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Let It Bleed [DSD]
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The Rolling Stones, Rolling Stones
List Price: $18.98
Our Price: $9.48
You Save: $9.50 (50%)
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Product Details
- Artist: The Rolling Stones, Rolling Stones
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- Binding: Audio CD
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- Brand: ROLLING STONES
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- EAN: 0766481858829
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- Format: Original recording remastered
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- Label: Abkco
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- Manufacturer: Abkco
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- Number of Discs: 1
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- Product Group: Music
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- Publisher: Abkco
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- Release Date: 2002-08-27
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- Studio: Abkco
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- Title: Let It Bleed [DSD]
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- UPC: 766481858829
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Avg Customer Rating: 
Product Description: No Description Available No Track Information Available Media Type: CD Artist: ROLLING STONES Title: LET IT BLEED Street Release Date: 08/27/2002 Domestic Genre: ROCK/POP
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Customer Reviews
Bloodrock
I got nasty habits. Small town boy, hung up on the only decent girl around. Eyes so blue they shoot me dead, the sky is grey with jealousy. Queue up for the bathroom 'round about 7:35, every Tuesday's early but her bad mood just makes me smile. Cold, private, recondite. Inaccessible. Why can't I resist this creature? Got class, style, history. I actually cook for her. Think about her all the time. What's wrong with me? I should say it, I should blow it: "Don't you wanna live with me?"
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Goodbye to the love crowd
Released just before the infamous Altamont debacle of December, 1969, "Let It Bleed" signals farewell to the peace-and-love Sixties in no uncertain terms. Once again, following "Beggars Banquet", an entire year went by until the release of the next Rolling Stones album. That year was 1969, and it had seen the death of Brian Jones, under suspicious circumstances, earlier that summer. Jones is present, posthumously, on "Bleed", participating in both the vicious "Midnight Rambler" (percussion), and "You Got The Silver" (autoharp), the latter track featuring Keith Richards' first solo lead vocal. Jones' replacement, the young Mick Taylor, was firmly in place, playing on "Live With Me" and "Country Honk"; though his relatively-unsullied image did not fit in with the rest of the group, he was probably the best guitarist the band ever had. In Jimmy Miller, who would work with them through 1973, the group also found its finest producer, a man who knew how to get the most out of their once-again-blues-based material. (With a cover of Robert Johnson's "Love In Vain", featuring Ry Cooder on mandolin, the band went straight to the motherlode.) "You Can't Always Get What You Want" is NOT blues, but, recorded with the London Bach Choir, it resonates, mournfully, as an end-of-an-era anthem. The Seventies lay ahead; the Stones, always bad boys and outlaws, were ready.
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Great Sound - Great Classic
If you're wondering which CD of this Stones classic to get, get this one. The digitalized remastering process here sounds almost as good as pristine heavyweight vinyl. And for younger listeners, if you've never heard "Let It Bleed", you're in for a ride. From the first quiet haunting notes of "Gimme Shelter" to the tongue in cheek choral intro and outro of "You Can't Always Get What You Want" - with plenty of hard rockin' in between - it's the Stones at one of their all-time peaks.
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very good album
I am a music lover period and The Stones one of the great groups of all time.Had some 45 rmps by them in the sixties and seventys but this is my first album.No complaints here.
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Probably the best overall Stones album/cd....
Sticky Fingers is close, but for overall quantity of good songs on one disc - this is probably it! Not "knocking" their other disc's (they have plenty of good ones), or individual songs on others - but overall, for number of good rockers/quality tunes on one album I like this one.
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