocket
    • “Monkey Man” in Goodfellas
    • “Paint It Black” in Full Metal Jacket

    The highest-grossing movie of all time, Avengers: Endgame, has a breathtaking original score by Alan Silvestri that made the big finale of the Marvel Cinematic Universe feel suitably epic. But it also has a couple of handpicked classic rock tunes in its soundtrack. The Rolling Stones’ “Doom and Gloom” plays while Rocket is fixing the ship. Also, th...

    Martin Scorsese has used “Gimme Shelter” a bunch of times throughout his career. There’s something about the song’s rough-and-tumble response to a violent world that fits right in with gangster stories. Arguably Scorsese’s best use of the track is in the opening of The Departedas Jack Nicholson’s Frank Costello explains his business in voiceover na...

    There are a ton of iconic music moments in Apocalypse Now, from the Doors’ “The End” opening the movie against images of napalm tearing through a jungle to Wagner’s “Ride of the Valkyries” setting the stage for a helicopter attack. The Rolling Stones’ “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” creates the perfect mood for the scene in which Lance surfs behind...

    Just as Marta is about to confess at the end of Knives Out, Benoit Blanc pieces the whole case together and Marta lies to get Ransom to admit to murder. After Ransom is arrested, the will goes through and the house becomes Marta’s. RELATED: This Is A Twisted Web: 10 Behind-The-Scenes Facts About Knives Out The Rolling Stones’ “Sweet Virginia” plays...

    Wes Anderson has used Rolling Stones songs in a bunch of his movies. In The Royal Tenenbaums, “Ruby Tuesday” plays after adoptive siblings Richie and Margot kiss. The song’s melancholic sound perfectly fits the tone of the story as Margot tells Richie that they can be together, but they’ll have to keep their love a secret.

    The dynamic at the heart of Martin Scorsese’s Mean Streetsis Charlie, a conflicted Catholic mobster, and Johnny Boy, his reckless young friend whose messes he constantly has to clean up. This is established when Charlie is sitting in the bar and Johnny Boy walks through the door in slow-motion with his arms around two girls, set to the Rolling Ston...

    There are a ton of classic ‘60s tracks on the soundtrack of Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. The Stones’ “Out of Time” plays at a crucial point in the film when Rick and Cliff are returning from Italy at the end of their working relationship and Joanna arrives at Sharon Tate’s house. RELATED: 10 Ways Once Upon A Time In Hollywood ...

    Wes Anderson’s debut feature Bottle Rocket was a crime comedy in the mold of Bande à part, telling the story of some regular people who decide to plot a crime and find themselves in over their heads. When the robbery inevitably goes wrong and the cops arrive, Dignan races back into the building to save Applejack set to the sounds of the Rolling Sto...

    The helicopter sequence in Goodfellasis one of the most frantic, electrifying set pieces in movie history. Martin Scorsese beautifully translated Henry Hill’s frazzled, coke-addled mindset to the screen, and part of this was changing the soundtrack eight times with different song fragments. One of those fragments is a chunk of the Rolling Stones’ “...

    Stanley Kubrick’s Full Metal Jacket is one of the greatest Vietnam War movies ever made. Rock ‘n’ roll tracks like “Surfin’ Bird” juxtaposed with the horrors of war contribute to the movie’s signature pitch-black comic tone. The Rolling Stones’ timeless classic “Paint It Black” plays over the end credits, letting Kubrick’s haunting satirical messag...

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    • "Loving Cup" in Shine a Light. Despite all the backing tracks for Hollywood's most famous montages and action scenes, nothing beats seeing the Stones live and close-up, as evidenced by Martin Scorsese's Shine a Light documentary, the height of which was the Stones' performance of "Loving Cup".
    • "Can't You Hear Me Knockin" in The Fighter. "Can't You Hear Me Knockin'" makes its presence felt late in The Fighter, as Mickey Ward's (Mark Wahlberg) training scene opposite his brother Dicky (Christian Bale) acts as the film's crescendo, with the estranged brothers reuniting after Dicky kicks his heroin habit thaniks to a prison stint.
    • "Paint it Black" in Full Metal Jacket. Watching Full Metal Jacket today, you might find it surprising that Stanley Kubrick found the Stones' pop iconography as important as the director more directly associated with the band — Martin Scorsese.
    • "Monkey Man" in Goodfellas. Let it Bleed remains one of the great Stones albums, from an era when Mick Taylor graced the Stones as their second guitarist after the death of Brian Jones, before Ronnie Wood later took on the role.
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    • Derek Scancarelli
    • 2 min
    • "Gimme Shelter" (1969) It takes just the opening notes of "Gimme Shelter" to be transported to another time in American history. Off the 1969 album Let It Bleed, the soothing-yet-haunting harmonies and crescendoing riffs build tension to later relinquish it.
    • "Jumpin' Jack Flash" (1968) Of all the greatest songs in music, few open with a line as defining as Jagger's drawling assertion: "I was born in a crossfire hurricane."
    • "Paint It, Black" (1966) The 1966 U.S. release of the Rolling Stones' Aftermath starts off with a pounding rhythm and beautiful — yet decidedly menacing and anxiety-inducing — guitar picking that confused music fans as much as it enticed them.
    • "Wild Horses" (1971) Recorded at Alabama's Muscle Shoals studio at the close of the '60s, "Wild Horses" is made of the magic only found in the most vulnerable moments of a raucous rockstar's subdued reflection.
    • "Time Is On My Side" (1964) The Rolling Stones are considered by many to be the world's greatest rock and roll band. These are their top 20 songs arranged in chronological order.
    • "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" (1965) "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction)" is considered by most observers to be one of the top rock songs of all times. The song was a #1 smash hit in both the US and the UK.
    • "Get Off of My Cloud" (1965) Mick Jagger and Keith Richards wrote "Get Off of My Cloud" in reaction to the rush of expectations of the group after the success of "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction."
    • "19th Nervous Breakdown" (1966) "19th Nervous Breakdown" was written while the Rolling Stones were on a concert tour in 1965. The song title came first and then Mick Jagger wrote the rest of the words around it.
  3. Mar 16, 2023 · The Best Road Trip Songs. 1. Sympathy For The Devil by the Rolling Stones. If you are looking for a song to drive to with a lot of groove, Sympathy for the Devil is just the ticket. We’ve been lucky enough to see the Rolling Stones in concert three times. Dave even met the band way back in 2003 when he shot a media blitz they did in Toronto.

  4. Oct 15, 2013 · 100 Greatest Rolling Stones Songs. From "Paint It Black" to "Shine a Light" – the hottest rocks from the Stones' 50-year career, chosen by our expert panel of writers, critics and artists. By ...

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