Rolling Stones Singles Collection:The London Years SACD
| Start Price |
USD 30.00 |
| Current Price |
USD 31.00 |
| Time Left |
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| Bid Count |
2 |
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| Start Time |
Sunday, August 17, 2008 |
| End Time |
Wednesday, August 27, 2008 |
| Location |
Norwood, MA |
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Description
Rolling Stones Singles Collection: The London Years SACD OOP MINT CONDITION Additional Information about Singles Collection: The London YearsPortions of this page Copyright 1948 - 2008 Muze Inc. All rights reserved. Track listing DISC 1:1. Come On2. I Want to Be Loved3. I Wanna Be Your Man4. Stoned5. Not Fade Away6. Little by Little7. It's All Over Now8. Good Times, Bad Times9. Tell Me10. I Just Want to Make Love to You11. Time Is on My Side12. Congratulations13. Little Red Rooster14. Off the Hook15. Heart of Stone16. What a Shame17. Last Time, The18. Play With Fire19. Satisfaction, (I Can't Get No)20. Under Assistant West Coast Promotion Man, The21. Spider and the Fly, The22. Get Off of My Cloud23. I'm Free24. Singer Not the Song, The25. As Tears Go ByDISC 2:1. Gotta Get Away2. 19th Nervous Breakdown3. Sad Day4. Paint It Black5. Stupid Girl6. Long Long While7. Mother's Little Helper8. Lady Jane9. Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing in the Shadow?10. Who's Driving Your Plane?11. Let's Spend the Night Together12. Ruby Tuesday13. We Love You14. Dandelion15. She's a Rainbow16. 2000 Light Years From Home17. In Another Land18. Lantern, The19. Jumpin' Jack Flash20. Child of the Moon - (Remake)DISC 3:1. Street Fighting Man2. No Expectations3. Surprise, Surprise4. Honky Tonk Women5. You Can't Always Get What You Want6. Memo From Turner7. Brown Sugar8. Wild Horses9. I Don't Know Why A.K.A. Don't Know Why I Love You10. Try a Little Harder11. Out of Time12. Jiving Sister Fanny13. Sympathy For the Devil Details Contributing artists: Al Kooper, Gene Pitney, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Phil Spector, Ry Cooder Distributor: Universal Distribution Recording type: Studio Recording mode: Mixed SPAR Code: n/a Album notes The Rolling Stones: Mick Jagger (vocals, harmonica, percussion); Keith Richards (vocals, guitar, keyboards); Bill Wyman (vocals, bass); Brian Jones (guitar, harmonica, organ, marimba, sitar, dulcimer, recorder, bells, saxophone, harpsichord, Mellotron, background vocals); Mick Taylor, Ron Wood (guitar); Charlie Watts (drums, percussion). Additional personnel includes: Joe Moretti (guitar); Ian Stewart (piano, organ); Reg Guest (piano); Nicky Hopkins, Jack Nitzsche (keyboards); Eric Ford (bass); Jimmy Miller (drums); Rocky Dijon (percussion); The London Bach Choir, Madelaine Bell, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Nanette Newman (background vocals); Gene Pitney, Phil Spector, Steve Marriott, Doris Troy, Al Kooper, Ry Cooder, Andy White.Producers: Andrew Oldham, Eric Easton, The Rolling Stones, Jimmy Miller, Jack Nitzsche.Engineers include: Roger Savage, Ron Malo, Dave Hassinger.This box set is a compilation of all the Rolling Stones' singles from 1963 to 1971, including A-sides, B-sides and alternate B-sides from the U.S. and the U.K. releases. These 58 songs on 3 discs have been digitally remastered with most tracks in mono to reflect the sound of the original 45s. It includes a 78-page, 12" x 12" book with lyrics, detailed track annotations by Bruce Eder and essays by Anthony De Curtis and Andrew Oldham.THE SINGLES COLLECTION: THE LONDON YEARS comes as advertised--the box includes every American and British A-side and B-side the Rolling Stones released between 1963 and 1971 (after which the band began releasing discs under the Rolling Stones Records imprint). The fantastic speed and scope of the Stones' early artistic development have few parallels in popular music, and this collection not only details that incredible process, but serves as a microcosm of '60s pop culture as well.From the down-and-dirty Chicago-style blues and R&B of the group's early covers (Chuck Berry's "Come On," Willie Dixon's "I Just Wanna Make Love to You") to the dreamy chamber pop of "Lady Jane" and the proto-hard rock of "Street Fightin' Man," the band was always on the cutting edge, both reacting to and anticipating cultural and musical trends. One listen to this box, however, reveals that, unlike the Beatles, the Stones seldom veered far from their roots, always injecting a vital dose of raw sexuality and pure rock & roll spirit into even the boldest of experiments.
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