point me in the direction of the really good rolling stones album that's not 'exile on main street'

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i like 'memo from turner' if that's any help.

is 'beggars banquet' all it's cracked up to be ?

piscesboy, Saturday, 28 September 2002 13:22 (twenty-three years ago)

'Let It Bleed' is considered their best if not E.O.M.S. i believe

blueski, Saturday, 28 September 2002 13:24 (twenty-three years ago)

what blueski said, and

Beggars Banquet contains some good Stones tunes that, amazingly, still haven't been overplayed (not "Sympathy..." obv.)

same goes for Between The Buttons

Paul (scifisoul), Saturday, 28 September 2002 13:53 (twenty-three years ago)

Beggars Banquet is ok, but I've never listened to it very much. Besides Exile, I also like Sticky Fingers and Aftermath, and I've heard that Let It Bleed is pretty good.

lyra (lyra), Saturday, 28 September 2002 14:08 (twenty-three years ago)

Her Satanic Majesty's Request is best.

david h (david h), Saturday, 28 September 2002 14:18 (twenty-three years ago)

Yeah, Let It Bleed is my favourite too.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Saturday, 28 September 2002 14:37 (twenty-three years ago)

It may be a comp rather than an actual album but Hot Rocks takes some beating (Rolled Gold is better but doesn't seem to be available on CD) or if you really want to splash out, The London Years boxset.

Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Saturday, 28 September 2002 14:52 (twenty-three years ago)

"Let It Bleed" is easily their best.

Daniel_Rf, Saturday, 28 September 2002 14:53 (twenty-three years ago)

Yeah, "Sticky Fingers", "Let It Bleed"... and howabout "Some Girls"? No, really.

Sean (Sean), Saturday, 28 September 2002 15:37 (twenty-three years ago)

yes, their satanic majesties request is indeed the best, although most people don't seem to like it that much

gareth (gareth), Saturday, 28 September 2002 17:35 (twenty-three years ago)

if you like Satanic check Danse Society's cover of "2000 Light Years"

Paul (scifisoul), Saturday, 28 September 2002 17:49 (twenty-three years ago)

Sticky Fingers is like Exile pt II sort of.... I agree w/Paul: Between the Buttons does it for me. There's something different about it.

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Saturday, 28 September 2002 18:05 (twenty-three years ago)

"Some Girls" really does stand right alongside all their best stuff.

J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Saturday, 28 September 2002 18:29 (twenty-three years ago)

Aftermath also great
UK version, right?

Paul (scifisoul), Saturday, 28 September 2002 18:43 (twenty-three years ago)

Let It Bleed is good, Sticky Fingers better, but Rolling Stones Now is their best album.

Burr, Saturday, 28 September 2002 19:13 (twenty-three years ago)

sticky fingers is the best album by the rolling stones

brains (cerybut), Saturday, 28 September 2002 19:57 (twenty-three years ago)

Stay away from Some Girls. It's no better/no worse than Voodoo Lounge or Bridges To Babylon, yet people like to pretend it is.

I'd recommend getting More Hot Rocks (Big Hits & Fazed Cookies). It covers the early (pre-Sticky Fingers) stuff pretty well (a slew of Motown/Chuck Berry/Lieber-Stoller-Lieber covers), Satanic Majesties ("She's A Rainbow" & "2000 Light Years From Home") and classic Stones' tunes that haven't been played to death ("Not Fade Away", "The Last Time", "It's All Over Now", "Dandelion", "No Expectations").

Vic Funk, Saturday, 28 September 2002 23:03 (twenty-three years ago)

yet people like to pretend it is,

Uh, I'm not pretending.

Sean (Sean), Saturday, 28 September 2002 23:15 (twenty-three years ago)

yes i think "..buttons" is an unsung classic, but the decca vinyl for the uk and commonwealth was much better organised than the us version although i notice the us re-issue has 'all sold out' on it which is catchy (but at the expense of 'backstreet girl' or 'she smiled sweetly', so something's missing)

beggars banquet is i think better than let it bleed simply because there's a real jones presence so the whole band packs more menace -- bleed is a slightly burnt out re-hash of banquet but obviously the occasional good song -- 'monkey man', 'live with me' and especially 'midnight rambler' are just too over the top, with 'country honk' a re-hash re-mix -- imo the country twang vs. ostentatious decadence and self-confidence are much better balanced on banquet

sticky fingers, the precurssor to the cyclic/2-phase blues of main street, is a madison avenue production thanks to new owners atlantic, so it's got too many songs designed to appeal to girls on it, and add in the sexploitation of brown sugar/bitch and the gross sentimetaility of the rest, and what have you got -- three of my friends favourite stones album (2 female, 1 male)

when the stones finally made it to the french tax shelter for sweaty midnight exile sessions they'd actually hit their stride, perhaps thanks to the french atmosphere finally pulling the mistreatment of women into check, but maybe when the brown sugar first really kicked in, the storm before the calm, limp, whatever but i like it era

george gosset (gegoss), Saturday, 28 September 2002 23:58 (twenty-three years ago)

the first one. 'england's newest hitmakers' or whatever. i'm not even sure what it's supposed to be called. but it's the greatest. i'm serious.

and 12x5, too. and some girls. nothing can compare to the first album, though.

^_^

dk, Saturday, 28 September 2002 23:59 (twenty-three years ago)

I figured out what it is abt Between the Buttons it's the BASS!!!!! it gnaws and sighs and purrs in this woozily feral way that you can hear since it's punched up so damn high in the mix

my vinyl copy has ALL the songs you mention on it, george (hm perhaps not backstreet girl) - i R being lucky

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Sunday, 29 September 2002 00:12 (twenty-three years ago)

Rolled Gold is great for the run of mid-60s work like Yesterday's Papers and We Love You, but yeah, Hot Rocks is the best you'll get today.

Piscesboy (hey!), if you like Memo From Turner, you want Beggars Banquet - tasty slide guitar, raucous posturing and *really bad* social commentary, but a real "spirit of the times" album full of dirty R&B in the old sense. It's where they found their voice again (at 24!) after the psychedelic hit-and-miss of the (previously) under-appreciated Satanic Majesties. If you like the helicopter persecution scenes in Goodfellas, Let It Bleed is your man, for Monkey man and Gimme Shelter. A great album, makes BB sound like really good demos.

I've no idea what Tracer Hand means regarding Sticky Fingers -it came out before Exile and has string sections and a big creamy 70s production, where Exile rattles along in the basement-recording style you'd expect of junky royalty in, erm, exile. Sticky Fingers is great - Can't You Hear Me Knocking journeys through rock, blues, and Latin jazz without getting on your tits, and Sway is just lovely, the kind of song that makes you think Eric Clapton might have been on to something after all.

I've always liked them more than the Beatles. No great theory behind that, they're just more fun - fleshier and stupider, prettier and less formal.

Leo, Sunday, 29 September 2002 00:20 (twenty-three years ago)

Leo I call it Part II because I cam to Exile first and heard SF long afterwardsI dunno, SF's songs just make me feel the same things that Exile's do, though maybe a bit less sharply defined. oncoming nausea most prominent among them (and i mean that in a good way!) You're right that the production is different. but if Exile was recorded in a basement whatta basement!! it must have been storage space for a high school marching band!

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Sunday, 29 September 2002 00:28 (twenty-three years ago)

well memo from turner, the centrepiece of invocation of my demon brother part 2 or 3, is a great soundtrack created by jack nitzche, backroom boy for phil spector, jimmy miller and the stones (like nicky hopkins except this's got buffy saint-marie and merry clayton)

clayton's singing in the background of gimme shelter from '69, and her vocal of the nitzche lyrics "go straight down, way underground" from poor white hound dog get borrowed for torn and frayed on main street -- like peter tosh and chuck berry seem to have suggested, the stones will hang with you and rip you and not return your calls

most importantly "Performance" is jagger ditching the english music business and the altamont-shock satanism, and from 1970 and starring anita pallenberg presents the two main stones protagonists changing trains, neatly bissecting the semi-mess of banquet and bleed for the calculated slick led zep of sticky fingers and the final sensible bail out to europe for main street (w/madison avenue marketing like the revoltingly fake 'rattle and hum' of 20 years later)

but co-director Donald Cammell operated from paris -- the stones had been on the run in the uk for 3 years and the "what happens next" hiatus of "Performance" maybe helped re-focus, 'though even holed up in a hot french basement it seems the us still burnt the stones out in 2 albums -- well that's five years on the run -- thank roeg and cammell for "Performance" -- a legitimate artistic statement about a band running out of steam, losing its powers

george gosset (gegoss), Sunday, 29 September 2002 00:54 (twenty-three years ago)

Flowers is getting sorely overlooked in this thread, so I just wanted to make sure it wasn't forgotten completely.

paul cox (paul cox), Sunday, 29 September 2002 01:18 (twenty-three years ago)

"Invocation of My Demon Brother" part 2 or 3... wha? I have the Anger film on Mystic Fire Video release; never heard of any subsequent parts, do fill me in.

And George, it's nice to see someone's thinking about "Performance", but is it really about a band running out of steam, losing its powers? I suppose it's about a number of things, and a rock vocalist in exile after a run of hits is one of them, but I wonder if this is a major theme of the film. Just a dialog here, not trying to get all in your face....

Sean (Sean), Sunday, 29 September 2002 02:11 (twenty-three years ago)

Vic comparing Some Girls to Voodoo Lounge is like comparing the Sistine Chapel ceiling to a black velvet Elvis. Especially in the lyrics dept. where Some Girls walks all over every other Stones album except Exile.

J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Sunday, 29 September 2002 02:25 (twenty-three years ago)

'Goat's Head Soup' is by far their most underrated alb, and the last truly great rec they ever made.

Andrew L (Andrew L), Sunday, 29 September 2002 06:13 (twenty-three years ago)

Listen, if you haven't heard a lot of Stones, skip the albums for now and go for Hot Rocks I and II.

Rahul Kamath (Rahul Kamath), Sunday, 29 September 2002 06:22 (twenty-three years ago)

sean, paul mentions Flowers -- wm. 0rbit does a tribute to the harry flowers theme as his only cover on a rather gratuitous, maybe accidental or incidental electro-whatever cd he put out with only himself -- maybe the music industry told him to make it, even though he's clearly [not)a collaborator

that ken was hanging with donald, maybe getting financial backing from him, well maybe not but maybe then there was a parting of the ways ? -- loog's long gone, goodbye ken, satanic majesties request etc.., this time don'll write the script with creative input from nic and since nic's on the set of this rock'n'roll movie from whomever else's got a good idea perhaps, ry, randy,.. buffy ? jack ?

let's change the name -- no let's keep the name, we'll put it right underneath [whatever flowers was calling himself at the time] -- the film ends with harry's hands (?) and that name changing device that goes on the front of your desk -- harry lime today ? -- well everybody was working for harry or anita one way or another weren't they ?

why make a film merging such disparate elements unless it's better for everyone to point out that those elements in fact belonged together, or at least sometimes go with each other in swinging london ?

not buying in to any crazed web site or book (and ken certainly wasn't telling) i nevertheless find myself feeling this was when certain angles of control over rock'n'roll wider london were being re-negotiated, what with the break-up of the beatles, the stones legal domicile hassles and the emergence of peter grant with his own little gang of demons playing the same tune using new equipment

and some people here seems to agree that somewhere in the middle of the buttons, the banquet, the blood, helicopters over altamont, warhol/ny, france, (and i don't know about the goats) the temperature was rising

george gosset (gegoss), Sunday, 29 September 2002 07:29 (twenty-three years ago)

ok, running out of steam, a bit heavy, given that they recovered, but did they know that they would ?

jack's "gone dead train", randy's sicko specialty is failure/ america ain't it, and this song's about impotance, right ? why would jagger have had it on ?

maybe we've just got off to a bad bad start in the west coast (look nita, there's bad and then there's bad) so we'll have to aim at new york -- ok, i like it, a posher, longer island of a place anyway, suits my airs and graces what, don'ya wanna live with me ? so let's shoot ourselves up a little creative nadir, 'cause if we just leave that sad honest snuff movie "gimme shlter" for posterity, we'll be remembered as just bad -- a little creativity, chin up lads, here's to old england !

george gosset (gegoss), Sunday, 29 September 2002 07:55 (twenty-three years ago)

Tracer Hand (not being a smartarse there, I was just curious) - Exile was recorded in the basement of Keith's Nellcote mansion in the south of France, so it *was* one hell of a basement. Part of the mythology of Exile is that the Stones decamped to France for tax purposes and Keith hired out the mansion at massive expense. Jagger was flying around getting married or divorced, so it was down to Keith to take control, which is why it's such a great album (and less full of hits). In between crashing speedboats, nodding out and bringing up the kid with Anita Pallenburg, he managed to get it together for all night recording sessions which yeilded that looser sound.

Goat's Head Soup probably is the most underrated one, I'd agree. Comin Down Again is a great track.

Leo, Sunday, 29 September 2002 08:40 (twenty-three years ago)

I'm gonna be awkward and answer the question: Marah's "Kids in Philly".

david Carlin ; ) (david h), Sunday, 29 September 2002 08:42 (twenty-three years ago)

http://www.themodernword.com/borges/borges_performance.jpg

george gosset (gegoss), Sunday, 29 September 2002 13:32 (twenty-three years ago)

I've never been able to understand Beggar's Banquet's lofty reputation. To me, it's "Street Fighting Man" (a MUCH less good v ersion of "Jumping Jack Flash") and nine b-sides. ("No Expectations" might be a little better than that, but that's it.)

Burr, Sunday, 29 September 2002 17:50 (twenty-three years ago)

fun fact: Keith Richards' basement in France was where Exile was recorded; he charged the band rental fees for making it there!

M Matos (M Matos), Sunday, 29 September 2002 21:28 (twenty-three years ago)

I'm gonna jump on the most popular album mentioned here and say Let It Bleed as well. With all of the pre-Sticky Fingers albums finally being remastered and reissued, this one is definitely the one I'm going to get first, probably Beggar's Banquet next.

Sean Carruthers (SeanC), Sunday, 29 September 2002 22:04 (twenty-three years ago)

I picked up the remastered Beggars the other day for old times sake... it really does sound good. The acoustic guitars are so metallic and the piano really rolls. I'd say Let It Bleed's slightly superior though... the songwriting's more consistent and it's bookended by two of the best they ever did.

Some, hmmm, interesting opinions in this thread... never thought I'd hear Satanic Majesties described as the Stones best album, Goat's Head Soup as their last great one, Sympathy for the Devil and No Expectations as B-sides or Some Girls as no better than Voodoo Lounge!

I heard Shattered off Some Girls on the radio the other day and it sounded fantastic--that bassline is so great, the lyric is so late 70s New York... you can almost fit that track in with all the other punk funk disco that's getting revived lately.

The Performance soundtrack is really cool too... from Ry Cooder blues to proto-electronica...

Most underrated: Black and Blue... there's something really lazy about that album, in a good way...

Ben Williams, Monday, 30 September 2002 04:13 (twenty-three years ago)

i got miss you on forty five last night!! i wish it had the dre remix on it though

simon trife (simon_tr), Monday, 30 September 2002 04:47 (twenty-three years ago)

Ok I downloaded the miss you dre mix with high hopes and it gets a big thumbs down... you can't just ditch that bassline! Although I do like the way it foregrounds Mick's vocals/lyrics and makes them sound a lot more sinister... but the beats are wack.

Ben Williams, Monday, 30 September 2002 12:57 (twenty-three years ago)

"she can make a dead man cum"

mark s (mark s), Monday, 30 September 2002 13:03 (twenty-three years ago)

OK - Beggars Banquet is one of the finest slabs of dirty, rough edged, diamond in the dust [insert cliche after cliche after cliche here] rock albums fullstop. Fullstop. In 1968, if you can open an album with six minutes of piano chord led incantations to the dark one then you gotta be onto something pretty special. And Beggars Banquet is special.

The people round here prob'ly won't give you much cred for getting turned on by the nasty blues-based rock that forms the bedrock of this album, much less for getting excited by it, but one listen to Streetfighting Man confirms that nobody rocks better than the Stones.

The album bites and snarls just like you'd expect but it also recoils - Sympathy is followed up straight away with the beautiful No Expectations, Streetfighting by Prodigal Son - its this ebb and flow of the whole which keeps Beggars fresh and compelling, human evcen, unlike the later self-parody and empty posturing. It also keeps Beggars from becoming obnoxious - the Stones you sense are beginning to get jaded by the rock star thing, and before the drugs and excess take full effect, they are getting proper pissed off. It's like they're trying to keep their feet on the ground, even as the madness sets in and they ascend to become the biggest rock band in the world. The album is certainly earthy and the symbolism throughout is undeniably rooted in the blues traditions of blood and sweat.

Also, it's on Beggars that I always feel Jagger is beginning to reallise that he can actually write alright lyrics - check Jigsaw Puzzle and tell me if you think he's been listening to Zimmerman. Maybe he doesn't quite pull it off but I give him points for trying.

One more thing - Jones' guitar work here is fascinating. I can never work out if the guy is a drug addled wastrel or a pied-piper genius. I think I'm right in saying that it's his trills an Symapthy, which are hideously out of time but for that, absolutely on point. And also the filthy cat's claw on metal noises he wrings from the thing on Stray Cat Blues - its just fucking spot on, all the way through.

Oh, and what Andrew L said about Goats Head is OTM.

Roger Fascist (Roger Fascist), Monday, 30 September 2002 15:31 (twenty-three years ago)

I don't think Brian Jones did anything on Beggars Banquet other than the slide guitar on No Expectations (maybe). There's amazing footage of them working up Sympathy for the Devil from an acoustic blues number in the Jean Luc-Godard film One Plus One--Brian is entirely superfluous.

"Later self-parody": I have to say Mick comes off as a poseur on Stray Cat Blues... but the music makes up for it.

God, my Stones bore mode is becoming engaged... must leave this thread alone....

Ben Williams, Monday, 30 September 2002 15:50 (twenty-three years ago)

It's Keith on "Sympathy", yeah. No Jones presence beyond doing most of the drugs for them so they can record. Was Ry Cooder on BB? Could be him on slide.

Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Monday, 30 September 2002 21:08 (twenty-three years ago)

Ry Cooder's on Let it Bleed...

and a really good Rolling Stones album that hasn't been mentioned yet: Out of Our Heads (she said yeah!)

willem (willem), Monday, 30 September 2002 21:52 (twenty-three years ago)

agreed on "Shattered," Ben--tense disco-funk forcebeat par excellence. it's not a coincidence that Prince was a big Stones fan (or that Jagger was a big Prince fan, either).

M Matos (M Matos), Monday, 30 September 2002 21:56 (twenty-three years ago)

two years pass...
Most definitely Exile & Sticky Fingers, though Monkey Man is one hell of a good song. Being more of a Keith fan its only obviuos that Exile was recorded @ Keiths house.

Linda Coats, Monday, 14 February 2005 11:44 (twenty-one years ago)

My personal favorite Stones album is an old German import called Around and Around, a best-of-their-early-days comp. But you'll never find it, so just go get Sticky Fingers.

Mr. Snrub (Mr. Snrub), Monday, 14 February 2005 12:11 (twenty-one years ago)

threads u don't remember starting volume 36 part b).

piscesboy, Monday, 14 February 2005 14:45 (twenty-one years ago)

I'll defend "Dirty Work" and "Emotional Rescue" (except the title song) to my dying breath.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Monday, 14 February 2005 14:53 (twenty-one years ago)

the title song of emotional rescue is absolutely grebt, though!

fact checking cuz (fcc), Monday, 14 February 2005 16:03 (twenty-one years ago)

Well, I am very fond of "December's Children." The cover of Berry's "Talkin' About You" and especially "Gotta Get Away," I love that song.

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Monday, 14 February 2005 18:36 (twenty-one years ago)

Tattoo You hasn't been mentioned? Side A is the party in the living room - Side B is the bedroom down the hall.

57 7th (calstars), Monday, 14 February 2005 19:14 (twenty-one years ago)

I'd go with Some Girls. Yeah, what's wrong with "Emotional Rescue"?

noodle vague (noodle vague), Monday, 14 February 2005 19:17 (twenty-one years ago)

two months pass...
It's the best song on that record! Keith's song's good too, bit formless tho.

A Viking of Some Note (Andrew Thames), Thursday, 21 April 2005 09:18 (twenty-one years ago)

The Rolling Stones Now! is my favorite early album. Then probably Beggars Banquet and/or Let It Bleed.
Metamorphasis is pretty nifty, but it's a b-sides collection (kind of like Flowers, but that one has a few a-sides on it too), so maybe it's not considered a 'real' album. But it's black and round, it's got a hole in the middle, it's twelve inches across and it plays at 33-1/3 rpm, so I count it.

Mike Dixn (Mike Dixon), Thursday, 21 April 2005 11:46 (twenty-one years ago)

In response to the original question, 'Memo From Turner' is on Metamorphasis.

Mike Dixn (Mike Dixon), Thursday, 21 April 2005 11:47 (twenty-one years ago)

"Metamorphosis" also has the very ace "Somethings Just Stick in Your Mind" and "Downtown Suzie."

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Thursday, 21 April 2005 18:56 (twenty-one years ago)

I'd much rather be with the boys!

European Samuel Glickstein (nordicskilla), Thursday, 21 April 2005 18:57 (twenty-one years ago)

I don't like Some Girls that much, mostly because I hate the production.

Gear! (can Jung shill it, Mu?) (Gear!), Thursday, 21 April 2005 19:21 (twenty-one years ago)

"Emotional Rescue" gets my vote; "Dirty Work" too. I will defend the latter to the death.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Thursday, 21 April 2005 19:23 (twenty-one years ago)

I'm in the Let it Bleed camp, but will also defend Emotional Rescue (my first Stones album)...including the title track.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Thursday, 21 April 2005 19:24 (twenty-one years ago)

Also, Undercover is cruelly underrated.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Thursday, 21 April 2005 19:24 (twenty-one years ago)

Yes, but the guy who started the thread doesn't want to hear Undercover! he wants Let It Bleed or Beggar's Banquet! Give him time!

European Samuel Glickstein (nordicskilla), Thursday, 21 April 2005 19:26 (twenty-one years ago)

oh wait this thread is from 2002

European Samuel Glickstein (nordicskilla), Thursday, 21 April 2005 19:26 (twenty-one years ago)

Between The Buttons!!

Dr. C (Dr. C), Friday, 22 April 2005 07:08 (twenty-one years ago)

Goddess In the Doorway!!

Gear! (can Jung shill it, Mu?) (Gear!), Friday, 22 April 2005 07:17 (twenty-one years ago)

All records 68-72 get an A+, Goat's Head Soup is an underrated classic, and Some Girls is their last great album (and one of their best).

Yngwie AlmsteenMay (sgertz), Friday, 22 April 2005 18:44 (twenty-one years ago)

u still can't get PERFORMANCE on dvd can u?

piscesboy, Saturday, 23 April 2005 08:11 (twenty-one years ago)

It's all about AFTERMATH: "Paint It Black," "Under My Thumb," "High & Dry," "Think," "Stupid Girl," "Flight 505," the epic "Going Home."

Flawless!

m coleman (lovebug starski), Saturday, 23 April 2005 10:20 (twenty-one years ago)

here's a shout out for It's Only Rock 'n Roll - imo definitely the best of their mid-seventies lull (GHS, B&B). The opening track, title track, & "Dance Little Sister" are worth the price of admission. Add to that the coked-out, paranoid funk of "Fingerprint File", "Ain't Too Proud To Beg" cover and Van Morrison-esque "Till The Next Goodbye" and you've got a damn fine Stones record.

Will(iam), Saturday, 23 April 2005 14:43 (twenty-one years ago)

Goat's Head Soup is an underrated classic

My neighbor was playing something that sounded really good the other day as it came muffled through my wall. When I asked him about it later he told it was Goat's Head Soup. I owned this long ago but seldom listened to it and don't remember it at all. In a way it's not too surprising that this would sound good coming from the next apartment over -- it's the 70s Rolling Stones, after all -- but...further comments? Should I re-buy it?

box.of.rox, Saturday, 23 April 2005 17:58 (twenty-one years ago)

he said it was

box.of.rox, Saturday, 23 April 2005 18:05 (twenty-one years ago)

The UK running order of Buttons makes it a whole different album, really -- without the overfamiliar (but not at all un-classic) "Let's Spend the Night Together" opening it up, it has a more understated appeal. "Yesterdays Papers" works better, leading into "My Obsession," etc.

Also, the UK version of Aftermath opens with "Mother's Little Helper," which the US version does not even include. You can't do without "Paint It Black," though.

happy fun ball (kenan), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 05:57 (twenty-one years ago)

haha "understated appeal"

Jesus I suck.

happy fun ball (kenan), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 06:06 (twenty-one years ago)

I continue to live in hope that one day the world will wake up and acknowledge the louche majesty of Black And Blue. Hot Stuff! Hand Of Fate! Fool To Cry! Memory Motel! I mean, come ON!

mike t-diva (mike t-diva), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 06:46 (twenty-one years ago)

Seconded. Those songs (there's other good stuff on it, I think, it's a great lazy groove rec if not a great SONGWRITING one) are about as good as anything they evr did. In my drunker/more romantic moments BandB's my fav RS Lp. There isn't a mid70s lull, btw, but there IS a bunch of recieved opinion (actually "It's Only"'s pretty tired as I remember but I'm prob wrong and anyway big deal it's one album).

A Viking of Some Note (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 12:18 (twenty-one years ago)

RECEIVED, Andrew.

A Viking of Some Note (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 12:20 (twenty-one years ago)

Some "great lazy groove" stuff covers the rest of the Lp pretty well now I look

A Viking of Some Note (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 12:22 (twenty-one years ago)

I think every single Stones studio album has been mentioned on this thread at least once.

Keith C (kcraw916), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 12:40 (twenty-one years ago)

They're a good band

A Viking of Some Note (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 12:42 (twenty-one years ago)

Masterpieces

The Rolling Stones, Now!
Aftermath
Beggar’s Banquet
Let it Bleed
Exile on Main Street
Some Girls

Great Albums

12 x 5
December’s Children (underrated)
Between the Buttons
Sticky Fingers

Very Good Albums

England’s Newest Hit Makers
Out of Our Heads
Flowers
Get Your Ya-Ya’s Out

Good Albums

Satanic Majesty’s Request
It’s Only Rock and Roll
Black and Blue
Tattoo You

Don’t care much for the rest…

Not Thaat Chuck, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 13:29 (twenty-one years ago)

I'd move "Ya-ya's" up to Great, just because of "Stray Cat Blues." But other than that, I think you're totally OTM.

happy fun ball (kenan), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 14:45 (twenty-one years ago)

I'll say "Dirty Work" again. "One Hit (To The Body)" and "Sleep Tonight" and "Hold Back" kick harder than anything in their catalogue.

As for other post-EOMS classics....I heard "Summer Romance" the other day on the radio and it sounded GREAT.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 15:14 (twenty-one years ago)

Other than Exile, Rolling Stones Now is great, and what I've heard of Some Girls suggests that it may be, too. Beggars Banquet is at least very good. I appreciate Aftermath - there's clearly something there - but just don't find it very likable (which may be the point) - what if anything am I missing? Sticky Fingers is ok, but pretty boring. Never heard the others. What should I go for next?

gabbneb (gabbneb), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 15:18 (twenty-one years ago)

Alfred, NO NO NO NO NO NO NO (have you even HEARD "Tattoo You"? For a start?). Tho maybe yr just beyond infatuated w/80s shit in which case ROCK ON HOMBRE

A Viking of Some Note (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 15:23 (twenty-one years ago)

Settle down, bro! I love "Tattoo You," but it's SUCH a predictable choice.

I don't love one decade more than another either.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 15:55 (twenty-one years ago)

btw I love "Black & Blue" as much as you do.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:01 (twenty-one years ago)

That's good to hear bro (really) but REALLY, those "Dirty Work" singles hit harder than anything in their catalogue? That's cuckoo even in cuckooland cuckoonesity! "Summer Romance" is pretty great tho. I prob shouldn't be annoyed w/anyone who'll stand up for 80s Stones, really. REALLY. Are you just overrepping for an overlooked rec?

A Viking of Some Note (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:13 (twenty-one years ago)

Really!

A Viking of Some Note (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:16 (twenty-one years ago)

I wrote a recent essay defending "Dirty Work" as not only their best since "Some Girls," but a necessary part of their development and thus ranks with anything else in their canon. With the Stones I'm so sick of the arias of ecstacy their proponents belt (you're not one of them, Andrew. You love B & B) that I get off defending their Less Important Records.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:19 (twenty-one years ago)

Yeah. Alfred OTM: Tattoo You is WAY fucking duller than Emotional Rescue (which is quite possibly better than Some Girls, by the way) or Dirty Work. (And by the way, I think Frank Kogan said once that Exile On Main Street is something like their 15th best album, which sounds about right. I'm not sure if 15 was the exact number, though.)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:19 (twenty-one years ago)

I love you. Tho I like to think eventually everyone'll dig there ARE no impt RStones recs, y'know? One likes what one likes. It all has to do w/it. Etc ("Dirty Work" is so not as good as "Tattoo" tho) XPOST Chuck and Frank full of shit, big fuckin shock

A Viking of Some Note (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:24 (twenty-one years ago)

I think in general lots of people tend to underrate the Stones's quite successful attempts to keep up with current dance music (funk, disco, reggae, new wave) in the mid to late '70s (though actually the rhythms in stuff like "Sympathy for the Devil" had anticipated disco etc., of course); for the most part, that stuff provided their best moments until they completely started sucking in the mid '80s or so.

xhuxk, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:25 (twenty-one years ago)

How the fuck did you get yr job, Chuck?

A Viking of Some Note (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:26 (twenty-one years ago)

Stop taking ANY ATTEMPT to "keep up" as evidence of greatness, dumbass

A Viking of Some Note (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:27 (twenty-one years ago)

I mean I don't underrate that shit (I overrated it, I thought, till you posted that fucked thing), but neither do I take anything that seems "STONESESQUE" as some sort of failure to be CURRENT.

A Viking of Some Note (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:29 (twenty-one years ago)

aftermath, between the buttons, and beggar's banquet are all better than exile, to me. exile has a lot of warmed over blues rock on it that just annoys me for some reason.

also, I like the disco on Some Girls a lot.

kyle (akmonday), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:30 (twenty-one years ago)

OK, here's the Kogan thing I was referring to:

"Even while Brooks & Dunn can prosper and gain kudos for making an album that resembles the 16th-best Rolling Stones album and that quotes platitudes from the seventh-best song on the 19th-best Rolling Stones album, and even as B&D endlessly and creatively run the riff from "Brown Sugar" (best song on the 14th-best Rolling Stones album), they simply won't let their music do what the Rolling Stones would do."

so he would say:

16th best = Exile on Main Street
19th best = (something with "Honky Tonk Women" on it, apparently)
14th best = Sticky Fingers

And in an email a couple weeks ago, I believe he said his favorite Rolling Stones album was *Get Your Ya Yas Out.* (My thoughts above about the Stones keeping up to date with dance music were probably inspired by something he wrote once, too, come to think of it.)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:35 (twenty-one years ago)

Lately I listen to "Emotional Rescue" prob more than my other Stones albums; it's juicier and faster than "Some Girls," maybe because most of the tracks are left-overs. Even the crass emotional stuff like "Indian Girl" is fascinating listening: you don't quite believe Mick but you can't take your eyes off him, or something. The only two tracks that still don't work are "Down In the Hole" and the title song (sorry, Chuck).

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:36 (twenty-one years ago)

I think everyone who ever wrote about the 70s/80s Stones wrote something similar (in fact did the Stones EVER get seperated from dancing?). xpost say sorry to me too, babe. It remains the best song off the record and the only one I've heard requested on STUDENTRADIO! I like "Down in the Hole" Ok, too.

A Viking of Some Note (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:39 (twenty-one years ago)

He's so cold, he's so goddamn cold.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:42 (twenty-one years ago)

What is inherently wrong with keeping up with newer music, Viking? You think I'm a dumbass because I'm not worried about bands "selling out their true sound" or something? Even when their true sound had to do with keeping up with what was happening with dance music in the first place? How bright of you. (Keeping up with new music is not necessarily *good* either, or course. Unless you do it right.)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:42 (twenty-one years ago)

And if you're trying to say that I *only* like bands when they keep up with new music (your dumbass "dumbass" post was completely ambiguous), uh, you don't know what you're talking about.

xhuxk, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:47 (twenty-one years ago)

If Frank's rankings were not intended as hyperbole, I'd like to see the actual list!

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 17:10 (twenty-one years ago)

The best Stones album is "Sticky Fingers", second best is "Hot Rocks".

o. nate (onate), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 17:15 (twenty-one years ago)

Well, if we're talking comps, the singles collection CD set is probably the best.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 17:21 (twenty-one years ago)

based on that small sample I'm guessing #1 is Bridges to Babylon, followed by Stripped. xxpost

Gear! (can Jung shill it, Mu?) (Gear!), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 17:21 (twenty-one years ago)

And that's part of the problem with a "Stones best albums" thing -- they were a singles band up until Between the Buttons.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 17:22 (twenty-one years ago)

Stones albums (excluding best of comps and concerts) that should be recommended as starters to kids.

Step 1. Tattoo You. Most kids are going to regard the Stones as an oldies band. "Start Me Up" and "Hang Fire" demonstrate that even when they were noticeably aging (and implicitly undermine the stigma about "oldies acts," thereby clearing the rest of the catalogue, from beginning to Bridges to Babylon.)

Step 2. Beggars Banquet. Because "Sympathy for the Devil" is the signature song, like in a "Stairway to Heaven Way," that'll hook a kid forever more. Plus it's got "No Expectations" and "Street Fighting Man" on it.

Step 3. We step it up to two at a time. Aftermath & Between the Buttons. The kid is now ready to hear the mid-60s masterpieces ("Paint It Black," "Under My Thumb," "Let's Spend the Night Together.")

Step 4. Sticky Fingers & Let It Bleed. Bring on "Bitch," "Brown Sugar," "Wild Horses," "Moonlight Mile," "Gimmie Shelter, "You Can't Always Get What You Want," and "Monkey Man."

Step 5. After those intense two-fer, you hit the kid with Out of Our Heads, which features the other Stones signature single, "Satisfaction." That "The Last Time" and "Play with Fire" are on it too won't hurt.

Step 6. The kid is ready to be a man: he gets Exile finally. Fuck.

After this six step program, he's ready for everything else, from the early blues stuff to the latter-day CEO rock.

nanker phelge, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 17:56 (twenty-one years ago)

>part of the problem with a "Stones best albums" thing -- they were a singles band up until Between the Buttons. <

Ha ha, Tim, I'd like to see Frank's entire list, too (I seriously doubt those rankings above were hyperbole), but I have a feeling he would disagree vehemently with the statement above.

xhuxk, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 18:14 (twenty-one years ago)

The first Stones album I owned was Hot Rocks on cassette. I followed it up with Exile, which remains my favorite. Sticky Fingers, Beggars Banquet, Let It Bleed, Aftermath, Flowers, Get Yer Ya Ya's Out are all ones I would recommend. Some Girls is one I'm going to sell, after copying a couple of the songs onto my computers.

Gear! (can Jung shill it, Mu?) (Gear!), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 18:17 (twenty-one years ago)

Well, you know, you like the albums for what they are: England's Newest Hitmakers, Rolling Stones Now, 12x5 -- all that stuff. But I don't really see that they put much effort into making super solid albums from the get-go like the Beatles did or even, say, The Who Sings My Generation. December's Children is maybe pretty solid.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 18:34 (twenty-one years ago)

What about Aftermath?

Not Thaat Chuck, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 18:41 (twenty-one years ago)

First album, too, actually.

Aftermath is great, but you still get the sense that they're doing some filler tracks ("Doncha Bother Me," "High and Dry").

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 18:43 (twenty-one years ago)

i don't know, they don't sound any more filler to me than, say, "Country Tonk' or "Monkey Man."

Not Thaat Chuck, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 18:58 (twenty-one years ago)

>I don't really see that they put much effort into making super solid albums from the get-go<

Not sure about the effort part, but those early LPs are as solid as the Beatles and Who ones you mention, to my ears (and as the other chuck said, with no more filler than many later, allegedly "solid" albums) (not that consistency is a great way to judge albums, anyway.)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:08 (twenty-one years ago)

not that consistency is a great way to judge albums, anyway

I guess there are different philosophies of grading albums. For instance, do you grade like the SAT test and subtract for wrong answers, thereby penalizing guesses, or do you just give credit for the right answers and ignore the misfires? I tend to think that with the advent of CDs (and MP3 players) bad tracks are much less of a handicap to an album, because they're easier to skip.

o. nate (onate), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:20 (twenty-one years ago)

"i don't know, they don't sound any more filler to me than, say, 'Country Tonk' or 'Monkey Man'."

There's a difference, though, between thinking that some tracks on albums are just bad and thinking that they were created when the band were still thinking that it was okay to do filler tracks. I don't think that the Beatles bought into the idea of filler tracks from the beginning, but not so sure about the Stones. Not to say that they were bad offenders at all. The Kinks were probably worse, right?

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:40 (twenty-one years ago)

Also: American perspectives on the early Beatles albums can be screwed up by the fact that Capitol butchered them all so they'd have more product.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:46 (twenty-one years ago)

>There's a difference, though, between thinking that some tracks on albums are just bad and thinking that they were created when the band were still thinking that it was okay to do filler tracks<

Why? Mediocre tracks are mediocre tracks; who cares how they got there?

xhuxk, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 20:08 (twenty-one years ago)

Well, as far as albums with bad tracks go, there is at least some intent there about it being SOME KIND of album, whereas, pre-Beatles, there wasn't, really. Artists just recorded a bunch of shit and then slapped albums out as product.

That's why I say the Stones were originally a singles band. I don't care how great an album 12x5 or Out of Our Heads is; I just care about the fact that there are some songs on there that I might want to play.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 20:20 (twenty-one years ago)

"There's a difference, though, between thinking that some tracks on albums are just bad and thinking that they were created when the band were still thinking that it was okay to do filler tracks. "

I actually don't think those tracks are bad, I see them as filler because they feel so offhand. A country lark version of a hit and a bit of Stones schtick, respectively. They feel exactly like product to me. Superior product, maybe, but product nonetheless.

Not Thaat Chuck, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 20:42 (twenty-one years ago)

>Well, as far as albums with bad tracks go, there is at least some intent there about it being SOME KIND of album, whereas, pre-Beatles, there wasn't, really. Artists just recorded a bunch of shit and then slapped albums out as product.<

And again, what exactly does intent have to do with making an album better, and what does slapped out product have to do with making them worse? Albums are just a bunch of songs, Tim. Lots of times when bands strive consciously to make them conceptual units, that makes them *less* entertaining. To me this seems completely obvious, and not just with the Stones. Paul Revere and the Raiders made better albums than Pink Floyd or the Grateful Dead ever will, in my book.

xhuxk, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 21:07 (twenty-one years ago)

>with the advent of CDs (and MP3 players) bad tracks are much less of a handicap to an album, because they're easier to skip.<

To quote Frank Kogan again, in the CD era, all albums are EPs.

xhuxk, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 21:15 (twenty-one years ago)

A country lark version of a hit and a bit of Stones schtick, respectively. They feel exactly like product to me. Superior product, maybe, but product nonetheless.

And but so hold on now... Would that imply that e.g. Gimme Shelter isn't "product"?

Plus bridge on Monkey Man > bridge over troubled water

rogermexico (rogermexico), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 21:22 (twenty-one years ago)

"And again, what exactly does intent have to do with making an album better"

Nothing. Didn't say it did. Just pointing out that I didn't see those songs on Let It Bleed as being "filler" in the same way that tracks on early Stones albums feel like filler.

"and what does slapped out product have to do with making them worse?"

I'm not making some black and white statement about it. Some slapped out product can be great. Obviously, a lot of slapped out product created as filler for early rock and roll albums was not.

"Albums are just a bunch of songs, Tim. Lots of times when bands strive consciously to make them conceptual units, that makes them *less* entertaining."

Yeah, I'm not talking about "conceptual unit" albums. I don't think of Please Please Me or With the Beatles as conceptual unit albums. I do think of them, however, as solid programs of songs.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 21:27 (twenty-one years ago)

jesus christ, rock critics are useless

er, not you tim!

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 21:40 (twenty-one years ago)

i mean what the fuck life is finite and we're talking endlessly about the "14th or 15th greatest rolling stones album"? is there nothing else to be said about the rolling stones? or are they just incapable/disinterested in saying anything interesting about them? for fuck's sake.

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 21:42 (twenty-one years ago)

ok, i know i shouldn't be damning all rock critics, because some of them are occasionally quite useful. but...

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 21:43 (twenty-one years ago)

Funny, if I was gonnna complain about somebody ranking Stones albums (which ranking is after all somewhat related to the question at the top of this thread), I might want to check the context in which those rankings occured and see if said context may indeed have included more interesting thoughts about the Stones, like Frank Kogan's here:

>they simply won't let their music do what the Rolling Stones would do. I'm not sure how best to convey what I mean, but notice the lyrics to "Brown Sugar": "Gold Coast slave ship bound for cotton fields/Sold in a market down in New Orleans/Scarred old slaver knows he's doin' all right/Hear him whip the women just around midnight." And that sadistic slaver inhabits and contaminates every sex act in the rest of the song. And this stoking the fire, pulling the rug, yanking up the floorboards, is just what Brooks & Dunn won't do, with either their sound or the words. Not that they're required to, any more than the Stones were required to reincarnate Howlin' Wolf. I'm just pointing out what's missing, where the real barrier is. And hell yeah, sorry for wimping out, they should cross the barrier, or someone should, 'cause if they or Montgomery Gentry or some other performers of that caliber don't cross it (this feeling of mine colored by the fact that Toby's horse-vomit song cited earlier, which came within a hair's breadth of endorsing lynching, lived high on the charts), the genre will continue to be a fake moral, fake rowdy, bullshit lie. (But not an uninteresting one.)<

xhuxk, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 22:02 (twenty-one years ago)

And so I'm right about "Dirty Work" after all!

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 22:18 (twenty-one years ago)

actually chuck, i was thinking more about you when i said critics were useless.

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 22:25 (twenty-one years ago)

:-)

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 22:25 (twenty-one years ago)

aw =)

Gear! (can Jung shill it, Mu?) (Gear!), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 22:28 (twenty-one years ago)

it's pathos!

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 22:30 (twenty-one years ago)

i mean what the fuck life is finite and we're talking endlessly about the "14th or 15th greatest rolling stones album"? is there nothing else to be said about the rolling stones"

Yes and no! It's fun to take the piss out of the band, and its self-important critics. Do you know how many bar fights I've almost started defending Emotional Rescue and Dirty Work over fucking Let it Bleed and shit?

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 22:32 (twenty-one years ago)

i guess i feel like the piss has been taken and then some, and endless iterations of "no [x later album] is actually quite good" or "no [x later album] is actually better than [x canonized album" are extremely dull. but you know what's even duller? me complaining about it. so carry on my wayward sons.

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 22:38 (twenty-one years ago)

there'll be peace now that Amateurist is done, at least.

Gear! (can Jung shill it, Mu?) (Gear!), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 23:01 (twenty-one years ago)

I'm sorry, that was stupid.

Gear! (can Jung shill it, Mu?) (Gear!), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 23:09 (twenty-one years ago)

shit, Frank Kogan's comment is great. I was watching that Godard movie about the Stones the other day, trying to explain what I think Godard is doing there--making the connection between the collective action of the Stones trying to make art (from samba, folk music, blues) and the action in the streets, as unpalatable as it is to various sensibilities. Which is exactly what country music can't do in its current, not uninteresting, ahistorical muddle. The morality of form and its exploitation and all that.

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 23:57 (twenty-one years ago)

I like the Stones' filler better than I do the Beatles' , anyway. Their takes on Hank Snow and Benny Spellman and Berry and Rufus Thomas feel pretty integral to me, on those early albums. Anyway, my favorites are indeed "Exile" and "Bleed" and "Aftermath," but I sure listen to "Dirty Work" and "Emotional Rescue" and "Some Girls" more these days, when I listen to the Stones.

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Wednesday, 27 April 2005 00:56 (twenty-one years ago)

"but I sure listen to "Dirty Work" and "Emotional Rescue" and "Some Girls" more these days, when I listen to the Stones."

Edd, I'm buying drinks tonight.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Wednesday, 27 April 2005 00:58 (twenty-one years ago)

c'mon and meet me at the Red Door on Division in Nashvegas, we'll get some old country singers to buy *us* drinks ( Mark Collie stood me n' my buddies to a round the other night, and he told us tales of his unreleased live record made at Tennessee's Women's Prison...Dirty Work indeed.)

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Wednesday, 27 April 2005 01:02 (twenty-one years ago)

Nowadays I just look to the stones for fashion tips.

happy fun ball (kenan), Wednesday, 27 April 2005 01:52 (twenty-one years ago)

four months pass...
ha! i like that last post.

piscesboy, Thursday, 15 September 2005 19:10 (twenty years ago)

Once again I thump my fists on the table, proclaiming the greatness of Dirty Work and Emotional Rescue.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Thursday, 15 September 2005 20:17 (twenty years ago)

three years pass...

i vote sticky fingers. but even then, just like all the other albums in their purple patch, you have to put up with the mawkish/sentimental/somewhat unlistenable fillerish ballads and downhome country-blues tributes that arent as good as the rock tracks next to them. exile is good in that its so consistent but its highpoints dont stick out immediately like with the others. but then i dont really think the stones are an albums band either, for the most part. hot rocks 1 is my fave album of theirs.

uk grime faggot (titchyschneiderMk2), Sunday, 25 January 2009 17:28 (seventeen years ago)

Of the earliest albums, Now! is great. Their version of "Mona" kills.

WmC, Sunday, 25 January 2009 17:31 (seventeen years ago)

I like Goat's Head Soup better than Exile.

thirdalternative, Sunday, 25 January 2009 17:43 (seventeen years ago)


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