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Music CD - The Rolling Stones: Some Girls

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Music CD: Some Girls Artist: The Rolling Stones
List Price: $29.98
Our Price: $16.87
Your Save: $ 13.11 ( 44% )
Availability:
Manufacturer: Virgin Records Us
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Tracks:
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1. Miss You 2. When the Whip Comes Down 3. Just My Imagination (Running Away With Me) 4. Some Girls 5. Lies 6. Far Away Eyes 7. Respectable 8. Before They Make Me Run 9. Beast of Burden 10. Shattered
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Binding: LP Record EAN: 0724384786717 Format: Limited Edition Label: Virgin Records Us Manufacturer: Virgin Records Us Number Of Discs: 1 Publication Date: 2001 Publisher: Virgin Records Us Release Date: 1999-10-19 Studio: Virgin Records Us
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: there are nice songs on this album Comment: this is a nice album. there are nice songs on this album. the cover art is nice. the cut-out jacket with the interchangeable sleeve promotes an element of fun. the musical contributors are very talented with their upbeat songs and childish humor. the singer is particularly enthusiastic with finger-snapping guitar music.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Some girls Comment: Those who are seeking to expand your Rolling stones collection or begin it, I'd leave this around the bottom of the list. Starts off great with "Miss You" then has trouble until "Far Away Eyes" runs into a road block again, but finishes terrifically with "Shattered" and "Beast of Burden".
Customer Rating:      Summary: A LETHAL DOSE OF ROCK AND ROLL! Comment: By the mid-late 70's things weren't going so well for The Stones. They were in a creative slump and their personal lives were in upheavel. Keith Richards had just been busted (again) in Toronto and was facing up to 20 years in jail after feds raided his hotel room, woke him from his sleep and arrested him. He was found to have so much heroin on him that they tacked on an 'intent to sell' charge to top it off. It appeared the Stones were done.
Luckily for Keith, his 'Blind Angel' came through and saved him. According to Richards a blind girl used to come to all the Stones shows in Toronto and sit near the front. Keith would make sure she always had a ride home because he would worry about what could 'happen to a blind girl in the street'. During the trial this girl came in and told the judge this story and luckily for Keith the judge decided to give him a Visa to go home and get cleaned up.
Whether it was the punk movement of the late 70's or the fact that they were faced with the REAL possibility of being done as a band, 1978's "Some Girls" finds them reinvigorated and playing some of the fiercest rock and roll they have played in quite some time. Opening with the disco thump of "Miss You" the album is full of energy and hooks galore like no other Stones album in years. Rock and roll was back in style as evidenced on "When the Whip Comes Down" and "Respectable" where Richards and Wood trade off fiery solos and Jagger sings, screams and yells like a banshee. Pure adrenaline! The album also contains one of Richards best songs "Before They Make Me Run", the campy country classic "Far Away Eyes", the rocking "Lies" and a cover of the Temptations' "Imagination".
The title track, "Some Girls" with it's controversial lyrics is sung with a punkish sneer and you have two other Stones classics in tow-"the pleading "Beast of Burden" and the funky "Shattered".
The Stones enjoyed a rebirth of sorts that began with this album in 1978 and ran through the early 80's. This was Ron Wood's first full album with the Stones and the music they present here is fresh, invigorating and punkish. There were more hooks here than their last two albums combined. Of course this sold in the millions and today it provides fans with a mid period reckless classic that exudes an energy few bands, including the Stones themselves, have been able to approach since.
Customer Rating:      Summary: some girls Comment: blues & jazz to country western (far away eyes) this has something for everyone! love the way Mick handles this diversity, sounds great & funny too!
Customer Rating:      Summary: A great comeback album Comment: After having produced five great albums in a row--Beggar's Banquet, Let It Bleed, Get Yer Ya-Yas Out (A concert album), Sticky Fingers, and Exile on Main Street--the Rolling Stones put out a series of lesser works. Each had some excellent songs on them, but they were pretty uneven, certainly not up to the standards of the "Fab Five" that preceded them. "Goat's Head Soup" had songs like "Angie"; "It's Only Rock and Roll" had the title song; "Black and Blue" had some good cuts, too. But nothing like those earlier albums mentioned above.
And then "Some Girls" came out and, for an instant, it was the glory days of the Rolling Stones again. Starting off with "Miss You," the CD begins strongly. Song after song appears, each strong and some "top of their game" songs. Among special cuts for me. . . .
Their cover version of The Temptations' "Just My Imagination (Running away with Me)" is terrific. The Stones have often done justice to the work of other songwriters and performers (e.g., many of the blues songs that they have covered over time compare well with blues greats who originated them), and this is another example. The lascivious "Some Girls" offended (quite understandably) many listeners, but it is also fine rock and roll.
Keith's obligatory solo, "Before They Make Me Run" is one of his better turns. One reviewer many years ago referred to this as his "non-apology" for his lifestyle. "Beast of Burden" is another terrific song.
And the CD closes with the rip roaring "Shattered." Compare with their earlier "Hot Stuff." The term "Shattered" recurs throughout this cut, illustrating their perceptions of New York. One line:
"Bite the Big Apple--don't mind the maggots."
Another: "Rats on the Westside, bedbugs uptown."
Hardly a Chamber of Commerce ad for New York City! But the song has the kind of life that drips from the tracks of those great five albums in a row. Great way to close the album! Yep, this is a real deal Rolling Stones album. Wish there were a lot more like this after its appearance in 1978, but most since then have featured a few terrific songs with a drop-off in excitement and quality after those (I have already reviewed one of the latter fine albums--"Bigger Bang" and I'll probably take a shot at a couple other choice efforts later on, too).
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Editorial Reviews:
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A fresh, uncompromising attempt to incorporate 1978 pop techniques into the band's familiar sound, Some Girls opens with the disco sass of "Miss You" and closes with the self-destructive punk of "Shattered." (Both songs, especially "Miss You," with its distinctive Mel Collins sax solo, remain live showstoppers.) So the Stones declared credibility in the dance circuit without sacrificing their hard-rock reputation. Though the anti-love "Beast of Burden" and the stylishly slow "Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me)" continue to rack up the most airplay, the obscurities stand up surprisingly well. Worth replaying: Keith Richards's rickety rocker "Before They Make Me Run." --Steve Knopper
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