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The Rolling Stones - Let It Bleed [Remastered] (CD)

Album Details: Let It Bleed [Remastered]

Release Date:08/27/2002
Label:Abkco
UPC:018771900429

Other Available Formats: Let It Bleed [Remastered]

User Reviews: Let It Bleed [Remastered]

  • Overall:

    A classic

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Sep 26, 2002

    One of the most brilliant and inspired Rolling Stones album. Everything in it is perfect. If you don't already have it, buy it.

  • Overall:

    OLD ROLLING STONES ARE WONDERFUL

    By MICHAEL  Aug 8, 2002

    THIS IS ONE OF THE OVER 500 VINYL RECORD ALBUMS IN MY COLLECTION. I DON'T THINK I HAVE ANY REMAKES ON VINYL, THEY ARE ALL ON THEIR ORIGINAL LABEL. THIS SPLENIDD RECORD BY THE ROLLING STONES IS ON THE FANTASTIC BLUE LONDON LABEL AND IS IN GOOD SHAPE. ...I LOVE THE ROLLING STONES UNTIL 1971!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Let It Bleed [Remastered]

  • All Music Guide

    Mostly recorded without Brian Jones who died several months before its release (although he does play on two tracks) and was replaced by Mick Taylor (who also plays on just two songs) this extends the rock and blues feel of Beggars Banquet into slightly harderrocking, more demonically sexual territory. The Stones were never as consistent on album as their main rivals, the Beatles, and Let It Bleed suffers from some rather perfunctory tracks, like "Monkey Man" and a countrified remake of the classic "Honky Tonk Woman" (here titled "Country Honk"). Yet some of the songs are among their very best, especially "Gimme Shelter," with its shimmering guitar lines and apocalyptic lyrics; the harmonicadriven "Midnight Rambler"; the druggy party ambience of the title track; and the stunning "You Can't Always Get What You Want," which was The Stones' "Hey Jude" of sorts, with its epic structure, horns, philosophical lyrics, and swelling choral vocals. "You Got the Silver" (Keith Richards' first l...ead vocal) and Robert Johnson's "Love in Vain," by contrast, were as close to the roots of acoustic downhome blues as The Stones ever got.The Rolling Stones' London/ABKCO catalog was reissued in August of 2002, packaged in digipacks with restored album artwork, remastered, and released as hybrid discs that contain both CD and Super Audio CD layers. The remastering performed with Direct Stream Digital (DSD) encoding is a drastic improvement, leaping out of the speaker yet still sounding like the original albums. This is noticeable on the standard CD layer but is considerably more pronounced on the SACD layer, which is shockingly realistic in its detail and presence yet is still faithful to the original mixes; Keith Richards' revvedup acoustic guitar on "Street Fighting Man" still sends the machine into overdrive, for instance. It just sounds like he's in the room with you. Even if you've never considered yourself an audiophile, have never heard the differences between standard and goldplated CDs, you will hear the difference with SACD, even on a cheap stereo system without a highend amplifier or speakers. And you won't just hear the difference, you'll be an instant convert and wish, hope, and pray that other artists whose catalog hasn't been reissued since the early days of CD Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Neil Young, especially the Beatles are given the same treatment in the very near future. SACD and DSD are that good.] - Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

The Rolling Stones

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 de... Read more