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Showing posts with label Stephen Marcussen Remasters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stephen Marcussen Remasters. Show all posts

Sunday 14 May 2017

"Sticky Fingers" by THE ROLLING STONES (Differences between the 2010 and 2013 Japan-Only SHM-CD Reissues) - A Review by Mark Barry...


"…Got Me In Its Sway…"

When the first four re-reissues of the Stones' Label catalogue arrived in May 2009 with their spangly 'new' remasters - I snapped them up (as I'm sure the Glimmer Twins knew I would). "Goat's Head Soup", "It's Only Rock 'n' Roll", "Black and Blue" and of course the mighty "Sticky Fingers". Four more came in June - "Some Girls", "Emotional Rescue", "Tattoo You" and "Undercover".

The rounded jewel cases seemed cool but the miserable 8-page inlays smacked of the usual fan-disrespecting laziness that seems to be associated with all things Rolling Stones reissue. But that aside - I couldn't believe just how good the Stephen Marcussen and Stewart Whitmore remasters were - hugely improving to my ears the rather restrained UV22 Virgin CDs from 1994 (done by Bob Ludwig). And despite losing all that gorgeous original artwork to a truly dreadful 'underpants' rear sleeve of the CD of "Sticky Fingers" - I was digging the music of my favourite Stones album blasting out of my speakers with a clarity and power that I'd not heard before. That is until the Japanese used that 2009 remaster and put out an SHM-CD with perfect repro artwork the following year - and I knew it had to be mine - again.

There have been other reissues since - so to disperse confusion lets try to clarify what's what and what not to buy. 

This review is for the first version of "Sticky Fingers" on SHM-CD (Super High Materials) released 30 June 2010 on Rolling Stones/Polydor UICY-94571 (Barcode 4988005613943) in Japan only. It's a straightforward transfer of the 10-track album with an exact repro of the famous 1971 Andy Warhol 'Zipper' sleeve artwork (46:27 minutes). But more importantly it uses the 2009 Stephen Marcussen/Stewart Whitmore remaster. A SHM-CD doesn't require a special CD player to play it on (compatible on all) nor does it need audiophile kit to hear the benefits. It's a new form of the format that picks up the nuances of the transfer better (top quality make). I mention the 2009 remaster because there's another.

Fans should note that a 'second' SHM version appeared 30 October 2013 in Japan but this time reissued on two formats (SHM-CD and PLATINUM SHM-CD) 'both' of which use a 'different' remaster. Those issues feature a 2011 'flat transfer' that I hated (dull as dishwater). The SHM-CD version is on Rolling Stones/Polydor UICY-75886 (Barcode 4988005788467) and the PLATINUM SHM-CD version in a beautiful presentation box is on Rolling Stones/Polydor UICY-40001 (Barcode 4988005788368). I've reviewed the Platinum SHM-CD variant separately (use the Barcode to locate it on Amazon). 

But let's get back to the 2010 SHM-CD version with the 2009 Remaster...

1. Brown Sugar
2. Sway
3. Wild Horses
4. Can't You Hear Me Knocking
5. You've Got To Move
6. Bitch [Side 2]
7. I Got The Blues
8. Sister Morphine
9. Dead Flowers
10. Moonlight Mile
Tracks 1 to 10 are the album "Sticky Fingers" - released 23 April 1971 in the UK and USA on Rolling Stones Records COC 59100

Right from the opening riffs of "Brown Sugar" (slightly distorted it has to be said) - you know you're in the presence of a different beast. This thing rocks - the guitars and rhythm section filling your speakers with incredible energy. I can hear the 'loudness wars' naysayers already - sure these things are loud and sure they're hissy in places too - but at least I feel like I'm in the presence of the real master tape. The power and clarity of instruments on say "Can't You Hear Me Knocking" and "Dead Flowers" is astounding. Ry Cooder's Slide Guitar and Jack Nitzsche's Piano on "Sister Morphine" is so good too, Paul Buckmaster's gorgeous Strings on "Moonlight Mile" and Keith's beautiful acoustic playing on "Wild Horses" - all fabulous. But if I was to isolate one track that shows massive improvement on this SHM - it's the Side 2 nugget "I Got The Blues". Everything about it rocks - Keith Richards and Mick Taylor on guitars, Bobby Keys and Jim Price on Horns, Jimmy Miller's Percussion and especially the Billy Preston Organ solo - it sounds truly fabulous. There's just that little more pep in the step of every track on this format - and somehow that amazing Cooder Slide on "Sister Morphine" seems more in your face (but in a good way), the sexy Saxophones on "Bitch" - the guitars on their fantastic bluesy cover of the Mississippi Fred McDowell/Gary Davis dead-and-dying tune "You Gotta Move".

OK - you could argue that spending over twenty quid on a fancier form of the CD with original repro artwork and a natty plastic outer is a bit of a luxury - especially with the 2009 standard CD costing as little as four round ones in some places. But this is one of my favourite albums of the Seventies and I want the best version of it I can get my hands on.

I'd argue - if you go the few extra pounds of brown sugar for the 2010 SHM-CD out of Japan - you'll love the difference...

"Some Girls: Deluxe Edition 2CD Version" by THE ROLLING STONES (November 2011 USA Universal Republic Records 2CD Reissue) - A Review by Mark Barry...








"...Party Like We Used To..."

Recorded in Paris in October 1977 and March 1978 but rooted in the insanity of a financially crumbling New York City over 3500 miles away - the Stones embraced Punk like they were born to the manor - albeit a more grotty manor than the ones they were used in tax exile. "Some Girls" rocked – two fingers up to everything – ludicrously un-PC – so Rolling Stones – and I loved it.

But for me this November 2011 Universal Republic Records 2CD 'Deluxe Edition' is a mixed bag of great music and truly lacklustre presentation (why is any fan of The Stones surprised by this). Here are the far away eyes, beasts of burden and respectable reconstruction details...

USA released 21 November 2011 - "Some Girls: Deluxe Edition 2CD US Version" by THE ROLLING STONES on Universal Republic Records B0016235-02 (Barcode 602527840550) is a 2CD Reissue with 12 New Tracks on Disc 2 that plays out as follows:

Disc 1 - "Some Girls" (40:44 minutes):
1. Miss You [Side 1]
2. When The Whip Comes Down
3. Just My Imagination (Running Away With Me)
4. Some Girls
5. Lies
6. Far Away Eyes [Side 2]
7. Respectable
8. Before They Make Me Run
9. Beast Of Burden
10. Shattered
Tracks 1 to 10 are their 14th British (16th American) album "Some Girls" - released 19 May 1978 in the UK on Rolling Stones Records CUN 39108 and the same day in the USA on Rolling Stones Records TP 39108. Produced by THE GLIMMER TWINS - it peaked at No. 2 in the UK and No. 1 in the USA. All songs written by Mick Jagger & Keith Richards except "Just My Imagination (Running Away With Me)" which is a cover version of a Temptations song written by Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong.

Disc 1 THE ROLLING STONES were:
MICK JAGGER - Lead and Backing Vocals and Rhythm Guitar
KEITH RICHARDS - Lead Guitars, Keyboards, Bass and Backing Vocals
RON WOOD - Lead Guitars, Pedal Steel Guitar (Tracks 2, 6 and 10) and Backing Vocals
BILL WYMAN - Bass
CHARLIE WATTS - Drums

Guests:
SUGAR BLUE (James Whiting) - Harmonica on Tracks 1 and 4
IAN McLAGAN - Piano on Track 1 and Organ on Track 3
MEL COLLINS - Saxophone on Track 1
REEBOP KWAKU BAAH, JIMMY MILLER and SIMON KIRKE – Percussion on Track 10

Disc 2 - Bonus Material (41:30 minutes):
1. Claudine
2. So Young
3. Do You Think I Really Care
4. When You're Gone
5. No Spare Parts
6. Don't Be A Stranger
7. We Had It All
8. Tallahassee Lassie
9. I Love You Too Much
10. Keep Up Blues
11. You Win Again
12. Petrol Blues

Disc 2 Guests:
IAN STEWART – Piano on Tracks 1, 2, 3, 8 and 11
CHUCK LEAVALL – Piano Solo on Track 2
SUGAR BLUE (James Whiting) - Harmonica on Tracks 1, 4 and 7
DON WAS – Bass on Track 6
MATT CLIFFORD – Percussion on Track 6
JOHN FOGERTY and DON WAS – Handclaps on Track 8
All songs written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards except for "We Had It All" - written by Troy Seals and Donnie Fritts (a Waylon Jennings cover from 1973) and "Tallahassee Lassie" and "You Win Again" which are Freddie Cannon and Hank Williams cover versions.

A word about the original artwork versus this reissue - I've 14 vinyl copies of the British "Some Girls" album bought across the decades in a failed attempt to get all the different colour-coded sleeves in the one place. In fact I'm certain no one seems to know the truth about how many different sleeves there is for this 1978 LP (six, seven, eight who knows?). Perpetuated by the hardback book in the ludicrously overpriced Super Deluxe Edition - the common consensus is that there are six variants - five of the original Peter Corriston 'Rolling Stones As Drag Queens' die-cut sleeves and a further sixth 'Pardon Our Appearance – Cover Under Reconstruction' second-pressing variant because the offending originals had to be withdrawn due to legal pressure.

As ever our entirely angelic celestial-choir of misogynistic British ne're-do-wells had deliberately courted controversy with their saucy artwork and less than subtle songmanship - especially on the truly incendiary lyrics to the title track that names the sexual peccadillos of women from all sorts of racial backgrounds (black ladies come out best although Michael may not have enough Huntley's Jam for them). So why the legal recall - under the lurid adverts for strapless bras with elasticised inner pockets, perma-styled and care-free wigs (boy cuts an option) were die-cut holes on the front sleeve under which could be seen smiling mugshots of very famous ladies. But Raquel Welch, Lucille Ball, Farah Fawcett-Majors and the estates of Judy Garland and Marilyn Monroe were all amongst the celebrities who didn't dig the artistic joke and filed against their images being used on what was then perceived as being a platter of schoolboy sexism railed loudly against by upstanding society types like the Reverend Jesse Jackson. American artist Peter Corriston had done Led Zeppelin's magnificent "Physical Graffiti" double-album die-cut sleeve in 1975 and would do the next three Stones albums too - "Emotional Rescue", "Tattoo You" and "Undercover".

I mention the sleeve's history because this particularly gutless American-based Deluxe Edition uses the 'Under Reconstruction' reissue artwork instead of the different coloured originals – a sanitised image that is about as shocking and appealing as a smelly sock in a University Student’s laundry basket. All four of the gatefold flaps on the inside of the 2CD set are the same – insanely dull snippets and close-ups of the reconstructed artwork that show little or no imagination. So what do you get? There are a couple of new black and white photos of the band in the studio in the 24-page booklet - the witty assessments of each band member as if Mick, Keith, Ron, Bill and Charlie were women around the edges of the back cover and the song titles that were in tiny print beside the garish Magazine Ads for lady products are blown-up to take a page each. And finally there are some excellent but short liner notes called "Love And Hope And Sex And Dreams" by ANTHONY DeCURTIS (the title is a lyric from "Shattered"). DeCurtis explains about the backdrop to the LP's inspiration  – New York City – a town in the grips of serial killer Son Of Sam, financial ruin with landlords torching slums for the insurance money (the Big Apple was famously bailed out by President Ford) while a strange mix of decadent Disco, bare Punk and bloated Rock music filled the nightclubs, stadiums and bars. But again the liner notes sloppily miss out guest credits for the album on the final pages like they didn't exist (see my list above for details) and there's zip discussion of the new recordings. And why didn't someone print the lyrics for an album that was in part defined by its radical and no-holes-barred words? It all feels like less instead of more somehow. The Rolling Stones used to be so Rock 'n' Roll - but now they're so corporate-safe. Thankfully there's the music that includes some very cool new entries...

Disc 1 is the STEPHEN MARCUSSEN and STEWART WHITMORE Remaster done in 2009 and doesn't pretend to be anything new even though some hated it (I think it's brilliant). The second CD of new tracks (supposedly outtakes) was done in Paris and New York in 2011 and mastered by the same duo. Both sound storming to me.

The first Rolling Stones LP to benefit from Ron Wood's official presence in the five-piece band turned out to be a barnstormer. Side 1 opens with the irresistible "Miss You" – that fantastically sexy rhythm that's neither Rock nor Disco but somewhere in-between – Jagger's Puerto Rican girls lyrics so racy yet so true - Sugar Blue and his slinky Harmonica part and the Mel Collins Saxophone solo that seals the deal. What a bloody winner. With the brilliantly funny and knowing "Far Away Eyes" on the B-side – the US 45 of "Miss You" on Rolling Stones 19307 went to No. 1 in June 1978 and deservedly so. "When The Whip Comes Down" is the first sign of Punk - a fantastic little rocker that took on a life of its own when they did it live. Quite why they follow Whip with a Temptations cover version is anyone's guess - but their very Stones take on the 1971 R&B No. 1 of "Just My Imagination (Running Away With Me)" fits perfectly. You also hear those duelling guitars on this incredibly muscular remaster with Ian McLagan's Hammond Organ contribution barely audible.

Even now I can recall the first time I heard the utterly astonishing title track "Some Girls" - shock and awe and just a little appalled too. How could anyone be saying this stuff? You know you're in trouble when it opens with Sugar Blue's fantastic Harmonica warble. With lyrics like "...some girls give me children I never asked them for..." and "...some girls take the shirt off my back and leave me with a lethal dose..." - the song was never going to get on the Sunday Hymn Sheet for Westminster Abbey. But in its defence (if that’s the right way to phrase it) the words were true in Jagger's brain and many didn't like that in-your-face stance. But re-listening to it now and that stunning Harmonica/Guitar combo makes it a bit of an angry masterpiece for me. The rip-roaring and equally snarling "Lies" ends Side 1 with the core five-piece band sounding more vital than they had in years.

Side 2 opens with the countrified preaching song "Far Away Eyes" – Ron Wood's Pedal Steel Guitar perfectly complimenting Jagger's hilarious song-on-the-radio story (send 10$ to the church of bleeding hearts in Los Angeles). Back to Punk and heroin with the President on the White House lawn and no problem that can't be bent - "Respectable" became a single too and another live thriller. Keith's "Before They Make Me Run" is the forgotten song on the album and while it's a half-decent bopper you can't help think that Jagger's vocals would have lifted it out of the ordinary. But all is redeemed with a lethal one-two of "Beast Of Burden" and "Shattered" - the two aspects of the Stones I love - melody one moment - snotty rockers the next - and brill at both.

I genuinely hadn't expected much of Disc 2 - but it's got some corkers amidst the good and merely ordinary. Ian Stewart gives it some Jerry Lee Lewis on the piano-pumping bopper "Claudine" where a wee bit of instrument-echo makes the song feel Fifties. But then we're hit with a total gem and something you can't help but feel should have been on the album or at least a B-side to say "Miss You" - the Punky and very un-PC "So Young" where Mick is clearly tempted by the flesh of girls on the school run rather than the office pool (it's a federal offence). They Countrify "Do You Think I Really Care", Blues Boogie "When You're Gone" (with Jagger on Harp) and Piano Ballad "No Spare Parts". Of the others I like the raw "Keep Up Blues" about Italian Suits and keeping up with the fashionistas and their take on the hank Williams classic "You Win Again" is the best of the covers. Jagger brings it all home with a Piano and Vocal on "Petrol Blues" - a track that suspiciously sounds like an actual demo from the period.

The album "Some Girls" still stands up and in 2018 amazingly will be 40 years young. But while there are moments on that second disc that evoke the old Stones magic - I still wish the packaging wasn't so utterly lame.

Time to get up and get into something new which they and artist Peter Corriston would do on 1980's "Emotional Rescue". In the meantime don a 100% miracle fibre wig, slip on those red leatherette stilettos and get whipped by this Rolling Stones bad boy. In the comfort of your own home of course...

Sunday 11 December 2016

"Folk Singer: Vol. 1" by WILLIE WATSON (2014 Acony CD) - A Review by Mark Barry...




"...Bet On Stewball And You Might Win..."

In the 8-page booklet to the CD "Folk Singer - Vol.1" - there's a black and white photo of WILLIE WATSON sat on a chair by his lonesome - tuning an acoustic guitar in front of a trio of top quality microphones in a large white empty studio space. Also on his chair is a bottle of water to sooth his throat – and little else.

This beautifully produced and crafted solo album is like that - most tracks with just the acoustic guitar or his chosen instrument of poison - the banjo. His voice sails out your speakers like the son of Hank Williams reborn - like Bob Dylan mated with Emmylou Harris and produced a bawler. Willie Watson's voice is fabulous - full of Americana - full of that Mickey Newbury, Tim Buckley, Tim Rose wanderlust ache.

Formerly with Nashville's OLD CROW MEDICINE SHOW – a very Country outfit who mixed the Grand Ole Opry tradition with 00's Americana - for his debut solo album Willie Watson's 10-song choice of the known and unknown is thrilling. There's no embellishment of any kind on the tracks - just him and the guitar or the banjo - and of course how he arranges the melodies (we get the luxury of a harmonica on "James Alley Blues").

1. Midnight Special
2. Long John Dream
3. Stewball
4. Mother Earth
5. Mexican Cowboy
6. James Alley Blues
7. Rock, Salt And Nails
8. Bring It With You When You Come
9. Kitty Puss
10. Keep It Clean

"Folk Singer - Vol.1" by WILLIE WATSON was US released May 2014 on Acony ANCY-1411 (Barcode 805147141124).

Produced by David Rawlings (Gillian Welch is Associate producer) and mastered by Stephen Marcussen who did the 2009 Rolling Stones Remasters of their catalogue from "Sticky Fingers" onwards) - this CD sounds glorious - warm - full of presence and life - but never ever overdone. Stripped down - the music is peaceful on your head and enriching for your soul and as close to Audio perfection as I’ve ever heard.

Proceedings open with a cover of the Traditional "Midnight Special" - a song that's been done by everyone from Big Joe Turner on Atlantic Records in the 50s to Creedence Clearwater Revival on Fantasy in the 60ts. Other highlights include a superb swinging version of Leadbelly’s "Stewball" - a song about an 18th century Irish racehorse who ran in England with an alarming knack of winning. I love the Jo Ann Kelly lonesome vibe of "Mother Earth" - a Memphis Slim cover done on Guitar as Watson sounds like Dylan circa '69 ("...when it all ends up...you got to go back to mother earth...").

Written by Richard 'Rabbit' Brown - "James Alley Blues" feels like Watson has discovered his inner Bruce Springsteen and especially the bare bones "Nebraska". Thinking he's a sappy country fool - he moans of woman's ways as "...she wants to hitch me to a wagon and drive me like a mule..." just before he delivers a harmonica solo that would make the new Nobel Prize Winner for Literature flinch with envy (go Bob). I first heard the gorgeous ache of "Rock, Salt & Nails" through John Martyn who does a stunning version of it on his "No Little Boy" CD compilation of 1993 on Permanent Records (a duet with Levon Helm of The Band on vocals). Here Watson strips the song right down to just his voice and an acoustic guitar giving a beautiful and lonesome result that makes you concentrate on the 'high bushy' lyrics.

Gus Cannon penned "Bring It With You When You Come" with his Jug Stompers way back in 1930 - a freight train song that’s been subsequently covered by luminaries like David Bromberg and The Siegal-Schwall Band. "Kitty Puss" is a kid's song by the obscure and forgotten Land Norris - a banjo-player from Georgia who made records in the early 1920s. The album ends on a Charley Jordan Blues cover - "Keep It Clean" - which could be saucy - or just a ditty about Coca-Cola.

Simple - sweet - good for you - and apart from the rather naff-looking artwork and simplistic title - I love it to bits. Investigate right soon...

Wednesday 6 July 2016

"Goats Head Soup" by THE ROLLING STONES (1994 UK Virgin CD Remaster vs. 2009 Polydor CD Remaster - Track Differences) - A Review by Mark Barry...





Above the VIRGIN 1994 'Collector's Edition' CD Remaster with the 'Uncensored' "Star Star" and an Amazon Link


The 2009 Polydor CD Remaster with the 'Censored' "Pussy" lyrics version and an Amazon Link

 
This Review and 304 More Like It Can Be Found 
In My AMAZON e-Book 
 
US AND THEM - 1973
 
Your All-Genres Guide To Exceptional 
CD Reissues and Remasters 
Classic Albums, Compilations, 45's...
All Reviews From The Discs Themselves - Over 2,300 E-Pages
(No Cut And Paste Crap)

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"...Can We Hear The Music..."

After a four-album run like 1968's "Beggars Banquet", 1969's "Let It Bleed" and their own label meisterworks 1971's "Sticky Fingers" and 1972's double "Exile On Main St." - the single LP "Goats Head Soup" was bound to disappoint. And in 1973 it did. Big time.

But try as I might and despite that truly rubbish 'yellow veils' artwork (and the stupid album title for that matter) - Side 2 of this sucker rarely stayed off my Garrard SP25 turntable for years and years. Like many Stones fans I hold a candle for the mess that is "Goats Head Soup". 
 
But with the Censored and Uncensored versions of "Star Star" on different timeframe Remasters without either announcing that fact - it's had a chequered history on CD and I'd like to sort out what's what. One CD has the original (1994) and the newest version (2009) has the 'doctored' or 'censored' cut. Let's get to the goaties...

1. Dancing With Mr. D [Side 1]
2. 100 Years Ago
3. Coming Down Again
4. Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker)
5. Angie
6. Silver Train [Side 2]
7. Hide Your Love
8. Winter
9. Can You Hear The Music
10. Star Star
Tracks 1 to 10 are the album "Goats Head Soup" by THE ROLLING STONES - released 31 August 1973 in both the USA and UK on Rolling Stones COC 59101. Produced by JIMMY MILLER - it also hit the No. 1 spot on both LP charts.

THE ROLLING STONES were:
MICK JAGGER - Lead Vocals, Guitar, Harmonica and Piano
KEITH RICHARD - Lead Guitar, Bass and Vocals
MICK TAYLOR - Lead Guitar, Bass and Vocals
BILL WYMAN - Bass
CHARLIE WATTS - Drums

Guests:
NICKY HOPKINS - Piano on Tracks 1, 3, 5, 8 and 9
BILLY PRESTON - Clavinet on Track 1, 2 and Piano on Track 4
IAN STEWART - Piano on Tracks 6 and 10
BOBBY KEYS - Tenor and Baritone Saxophone
JIM HORN - Flute and Saxophone
CHUCK FINLEY - Trumpet
JIM PRICE - Horns on Track 4
NICKY HARRISON - String Arrangements on Tracks 5 and 8
PASCHAL BEBOP and JIMMY MILLER - Percussion

Outside of endless Japanese SHM-CD and Platinum SHM-CD reissues - for most punters wanting the 'original' album for a reasonable sum of money requires Barcode knowledge. But first let's get to that "Star Star" track that ends Side 2 of this much maligned album. It's about groupies and contains some hard-hitting lyrics running alongside a knockoff Chuck Berry riff. Although its title is "Star Star" - it's clear that Jagger is singing  "You're a Starfucker Starfucker Star!" during every chorus - something the BBC apparently didn't notice when DJs first got the album and needed to play an upbeat 'fast' Stones track. 

So there they were - British DJs on Aunty Beeb blasting it away on morally upright Blighty airwaves (much to the amusement of the public) - when at a launch party for the album (you could only get in if you had a mock vial of drugs sent out by the Promo people) Jagger approached a BBC Radio 1 Controller and congratulated him for having the balls to air such a tune. Drink in hand and puce-faced - the Controller quickly retired and the next day had the song quickly 'banned' from schedules (I heard that story from a BBC insider I bought records off when I was working at Reckless). 

But while that 's' word was iffy to say the least - the lines "...Yeah I heard about your Polaroids...that's what I call obscene...your tricks with fruit is kind of cute...I bet you keep your pussy clean..." went too far for conservative American Radio. They did a 'doctored' cut that sort of hide the offending 'p' word. Talk is that Jagger wanted Atlantic USA (who distributed The Rolling Stones label there) to put out "Star Star" as a 45 - but they wisely went for "Angie" instead and were rewarded with another Stones No. 1 in September 1973. How does "Star Star" affect the CD Remasters and which CD Reissue has what version?

The June 1994 BOB LUDWIG Virgin CD Remaster of "Goat's Head Soup" by THE ROLLING STONES that carries the original un-doctored song came in two forms - Virgin CDV 2375 (Barcode 724383951925) as a standard jewel case - while Virgin CDVX 2375 (Barcode 724383949823) came as a stickered jewel case 'Collector's Edition' with 'Original Album Packaging' housed inside the see-through casing (total playing time 46:57 minutes). I own the CDVX Collector’s Edition. The repro'd artwork is very cool - the gatefold LP sleeve - the 'Goat's Head Soup' Photo Insert and the two-sided Inner Sleeve that came with August 1973 original Vinyl LPs are all there held within the specially constructed jewel case. Be careful because once out of the shrink-wrap these jewel cases get scuffed so easily and getting a Near Mint one is hard work. Remastered by BOB LUDWIG using the UV22 Apogee Process - that 1994 Virgin version used the English tapes and therefore included the proper 'uncensored' version of "Star Star" as originally released by The Rolling Stones. 

But the May 2009 STEPHEN MARCUSSEN Polydor CD Remaster of "Goat's Head Soup" by THE ROLLING STONES on Polydor 0602527015606 (Barcode 602527015606) apparently used the American Tapes and has 'only' the 'censored' version (without saying so) where someone played with the vocals so that the offending 'p' word is sort of muddled out. That 2009 'censored' version of the album (there is only one version on Polydor in a round corner 'super jewel case') has been used ever since. Farcical really when you hear it too. So which version do you buy and which has best Audio?

For me therein lies another problem. You will probably notice that seemingly knowledgeable Audiophile types state categorically that the 1994 CD is better - I say this is knob. It's very good - it is - and it can't be accused of what they claim is Marcussen's 'loudness' on the 2009 version. But I own both and the 2009 Remaster 'sings' compared to the older variant. This 1973 LP was always kind of 'muddy' and needed to be lifted out of that. The Marcussen version is 'loud' - it is - but man what a wallop it packs. Let's get to the album itself...

On key tracks like the beautiful "Winter" and the trippy "Can You Hear The Music?" - the 2009 Remaster truly excels. Stuff like "Dancing With Mr. D" rocks too (a sequel to “Sympathy To The Devil” that isn’t quite as great) and the largely Acoustic "Angie" can only be described as sublime Audio - not something you say about The Rolling Stones on CD very often. Although they didn't issue it as a 45 in the UK - the USA put out "Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker)" as an A-side 7" single in February 1974 with "Dancing With Mr. D" on the flip - it went to No. 15. 

The sinking into dark-eyes and rotten-teeth druginess of "Coming Down Again" has Keith taking the Lead Vocals before Mick takes over. But as Richards sings in a pleading ache "...she was dying to survive..." and later "...where are all my friends..." - you can literally feel his own spirit crying out for rescue from what was surely a suicidal and inevitable path towards Heroin. Again the 2009 Remaster on this track is fantastic. The 'case of mistaken identity' song "Heartbreaker" about cops with their trigger-happy forty-fours sounds incredible as does Billy Preston’s piano and that trio of expert brass players. And "Silver Train" rocks too - huge build of slide guitars - Mick Taylor adding so much as he always did – while Mick blows a mean Harmonica and claims he 'did not know her name' but she left with all the money anyway (yikes).

I've always loved "Goats Head Soup" - especially the whole of Side 2. Whether you buy the standard CD version of the 1994 Virgin Remaster (use Barcode 724383951925 to locate that issue) or the 2009 Polydor variant (better to my ears - use Barcode 602527015606 to locate that issue) - in 2016 - both are cheap as chips and just as tasty. "Goat's Head Soup" is overlooked in the Stones cannon of work and shouldn't be. 

"...Can You Hear The Music...Can You Feel The Magic..." - Mick Jagger sang on that trippy Side 2 gem. Yes I can Michael...and better too...

Tuesday 14 June 2016

"Do Right Man" by DAN PENN (1994 Sire/Warmer Brothers/Blue Horizon CD Album) - A Review by Mark Barry...





"...I Leave Myself Wide Open..."

It's one thing to be able to write great songs that are name-checked as masterpieces some 45 years later (Penn has scribed many as you will find out) – but it's another ball of wax to find out that the man can actually sing 'Soulful' too - gargle warmth and personality with the best of them –reminding you at times of great unsung white male singers with black Soulful voices like Eddie Hinton and Terry Reid.

The premise here is this – Alabama’s DAN PENN - a 60ts and 70ts gifted white boy in-house songwriter working with huge names in the Soul and Rock world in Rick Hall’s legendary powerhouse FAME STUDIOS in Muscle Shoals – revisits his old hits in his old stomping ground with his playing buddies at his side. He will do 'his' versions of songs made famous by icons like Aretha Franklin - her 1967 smash "Do Right Woman, Do Right Man" on Atlantic Records, James Carr's 1967 hurting "The Dark End Of The Street" on Goldwax, Percy Sledge's 1966 heartbreaker "It Tears Me Up" on Atlantic, James and Bobby Purify's 1966 ode to devotion "I'm Your Puppet" on Bell Records and "You Left The Water Running" - a song so popular it was first done by Barbara Lynn, Otis Redding, Maurice & Mac, Sam & Dave, Ralph Jackson and Wilson Pickett. In fact in the case of "I'm Your Puppet" - a song also done by Dionne Warwick and as a duet with Marvin Gaye and Valerie Simpson - I'd argue that the new 1994 Penn version excels the sublime original and all other retellings - instilling the new take with incredible pathos, genuine beauty and feel. I play this sucker into the ground - always moving me. But let's get to the technical details first...

UK released 31 October 1994 - "Do Right Man" by DAN PENN on Sire/Warner Brothers/Blue Horizon 9362-45519-2 (Barcode 093624551928) was Produced by DAN PENN and GEORGE DRAKOULIAS, Recorded and Mixed at MUSCLE SHOALS SOUND STUDIOS in Sheffield, Alabama and Mastered by STEPHEN MARCUSSEN (he handled the 2009 Rolling Stones Remasters). The 16-page booklet has liner notes from noted R 'n' B and Soul Writer/Historian PETER GURALNICK and its ten-tracks plays to 37:15 minutes:

1. The Dark End Of The Street
2. Cry Like A Man
3. It Tears Me Up
4. You Left The Water Running
5. Do Right Woman Do Right Man
6. Memphis Women And Chicken
7. Zero Willpower
8. He'll Take Care Of You
9. I'm Your Puppet
10. Where There's A Will (There's A Way)

The band reunites Penn with:
REGGIE YOUNG and JIMMIE JOHNSON on Lead Guitars
BOBBY EMMONS, SPOONER OLDHAM, DAVID BRIGGS and CARSON WHITSETT on Keyboards
DAVID HOOD on Bass
ROGER HAWKINS on Drums.

The MEMPHIS HORNS on all cuts are:
WAYNE JACKSON on Trumpet, HARVEY THOMPSON on Tenor Sax
DOUG MOFFET on Baritone Sax (Flute on "He'll Take Care Of You")
CHARLES ROSE on Trombone

BACKING SINGERS on all cuts are:
AVA ALDRIDGE, CINDY RICHARDS-WALKER, LENNY LeBLANC, BUZZ CASON and GEORGE SOULE

DELBERT McCLINTON plays Harmonica on "Memphis Women And Chicken"

It's true that the new songs are competing with tunes so ingrained in your consciousness that it's hard to think of the newbees as anything you could compare favourably with the old - but I'd argue that Penn succeeds. His interpretations of "Dark End Of The Street", "It Tears Me Up" and especially "Do Right Woman Do Right Man" are spine-tinglingly good. And that "I'm Your Puppet" just does me in. Not to be outdone there are 'new' old songs too - tunes he's returned to that apparently lay unfinished - some for over twenty years.

There's the slow groove of "Cry Like A Man" - maybe an answer song to "Cry Like A Baby" - a Penn tune picked up by Arthur Alexander and Cher in 1969. The jaunty greasy food song "Memphis Women And Chicken" and the truly gorgeous "Zero Willpower" - a song you'd swear has to have been done by some Soul giant back in the Sixties but turns out to be new - a modern day classic (lyrics from it title this review). It ends on the Funky Brass groover "Where There's A Will (There's A Way)" which is good rather than being great.

He would tour this album with just Spooner Oldham - voices and keyboards - simple, eloquent and Soulful. And in some ways that's how you would sum up this overlooked beauty of an album – an eloquent slice of Modern Day Soul by a songwriter who helped shape its very foundations.

Get the 'Do Right Man' into your life soon as poss...

Tuesday 9 June 2015

"Sticky Fingers: Deluxe Edition" by THE ROLLING STONES (June 2015 Polydor 2CD Reissue - Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...




AMAZON UK Best Price Link Above - AMAZON USA Best Price Link Below


"...English Blood Runs Hot..." 

There can’t be too many Rolling Stones fans out there in the big wide world that won’t look at the sleeve of "Sticky Fingers" and grin like a schoolboy watching the English Ladies Hockey Team practice their down strokes. And I suppose if us aging reprobates are to suffer yet another reissue of that absolute Classic Rock Album – then this June 2015 two-disc rehash is a great way to massage our hip-replacements - because frankly it’s a bit of belter. In fact fans of the 'Mick Taylor Era' of The Rolling Stones are going to flip for Disc 2. Once more unto the bleach...

First things first – Disc 1 is not a new version in any way – it’s the remaster done by Stephen Marcussen at Marcussen Mastering in 2009 and runs to exactly the same playing time – 46:25 minutes. Disc 2 presents us with 10 Previously Unreleased Bonus Tracks mixed by BOB IRWIN and mastered by STEPHEN MARCUSSEN – five album outtakes and five live cuts from the last date on their UK Tour – Sunday, 14 March 1971 at The Roundhouse in London.

The 8-page basic inlay that accompanied the 4 May 2009 reissue has been upgraded to 24-pages for this 2CD Deluxe Edition (there is a single disc version that keeps the 8-page inlay). The Andy Warhol torso and underpants photo that was hidden under the original ‘zipper’ sleeve is reproduced on Page 3 - with Pages 4 to 7 giving us new black and white portrait photos of each member of the band (all were once considered for the inner artwork). The photo that did grace the inner insert for the original April 1971 LP is reproduced on the left hand flap as you open the gatefold card digipak – but rather tastefully - an outtake I’ve never seen before from the same photo session is on the right flap. Instead of Mick yawning and Keith grinning in side profile – it has Keith and Mick staring forward pensively with the other three doing the same in the rear (Bill Wyman, Mick Taylor and Charlie Watts). You can see why they chose the one that finally came out – its just more funny and a better snap (but what a lovely touch). Beneath each see-through CD tray (yellow lips logo on Disc 1 and green on Disc 2) are pictures of tape boxes. The booklet also has shots of their initial recording sessions at the famed Muscle Shoals Studios in Alabama (there’s even a bill for $1009 for the recording of "Wild Horses"), black and whites of the Stargroves Estate in Hampshire where further recording took place, the artwork for the "Brown Sugar" UK 7" single picture sleeve, a repro of the UK Tour 1971 poster, colour shots from the Roundhouse gig in London and even photos of the album launch in France with Ahmet Ertegun of Atlantic Records. Finally there are detailed credits for both discs.

UK released 8 June 2015 (9 June 2015 in the USA) – this reissue of "Sticky Fingers" by THE ROLLING STONES comes in a dizzying TEN FORMATS - including Single and Double Vinyl variants, differing Downloads versions and even a Spanish Cover Version with its famously unique 'Fingers in A Tin Of Treacle' artwork. This review is for the 2CD Deluxe Edition on Polydor/Rolling Stones 376 483-6 (Barcode 602537648368). Here are the details...

Disc 1 (46:25 minutes)
1. Brown Sugar
2. Sway
3. Wild Horses
4. Can’t You Hear Me Knocking
5. You Gotta Move
6. Bitch [Side 2]
7. I Got The Blues
8. Sister Morphine
9. Dead Flowers
10. Moonlight Mile
Tracks 1 to 10 are the album "Sticky Fingers" - released 23 April 1971 in the UK and USA on Rolling Stones Records COC 59100

Disc 2 (54:02 minutes):
1. Brown Sugar (with Eric Clapton) – 4:05 minutes
2. Wild Horses (Acoustic) – 5:47 minutes
3. Can’t You Hear Me Knocking (Alternate Version) – 3:24 minutes
4. Bitch (Extended Version) – 5:53 minutes
5. Dead Flowers (Alternate Version) – 4:18 minutes
6. Live With Me – 4:22 minutes
7. Stray Cat Blues – 3:48 minutes
8. Love In Vain – 6:42 minutes
9. Midnight Rambler – 11:27 minutes
10. Honky Tonk Women – 4:14 minutes
Tracks 1 to 5 are Outtakes from the original sessions produced by Jimmy Miller. "Brown Sugar" is credited as (with Eric Clapton) when in fact it also has Al Kooper on Guitar (Ian Stewart on Piano and Bobby Keys on Saxophone too). Tracks 6 to 10 are highlights from a show at The Roundhouse in London on Sunday, 14 March 1971 (there is a CD3 only on the Super Deluxe Edition 12" x 12" Box Set which is called "Get Yer Leeds Lungs Out" and was recorded 1971 at Leeds University). The live band for the London show included Bobby Keys on Saxophone, Jim Price on Trumpet and Nicky Hopkins on Piano. All songs are Jagger/Richards originals except "Stray Cat Blues" which is a Robert Johnson cover version.

THE ALBUM:
Right from the opening riffs of "Brown Sugar" (slightly distorted it has to be said) - you know you're in the presence of a different beast. This (2009) thing rocks - the guitars and rhythm section filling your speakers with incredible energy. I can hear the 'loudness wars' naysayers already - sure these things are loud and sure they're hissy in places too - but at least I feel like I'm in the presence of the real master tape. The power and clarity of instruments on say "Can't You Hear Me Knocking" and "Dead Flowers" is astounding. Ry Cooder's Slide Guitar and Jack Nitzsche's Piano on "Sister Morphine" is so good too, Paul Buckmaster's gorgeous Strings on "Moonlight Mile" and Keith's beautiful acoustic playing on "Wild Horses" - all fabulous. But if I was to isolate one track that shows massive improvement on this SHM - it's the Side 2 nugget "I Got The Blues". Everything about it rocks - Keith Richards and Mick Taylor on guitars, Bobby Keys and Jim Price on Horns, Jimmy Miller's Percussion and especially the Billy Preston Organ solo - it sounds truly fabulous. There's just that little more pep in the step of every track on this format - and somehow that amazing Cooder Slide on "Sister Morphine" seems more in your face (but in a good way), the sexy Saxophones on "Bitch" - the guitars on their fantastic bluesy cover of the Mississippi Fred McDowell/Gary Davis dead-and-dying tune "You Gotta Move". There are many who hated the 2009 remaster saying it was too loud or something like that. I think this is crap of the highest order. I bought the Japanese Platinum SHM-CD version with a flat transfer (which is what many of these detractors wanted) and it 'was' awful. It's a matter of Audio taste I know - but I frankly get weary of Audiophile types telling me what I'm hearing is lousy when my ears tell me different.

I had expected Disc 2 to be a disappointment – five lesser versions with a bunch of live stuff that should have stayed in the can – neither let the side down thank God. To hear “Brown Sugar” in ‘any’ variant is a blast - yet you can so hear why Jagger toned down the “get down on your knees...” lyrics and how the twin slide guitar work of Clapton and Kooper is good but still feels too ramshackle. Bobby Keys comes blasting in with that Saxophone solo pretty much intact but the finished album cut is sharper and their decision to go with a cleaner more concise version was the right one. It’s odd ‘not’ to hear the opening acoustic strums of “Wild Horses” be accompanied by that second guitar – this time we get a sort of unplugged original – and what a gorgeous song it is too. Lyrically there’s not much that’s different except that you can you hear the words more clearly on this Alternate. We then get a weird reversal – the finished album masterpiece “Can’t You Hear Me Knocking” gets cut down from 7:16 minutes to 3:24 minutes and is really the band ‘feeling’ for something. In fact on the amazing near 12-minute live version of “Midnight Rambler” where Keith and Mick solo like crazy – you can hear the finished licks and solos creep in because it was March 1971 – after they’d recorded this early attempt. 

But then comes an absolute jewel – the extended “Bitch” where Bobby Keys (Saxophone) and Jim Price (Trumpet) add so much to the song. It’s absolutely fantastic and I actually shouted “More” at the Marantz as it finished – not wanting this bad sucker to end. After such excitement the Alternate of “Wild Flowers” isn’t nearly as Country as the finished album version and suffers for it. Fans will be disappointed that the five live cuts don’t actually feature a single “Sticky Fingers” track but that’s not to say that they’re inferior fare – far from it. This is the 1971 band cooking (with Mick Taylor) on 1969 “Let It Bleed” material like “Live With Me” and “Love In Vain”. There is already a huge step forward in the overall sound and impact – a band finding their Rock feet. The Robert Johnson cover of ”Stray Cat Blues” is just fantastic while the huge “Midnight Rambler” sees Mick give it some fabulous harmonica fills inbetween those Bluesy guitar moments (“Spotlight on Keith’s arse...” he say before they launch into the jam). After introductions of the band – Mick tells the crowd to “open your lungs on this one” as The Stones go into a stunning version of “Honky Tonk Women”. Very tasty stuff...

I don’t know if I’d plum up the dosh for the Super Deluxe Version – but I have to say that this 2CD Deluxe Edition is a triumph.

In the Jake Gyllenhaal/Dustin Hoffman/Susan Sarandon movie “Moonlight Mile” from 2002 – Jake’s character is in a bar, goes over to a jukebox and puts on the movie’s title track. It starts to play and then as the stunning Paul Buckmaster strings kick in – Jagger sings - “I’m riding down your Moonlight Mile...” And I remember watching it - and not for the first time did a chill go up my arms – reminding me of how much I loved this band and in particular this album that I played to death as a teen in Dublin.

Mick Jagger and Keith Richards are more Zimmer-Frame Twins these days than Glimmer Twins – but that doesn’t stop this 2CD reissue from being magical to me. Lick your lips folks...because here we go again...

Sunday 16 May 2010

"Exile On Main St.: Deluxe Edition" by THE ROLLING STONES (May 2010 Polydor 2CD Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...





"…It's My Heart That You Stole…"

Following an album like 1971's magnificent "Sticky Fingers" was always going to be a tall order - but The Stones did it with swagger and panache. "Exile On Main St" was released 12 May 1972 as a 2LP set on Rolling Stones Records COC 69100 in the UK and on COC 2-2900 in the USA. It reached the coveted number 1 spot on both sides of the pond - and like The Beatles "White Album" before it - is a flawed and sprawling thing but considered by most to be a masterpiece nonetheless. And this fabulous Expanded 2CD Reissue/Remaster is only going to cement that legendary reputation even more. Here are the big red rubber lips, double entendres and three balls in a man’s mouth…

Released 17 May 2010 – "Exile On Main St.: Deluxe Edition" by THE ROLLING STONES on Rolling Stones/Polydor 273 429-5 (Barcode 602527342955) is a 2CD Deluxe Edition and breaks down as follows:

Disc (67:18 minutes):
1. Rocks Off
2. Rip This Joint
3. Shake Your Hips
4. Casino Boogie
5. Tumbling Dice
6. Sweet Virginia [Side 2]
7. Torn And Frayed
8. Sweet Black Angel
9. Loving Cup
10. Happy [Side 3]
11. Turd On The Run
12. Ventilator Blues
13. I Just Want To See His Face
14. Let It Loose
15. All Down The Line [Side 4]
16. Stop Breaking Down
17. Shine A Light
18. Soul Survivor

Disc 2 (41:12 minutes):
1. Pass The Wine (Sophia Loren)
2. Plundered My Soul
3. I’m Not Signifying
4. Following The River
5. Dancing In The Light
6. So Divine (Aladdin Story)
7. Loving Cup – Alternate Take
8. Soul Survivor – Alternate Take
9. Good Time Women
10. Title 5

Disc 1 has the full double-album compliment of 18 tracks while Disc 2 is a new 10-track mixture of previously unreleased outtakes and alternate versions. All songs are by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards except "Ventilator Blues" which is co-written with Mick Taylor, while "Shake Your Hips" and "Stop Breaking Down" are Slim Harpo and Robert Johnson cover versions. As with "Sticky Fingers", the additional musicians and producer (Jimmy Miller) added hugely to the power of almost every song and should be noted for it - Bobby Keys on Saxophone, Jim Price on Trumpet, Nicky Hopkins, Ian Stewart and Billy Preston on Piano and Organ with lady-soul veterans Clydie King and Vanetta Fields on Backing Vocals. Dr. John also sang backup on "Let It Loose".

SOUND:
As with the 2009 reissues STEPHEN MARCUSSEN (over 1000 mastering credits to his name including the “Alfie” soundtrack with Mick Jagger) and STEWART WHITMORE of Marcussen Mastering have remastered the original tapes and the sound is glorious throughout. "Loving Cup" followed by "Happy" are beautifully clear and "Tumbling Dice" is at last full and in your face. Most every track is improved - the instrumentation in your speakers with a fabulous live and shambolic feel. The acoustic and harmonica opening of "Sweet Virginia" and the drums of "All Down The Line" are superb. To me it's a huge improvement, a balls-to-the-wall triumph. Downsides - the hiss level on "Shine A Light" that was there in the first place is now more accented as it is on the frantic "Rip This Joint". Some despised the 2009 remasters, so this will be more of the same for them, but most I suspect will absolutely love it. Wish I could say the same about the presentation...

PACKAGING:
Very poor I'm afraid. The front flap and rear of the original 2LP cover are produced on the outside of the digipak (as they should be) with the inner LP photo spread reproduced on the inside of the digipak, BUT the original vinyl double also had two fantastic inner sleeves and a set of fold-out postcards. Only 1 side of the two inners is reproduced! That the idiots would not bother picturing the 'postcards' seems to be par for the course for Stones reissues these days, but that great shot of Mick & Keith at the mike with whiskey bottle in hand is missing - as is the "I Don't Want To Talk About Jesus I Just Want To See His face" quote on the other side - unbelievable! The supposedly exclusive 12-page booklet is different to all other issues, but turns out to be just black and white photos of the session and no liner notes whatsoever - none! The track-by-track details are now only bland black and white printed listings, which lose all of the inner sleeves magical artwork. It's an insult that this supposedly 'deluxe' reissue cavalierly misses out on crucial visual elements of the original release - it's hugely unimaginative and workmanlike at best.

BONUS DISC:
Although the 10 bonus tracks have the same original backing band - and despite what the track-by-track credits 'don't' tell you - it's obvious that the first 5 have had 'treatment' of some kind - vocal tracks added on/redone recently. 

"Pass The Wine (Sophia Loren)" is an ok opener, but the track that sounds most like a genuine outtake peach is "Plundered My Soul" which is fantastic (it was issued in April 2010 as a limited edition Record Shop Day 7" single in the USA and UK). Best approximation is that it sounds like the B-side "Tumbling Dice" should always have had (lyrics above). "I'm Not Signifying" is ok, but hardly great, but there then follows a genuinely lovely ballad "Following The River" complete with the new girls giving it some soulful backing vocals (Lisa Fischer and Cindy Mizelle). It's far better than you think. "Dancing In The Light" is a jaunty mid-tempo song similar to "Hide Your Love" off "Goat's Head Soup". The opening of "So Divine (Aladdin Story) is closer to Brian Jones Rolling Stones circa "Dandelion" and its really interesting - Jim Price on vibes and Bobby Keys on some kind-of treated saxophone sound. There follows two "Alternate Takes" of "Loving Cup" and "Soul Survivor". Now these are far closer to what we want - "Loving Cup" opens with a lovely Nicky Hopkins piano refrain and suddenly it's "there" - that shambolic feel to everything - especially the guitars of Richards and Taylor dueling to the end yet complimenting each other so perfectly. Now this I will love.  And then another gem - Keith carrying the vocals and sloppy stuff on "Soul Survivor" instead of Mick - and it works - and when that riffing guitar kicks in, I'm balling my eyes out and there are chills on my arms. "Good Time Women" is a forerunner for "Tumbling Dice" and is fab - rough and tumble as well. "Title 5" opens with studio chatter of "Take 1" and is a strange little rocking instrumental which kind of peters out, interesting but that's all...

Ok - so there's no live stuff and there should be (legendarily good), the "All Down The Line" Alternate Take that's on the B-side of the "Plundering My Soul" 7" single isn't on here either, which is just stupid - and the 4-track Excerpts 7" Flexi single from the April 1972 NME in the UK with song edits and an exclusive "Exile On Main Street Blues" track is nowhere to be seen let alone pictured either. But overall - I'm kind of shocked at how good Disc 2 is. I'll ignore some of these newer makeovers for sure, but those Alternate Takes are thrilling.

In May 2012, "Exile" will be 40 years old and Mick and Keef will be more Zimmer Frames than Glimmer Twins. But that won't stop this coolest of double-albums from being the absolutely business. I suspect the real truth about this 2CD reissue is far simpler - men around the world will see this digital temptress pouting on the shelf of their local megastore, feel a quickening of the pulse and a movement in their trouser area - and be unable to resist.

And you know - you can't help but feel that these two canny English lads already know this…

PS:
HMV in the UK have issued "Exile" with the digipak inside an exclusive card slipcase (Polydor 274 102-3). I've pictured both sides of it for fans.

The Japanese, however, have not surprisingly got the most desirable version of them all; it’s inside a 14-disc box set called “From The 70’s To 00’s” which contains all their albums from “Sticky Fingers” through to “A Bigger Bang”. They are all on the SHM-CD format (Super High Materials) and each has the original album artwork repro’d on one of those 5” Mini LP sleeves we so love (UICY-91558). “Exile” is included - being the 2010 Remaster version – and is in a gatefold card sleeve complete with its original foldout postcards and two inner sleeves. 

PS:
HMV in the UK have issued “Exile” with the digipak inside an exclusive card slipcase (Polydor 274 102-3). I’ve pictured both sides of it for fans.



The Japanese, however, have not surprisingly got the most desirable version of them all; it’s inside a 14-disc box set called “From The 70’s To 00’s” which contains all their albums from “Sticky Fingers” through to “A Bigger Bang”. They are all on the SHM-CD format (Super High Materials) and each has the original album artwork repro’d on one of those 5” Mini LP sleeves we so love (UICY-91558). “Exile” is included - being the 2010 Remaster version – and is in a gatefold card sleeve complete with its original fold-out postcards and two inner sleeves.

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order