<< FLAC The Rolling Stones - Black And Blue (1976) [SACD] (2011 SHM-SACD ISO)
The Rolling Stones - Black And Blue (1976) [SACD] (2011 SHM-SACD ISO)
Category Sound
FormatFLAC
SourceCD
BitrateLossless
GenreRock
TypeAlbum
Date 1 decade, 2 years
Size 1.85 GB
 
Website http://store.acousticsounds.com/d/78015/The_Rolling_Stones-Black_And_Blue-SHM_Single_Layer_SACDs
 
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Ronnie Wood replaced Mick Taylor for this 1976 release which includes "Fool To Cry" & "Hey Negrita"

Japanese only SACD+SHM-CD pressing. SACDs offer much higher fidelity than regular compact discs, containing up to four times the musical information. SACDs will not play in traditional CD players, but SACD players are able to play both SACDs and CDs.

When Black and Blue came out in 1976, many dismissed the album because it wasn't Exile on Main Street or even Goats Head Soup - which, in retrospect, is precisely what makes it so cool. By necessity, the sessions doubled as auditions to find a replacement for just-departed guitarist Mick Taylor, with Harvey Mandel, Wayne Perkins and eventual winner Ron Wood all bringing the heat; as it turned out, the presence of these highly motivated outside musicians - along with an emphasis on stretchable material - resulted in some of the most energized performances in the Stones canon.

The no-nonsense vibe is apparent from the album's first moments - the deep funk of "Hot Stuff." It isn't one of the Stones' greatest songs, but it is one of their greatest grooves. The swaggering, nonchalant "Hand of Fate," perhaps the least exposed of the band's classic rock numbers, finds Keith Richards and Perkins locked in an extended rally while Mick Jagger employs his voice as a rhythm instrument. After a steamy, spot-on cover of the Jamaican hit "Cherry Oh Baby" comes "Memory Motel," a vivid seven-minute road movie, co-starring Jagger and Richards on vocals, that is among the Stones' most stirring epic ballads, along with "Moonlight Mile" and "Angie." And that's just side one. The second half is its virtual twin, as another pair of sultry hip-shakers ("Hey Negrita," "Melody") boogaloo into another sublime ballad ("Fool to Cry") and a chunky rocker ("Crazy Mama").

Forty-one minutes of supertight, bone-dry, hi-fi rock and soul, Black and Blue is the only Stones long-player to treat feel as its primary subject matter, and that's the key to the record's charm. When Richards sings, "She's got a mind of her own. . . . She's one of a kind," in "Memory Motel," he could be describing this down-to-earth beauty.

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