Rolling Stones to remaster post 1970 albums

Discussion in 'Music Corner' started by Doug Schiller, Apr 3, 2009.

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  1. George Blair

    George Blair Senior Member

    Location:
    Portland, OR
    Yep. And there is some good stuff waiting to be heard. Where's the live at BBC? Hasn't virtually every other british invasion band released one? Not to mention the great live era...
     
  2. quicksrt

    quicksrt Senior Member

    Location:
    Los Angeles
    There is that classic 71 BBC show in circulation, and also lovely Chess Studios outtakes in stereo sound. The early BBC stuff would be bottom of my list of wants. I'd personally rather have Taxile and Ichy Fingers outs, except I already have them.

    As a matter of fact, there is just tons and tons of Stones stuff out there to be heard. And if one is not inclined to go for it, then fine, others will. No need for London/Brussels 73 live, it is out there all over the place.

    Btw, the Rarities CD from Starbucks had "Through the Lonely Nights" which was not on CD previously afaik. "Let it Rock" was a lesser item in my consideration.
     
  3. dolstein

    dolstein Senior Member

    Location:
    Arlingon, VA
    So, apparently Exile on Main Street is going to be singled out for special treatment. I wonder whether we're going to get the first of hopefully many Universal Deluxe Editions from the band. Perhaps a remastered studio album plus a bonus disc containing live recordings from 1972.
     
  4. quicksrt

    quicksrt Senior Member

    Location:
    Los Angeles

    Do you have a link with this news? I really must have missed this.
     
  5. Mike D'Aversa

    Mike D'Aversa Senior Member

    Quote:
    Originally Posted by dolstein
    So, apparently Exile on Main Street is going to be singled out for special treatment. I wonder whether we're going to get the first of hopefully many Universal Deluxe Editions from the band. Perhaps a remastered studio album plus a bonus disc containing live recordings from 1972.

    It's being singled out as a separate release from the others, but nobody knows exactly why/what that implies...
     
  6. Mr Olsen

    Mr Olsen Granddanois

    The "old" ABKCO/Virgin remasters by Bob Ludwig sounds pretty good to my ears. Who's doing the new post-1971 remasters? No information in the UMG press release...
     
  7. quicksrt

    quicksrt Senior Member

    Location:
    Los Angeles
    They are likely not remastering, just redoing the art and package. But I have not seen anything official on that even. As a matter of fact I have seen nothing about any of this. :laugh:
     
  8. Mike D'Aversa

    Mike D'Aversa Senior Member

    "They" ALWAYS remaster...
     
  9. DetroitDoomsayer

    DetroitDoomsayer Forum Middle Child

    Location:
    Detroit, Michigan
    Universal didn't remaster the Elvis Costello single disc reissues, they use the same mastering as the Rhinos.
     
  10. bartels76

    bartels76 Forum Hall Of Fame

    Location:
    CT
    Musictap says these will be new remasterings.
     
  11. Mike D'Aversa

    Mike D'Aversa Senior Member

    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Mike D'Aversa
    "They" ALWAYS remaster...

    True...
     
  12. quicksrt

    quicksrt Senior Member

    Location:
    Los Angeles
    oh, then it must be true! :laugh:
     
  13. Oatsdad

    Oatsdad Oat, Biscuits, Abbie & Mitzi: Best Dogs Ever

    Location:
    Alexandria VA
    Didn't people say that in 1978? :D
     
  14. Saint Johnny

    Saint Johnny Forum Resident

    Location:
    Asbury Park
    Earlier than '78, IIRC. But now time isn't on their side! ;)
     
  15. Bowie Fett

    Bowie Fett Forum Resident

    Location:
    Los Angeles, CA
    Only 10 days until release and still no reviews, samples, or images of these new discs. Wow...
     
  16. Mike D'Aversa

    Mike D'Aversa Senior Member

    Why wow? What's there to be interested in?
     
  17. quicksrt

    quicksrt Senior Member

    Location:
    Los Angeles
  18. Doug Schiller

    Doug Schiller Senior Member Thread Starter

    Location:
    Tampa Bay
    Still, you think, after throwing out sacks of money at the Stones and going through the effort to remaster the albums, they would have a PR campaign.
    There were a number of articles when the Doors released their controversial set.
    I haven't seen a single print ad.
    It looks to me like they are just quietly replacing the inventory with their label's version and they will slap on the remaster sticker to sucker potential buyers.
     
  19. Mike D'Aversa

    Mike D'Aversa Senior Member

    Maybe they're not really remastering at all (ala Elvis Costello a year or to ago), but simply cloning Virgin/Ludwig's 90's work onto the new label? It's not like they needed to be redone in the first place...
     
  20. Claus

    Claus Senior Member

    Location:
    Germany
    anyone has heard the new remasters?

    found this info:

    The band said, “The sound now differs in that we changed a few things and took away some of the hard edges that were on some of the albums and improved the overall fidelity without losing the feel of the original masters.”
     
  21. Joel1963

    Joel1963 Senior Member

    Location:
    Montreal
    Sounds like the Stones are losing their, er, "stones".
     
  22. Stefan

    Stefan Senior Member

    Location:
    Montreal, Canada
    That could be good or bad. :)

    Last night I was A-Bing a new needledrop I did of an original 59100 US LP pressing of Sticky Fingers with the '94 remaster, and yikes that remaster was brighter than I remembered! The original LP sounded full and powerful with balanced frequency response but the CD was really harsh when played back-to-back with the LP.

    I truly wish they'd put as much care into these new remasters as Abcko did with their porition of the catalog in 2002, but I don't have much hope that they will. Too bad.
     
  23. dolstein

    dolstein Senior Member

    Location:
    Arlingon, VA
    Any word on what the packaging will be like? Will there be new liner notes, additional photos, etc.? When the remastered Virgin CDs came out, I bought the mini-album versions rather than the standard jewel box versions. What were the standard JB booklets like?
     
  24. Mike Dow

    Mike Dow I kind of like the music

    Location:
    Bangor, Maine
    http://home.nestor.minsk.by/jazz/press/2009/04/3018.html

    Universal launches next phase of Rolling Stones reissues

    Following the release of the first batch of re-mastered, post 1971 studio albums by The Rolling Stones, Universal Music Group have confirmed details of the second instalment in this trilogy of reissued albums.

    The comprehensive reissue programme started in May with the re-appearance of the legendary Sticky Fingers, Goats Head Soup, It’s Only Rock’n’Roll and Black And Blue in stores and digitally. It now continues apace with the reintroduction of such acknowledged classics as Some Girls, Emotional Rescue, Tattoo You and Undercover, due out on 8 June 2009. The third and final instalment (of the studio albums) will be released in July.

    The band said, “The sound now differs in that we changed a few things and took away some of the hard edges that were on some of the albums and improved the overall fidelity without losing the feel of the original masters.”

    By the late seventies, The Rolling Stones were unquestionably the world’s greatest rock’n’roll band, a tag they thoroughly deserved and have yet to lose. They had moved effortlessly into open-air stadiums but also began a tradition of performing more intimate shows in theatres and clubs alongside their groundbreaking concerts in arenas. To the delight of their millions of fans, they have continued with this policy to the present.

    The world really was The Rolling Stones’ oyster in the late seventies, as their Canadian escapades made headlines around the world. They partied at Studio 54, came up with dancefloor favourites Miss You and Emotional Rescue, and recorded in Paris, Nassau and New York. The eighties saw the band stretch the envelope further still, working with jazz great Sonny Rollins, film directors Julien Temple and Michael Lindsay-Hogg, and producers Chris Kimsey and Steve Lillywhite.

    Amazingly, the Rolling Stones topped these achievements with ever-more ambitious tours in the nineties and noughties, and recorded three more classic studio albums with acclaimed producer Don Was, in Dublin, Los Angeles, France and the Caribbean.

    Some Girls introduced a whole new generation to the music of the Stones. The infectious dance groove of Miss You topped the US charts, as did the album in 1978. Both releases also made the Top 3 in the UK, where the country-flavoured Far Away Eyes, featuring Ronnie Wood on pedal steel guitar, enjoyed substantial airplay. Respectable, the follow-up single in Britain, proved that they could match the punks they had influenced so much. The US market preferred the mid-tempo Beast of Burden which went Top Ten there.

    A cover of The Temptations’ Just My Imagination (Running Away With Me), the driving When The Whip Comes Down, Keith Richards’ vocal turn on Before They Make Me Run and the urgent Shattered – a US Top 30 single – make this a must-have album, which has already sold over 6 million copies worldwide, and still provides the group with concert highlights 30 years on. Peter Corriston’s striking cover design, controversial at the time, remains a classic.

    First issued in 1980, Emotional Rescue was a transatlantic chart-topper and its infectious title track made the best-sellers list too. Recorded in Nassau in the Bahamas, in Paris and in New York, and produced by Jagger and Richards under their Glimmer Twins guise, it also contains the classic rocker She’s So Cold, which went Top 40 in both the UK and the US, and Dance (Pt 1), another groove-oriented track, which was a club hit in the States.

    The bittersweet ballad All About You features one of Richards’ most affecting vocal performances as well as Bobby Keys’ distinctive saxophone. Corriston used a thermo camera to create the album’s unusual cover, and drew on the same technique for the Emotional Rescue video.

    Tattoo You is another undisputed classic and rightly topped the US charts for nine weeks on its original release in 1981. Its opening track and first single, Start Me Up, remains one of the band’s best loved songs and a mainstay of their live set. The cleverly sequenced Tattoo You comprises six rock tracks, including the US Top 20 hit Hang Fire, the fast blues of Black Limousine, Richards’ lead vocal on Little T & A, and the sneering Neighbours, but the five ballads which follow – and formed the second side of the original vinyl – really lift it into another league.

    The sweet soul of Worried About You, Tops and the sublime Waiting On A Friend, featuring jazz great Sonny Rollins on saxophone, in particular show what a fine singer Jagger is. Corriston’s cover design won a Grammy Award for best album package.

    Produced by the Glimmer Twins and Chris Kimsey, and recorded in Paris and New York, Undercover made the Top 5 on both sides of the Atlantic in 1983. Its lead-off single, the stunning Undercover Of The Night, incorporated elements of reggae, dub and dance and proved that the group kept their finger on the pulse of popular music.

    Jagger has never been in better form than when delivering its politically-charged lyrics. He also raps about the Texas Chainsaw Massacre on the nasty Too Much Blood. The Top 50 single She Was Hot has rightly been revived by the band in recent years, as has the Richards-sung rocker I Wanna Hold You. Corriston’s cover originally came with strategically-placed stickers.

    Fans will have the option of purchasing a collector’s box in which to house all 14 studio albums. The catalogue will also be available digitally. The classic album Exile on Main Street will also be re released later in 2009 by UMG as part of wider plans for this title. Watch this space.
     
  25. reb

    reb Money Beats Soul

    Location:
    Long Island
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