The Rolling Stones - Hot Rocks, 1964-1971 [24 bit FLAC] vinylseeders: 3
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The Rolling Stones - Hot Rocks, 1964-1971 [24 bit FLAC] vinyl (Size: 3.1 GB)
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The Rolling Stones - Hot Rocks, 1964-1971 (1972) [24 bit FLAC] vinyl
Released: 1972 Genre: Pop/Rock Style: Album Rock Codec: FLAC Bit Rate: ~ 5,000 kbps Bits Per Sample: 24 Sample Rate: 192,000 Hz 01. Time Is On My Side 3.03 02. Heart Of Stone 2.46 03. Play With Fire 2.19 04. (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction 3.48 05. As Tears Go By 2.45 06. Get Off My Cloud 2.59 07. Mother's Little Helper 2.50 08. 19th Nervous Breakdown 4.00 09. Paint It Black 3.26 10. Under My Thumb 3.44 11. Ruby Tuesday 3.17 12. Let's Spend The Night Together 3.36 13. Jumping Jack Flash 3.42 14. Street Fighting Man 3.20 15. Sympathy For The Devil 6.27 16. Honky Tonk Women 3.02 17. Gimme Shelter 4.35 18. Midnight Rambler (live) 9.11 19. You Can't Always Get What You Want 7.34 20. Brown Sugar 3.54 21. Wild Horses 5.44 This two-LP/two-CD set is both a lot more and a bit less than what it seems. It is seven years' worth of mostly very high-charting -- and all influential and important -- songs, leaving out some singles in favor of well-known album tracks, and in the process, giving an overview not just of the Rolling Stones' hits but of their evolving image. One hears them change from loud R&B-inspired rockers covering others' songs ("Time Is on My Side") into originators in their own right ("Satisfaction"); then into tastemakers and style-setters with a particularly decadent air ("Get Off of My Cloud," "19th Nervous Breakdown"); and finally into self-actualized rebel-poets ("Jumpin' Jack Flash," "Midnight Rambler") and Shaman-like symbols of chaos. On its initial release, Hot Rocks sold well, not only as a unique compilation but also as a panorama of the 1960s. The only flaw was that it didn't give a good look at the Stones' full musical history, ignoring their early blues period and the psychedelic era. There are also some anomalies in Hot Rocks' history for the collector -- the very first pressings included an outtake of "Brown Sugar" featuring Eric Clapton that was promptly replaced; and the original European CD version, issued as two separate discs on the Decca label, was also different from its American counterpart, featuring a version of "Satisfaction" mastered in stereo and putting the guitars on separate channels for the first time. Those musicologist concerns aside, this is still an exciting assembly of material. Sharing Widget |
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