<< FLAC The Rolling Stones - Goats Head Soup (Deluxe) (2020)
The Rolling Stones - Goats Head Soup (Deluxe) (2020)
Category Sound
FormatFLAC
SourceCD
BitrateLossless
GenreRock
TypeAlbum
Date 4 years, 2 months
Size 1.21 GB
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Post Description

Artist: The Rolling Stones
Title: Goats Head Soup (Deluxe)
Year Of Release: 1973/2020
Label: Polydor Records
Genre: Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 02:52:54
Total Size: 1.14 GB


Tracklist:

CD1
1. Dancing With Mr D (2020) (4:52)
2. 100 Years Ago (2020) (3:58)
3. Coming Down Again (2020) (5:54)
4. Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker) (2020) (3:27)
5. Angie (2020) (4:32)
6. Silver Train (2020) (4:26)
7. Hide Your Love (2020) (4:12)
8. Winter (2020) (5:29)
9. Can You Hear The Music (2020) (5:32)
10. Star Star (2020) (4:24)

CD2
1. Scarlet (feat. Jimmy Page) (3:44)
2. All The Rage (4:11)
3. Criss Cross (4:32)
4. 100 Years Ago (Piano Demo) (2:43)
5. Dancing With Mr D (Instrumental) (3:31)
6. Heartbreaker (Instrumental) (3:18)
7. Hide Your Love (Alternate Mix) (5:18)
8. Dancing With Mr D (4:34)
9. Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker) (3:26)
10. Silver Train (4:31)
11. Scarlet (The War On Drugs Remix) (feat. Jimmy Page) (3:49)
12. Scarlet (The Killers & Jacques Lu Cont Remix) (feat. Jimmy Page) (3:15)

CD3
1. Brown Sugar (Live / Forest National Arena, Brussels / 17/10/73) (3:56)
2. Gimme Shelter (Live / Forest National Arena, Brussels / 17/10/73) (5:33)
3. Happy (Live / Forest National Arena, Brussels / 17/10/73) (3:14)
4. Tumbling Dice (Live / Forest National Arena, Brussels / 17/10/73) (5:04)
5. Star Star (Live / Forest National Arena, Brussels / 17/10/73) (4:16)
6. Dancing With Mr D (Live / Forest National Arena, Brussels / 17/10/73) (4:38)
7. Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker) (Live / Forest National Arena, Brussels / 17/10/73) (5:03)
8. Angie (Live / Forest National Arena, Brussels / 17/10/73) (5:15)
9. You Can't Always Get What You Want (Live / Forest National Arena, Brussels / 17/10/73) (11:01)
10. Midnight Rambler (Live / Forest National Arena, Brussels / 17/10/73) (12:53)
11. Honky Tonk Women (Live / Forest National Arena, Brussels / 17/10/73) (3:12)
12. All Down The Line (Live / Forest National Arena, Brussels / 17/10/73) (4:21)
13. Rip This Joint (Live / Forest National Arena, Brussels / 17/10/73) (2:25)
14. Jumpin' Jack Flash (Live / Forest National Arena, Brussels / 17/10/73) (3:27)
15. Street Fighting Man (Live / Forest National Arena, Brussels / 17/10/73) (5:15)

How do you follow a monumental achievement like the 1972 masterpiece Exile on Main Street? The short answer is: you can't. And so if the Stones—who'd been on a massive roll of success from 1968's Beggars Banquet through Exile finally made a less than acclaimed album, who could blame them? Hence the tale of 1973's Goats Head Soup, the album forever blamed for the Stones inevitable stumble. While it's true that nothing on Goats Head Soup is on the level of Exile's many highlights ("Rip This Joint," "Tumbling Dice," "Sweet Virginia"), the album does have the Stones' finest near-ballad—the hit single "Angie"—and "Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker)," with Billy Preston on organ, and whose lyrics suddenly have fresh relevance ("The police in New York City/ They chased a boy right through the park/ And in a case of mistaken identity/ The put a bullet through his heart"). After that, however, it's a mixed bag. While they still can't be mistaken for top drawer Stones, much of the rest of the album—tunes like "Hide Your Love," "Winter" and "Can You Hear The Music"—is in retrospect not quite the filler they appeared to be in the wake of Exile.

The last record produced by Jimmy Miller, who was key to their 1968-72 successes, Goats Head Soup was also one of the worst sounding Stones records before being remastered and reissued in 1994, 2009 and 2011 (Japan only), with the only difference between versions being censored or uncensored versions of the infamous last track, the Chuck Berry-styled rave up, "Star Star." Here the entire record is available for the first time in a much-improved 96kHz/24-bit hi-res mix. Among the included outtakes is a ripping instrumental take of "Dancing with Mr. D"—Mick Taylor playing slide is truly revelatory and "Scarlet" (with Jimmy Page on guitar) which while promising sounds unfinished. Also part of the reissue is the extraordinary Brussels Affair, a 1973 live show broadcast on French and American radio. Unquestionably essential, the pace of this greatest hits set has Mick Jagger out of breath the entire way. Mick Taylor has never played better and Charlie Watts, yes, the band's stone-faced metronome, turns in one of his most frantic performances. It’s the persuasive exclamation point on an overdue reappraisal of one of the Stones most maligned albums. © Robert Baird/Qobuz

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