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Bridges To Babylon (2009 Remastered)

(CD; Rock englischsprachig)
TonträgerAudio-CD
Englisch
Polydorerschienen am17.07.2009
Voodoo Lounge confirmed that the Stones could age gracefully, but it never sounded modern; it sounded classicist. With its successor, Bridges to Babylon, Mick Jagger was determined to bring the Rolling Stones into the '90s, albeit tentatively, and hired hip collaborators like the Dust Brothers (Beck, Beastie Boys) and Danny Saber (Black Grape) to give the veteran group an edge on their explorations of drum loops and samples. Of course, the Stones are the Stones, and no production is going to erase that, but the group is smart enough -- or Keith Richards is stubborn enough -- to work within its limitations and to have producer Don Was act as executive producer. As a result, Bridges to Babylon sounds like the Stones without sounding tired. The band is tight and energetic, and there's just enough flair to the sultry "Anybody Seen My Baby?," the menacing "Gunface," and the low-key, sleazy "Might as Well Get Juiced" to make them sound contemporary. But the real key to the success of Bridges to Babylon is the solid, craftsmanlike songwriting. While there aren't any stunners on the album, nothing is bad, with rockers like "Flip the Switch" and "Low Down" sounding as convincing as ballads like "Already Over Me." And, as always, Keith contributes three winners -- including the reggae workout "You Don't Have to Mean It" and the slow-burning "How Can I Stop" -- that cap off another fine latter-day Stones record.

(Stephen Thomas Erlewine ; allmusic.com)
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Produkt

KlappentextVoodoo Lounge confirmed that the Stones could age gracefully, but it never sounded modern; it sounded classicist. With its successor, Bridges to Babylon, Mick Jagger was determined to bring the Rolling Stones into the '90s, albeit tentatively, and hired hip collaborators like the Dust Brothers (Beck, Beastie Boys) and Danny Saber (Black Grape) to give the veteran group an edge on their explorations of drum loops and samples. Of course, the Stones are the Stones, and no production is going to erase that, but the group is smart enough -- or Keith Richards is stubborn enough -- to work within its limitations and to have producer Don Was act as executive producer. As a result, Bridges to Babylon sounds like the Stones without sounding tired. The band is tight and energetic, and there's just enough flair to the sultry "Anybody Seen My Baby?," the menacing "Gunface," and the low-key, sleazy "Might as Well Get Juiced" to make them sound contemporary. But the real key to the success of Bridges to Babylon is the solid, craftsmanlike songwriting. While there aren't any stunners on the album, nothing is bad, with rockers like "Flip the Switch" and "Low Down" sounding as convincing as ballads like "Already Over Me." And, as always, Keith contributes three winners -- including the reggae workout "You Don't Have to Mean It" and the slow-burning "How Can I Stop" -- that cap off another fine latter-day Stones record.

(Stephen Thomas Erlewine ; allmusic.com)
Zusatztext

Songtexte abgedruckt

All songs written by M. Jagger & K. Richards

℗ & © 2009 Promotone B. V. under exclusive license to Universal International Music B. V.

Details
ISBN/GTIN0602527016450
ProduktartTonträger
EinbandartAudio-CD
Verlag
Erscheinungsjahr2009
Erscheinungsdatum17.07.2009
SpracheEnglisch
Gewicht102 g
Artikel-Nr.1025939
Rubriken

Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
  • Flip The Switch 
  • Anybody Seen My Baby? (written by M. Jagger, K. Richards, k. d. lang, B. Mink)
  • Low Down 
  • Already Over Me 
  • Gunface 
  • You Don't Have To Mean It 
  • Out Of Control 
  • Saint Of Me 
  • Might As Well Get Juiced 
  • Always Suffering 
  • Too Tight
  • Thief In The Night (written by M. Jagger, K. Richards, P. de Beauport)
  • How Can I Stop
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