Album Reviews
Richards' droning Telecaster clang opens "Street Fighting Man" like swordplay, and Mick Jagger sings the chorus at the top of his range with astounding strength. Charlie Watts pushes the beat in "It's Only Rock n' Roll" with pinpoint impatience; Ron Wood's lap-steel screams turn up the barn-dance delirium in "Happy." Twelve more good reasons: the covers and rarely aired album tracks on Disc Two. "Can't You Hear Me Knocking" was a highlight of every fortieth-anniversary show I saw -- Watts peppering Richards' tumbling riff with gunfire rimshots; Jagger blowing sharp, modal harp. And "Worried About You," a forgotten slice of R&B melodrama from Tattoo You, driven to tears here by Wood's chugging guitar and Jagger's heated falsetto vocal, proves that the Stones, under the lights and at this advanced date, can still improve on even their best studio work.
(Posted: Nov 25, 2004)
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- Brown Sugar
- Street Fighting Man
- Paint It Black
- You Can't Always Get What You Want
- Start Me Up
- It's Only Rock n Roll, But I Like It
- Angie
- Honky Tonk Women
- Happy
- Gimmie Shelter
- (I Can't Get No) Satifaction
- Neighbours
- Monkey Man
- Rocks Off
- Can't You Hear Me Knockin'
- That's How Strong My Love Is
- The Nearness of You
- Beast of Burden
- When The Whip Comes Down
- Rock Me, Baby
- You Don't Have To Mean It
- Worried About Love
- Everybody Needs Somebody To Love
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC.