Hot Rocks (1964-1971)

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Total Tracks: 21   Total Length: 85:07

eMusic Review

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Phil Sutcliffe

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Quite possibly the best intro to the Stones available.
2005 | Label: ABKCO (US)

Starting as the band grew out of their raw London R&B apprenticeship, Hot Rocks 'first phase gathers the early fruits of Jagger/Richards'love-hate writing partnership in combination with Brian Jones'wayward talent for shaft-of-light ideas: their mid-’60s nail-hard rock hits ("(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" the epitome), their sulkiest, meanest working-class-boy put-downs ("Under My Thumb," with Jones on marimba) and the odd rare venture in gentleness and true romance ("Ruby Tuesday," Jones tootling a recorder).

But it's the second half of Hot Rocks that turned the future upside down. From late '68, while Jones faded towards tragedy, Keith Richards found an often inspired guitar foil in Mick Taylor and took his open-tuning tutorials from Ry Cooder and Gram Parsons, while the band found their most inspired producer, Jimmy Miller.

"Jumpin'Jack Flash" announced the change — the archaic tin-shack sound set aside for good — and every subsequent Hot Rocks track is delivered on that gutbucket rifftasmagoria they'd discovered. "Street Fighting Man," "Sympathy for the Devil," "Honky Tonk Women"… sheer heart attack. The Stones entwined ecstatic sensuality with a soured world of political and spiritual ambivalence — “just a shot away” and “just a kiss away” both (in the hippie era of love and assassinations).… read more »

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The Stones (not Donna)

AlaskaDave1047FM

What's to say about them I grew up listening to everything on this/ theses albums, from top 40 classics to vinyl gold 'The Rolling Stones' still sound great at 115db even if from an ipod

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Arrrrgghhhhh!

deafened

Again, no downloads for Canadians, eh?

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One of my first rock LP's

pmfan

Great collection. Just add "The Last Time" from "More Hot Rocks" and you're all set. The great thing about these downloads is that you can have "Hot Rocks plus".

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Wow, this takes me back

Mamafeenix

Man, this reminds me of all the times I would lay on the living room rug listening to this album, singing along at the top of my lungs, while staring at all the pictures of Mick and the blokes (when they were still young and spry). Or playing Ruby Tuesday on the kid's air organ my aunt gave me... So many memories... this album could be part of the soundtrack to my childhood! So I am thrilled to find this and feel it's a great download for a small, yet significant piece of music history and maybe a significant part of your own history.

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Would love it, but...

owlmerlyn

"We're sorry. This album is unavailable for download in your country (South Africa) at this time. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause."... C'mon emusic!

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Stones yeah...oh i see

Beatlenut

This is a great complilation of Stones tracks i used to have the lp, well worth the downloads, i only wish i could dl it,but unfortunately not available in my country,emusic you are such a big tease with the come on the front page.

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a chorus of Angels has arrived

DiscerningListener

try first: You can't always get what you want" you'll find .. ya get what you need :) after that, go for broke, use up every credit you have. caChinga go the Stones applause from Santa Fe and kudos to eMusic, you ROCK !

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PROOF POSITIVE

big-al75

All of you people who write reviews about e-mu saying that there is nothing to d-l, I say to you: THE BEST BAND OF RECENT HISTORY IS ON e-MUSIC! Take that. This album has all of the hits, and is a must for ALL rock fans.

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If you own only one Stones record...

Highnumber

...let it be this one. You should own more, but this has all their most essential tracks. Start here, then fill in with the albums.

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Great CD

magicbus30

I have had this on tape since the late 80's. Can't beat it for a collection of Stones music. I can still remember being in college and cleaning the house to "Jumping Jack Flash". When my tape finally wore out last summer, I bought the CD from Itunes... wish I had waited. A must download!!!

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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

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

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