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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A classic comp of mid-'60s hits, August 27, 2002
"Big Hits (High Tide And Green Grass)" is one of the evergreen hits collections--in thirty-six years, it's never been out of print, and there's a reason for that: There are almost no weak spots on this album. Sure, there are better or more complete Stones collections ("Hot Rocks," "The Singles Collection" box, "Forty Licks"), but this one manages to capture the band while it was in the midst of conquering the world. How else to explain the brass of an album that leads off with the Stones then-biggest hit to date, "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" and then fails to go downhill, like most other hits compilations?Being one of the new hybrid CDs, not only has the sound been largely improved (I say "largely" because there are a couple of exceptions--more in a moment), but so has the packaging--the booklet of color photos that was inside the original gatefold LP jacket has been restored. And "Satisfaction" does indeed live up to the hype--it sounds like it's coming out of the control room speakers, even on a regular CD player. "The Last Time," however, still sounds like it's coming out of a transistor radio (remember those? I don't) someone chucked into a garbage can three or four alleys away--I've got a first pressing copy of the vinyl and it still sounds bad there, so I guess it's never going to sound much better. And while four tracks are in stereo ("Satisfaction," "Time Is On My Side," "It's All Over Now," and "Heart Of Stone"), the rest are mono--and you've got to be listening to tell which is which, because, at least on the copy I listened to, there's no indication on the packaging of what mixes were used where. The CD isn't any help, as it proclaims the entire album to be in stereo. Obviously ABKCO still has a lot to learn about being honest with its customers. Quibbles aside, most of the album has been hugely sonically improved, and for the better. And you can't go wrong with that track listing, aside from "Tell Me," which sounds like a bad Merseyside imitation (Herman's Hermits, anyone?). Nearly every track is a winner--and the Stones were really still in the early days, yet (even if it didn't seem like it at the time). If you don't have any other Stones records, you can't go wrong starting with this one. And if you do have some other Stones records, give it a spin and listen to the soundtrack of a band beginning to form a legend as yet unsullied by age, scandal, and bad rock videos.
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