METAMORPHOSIS

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (47 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 47:42

eMusic Review

Avatar Image
Yancey Strickler

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
An excellent rarities collection with some real treats for super-fans.
2005 | Label: ABKCO (US)

Covering the Stones 'early years, Metamorphosis is a heavily curated collection of Stones outtakes and rarities paced by a handful of absolutely essential Jagger/Richards tunes. The best song is undoubtedly "Some Things Just Stick in Your Mind," one of the band's primo country songs poorly covered at the time by Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham's passion project, Vashti Bunyan. In the Stones 'hands, "Some Things" is a fascinating pastiche of '60s Nashville country, with very open-ended, elegiac lyrics (a later Stones staple). (For more on this track, and other little-known Stones standouts, check out this feature [LINK].)

Elsewhere there's an ornate version of "Heart of Stone" that easily bests the original; "I'd Much Rather Be With the Boys," a fantastic Motown girl-group number; "Try a Little Harder," an extremely out of character Stones take on early '60s white-boy pop; and the "Shine a Light"-reminiscent "I Don't Know Why," which would feel completely at home on Exile, Sticky Fingers or Goat's Head Soup.

But wait, there's more! "If You Let Me" is just waiting for a new Wes Anderson flick; "Downtown Suzie" swings weird and stoned; "Family" improves upon the band's Satanic Majesties-era psych while mimicking Bob Dylan to boot; and "I'm Going… read more »

Write a Review4 Member Reviews

Please log in before you review a release. Log in

user avatar

I Don't Know Why....

SaintGeorge76

Everyone makes a great point, but lest we forget the sheer power of this great number: I Don't Know Why (aka I Don't Know Why I lOve You). Also we remember that this song was recorded the night of Brian's death, so it does have that dubious connection. There's some pain in there somewhere.

user avatar

Memo

Supersonic75

While I agree that it's a great song, the version of "Memo From Turner" included on this is NOT the version from "Performance". This is the Stones version; around twice the speed of the original and not nearly as good or nasty (the original version also featured stinging slide guitar from the great Ry Cooder).

user avatar

Not the best "Memo"

CalOF

Memo From Turner should be on EM's list of Best Stones Song You Never Heard of, but personally, I much prefer the version on the Singles Album.

user avatar

Never Out Of Time For Memo From Turner !!

Dvoodoo

Memo From Turner from the soundtrack to the film Performance is an absolute classic, Jagger at his inimitable nastiest... Out Of Time is also a must have, and just an awesome pop song whether yer listening to the Stones, or the Immediate single version sung by Chris Farlowe. eMusic even has a bossa nova version of Out Of Time on Bossa n Stones, and my faves Joe Strummer did it with his 101ers in the 70s and the Ramones tackled it years later on their Acid Eaters collection...get it!

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

The 13 Best Rolling Stones Songs You’ve (Maybe) Never Heard

By Yancey Strickler

As they branded themselves in a deserved fit of future-pique, the Rolling Stones are the world's greatest rock 'n 'roll band, with singles too numerous to name dominating our hearts and loins from 1964 on. Though that burst of dangerous, sexual charge that impregnated "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction," "Let's Spend the Night Together," "Jumpin 'Jack Flash" and others has subsided some 40 years after the fact, the throbbing energy of London's favorite bad boys… more »

They Say All Media Guide

Though it remains the only Rolling Stones outtakes collection album ever to be officially released, Metamorphosis is one of those albums that has been slighted by almost everyone who has touched it, a problem that lies in its genesis. While both the Stones and former manager Allen Klein agreed that some form of archive release was necessary, if only to stem the then-ongoing flow of bootlegs, they could not agree how to present it. Of the two, the band’s own version of the album, compiled by Bill Wyman, probably came closest to the fan’s ideal, cherrypicking the vaults for some of the more legendary outtakes and oddities for a bird’s-eye view of the entire band’s creative brilliance. Klein, on the other hand, chose to approach the issue from the songwriting point-of-view, focusing on the wealth of demos for songs that Jagger/Richards gave away (usually to artists being produced by Andrew Oldham) and which, therefore, frequently featured more session men than Rolling Stones. Both approaches had their virtues, but when Klein’s version of the album became the one that got the green light, of course fans and collectors bemoaned the non-availability of the other. The fact is, if Wyman’s selection had been released, then everyone would have been crying out for Klein’s. Sometimes, you just can’t win. So, rather than wring your hands over what you don’t receive, you should celebrate what you do. A heavily orchestrated version of “Out of Time,” with Jagger accompanying the backing track that would later give Chris Farlowe a U.K. number one hit, opens the show; a loose-limbed “Memo From Turner,” recorded with Al Kooper, closes it. No complaints there, then. The real meat, however, lies in between times. During 1964-1965, Mick Jagger and Andrew Oldham headed a session team that also included the likes of arrangers Art Greenslade and Mike Leander, guitarist Jimmy Page, pianist Nicky Hopkins, bassist John Paul Jones, and many more, convened to cut demos for the plethora of songs then being churned out by Jagger and Keith Richards. Some would subsequently be redone by the Stones themselves; others, however, would be used as backing tracks for other artist’s versions of the songs. Metamorphosis pulls a number of tracks from this latter grouping, and while “Each and Every Day of the Year” (covered by Bobby Jameson), “I’d Much Rather Be With the Boys” (the Toggery Five), “Some Things Just Stick in Your Mind” (Vashti), “Sleepy City” (the Mighty Avengers), and “We’re Wasting Time” (Jimmy Tarbuck) may not be Stones performances per se, they are certainly Stones songs and, for the most part, as strong as any of the band originals included on the group’s first four or five LPs. Elsewhere, the 1964 Chess studio outtake “Don’t Lie to Me” is as fine a Chuck Berry cover as the Stones ever mustered, while “Family,” the rocking “Jiving Sister Fanny,” Bill Wyman’s “Downtown Suzie,” and a delightfully lackadaisical version of Stevie Wonder’s “I Don’t Know Why” are outtakes from two of the Stones’ finest-ever albums, Beggars Banquet and Let It Bleed. All of which adds up to an impressive pedigree, whatever the circumstances behind the album, and whatever else could have been included on it. Indeed, if there are any criticisms to be made, it is that the album sleeve itself is singularly uninformative, and the contents are seriously jumbled. But those are its only sins. Everything else you’ve heard about it is simply wishful (or otherwise) thinking. – Dave Thompson

more »