BIG HITS (HIGH TIDE AND GREEN GRASS)

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 36:33

eMusic Review

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Ben Fong-Torres

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
This classic collection focuses on the raw, early Stones, still peering over the Atlantic for inspiration.
2005 | Label: ABKCO (US)

Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass), released in spring of 1966, was my first favorite compilation album. Why not start with the greatest? It's a gem of a collection, kicking off with their instant classic, “(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction” and sashaying between sounds softer (“As Tears Go By,” “Time Is on My Side”) and harsher: “The Last Time,” “Get Off of My Cloud,” “19th Nervous Breakdown.”

The Stones, who'd issued their first single in America only two years before, didn't have twelve actual hits yet, and there was an unwritten rule back then that albums had to have a dozen cuts. So we get two bluesy numbers that were flip sides: “Good Times, Bad Times” and “Play with Fire.” Hits or flips, Big Hits is more than a handy collection. It's a statement. As songwriters and musicians, the Stones were stunningly quick studies. All the hits are their creation, except for “Not Fade Away,” the Buddy Holly jumper that gave the Stones their first US hit, albeit a modest one, peaking at Number 48.

There are now many other, better and more complete collections out there, including Hot Rocks and Forty Licks. Still, Big Hits maintains a place on my… read more »

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Essential

Motorheadfan

My favorite Stones album for 40 years now. Somehow, this compilation holds together as a coherent set far better than most and I love to sit through the whole album. Only 37 minutes - after all. Try it. You'll like it. I promise.

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Excellent album

ericfj

The whole album rocks in a classic 60's style.

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After this album there was no turning back for me.

SelfRisinMojo

The Beatles were the soundtrack of my pre-pubescent years. The Stones songs were anthems of my rebellion stirred by raging hormones, moving me in ways I didn't understand but I knew damn well I liked it. The important question wasn't would parents let their daughter date a Rolling Stone,the important question was would your parents listen to a Rolling Stone record? In the 60s the answer was almost always no.

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Awesome!

walks2wrk

This has been my favorite album from the classic artists since I heard it as a child (born '69). I love at least half of the album...great mix of simple sixties style rock and the beginning sound of the '70's.

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They Say All Media Guide

The first hits compilation of the Rolling Stones is still one of the most potent collections of singles that one can find. Listening to it in 1966 or today, one can understand how, almost prematurely for the 1960s — as most of the material here dates from 1964 or 1965 — the Stones set themselves up as the decade’s most visible rock & roll rebels. The defiant, in-your-face fuzztone riff and sexually frustrated lyrics of “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” and the frenetic pounding punk anthem “Get Off of My Cloud” are highlights of a 12-song set that has no weak points, only peaks — the louder-than-life rhythm guitars on “It’s All Over Now” and “The Last Time,” the wailing R&B of “Time Is on My Side,” the balladry, folk, and soul style of “As Tears Go By” and “Tell Me,” and all of the rest make for a body of work that’s still amazing to hear decades after the fact. Appearing as it did in the late winter of 1966, this collection completely missed the group’s drift into psychedelia, and it has since been supplanted by Hot Rocks and More Hot Rocks, but Big Hits is still the most concentrated dose of the early Stones at their most accessible that is to be had, short of simply playing their first five U.S. albums. The artwork and photography were pretty cool too, and the original LP had one of rock’s early classic gatefold album designs. – Bruce Eder

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