The Rolling Stones - Black And Blue (2011) [SHM-SACD]
BAND/ARTIST: The Rolling Stones
- Title: Black And Blue
- Year Of Release: 1976 / 2011
- Label: Polydor – UIGY-9079
- Genre: Rock
- Quality: DSD64 image (*.iso) 2.0
- Total Time: 41:30
- Total Size: 1.68 GB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1 Hot Stuff 5:21
2 Hand Of Fate 4:28
3 Cherry Oh Baby 3:54
4 Memory Motel 7:06
5 Hey Negrita 4:58
6 Melody 5:48
7 Fool To Cry 5:02
8 Crazy Mama 4:32
1 Hot Stuff 5:21
2 Hand Of Fate 4:28
3 Cherry Oh Baby 3:54
4 Memory Motel 7:06
5 Hey Negrita 4:58
6 Melody 5:48
7 Fool To Cry 5:02
8 Crazy Mama 4:32
• SHM-SACD (Super High Material SACD) is the ultimate Super Audio CD that utilizes the materials and technologies that were developed for the SHM-CD to further enhance the audio-resolution. These discs are made with polycarbonate developed for the screen of the liquid crystal display. As it has a higher transparency, players can read the signal more faithfully. Also, it excels in fluidity, which enables you to cast a more accurate pit. What works wonders for a low resolution format such as CD should offer even greater sonic improvements in a real high resolution format such as SACD.
• The Rolling Stones recorded Black and Blue while auditioning Mick Taylor's replacement, so it's unfair to criticize it, really, for being longer on grooves and jams than songs, especially since that's what's good about it. Yes, the two songs that are undeniable highlights are "Memory Motel" and "Fool to Cry," the album's two ballads and, therefore, the two that had to be written and arranged, not knocked out in the studio; they're also the ones that don't quite make as much sense, though they still work in the context of the record. No, this is all about groove and sound, as the Stones work Ron Wood into their fabric. And the remarkable thing is, apart from "Hand of Fate" and "Crazy Mama," there's little straight-ahead rock & roll here. They play with reggae extensively, funk and disco less so, making both sound like integral parts of the Stones' lifeblood. Apart from the ballads, there might not be many memorable tunes, but there are times that you listen to the Stones just to hear them play, and this is one of them. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
• The Rolling Stones recorded Black and Blue while auditioning Mick Taylor's replacement, so it's unfair to criticize it, really, for being longer on grooves and jams than songs, especially since that's what's good about it. Yes, the two songs that are undeniable highlights are "Memory Motel" and "Fool to Cry," the album's two ballads and, therefore, the two that had to be written and arranged, not knocked out in the studio; they're also the ones that don't quite make as much sense, though they still work in the context of the record. No, this is all about groove and sound, as the Stones work Ron Wood into their fabric. And the remarkable thing is, apart from "Hand of Fate" and "Crazy Mama," there's little straight-ahead rock & roll here. They play with reggae extensively, funk and disco less so, making both sound like integral parts of the Stones' lifeblood. Apart from the ballads, there might not be many memorable tunes, but there are times that you listen to the Stones just to hear them play, and this is one of them. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
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