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Format: CD
 2 Discs
 Record Label: Interscope Records (USA)
 Recording Type: Live
 UPC: 602517647442 |
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Track Listing
No track list available 1. Jumpin' Jack Flash 2. Shattered 3. She Was Hot 4. All Down the Line 5. Loving Cup - (featuring Jack White III) 6. As Tears Go By 7. Some Girls 8. Just My Imagination 9. Faraway Eyes 10. Champagne & Reefer - (featuring Buddy Guy) 11. Tumbling Dice 12. Band Introductions 13. You Got the Silver 14. Connection
DISC 2: 1. Martin Scorsese Intro 2. Sympathy For the Devil 3. Live With Me - (featuring Christina Aguilera) 4. Start Me Up 5. Brown Sugar 6. (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction 7. Paint It Black 8. Little T&A 9. I'm Free 10. Shine a Light
Album Notes The Rolling Stones: Mick Jagger (vocals, guitar, harmonica); Ronnie Wood, Keith Richards (vocals, guitar); Charlie Watts (drums). Additional personnel: Lisa Fischer, Blondie Chaplin, Bernard Fowler (vocals); Tim Ries (saxophone, keyboards); Bobby Keys (saxophone); Kent Smith (trumpet); Michael Davis (trombone); Chuck Leavell (keyboards); Darryl Jones (bass guitar). Several things are clear from watching Martin Scorsese's concert movie SHINE A LIGHT. One is that the Rolling Stones are old. Another is that they're still able to play with a tightness and vigor that stands up to the music being made by most current 20-something outfits. That energy crackles through the 16 tracks on the SHINE A LIGHT soundtrack, the film's sonic counterpart, which captures the Stones at New York City's Beacon Theater in 2006 in surprisingly stripped-down, feral form. There's nothing flashy or pretentious about the Stones' performance, which helps highlight their unmistakably natural, time-tested ease playing with each other. Even dusty classics like "Jumpin' Jack Flash" and "Brown Sugar" come off with flair, and lesser-played gems like "Faraway Eyes" and "You Got the Silver" are a welcome treat. The guests-the White Stripes' Jack White on "Loving Cup," Buddy Guy on the Muddy Waters' classic "Champagne and Reefer," and Christina Aguilera on a fiery version of "Live With Me"-enliven the band, and provide some of the album's best moments. Given the amount of live Stones' material available, and the band's already towering legend, the necessity of such a set may be debatable, but it's hard not to hear this for what it is: a good rock show from a band that knows its stuff.
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