Music > Styles > Classic Rock
Forty Licks

Retail Price (not our price): $29.98
Release Date: 2002-10-01
Manufacturer: Virgin Records
Discs: 2

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Track List
Now here, for your listening pleasure, the tracks...

Disc 1
1. Street Fighting Man style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
2. Gimme Shelter style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
3. (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
4. The Last Time style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
5. Jumpin Jack Flash style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
6. You Can't Always Get What you Want style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
7. 19th Nervous Breakdown style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
8. Under My Thumb style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
9. Not Fade Away style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
10. Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
11. Sympathy For The Devil style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
12. Mother's Little Helper style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
13. She's a Rainbow style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
14. Get Off My Cloud style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
15. Wild Horses style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
16. Ruby Tuesday style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
17. Paint It Black style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
18. Honky Tonk Women style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
19. It's All Over Now style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
20. Let's Spend The Night Together style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
 
Disc 2
1. Start Me Up style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
2. Brown Sugar style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
3. Miss You style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
4. Beast Of Burden style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
5. Don't Stop (new) style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
6. Happy style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
7. Angie style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
8. You Got Me Rocking style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
9. Shattered style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
10. Fool To Cry style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
11. Love Is Strong style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
12. Mixed Emotions style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
13. Keys To Your Love (new) style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
14. Anybody Seen My Baby? style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
15. Stealing My Heart (new) style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
16. Tumbling Dice style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
17. Undercover of the Night style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
18. Emotional Rescue style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
19. Only Rock 'n Roll (But I Like It) style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1
20. Losing My Touch (new) style="font-size: 10px;" valign="top">1

Editorial Reviews (supplied by Amazon.com):

1) Product Description
This special limited collector's edition of the definitive Rolling Stones hits collection is released to coincide with the start of the band's European tour which kicks off in Munich on June 2, 2003 and concludes on September 14th taking in 38 gigs in 13

2) Amazon.com
The band that proclaimed itself "The Greatest Rock & Roll Band in the World" has long since represented rock's most overarching confluence of art and commerce--with a distinct emphasis on the latter in recent decades--a notion this 40-track, five-decade-spanning anthology can't completely escape. While this is the first anthology to gather hits from the band's entire career, it's the early tunes that highlight one of the Stones' central ironies: virtually their entire "bad boy" reputation was built working for The Man. That original '60s musical arc bounded from '50s rock and R&B revivalism ("Not Fade Away," "The Last Time") to anti-Mop Top aggression ("Satisfaction," "Get Off My Cloud," "19th Nervous Breakdown") to proto-goth cynicism ("Paint It Black," "Have You Seen Your Mother Baby") and psychedelic minstrelsy ("She's a Rainbow," "Ruby Tuesday") to the epitome of blues-based cock rock ("Street Fighting Man," "Jumpin' Jack Flash") in quick succession. Wresting control of their own destinies--and future copyrights--at the end of the '60s, they'd spend the next 30 years largely recycling their earlier incarnation ad infinitum--their music sprinkled with occasionally successful forays into contemporary club and disco fodder ("Some Girls," "Shattered")--and resting on their well-paid laurels. Unfortunately, the listless quartet of new tracks that flesh out this collection seems little more than another business deal to hype their 2002-03 world tour, with "Don't Stop" arguably the weakest in a long string of post-'80s Stones McSingles. If Jagger seems typically detached here, Keith Richards injects some welcome, craggy warmth into the closing barroom lament, "Losing My Touch." But it's also a performance that suggests his legendary band has become little more to him than "The Greatest Day Job in the World." --Jerry McCulley


Customer Reviews (supplied by Amazon.com):
Average Customer Rating: out of 5

 
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