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Hot Rocks, 1964-1971
The Rolling Stones
List Price:$31.03
Price:$26.98
 
Rating:
Sales Rank:2721
 
Release Year:1972
Label:
UPC:018771966722
 
Styles:Regional Blues , AM Pop, British Psychedelia, Album Rock, British Blues, Contemporary Pop/Rock , Psychedelic, British Invasion, Hard Rock, Blues-Rock, Blues, Rock & Roll
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Tracks


[02] Heart of Stone 2:51
[03] Play with Fire 2:16
[04] (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction 3:44
[05] As Tears Go By 2:46
[07] Mother's Little Helper 2:48
[08] 19th Nervous Breakdown 3:58
[09] Paint It Black 3:24
[10] Under My Thumb 3:44
[11] Ruby Tuesday 3:18
[12] Let's Spend the Night Together 3:35
[13] Jumpin' Jack Flash 3:43
[14] Street Fighting Man 3:15
[15] Sympathy for the Devil 6:19
[16] Honky Tonk Women 3:02
[17] Gimme Shelter 4:32
[18] Midnight Rambler [Live] 9:15
[19] You Can't Always Get What You Want 7:29
[21] Wild Horses 5:42
Album Review


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. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi