The Rolling Stones
Greatest Vinyl Hits
1964-1997 (2021)
MP3 LOSSY CBR320
PBTHAL VINYL TRACKS
CONVERTED FROM 24BIT
WITH DBPOWERAMP
DYNAMIC RANGE 12
LOW 10 HIGH 16
NO VOLUME NORMALIZING
CHARLIE WATTS TRIBUTE
1941-2021
R.I.P.
allmusic.com...
Within a few years of making their debut in 1964, people were calling the Rolling Stones the Greatest Rock 'n' Roll Band in the World, as if it had been their birthright. And despite a great many creative peaks and valleys over the decades, in the 2020s plenty of folks were still happy to call them that. They created consistently compelling, innovative music through the 1960s, and if they were more hit and miss in the '70s and '80s, the fact they could knock out albums like Sticky Fingers (1971), Exile on Main Street (1972), Some Girls (1978), Tattoo You (1981) and Undercover (1983) when the spirit moved them reminded fans that they never truly lost the touch, and as recently as 2016's raw, committed Blue & Lonesome and their enthusiastically received tours of the 2010s, they sounded as if they wanted to be certain the world knew no one could ever count them out as a force to be reckoned with.
Throughout the Stones' history, the twin focal points with most fans were Mick Jagger, the swaggering, lascivious, and kinetic vocalist and frontman, and Keith Richards, the guitarist who defined the notion of rhythm as lead and spent decades as rock's leading poster boy for charmingly reckless behavior. However, to a vocal minority and fans and an impressive number of fellow musicians, the true source of the band's magic could be found at the back of the stage, behind the drums. Charlie Watts, who died on August 24, 2021 at the age of 80, was always an implacable presence in concert, always focused and right in the zone, and he laid out arguably the most satisfying backbeat in rock 'n' roll history. From the late '60s onward, many rock drummers believed the prime indicators of talent were the ability to hit hard, throw as many exotic rudiments into a song as possible, and toss a few extended solos into the set. Charlie Watts had no use for any of that. What Watts brought to the Stones was a style that rolled just as much as it rocked. He gave their performances a swing that few of their peers could match, and their music had a groove that was the product of an unerring instinct about where to put the two and four on the snare, and fills that accented the songs and lifted them up, rather than nailing them down. Ginger Baker's work in Cream may have exemplified one school of thought about rock drumming, but Watts saw his job as a drummer not as a place to compete with his bandmates, but to support, complement, and augment what they were doing. As Watts once told a journalist, "I don’t like drum solos. I never take them. I admire some people who do them, but generally, I don’t like them. It’s not something I sit and listen to. I prefer drummers in the band playing with the band."
Tracklist:
01.-Time Is On My Side
02.-Ruby Tuesday
03.-Get Off Of My Cloud
04.-(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction
05.-Paint It, Black
06.-Let's Spend The Night Together
07.-Honky Tonk Women
08.-Street Fighting Man
09.-Sympathy For The Devil
10.-Jumpin' Jack Flash
11.-Let It Bleed
12.-Gimme Shelter
13.-Midnight Rambler
14.-You Can't Always Get What You Want
15.-Monkey Man
16.-Brown Sugar
17.-Wild Horses
18.-All Down The Line
19.-Rocks Off
20.-Tumbling Dice
21.-Happy
22.-Angie
23.-Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker)
24.-If You Can't Rock Me
25.-It's Only Rock 'N Roll (But I Like It)
26.-Ain't Too Proud To Beg
27.-Hand Of Fate
28.-Hot Stuff
29.-Fool To Cry
30.-When The Whip Comes Down
31.-Far Away Eyes
32.-Miss You
33.-Beast Of Burden
34.-Shattered
35.-Emotional Rescue
36.-She's So Cold
37.-Hang Fire
38.-Start Me Up
39.-Waiting On A Friend
40.-It Must Be Hell
41.-She Was Hot
42.-Undercover Of The Night
43.-One Hit (To The Body)
44.-Harlem Shuffle
45.-Almost Hear You Sigh
46.-Mixed Emotions
47.-Rock And A Hard Place
48.-Love Is Strong
49.-Out Of Tears
50.-Saint Of Me
Run Time: 03:39:39
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88
An excellent compilation and a worthy tribute to the Watts / Richards legacy.
Nice of you to include the original album covers.
RIP Charlie Watts. Thanks, 88.
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