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Goats Head Soup - Rolling Stones (The) (CD 1994)

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  Goats Head CD sucks
Review created: 02/20/08
by:

Must have been one of their worst CD's , I can see why eveyone is buying songs on line. All the songs on the Cd suck. I see why the sales of Cd's have dropped 15%. Maybe one song on this Cd is half decent .


Review ID: 10000000005738588
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  Goats Head Soup
Review created: 01/14/08
by:

I remember buying the album in 73 when it was released. I wanted to purchase it again for the song, Cold Winter, which has been a sentimental favorite of mine throughout the years. It has the classic Angie, and some other rockin tunes such as Silver Train and Star Star.
I really like this CD, although it is mostly for sentimental reasons, such as the hauntingly sad Cold Winter, that I wanted to have Goats Head Soup in my music collection.


Review ID: 10000000005125685
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  Early 70's Stones
Review created: 07/06/07
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

A solid early 70's effort from the Stones. Three classic songs, Angie, Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker), and Star Star, a blues chug tune, Hide Your Love, and a southern jam rambler Silver Train. No Keith lead vocal songs, but there is a Nawlins voodoo song, Dancing With Mr. D. Throw in a song with pipes, triangles, and flutes, Can You Hear The Music, and you have an album that shows the Stones diversity and experimentalism. A solid effort worth the listen.


Review ID: 10000000003948009
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  Hm Hm Good. Good Soup
Review created: 11/29/06
by:

I popped this album in and liked it immediately. 100 Years Ago and Heartbreaker hit me immediately as cool tunes that can't be missing from any die hard Stones fan. They rock pretty hard, especially the latter, and even casual fans will love them. Of course, Angie has been one of their classic ballads since the album was released, and for good reason. It's a nice well written heartfelt song. Silver Train is a nice tune played with an Allman Brother's cool Southern sound. Hide Your Love is a bluesy piano driven song, with a cool guitar solo. Winter is a nice ballad that shows that the Stones can write a ballad that isn't a love song. Can You Hear The Music is an eerie tune that keeps you listening. They end the album strong with Star Star, a Chuck Berry-like tune that rocks with it's bluesy guitar driven chorus.

Is this up there with their best albums? No. But it just shows a different side of the Stones that make them one of the best bands ever. If another band had come out with this, it'd probably be their best album. With the Stones, the bar is set so high that it can't compete with the likes of Sticky Fingers and Exile on Main Street. But who cares? It's still an excellent album with a good song selection. I've read reviews that cut this album down, saying that this foretells the Stones demise. What do they know? This just shows how a group grows and their songwriting changes. It's not bad, it's just different. They just go in a little different direction on this album, and they give you Goats Head Soup, which by the way has a lot of good songwriting and tasteful licks, Heartbreaker being a great example of this. Goats Head Soup is the soup that eats like a meal (Sorry for the corny theft from Chunky Soup, but it's fitting given the title of the album).


Review ID: 10000000002395122
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  why is it looked down upon?
Review created: 11/07/06
by:

A really good Stones album recorded at the tail end of their zenith, why it didn't get better reviews I don't know. I'll admit it's not in same league as some of their classics, but not much else is. They have nothing to be ashamed of here.
It was recorded in the early 70's, but none of the songs sound dated, at least to me. I'm not crazy about the albums cover art-nitpicking? I mean who cares, once the c.d. is in a player and the case is in a drawer nobody looks at it anyway.


Review ID: 10000000002290651
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  Stones roll downhill...slightly
Review created: 07/03/06

Goats Head Soup begins a slow, downhill slide by the Stones that ends with Tattoo You, picks up speed with Undercover and unfortunately, continues to this day. That being said, it's not as bad an album as some would have you to believe, but how do you possibly maintain the creative momentum as their four previous albums? I would rank it just outside the top ten of the Stones albums, probably more deserving of 3.5 stars. Nevertheless, I'll give it a 4 because Heartbreaker still packs a wallop and Angie is their last great ballad. All in all, it's still a good album that a true Stones fan will want.


Review ID: 10000000001285689
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  The Stones explore the exciting world of Louisiana cooking
Review created: 10/02/07
by: pyfr-- a member of Epinions and Top Reviewer in Music

Pros:
<i>Dancing With Mr. D.</i> and <i>Angie</i>. Some of the obscure ones are pleasantly above average.

Cons:
No Stones album is complete without at least four that go absolutely nowhere.

There are several different kinds of Rolling Stones fans. You got the people who think they did nothing worthwhile beyond the 1960 s, for instance. Then there are those who basically feel that they went to Baltimore in a breadbasket throughout the 1980 s. And let us not forget the strangest of all the various and sundry Stones disciples- those who still believe, and always will, that Mick, Keith, and the other undead creatures behind them onstage are unable to make music that is anything less than a gentle massage to the prostate gland. I d probably put myself more in the second category, but.


Review ID: 10000000004524957
  Just another really good Stones album.
Review created: 08/30/04
by: ilash -- a member of Epinions

Pros:
Some very strong material on here.

Cons:
Some fairly weak material on here too.

Goats Head Soup must have shocked everybody- and I do mean everybody- when it was released back in 1973. The Rolling Stones had just completed a string of four critically acclaimed and publicly adored roots-rock albums starting with 1969 s Beggar s Banquet and culminating in the 1972 double-album Exile On Main Street. The band was at both its critical and commercial peak of its forty-year long (and still counting) career. Adored by critics and general listening public alike for their untouchable take on more grounded rock and roll, - blues-rock, straight forward hard-rock, even country-rock,..


Review ID: 10000000000231792
  The Stones Begin Their Descent Into 70's Mainstream...
Review created: 04/26/00
by: e_burrell -- a member of Epinions

Pros:
Great tunes such as <i>100 Years Ago</i>, <i>...(Heartbreaker)</i> and <i>Angie</i> make this one worth the price...

Cons:
The beginning of Stones mainstream 1970's rock, Not gritty enough, The mediocre songs near the end overshadow the highlights

The task must have been daunting. What kind of songs do you write? What styles do you use? Even for a band such as The Rolling Stones, following up a certifiable masterpiece such as Exile On Main Street must have been a chore. Goats Head Soup would become (in my mind) the beginning of the Stones' slide into 1970's mediocrity and mainstream accessibility. Traces of the grit and honesty that had filled previous watershed albums such as Let It Bleed, Beggar's Banquet and Exile On Main Street can be found scattered throughout this album, but in smaller doses. Mick Jagger's vocals aren't as urgent.


Review ID: 10000000000231794
  High highs, low lows
Review created: 08/29/00
by: malcomwilliams -- a member of Epinions

Pros:
A handful of classic 70's songs

Cons:
A couple of nearly unlistenable tracks

Goats' Head Soup ended the Stones' amazing run of truly essential albums - what other band in history has put together a run like Beggar's Banquet, Let it Bleed, Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out, Sticky Fingers, and Exile on Main Street? When released this album was panned by critics and has been forgotten by most folk but the true Stones' faithful. This judgement is unfair. When blazing new trails you're bound to take some wrong turns. And sure the thought of "Winter," "Dancing with Mr. D." and "100 Years Ago" today probably makes the band wince and Brian Jones roll over in his grave. However "Angie" ...


Review ID: 10000000000231796
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Goats Head Soup - Rolling Stones (The) (CD 1994)
Goats Head Soup - Rolling Stones (The) (CD 1994)
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