Track Listing DISC 1: 1. Tell Me 2. Not Fade Away 3. Last Time, The 4. It's All Over Now 5. Good Times, Bad Times 6. I'm Free 7. Out of Time 8. Lady Jane 9. Sittin' on a Fence 10. Have You Seen Your Mother Baby, Standing in the Shadow? 11. Dandelion 12. We Love You
DISC 2: 1. She's a Rainbow 2. 2000 Light Years From Home 3. Child of the Moon - (RMK) 4. No Expectations 5. Let It Bleed 6. What to Do 7. Fortune Teller 8. Poison Ivy - (Version 1) 9. Everybody Needs Somebody to Love 10. Come On 11. Money 12. Bye Bye Johnnie 13. Poison Ivy - (Version 2) 14. I've Been Loving You Too Long 15. I Can't Be Satisfied 16. Long Long While
| Details | | Playing Time: | 90 min. | | Contributing Artists: | John Lennon, Paul McCartney | | Distributor: | Universal Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes The Rolling Stones: Keith Richards (vocals, guitar); Mick Jagger (vocals); Brian Jones (various instruments, guitar); Mick Taylor (guitar); Bill Wyman (bass); Charlie Watts (drums). Additional personnel includes: John Lennon, Paul McCartney (background vocals). Producers: Andrew Loog Oldham, The Rolling Stones, Jimmy Miller. Audio Remasterers: Jon Astley; Bob Ludwig; Steve Rosenthal; Teri Landi; Pascal Byrne. When you're anthologizing the Rolling Stones, one of the first things you must accept is that you're doomed to failure. No one album can possibly tell the story of the band that's explored so many different musical avenues and recorded so many memorable songs. Still, the double-disc best of HOT ROCKS, and this, its sequel, come perilously close. This set wisely doesn't attempt to be comprehensive. Instead, it just picks out various gems from different points in the band's development. Their R&B/roots period is well-represented by covers of "It's All Over Now" and "Not Fade Away." "She's A Rainbow" and "2000 Light Years From Home" are monuments to the band's psychedelic phase. "No Expectations" and "Let It Bleed" are bluesy tunes that cut to the quick, emphasizing the Stones' gift for visceral compositions and the sound that defined what was--arguably--their greatest period (the late '60s). Though HOT ROCKS is the place to turn for a comprehensive cross section of the band's biggest and most essential hits, MORE HOT ROCKS is an excellent companion piece, bringing together some of the Stones' lesser known but equally satisfying work.
Editorial Reviews ...MORE HOT ROCKS is an exploitation reissue par excellence... Rolling Stone (02/01/1973)
9 (out of 10) - ...[MORE HOT ROCKS and HOT ROCKS] pile together the cream of the Stones' first eight years... NME (07/08/1995)
...MORE HOT ROCKS is an exploitation reissue par excellence...NME (7/8/95, p.46) - 9 (out of 10) - ...[MORE HOT ROCKS and HOT ROCKS] pile together the cream of the Stones' first eight years... Rolling Stone (02/01/1973)
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