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Detaljer om materialet
Type
Cd (musik)
Format
2 cd'er, 1 bilag
Sprog
engelsk
Genre
70'er rockrock
Emnetal
78.794:5
Bidrag af
Indhold
Dancing With Mr D (2020)100 Years Ago (2020)Coming Down Again (2020)Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (2020)Angie (2020)Silver Train (2020)Hide Your Love (2020)Winter (2020)Can You Hear The Music (2020)Star Star (2020)ScarletAll The RageCriss Cross100 Years Ago (Piano Demo)Dancing With Mr D (Instrumental)Heartbreaker (Instrumental)Hide Your Love (Alternate Mix)Dancing With Mr D (Glyn Johns 1973 mix)Doo Doo Doo Doo DooSilver Train (Glyn Johns 1973 mix)
Beskrivelse
Album oprindelig publiceret 1973, i Giles Martin 2020 stereo remix plus bonustracks (cd 2)
Udgave
2020 stereo remix
Forlag
PromotoneUniversal Music International
Målgruppe
voksenmaterialer
På hjemmesiden
Anmeldelser
Gaffa online, 2020-09-27
"Her ved et genhør i forbindelse med genudgivelsen må man (...) konstatere, at der faktisk er flere fine skæringer på det lidt oversete album. 'Angie' er ganske vist eneste sang fra pladen, som har opnået klassikerstatus - men også '100 Years Ago', 'Silver Train' og ikke mindst balladen 'Winter' er stærke indspark fra et band, som stadig lyder vitale og vedkommende"
Gaffa online, 2020-09-27
Pitchfork, 2020-09-16
"In 1973, Goats Head Soup marked the end of the Stones' imperial era, capturing them as they transitioned from the World's Greatest Rock'n'Roll Band to just a really good one"
Pitchfork, 2020-09-16
Louder, 2020-09-04
"The Rolling Stones' eleventh studio album has long been seen as an acquired taste, plain fare compared to its immaculate predecessors: 1972's Exile On Main St. and 1971's Sticky Fingers. However, while it's easy to see Goats Head Soup (its title inspired by a Jamaican aphrodisiac, apparently) as a missed opportunity - the band had decamped to Dynamic Sounds Studios in Kingston in late 1972, enthused by the possibilities of fusing rock with reggae - it retains a gritty charm of its own"
Louder, 2020-09-04
Rolling stone, 2020-09-03
"Goats Head Soup didn't - and still doesn't - sound like what one would have expected from the Stones after Exile ... But after ten years of recording, touring and the accompanying excess, the Stones sound burnt out, regretful, melancholic, even at times vulnerable - in other words like human beings, not invincible rock gods. How many times has that happened with them? Not many, which lends the best parts of Goats Head Soup a mesmerizing mood all its own. Adding to the album's legacy, let's not forget that "Waiting on a Friend" was born during the making of this record"
Rolling stone, 2020-09-03