Tattoo YouThe Rolling Stones
Release Date: 06/09/2009
Original Release:
1981
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 1069646_CD
UPC # 602527015699
Label: UME
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Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: The Rolling Stones
Producer: The Glimmer Twins Distributor: Universal Distribution Notes: Audio Mixer: Gary Lyons. Audio Remasterers: Stephen Marcussen; Stewart Whitmore. Audio Remixer: Bob Clearmountain. After bum-rushing the '80s with EMOTIONAL RESCUE, the Stones released TATTOO YOU, the second half of a potent one-two album punch that showed the band asserting themselves as they entered their third decade of music-making. Essentially made up of songs dating as far back as 1972 sessions for GOATS HEAD SOUP, the Stones' 1981 release is still a potent slab of swagger and sass. "Hang Fire" is a tight two-minute and twenty second redefinition of surf music, and "Start Me Up" is classic Stones, replete with Jagger's sexual braggadocio and Keith's patented "Honky Tonk Women"-style riffs. The bluesy shuffle that is "Black Limousine" is only surpassed by the cocky "Little T & A," sung by an endearingly raspy Keith Richards. Most impressive on TATTOO YOU is the wistful "Waiting On A Friend," featuring jazz giant Sonny Rollins wailing away on his saxophone as the song fades out.
Rolling Stone (10/89) - Ranked #34 in Rolling Stone's "100 Best Albums Of The 80s" survey.
NME (Magazine) (7/9/94, p.43) - 6 - Good - "...the Stones hit their vaults and re-recorded a number of unreleased songs written years earlier..."
Originally part of the early 1960s British blues/R&B scene, the Rolling Stones rapidly ascended the heights of fame with a perfect combination of hit singles and media-grabbing scandals. By the '70s, Keith Richards had become a bona fide guitar hero, and Mick Jagger an unlikely sex symbol. The world became the Stones' stage, and their music continued to walk the line between blues, rock, and whatever lay around the next corner, be it reggae, funk, or disco. Despite the ravages of changing fashion, solo albums, and plain old age, the Stones persevered through the decades to become a venerable institution, refusing to relinquish their title as "The World's Greatest Rock & Roll Band."
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