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22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rediscover it!
I got this album with its sanitized cover for Christmas in 1968, along with the Beatles White Album, and at the time preferred it. You want your profundity, you got Sympathy for the Devil. You want your social commentary, you got Salt of the Earth. You want the Stones vote on bein' a radical, you got the awesome and unique Street Fighting Man. Time passed, and I...
Published on May 24, 2000 by John Stodder

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14 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Don't Get Ripped Off With Old "Product" Sold As New!
This is without a doubt one of the best albums the Rolling Stones have released over their long career. The problem, as is the case with all the Universal/ABKCO Rolling Stones releases on CD, is the poor audio quality and packaging. These releases were remastered in the mid 80's using the current technology of the time. The packaging is minimal and the CD only has the...
Published on May 21, 2001


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22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rediscover it!, May 24, 2000
This review is from: Beggars Banquet (Audio CD)
I got this album with its sanitized cover for Christmas in 1968, along with the Beatles White Album, and at the time preferred it. You want your profundity, you got Sympathy for the Devil. You want your social commentary, you got Salt of the Earth. You want the Stones vote on bein' a radical, you got the awesome and unique Street Fighting Man. Time passed, and I lost the album. Picking up the CD today, what strikes me is that this is probably their richest album MUSICALLY, and indeed it is timeless. The headliner songs are still great, but what makes this album worth owning (rather than just cherrypicking the hits on best of albums) are the other cuts, which are primarily acoustic and slide blues. Cuts like Prodigal Son and Parachute Woman, and the sublime No Expectations don't get anthologized, and don't get played on the radio, but they are the very soul of the Rolling Stones, the calling card they will present when they knock on the door of St. Peter's. A rewarding musical experience.
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19 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Stones Look Back and Forwards, May 1, 2000
This review is from: Beggars Banquet (Audio CD)
Though The Stones recording were well-revered at the time,Beggars Banquet is where this group shows they can reach the next level of musical progression.Coming after the ill concieved,yet quirkily brilliant psychedelic foray Their Satanic Majesties Request,they come out with BB which brings them back in touch with their blues roots as well as open new doors.Sympathy For The Devil and Street Fighting Man must of been a shock to the ears of ill prepared listeners who soaked up the non album preview single Jumping Jack Flash.But its also songs like No Expectations,Jigsaw Puzzle,Stray Cat Blues & Salt Of The Earth that fortifies this albums classic stature.Factory Girl,Prodigal Son and Parachute Woman makes you wish they'd return to this genre today instead of using their music to promote their concerts.At the time when most groups were spewing out SGT Pepper rip-offs or even falling apart(Cream and even The Beatles themselves)The Rolling Stones were ready to take the mantle,and Beggars Banquet was their first victory.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Album/cd By A Great Band, October 27, 2000
This review is from: Beggars Banquet (Audio CD)
The Stones were truly one of the greatest rock bands to come out of the early '60's, the time when rock music took flight, and "Beggar's Banquet" is one of their best pieces of work. After the psychedelic side-trip of "Satanic Majesties", the single "Jumpin' Jack Flash", followed by this LP, came as a great relief. It represented both a return to the band's R&B roots and their first extension into country-based rock. It also showcased a new depth in Jagger's lyrics.

While "Sympathy..." and "Street..." have traditionally gotten all the airplay from this set, there are numerous other gems. "Dear Doctor", "Prodigal Son" and "Factory Girl" display the country influence in both music and homey, working-man lyrics. "Salt of the Earth" is a rock hymn to everyman. "Parachute Woman" is an R&B-based rocker.

This is one of my ten favorite album/CDs of all-time. Nobody who likes rock music should be without it.

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14 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Don't Get Ripped Off With Old "Product" Sold As New!, May 21, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Beggars Banquet (Audio CD)
This is without a doubt one of the best albums the Rolling Stones have released over their long career. The problem, as is the case with all the Universal/ABKCO Rolling Stones releases on CD, is the poor audio quality and packaging. These releases were remastered in the mid 80's using the current technology of the time. The packaging is minimal and the CD only has the original album tracks thus the disc is short. If you can hold out wait until these albums finally get the treatment they deserve -- at least 20bit remastering, new packaging and extra/bonus tracks to use up the empty 50% of the capacity of CD -- otherwise listen to the vinyl, it sounds much better! The record company "monopoly monsters" today continue to sell to unsuspecting customer CD's that were "remastered" at the dawn of the CD age, at close to full price for a disc that is half the length of a new disc today, with terrible audio quality and packaging. The original Beatles albums are also still sold in this way as are the Warner Brothers albums of Van Morrison for example. I have worked in the music industry for a number of years and know from experience, particularly today, the industry is run by a bunch of marketing "spin doctors," lawyers and accountants who know little to nothing about music - to them it is just "product" to be moved. To paraphrase Tom Dowd, if you asked one of them for a "note" they would probably pull a bank note from their pocket.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sounds of the Sixties---the 1860's!, February 4, 2001
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This review is from: Beggars Banquet (Audio CD)
There are good bands and there are great bands, and then there are the Rolling Stones, surely the greatest rock and roll band ever. Having emerged from the shadow of the Beatles in the first wave of the British Invasion, the lads from London struggled to remain true to their American R&B roots, and still expand their repertoire to include catchy "pop"-sounding songs, as well as dip into their magic bag of influences, which were hardly all musical in nature. The record opens with the notoriously misunderstood "Sympathy For The Devil," a hootchie-koo of Brazilian samba mixed with Charlie Watts' pummeling drums and Mick Jagger's bayou-witch vocals; the wonder of the song is that is so terrifying, so impossible to escape--and entirely played on acoustic instruments. The record takes you on a psychic tour of the Mississippi Delta, with folksy-woodsy numbers such as "Factory Girl," "No Expectations" and the menacing "Parachute Woman," before exploding, on side two, with "Street Fighting Man," another acoustic song so powerful and controversial that American radio stations often banned it from airplay, and plowing all the way to "Salt of the Earth," a kind of common-man's anthem that owes at least as much to Reconstuction-era gospel and blues as it does to hippie anti-Vietnam War sentiments, which were bubbling to a boil, on both sides of the Atlantic. There is perhaps no finer record than this one, on which to sample the brilliance and majesty of the Stones. Keith Richards, considered a satellite to Jagger and Jones before this record, clearly emerges as its driving force, with his razor-edged guitar riffs and unshakable sense of rhythm and melody; his burgeoning friendship with, and admiration of, American folk rocker Gram PArsons, who would shortly join Hendrix and Joplin on the growing list of rock's drug fatalities, inspired him to dunk the British band into the cool waters of American Southern music, with the glorious results audible on every track. "Beggars Banquet" simply cannot be ignored in any serious list of the greatest albums of rock; it's that good, it's that raw, it's that real, and it cannot be denied. As a commentary on the dying dreams of the Sixties and the emerging global impact of the Rolling Stones, it is absolutely indispensable. Please allow them to introduce themselves, they're men of wealth and taste---great musical taste!
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Bad Band, September 15, 2001
This review is from: Beggars Banquet (Audio CD)
This is classic rock, sure, but that don't mean its good. There's good classic rock, like Barry Manilow, Air Supply, The Carpenters and Herman's Hermits. Buy those bands if you want good classik rock!! Also, support The Bengals, there the best football team ever. Go bengals, who-dey!!!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beatles AND Stones Fan Rates Beggar's High, August 25, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Beggars Banquet (Audio CD)
I've noticed that there is an unseemly amount of sniping between so-called "Beatles fans" and so-called "Stones fans," operating under the misguided and ignorant assumption that if you like one band you have to slam the other. Sorry, gang, but that is woefully wrong. In 1968 two fabuolous, legendary albums were released, *The Beatles* (aka "The White Album") and *Beggar's Banquet* by the Rolling Stones. Both albums would represent the best of the late 60s and remain numbered among the finest albums in rock history. I have both albums, and listen to them with equal frequency and equal enjoyment. By and large, I regard myself a Beatles fan, and when push comes to shove, it is the Beatles I choose as the greatest ever. Even so, the Rolling Stones are definitely in their league (along with The Who and about maybe a handful of other great bands), and must be regarded as one rock's seminal bands - with The Beatles, The Who, Led Zeppelin, and a few others. Listen to *Beggar's* and *White Album* with an open mind, and enjoy two legendary forces in the formation and expansion of rock. John Lennon himself said it when he compared the 60s to a ship, and in the crow's nest,looking out at the horizon, were the Beatles and their FRIENDS the Rolling Stones. As usual, Lennon sums it up better than most - TOGETHER The Beatles and The Rolling Stones, helped by James Brown, Dylan, Joplin and Hendrix, The Who, Cream and Zeppelin, The Doors and Credence, re-created the whole of popular music, and for the better. *Beggar's Banquet* is worthy of five stars, as is its contemporary, *The Beatles*. Buy them both, open your minds and, and learn something about art and rock-and-roll. Peace and love.
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16 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars So good it almost hurts, March 30, 2000
By 
strummer (Seattle, WA USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Beggars Banquet (Audio CD)
'Beggars Banquet' is one of the defining Rolling Stones albums. Part of an unheralded run in recorded music history, this album showcases the musical genius that is the Rolling Stones.

Few can doubt the timelessnes of 'Sympathy for the Devil' or the power of 'Street Fighting Man' but it's the fifth song on the album that makes the whole thing exquisite in my opinion. 'Jig-Saw Puzzle' is one of the most beautiful Jagger/Richards compositions ever recorded. This song alone is worth twice the price of the CD. It's perhaps one of the only Stones songs that's so obviously about the band members and their respective struggles. For example, "... and the guitar players look damaged/they've been outcasts all their lives ..." reminds you of a certain rhythm guitar player with a penchant for excess doesn't it?

The Rolling Stones are a rare species in rock and roll - a band that consistently delivered the goods. And 'Beggars Banquet' is one of the best by the Stones and one of the best ever recorded. If you're a fan of the band or not this one album you need to own.

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Stones first masterpiece, November 14, 2000
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This review is from: Beggars Banquet (Audio CD)
The last album recorded by the original band and it's very strong. Sympathy For The Devil is not only the best song on the album by far, but the Stones best ever song and the 2nd best song of all time. Keith's plays his best ever solo and one of the best solos ever, along with some great bass and Mick's genius lyrics. Brian's slide is all over this album, especially on the beautiful ballad No Expectations and the climatic Jig Saw Puzzle. Street Fighting Man is another classic, with great layed acoustic guitars and it's rebellious if dated lyrics. Not really any weak tracks, except for perhaps the country song Dear Doctor, which although charming, is not as strong as any of the others. Stray Cat Blues is the only electric song other than Sympathy on the album. Keith plays an nasty solo at the end and Mick snarls his way through the blatantly sexual lyrics. Factory Girl is another really good, acoustic song. The ballad Salt Of The Earth closes the album well. Keith does a real nice job on his first solo vocals in the opening verse. Overall, this album bites and hits home despite the fact that it is mostly acoustic. Beggar's marks the beginning of the Stones invicibility and also Brian Jones's last full work with the band.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Full Banquet, October 6, 2000
This review is from: Beggars Banquet (Audio CD)
Beggars Banquet was the last album released by the original Stones lineup, although Brian Jones is reported to have barely played on it. It was a strong comeback by the band, who in trying to compete with the Beatles and fit in with the Psychadelic scene, had released the terribly misguided Their Satantic Majesties Request. Beggars strips away all the musically gimmickry and provides the listener with bare-bones rock. "Sympathy For The Devil" has taken on a life of its own and has become the band's manifesto. "No Expectations", "Dear Doctor", "Prodical Son" & "Factory Girl" find the band exploring country music themes for the first time. With their sexual themes, "Parachute Woman" & "Stray Cat Blues" put the band in familiar territory. The album closes with their anthem for the little man, the earnest "Salt Of The Earth". Beggars Banquet closes one era of the band while opening up a new one. They say goodbye to Brian Jones and start a music path that would produce some of the greatest albums ever recorded in musical history.
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