Detailed item info
Track listing |
DISC 1: 1. Tell Me 2. Not Fade Away 3. Last
Time, The 4. It's All Over Now 5. Good
Times Bad Times 6. I'm Free 7. Out Of Time 8. Lady Jane 9. Sittin' On A Fence 10. Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing In The Shadows? 11. Dandelion 12. We Love You
DISC 2: 1. She's A Rainbow 2. 2000
Light Years From Home 3. Child Of The Moon - (remix) 4. No Expectations 5. Let It Bleed 6. What To Do 7. Money 8. Come On 9. Fortune Teller 10. Poison Ivy 11. Bye
Bye Johnny 12. I Can't Be Satisfied 13. Long
Long While
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Details |
Playing time: | 79 min. |
Contributing artists: | Paul McCartney |
Distributor: | Universal Distribution |
Recording type: | Studio |
Recording mode: | Stereo |
SPAR Code: | n/a |
|
Album notes |
The
Rolling Stones: Keith Richards (vocals, guitar); Mick Jagger (vocals);
Brian Jones (various instruments, guitar); Mick Taylor (guitar); Bill
Wyman (bass); Charlie Watts (drums). Additional personnel
includes: John Lennon, Paul McCartney (background vocals). Producers:
Andrew Loog Oldham, The Rolling Stones, Jimmy Miller. All
tracks have been digitally remastered. When you're
anthologizing the Rolling Stones, one of the first things you must
accept is the fact that you're doomed to failure. No one album can
possibly tell the story of the band that's explored so many different
musical avenues and recorded so many memorable songs. Credit where
credit's due; HOT ROCKS, and this, its sequel, come perilously
close. This double LP wisely doesn't attempt to be
comprehensive. Instead, it just picks out various gems from different
points in the band's development. Their R&B/roots period is
well-represented by covers of "It's All Over Now" and "Not Fade
Away." "She's A Rainbow" and "2000 Light Years From Home" are monuments
to the bands psychedelic phase. "No Expectations" and "Let It Bleed"
are bluesy tunes that cut to the quick, emphasizing the Stones' gift for
visceral compositions.
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Editorial
reviews |
...MORE HOT ROCKS is an exploitation
reissue par excellence... Rolling Stone (02/01/1973)
9
(out of 10) - ...[MORE HOT ROCKS and HOT ROCKS] pile together the cream
of the Stones' first eight years... NME (07/08/1995)
...MORE
HOT ROCKS is an exploitation reissue par excellence...New Musical
Express (7/8/95, p.46) - 9 (out of 10) - ...[MORE HOT ROCKS and HOT
ROCKS] pile together the cream of the Stones' first eight years... Rolling
Stone (02/01/1973)
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All rights reserved.Portions of this page Copyright 1948 - 2010 Muze
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rights reserved.
The Rolling Stones Biography
By the time the Rolling Stones
began calling themselves the World's
Greatest Rock & Roll Band in the late '60s, they had already staked
out an impressive claim on the title. As the self-consciously dangerous
alternative to the bouncy Merseybeat of the Beatles in the British
Invasion, the Stones had pioneered the gritty, hard-driving blues-based
rock & roll that came to define hard rock. With his preening
machismo and latent maliciousness, Mick Jagger became the prototypical
rock frontman, tempering his macho showmanship with a detached, campy
irony while Keith Richards and Brian Jones wrote the blueprint for
sinewy, interlocking rhythm guitars. Backed by the strong yet subtly
swinging rhythm section of bassist Bill Wyman and drummer Charlie Watts,
the Stones became the breakout band of the British blues scene,
eclipsing such contemporaries as the Animals and Them. Over the course
of their career, the Stones never really abandoned blues, but as soon as
they reached popularity in the U.K., they began experimenting
musically, incorporating the British pop of contemporaries like the
Beatles, Kinks, and Who into their sound. After a brief dalliance with
psychedelia, the Stones re-emerged in the late '60s as a jaded,
blues-soaked hard rock quintet. The Stones always flirted with the seedy
side of rock & roll, but as the hippie dream began to break apart,
they exposed and reveled in the new rock culture. It wasn't without
difficulty, of course. Shortly after he was fired from the group, Jones
was found dead in a swimming pool, while at a 1969 free concert at
Altamont, a concertgoer was brutally killed during the Stones' show. But
the Stones never stopped going. For the next 30 years, they continued
to record and perform, and while their records weren't always
blockbusters, they were never less than the most visible band of their
era -- certainly, none of their British peers continued to be as popular
or productive as the Stones. And no band since has proven to have such a
broad fan base or far-reaching popularity, and it is impossible to hear
any of the groups that followed them without detecting some sort of
influence, whether it was musical or aesthetic.
Throughout their
career, Mick Jagger (vocals) and Keith Richards (guitar, vocals)
remained at the core of the Rolling Stones. The pair initially met as
children at Dartford Maypole County Primary School. They drifted apart
over the next ten years, eventually making each other's acquaintance
again in 1960, when they met through a mutual friend, Dick Taylor, who
was attending Sidcup Art School with Richards. At the time, Jagger was
studying at the London School of Economics and playing with Taylor in
the blues band Little Boy Blue and the Blue Boys. Shortly afterward,
Richards joined the band. Within a year, they had met Brian Jones
(guitar, vocals), a Cheltenham native who had dropped out of school to
play saxophone and clarinet. By the time he became a fixture on the
British blues scene, Jones had already had a wild life. He ran away to
Scandinavia when he was 16; by that time, he had already fathered two
illegitimate children. He returned to Cheltenham after a few months,
where he began playing with the Ramrods. Shortly afterward, he moved to
London, where he played in Alexis Korner's group, Blues Inc. Jones
quickly decided he wanted to form his own group and advertised for
members; among those he recruited was the heavyset blues pianist Ian
Stewart.
As he played with his group, Jones also moonlighted under
the name Elmo Jones at the Ealing Blues Club. At the pub, he became
reacquainted with Blues, Inc., which now featured drummer Charlie Watts,
and, on occasion, cameos by Jagger and Richards. Jones became friends
with Jagger and Richards, and they soon began playing together with
Taylor and Stewart; during this time, Mick was elevated to the status of
Blues, Inc.'s lead singer. With the assistance of drummer Tony Chapman,
the fledgling band recorded a demo tape. After the tape was rejected by
EMI, Taylor left the band to attend the Royal College of Art; he would
later form the Pretty Things. Before Taylor's departure, the group named
itself the Rolling Stones, borrowing the moniker from a Muddy Waters
song.
The Rolling Stones gave their first performance at the
Marquee Club in London on July 12, 1962. At the time, the group
consisted of Jagger, Richards, Jones, pianist Ian Stewart, drummer Mick
Avory, and Dick Taylor, who had briefly returned to the fold. Weeks
after the concert, Taylor left again and was replaced by Bill Wyman,
formerly of the Cliftons. Avory also left the group -- he would later
join the Kinks -- and the Stones hired Tony Chapman, who proved to be
unsatisfactory. After a few months of persuasion, the band recruited
Charlie Watts, who had quit Blues, Inc. to work at an advertising agency
once the group's schedule became too hectic. By 1963, the band's lineup
had been set, and the Stones began an eight-month residency at the
Crawdaddy Club, which proved to substantially increase their fan base.
It also attracted the attention of Andrew Loog Oldham, who became the
Stones' manager, signing them from underneath Crawdaddy's Giorgio
Gomelsky. Although Oldham didn't know much about music, he was gifted at
promotion, and he latched upon the idea of fashioning the Stones as the
bad-boy opposition to the clean-cut Beatles. At his insistence, the
large yet meek Stewart was forced out of the group, since his appearance
contrasted with the rest of the group. Stewart didn't disappear from
the Stones; he became one of their key roadies and played on their
albums and tours until his death in 1985.
With Oldham's help, the
Rolling Stones signed with Decca Records, and that June, they released
their debut single, a cover of Chuck Berry's "Come On." The single
became a minor hit, reaching number 21, and the group supported it with
appearances on festivals and package tours. At the end of the year, they
released a version of Lennon-McCartney's "I Wanna Be Your Man" that
soared into the Top 15. Early in 1964, they released a cover of Buddy
Holly's "Not Fade Away," which shot to number three. "Not Fade Away"
became their first American hit, reaching number 48 that spring. By that
time, the Stones were notorious in their homeland. Considerably rougher
and sexier than the Beatles, the Stones were the subject of numerous
sensationalistic articles in the British press, culminating in a story
about the band urinating in public. All of these stories cemented the
Stones as a dangerous, rebellious band in the minds of the public, and
had the effect of beginning a manufactured rivalry between them and the
Beatles, which helped the group rocket to popularity in the U.S. In the
spring of 1964, the Stones released their eponymous debut album, which
was followed by "It's All Over Now," their first U.K. number one. That
summer, they toured America to riotous crowds, recording the Five by
Five EP at Chess Records in Chicago in the midst of the tour. By the
time it was over, they had another number one U.K. single with Howlin'
Wolf's "Little Red Rooster." Although the Stones had achieved massive
popularity, Oldham decided to push Jagger and Richards into composing
their own songs, since they -- and his publishing company -- would
receive more money that away. In June of 1964, the group released their
first original single, "Tell Me (You're Coming Back)," which became
their first American Top 40 hit. Shortly afterward, a version of Irma
Thomas' "Time Is on My Side" became their first U.S. Top Ten. It was
followed by "The Last Time" in early 1965, a number one U.K. and Top Ten
U.S. hit that began a virtually uninterrupted string of Jagger-Richards
hit singles. Still, it wasn't until the group released "(I Can't Get
No) Satisfaction" in the summer of 1965 that they were elevated to
superstars. Driven by a fuzz-guitar riff designed to replicate the sound
of a horn section, "Satisfaction" signaled that Jagger and Richards had
come into their own as songwriters, breaking away from their blues
roots and developing a signature style of big, bluesy riffs and wry,
sardonic lyrics. It stayed at number one for four weeks and began a
string of Top Ten singles that ran for the next two years, including
such classics as "Get off My Cloud," "19th Nervous Breakdown," "As Tears
Go By," and "Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing in the Shadow?"
By
1966, the Stones had decided to respond to the Beatles' increasingly
complex albums with their first album of all-original material,
Aftermath. Due to Brian Jones' increasingly exotic musical tastes, the
record boasted a wide range of influences, from the sitar-drenched
"Paint It, Black" to the Eastern drones of "I'm Going Home." These
eclectic influences continued to blossom on Between the Buttons (1967),
the most pop-oriented album the group ever made. Ironically, the album's
release was bookended by two of the most notorious incidents in the
band's history. Before the record was released, the Stones performed the
suggestive "Let's Spend the Night Together," the B-side to the medieval
ballad "Ruby Tuesday," on The Ed Sullivan Show, which forced Jagger to
alter the song's title to an incomprehensible mumble, or else face being
banned. In February of 1967, Jagger and Richards were arrested for drug
possession, and within three months, Jones was arrested on the same
charge. All three were given suspended jail sentences, and the group
backed away from the spotlight as the summer of love kicked into gear in
1967. Jagger, along with his then-girlfriend Marianne Faithfull, went
with the Beatles to meet the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi; they were also
prominent in the international broadcast of the Beatles' "All You Need
Is Love." Appropriately, the Stones' next single, "Dandelion"/"We Love
You," was a psychedelic pop effort, and it was followed by their
response to Sgt. Pepper, Their Satanic Majesties Request, which was
greeted with lukewarm reviews.
The Stones' infatuation with
psychedelia was brief. By early 1968, they had fired Andrew Loog Oldham
and hired Allen Klein as their manager. The move coincided with their
return to driving rock & roll, which happened to coincide with
Richards' discovery of open tunings, a move that gave the Stones their
distinctively fat, powerful sound. The revitalized Stones were showcased
on the malevolent single "Jumpin' Jack Flash," which climbed to number
three in May 1968. Their next album, Beggar's Banquet, was finally
released in the fall, after being delayed for five months due its
controversial cover art of a dirty, graffiti-laden restroom. An edgy
record filled with detours into straight blues and campy country,
Beggar's Banquet was hailed as a masterpiece among the fledgling rock
press. Although it was seen as a return to form, few realized that while
it opened a new chapter of the Stones' history, it also was the closing
of their time with Brian Jones. Throughout the recording of Beggar's
Banquet, Jones was on the sidelines due to his deepening drug addiction
and his resentment of the dominance of Jagger and Richards. Jones left
the band on June 9, 1969, claiming to be suffering from artistic
differences between himself and the rest of the band. On July 3, 1969 --
less than a month after his departure -- Jones was found dead in his
swimming pool. The coroner ruled that it was "death by misadventure,"
yet his passing was the subject of countless rumors over the next two
years.
By the time of his death, the Stones had already replaced
Brian Jones with Mick Taylor, a former guitarist for John Mayall's
Bluesbreakers. He wasn't featured on "Honky Tonk Women," a number one
single released days after Jones' funeral, and he contributed only a
handful of leads on their next album, Let It Bleed. Released in the fall
of 1969, Let It Bleed was comprised of sessions with Jones and Taylor,
yet it continued the direction of Beggar's Banquet, signaling that a new
era in the Stones' career had begun, one marked by ragged music and an
increasingly wasted sensibility. Following Jagger's filming of Ned Kelly
in Australia during the first part of 1969, the group launched its
first American tour in three years. Throughout the tour -- the first
where they were billed as the World's Greatest Rock & Roll Band --
the group broke attendance records, but it was given a sour note when
the group staged a free concert at Altamont Speedway. On the advice of
the Grateful Dead, the Stones hired Hell's Angels as security, but that
plan backfired tragically. The entire show was unorganized and in
shambles, yet it turned tragic when the Angels killed a young black man,
Meredith Hunter, during the Stones' performance. In the wake of the
public outcry, the Stones again retreated from the spotlight and dropped
"Sympathy for the Devil," which some critics ignorantly claimed incited
the violence, from their set.
As the group entered hiatus, they
released the live Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out! in the fall of 1970. It was their
last album for Decca/London, and they formed Rolling Stones Records,
which became a subsidiary of Atlantic Records. During 1970, Jagger
starred in Nicolas Roeg's cult film Performance and married Nicaraguan
model Bianca Perez Morena de Macias, and the couple quickly entered high
society. As Jagger was jet-setting, Richards was slumming, hanging out
with country-rock pioneer Gram Parsons. Keith wound up having more
musical influence on 1971's Sticky Fingers, the first album the Stones
released though their new label. Following its release, the band
retreated to France on tax exile, where they shared a house and recorded
a double album, Exile on Main St. Upon its May 1972 release, Exile on
Main St. was widely panned, but over time it came to be considered one
of the group's defining moments.
Following Exile, the Stones began
to splinter in two, as Jagger concentrated on being a celebrity and
Richards sank into drug addiction. The band remained popular throughout
the '70s, but their critical support waned. Goats Head Soup, released in
1973, reached number one, as did 1974's It's Only Rock 'n' Roll, but
neither record was particularly well received. Taylor left the band
after It's Only Rock 'n' Roll, and the group recorded their next album
as they auditioned new lead guitarists, including Jeff Beck. They
finally settled on Ron Wood, former lead guitarist for the Faces and Rod
Stewart, in 1976, the same year they released Black n' Blue, which only
featured Wood on a handful of cuts. During the mid- and late '70s, all
the Stones pursued side projects, with both Wyman and Wood releasing
solo albums with regularity. Richards was arrested in Canada in 1977
with his common-law wife Anita Pallenberg for heroin possession. After
his arrest, he cleaned up and was given a suspended sentence the
following year. The band reconvened in 1978 to record Some Girls, an
energetic response to punk, new wave, and disco. The record and its
first single, the thumping disco-rocker "Miss You," both reached number
one, and the album restored the group's image. However, the group
squandered that goodwill with the follow-up, Emotional Rescue, a number
one record that nevertheless received lukewarm reviews upon its 1980
release. Tattoo You, released the following year, fared better both
critically and commercially, as the singles "Start Me Up" and "Waiting
on a Friend" helped the album spend nine weeks at number one. The Stones
supported Tattoo You with an extensive stadium tour captured in Hal
Ashby's movie Let's Spend the Night Together and the 1982 live album
Still Life.
Tattoo You proved to be the last time the Stones
completely dominated the charts and the stadiums. Although the group
continued to sell out concerts in the '80s and '90s, their records
didn't sell as well as previous efforts, partially because the albums
suffered due to Jagger and Richards' notorious mid-'80s feud. Starting
with 1983's Undercover, the duo conflicted about which way the band
should go, with Jagger wanting the Stones to follow contemporary trends
and Richards wanting them to stay true to their rock roots. As a result,
Undercover was a mean-spirited, unfocused record that received
relatively weak sales and mixed reviews. Released in 1986, Dirty Work
suffered a worse fate, since Jagger was preoccupied with his fledgling
solo career. Once Jagger decided that the Stones would not support Dirty
Work with a tour, Richards decided to make his own solo record with
1988's Talk Is Cheap. Appearing a year after Jagger's failed second solo
album, Talk Is Cheap received good reviews and went gold, prompting
Jagger and Richards to reunite late in 1988. The following year, the
Stones released Steel Wheels, which was received with good reviews, but
the record was overshadowed by its supporting tour, which grossed over
140 million dollars and broke many box office records. In 1991, the live
album Flashpoint, which was culled from the Steel Wheels shows, was
released.
Following the release of Flashpoint, Bill Wyman left the
band; he published a memoir, Stone Alone, within a few years of
leaving. The Stones didn't immediately replace Wyman, since they were
all working on solo projects; this time, there was none of the animosity
surrounding their mid-'80s projects. The group reconvened in 1994 with
bassist Darryl Jones, who had previously played with Miles Davis and
Sting, to record and release the Don Was-produced Voodoo Lounge. The
album received the band's strongest reviews in years, and its
accompanying tour was even more successful than the Steel Wheels tour.
On top of being more successful than its predecessor, Voodoo Lounge also
won the Stones their first Grammy for Best Rock Album. Upon the
completion of the Voodoo Lounge tour, the Stones released the live,
"unplugged" album Stripped in the fall of 1995. Similarly, after
wrapping up their tour in support of 1997's Bridges to Babylon, the
group issued yet another live set, No Security, the following year. A
high-profile greatest-hits tour in 2002 was launched despite the lack of
a studio album to support, and its album document Live Licks appeared
in 2004. A year later, the group issued A Bigger Bang, their third
effort with producer Don Was.
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