Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Binding: Audio CD
EAN: 0724383951925
Format: Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered
Label: Virgin Records Us
Manufacturer: Virgin Records Us
Number Of Discs: 1
Publisher: Virgin Records Us
Release Date: July 26, 1994
Studio: Virgin Records Us
Sales Rank: 8281
MPN: 39519
Disc 1:- Dancing with Mr. D.
- 100 Years Ago
- Coming Down Again
- Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker)
- Angie
- Silver Train
- Hide Your Love
- Winter
- Can You Hear the Music
- Star Star
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Average Rating: 
Rating: -
Containing none of their big hits except Angie, one of my least favorite Stone songs, this album still delivers a wide range of sounds when the Stones are still experimenting with moods and directions. Their contemporary releases sounds all similar to me, but that may be due to time and a growing familiarity with Goat's Head Soup, an "album," now CD and MP3s, that contains some of my most played Stone singles.
Rating: -
As a dyed-in-the-wool Stones fan and having had the LP version for years and years, I found the cd to be all I expected.
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I am the Stones authority. And this is their most underrated outing during their peak years of 1968 through 1973. Its reputation suffers among Stones purists for two reasons - it was judge at the time in light of recent Stones history and the breath taking string of master albums that preceded it, beginning with Beggars Banquet and Let It Bleed to end the Sixties, and then Sticky Fingers and Exile On Main Street to kick off the Seventies. So what album would look impressive in this company? The second reason this album's reputation suffered with Stones purists was the radio single that became the hit representing this album. As "Start Me Up" taints Tatoo You with the Stones aficionado, so too in the minds of many Stones fans does "Angie" taint ... Read More:
Rating: -
Keith's into H, Mick's into Bianca, the 1972-73 Stones are beginning to lose touch with the comprehensive vision that created Exile On Main Street, but Goat's Head Soup is still something any modern band would die for. "Dancing With Mr. D" is a slow,snaky sequel to "Sympathy," "A Hundred Years Ago" a rousing '70 leftover from the Marianne Faithfull days, "Coming Down Again" a lost gem of a ballad from Keith, and "Can You Hear The Music" pioneers the clavinet sound that would become so central to Queen's work throughout the decade. And don't forget "Angie."
It's only in the loudly empty "Silver Train," groovy but repetitive "Hide Your Love," Elvis Vegasy "(Doo Doo) Heartbreaker," and cheap Chuck Berry knock-off "Star Star" that the album ... Read More:
Rating: -
It was bound to happen. It was inevitable. As it was, it was still quite jarring to the listener when "Goat's Head Soup" was released in 1973 coming off the heels of an amazing 8 year run (1965-1972) of some of the most amazing music ever put on this planet. At the time this was a major disappointment to Stones fans, however, time has been kind to this release and has softened the blow that originally (and unfairly) gave it the reputation as being a lousy record and follow up to the monumental "Exile". In many ways, it IS the disappoinment of legend because this was the first 'slip-up' of 'The Greatest rock and roll band in the world". They were human, after all and perhaps, tired. In other ways this stands as a more than competent collection ... Read More:
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