The Rolling Stones – Some Girls Live In Texas '78 (2LP, 1 CD, 1 DVD)
RARITY - SEALED
The Rolling Stones [click here to see more vinyl featuring The Rolling Stones]
- Vocals, Guitar, Piano – Mick Jagger
- Vocals, Guitar – Keith Richards
- Vocals, Guitar, Pedal Steel Guitar – Ron Wood
- Bass – Bill Wyman
- Drums – Charlie Watts
- Piano – Ian Stewart
Keyboards – Ian Mclagan
Violin – Doug Kershaw
Written by Barrett Strong (B3), Charles Edward Berr (A1, D2), Jagger-Richards (A2 to B2, B4 to D1, D3-4), Norman Whitfield (B3), Robert Leroy Johnson (C3)
2LPs, 1CD , 1 DVD, Tri-fold jacket
DVD Video Mutichannel NTSC
Limited edition
Original analog Master tape : YES
Heavy Press : 180g
Record color : Black
Speed : 33 RPM
Size : 12'’
Stereo
Studio
Label : Rolling Stones Records
Original Label : Eagle Vision
Recorded by BJ Schiller
Mixed by Bob Clearmountain
Produced by Jack Calmes, Dave Trafford, Lindsay Brown
Executive-Producer – Geoff Kempin, Terry Shand
Mastered by Mazen Murad
Originally released in 2011
Reissued in 2012
Tracks:
Side A:
- Let It Rock
- All Down The Line
- Honky Tonk Women
- Star Star
- When The Whip Comes Down
Side B
- Beast Of Burden
- Miss You
- Imagination
- Shattered
Side C:
- Respectable
- Far Away Eyes
- Love In Vain
- Tumbling Dice
Side D
- Happy
- Sweet Little Sixteen
- Brown Sugar
- Jumpin' Jack Flash
CD:
1-1 : Let It Rock
1-2 : All Down The Line
1-3 : Honky Tonk Women
1-4 : Star Star
1-5 : When The Whip Comes Down
1-6 : Beast Of Burden
1-7 : Miss You
1-8 : Imagination
1-9 : Shattered
1-10 : Respectable
1-11 : Far Away Eyes
1-12 : Love In Vain
1-13 : Tumbling Dice
1-14 : Happy
1-15 : Sweet Little Sixteen
1-16 : Brown Sugar
1-17 : Jumpin’ Jack Flash
DVD-1 : Let It Rock
DVD-2 : All Down The Line
DVD-3 : Honky Tonk Women
DVD-4 : Star Star
DVD-5 : When The Whip Comes Down
DVD-6 : Beast Of Burden
DVD-7 : Miss You
DVD-8 : Imagination
DVD-9 : Shattered
DVD-10 : Respectable
DVD-11 : Far Away Eyes
DVD-12 : Love In Vain
DVD-13 : Tumbling Dice
DVD-14 : Happy
DVD-15 : Sweet Little Sixteen
DVD-16 : Brown Sugar
DVD-17 : Jumpin’ Jack Flash
Reviews:
“By 1978 and the release of the band’s classic Some Girls, The Rolling Stones were already seasoned veterans, the biggest band in the world, and road warriors that had toured for the better part of the previous two decades. And with Some Girls, the band continued to assert its relevance within mainstream music fads with its disco-smash “Miss You,” while somehow still retaining definitive ownership over the rock and roll territory it helped define since the early 1960s. Live in Texas 1978, a wonderful complement to the recent deluxe reissue of Some Girls, finds the Stones stripped down to its essential rock elements. Opening with Chuck Berry’s “Let It Rock,” the band rages through a handful of Berry-inspired classics before launching into “When the Whip Comes Down” and “Beast of Burden,” the first two of seven straight Some Girls tracks the band would play on this July night in Fort Worth. Mick Jagger’s charisma is as undeniable as ever, howling the lines of “Beast of Burden” and sharing a mic with mate Keith Richards to profoundly raucous effect. Classics like the revved up “Shattered” and the Richards’ led “Happy” are essential versions, and “Far Away Eyes,” performed here with violin player Doug Kershaw, is simply sublime.
The cinematography is up-close and personal, highlighting the familial vibe present in the band at the time (watch Jagger blow kisses in close quarter with Ron Wood during “Imagination”). And there’s only a hint of the caricature that the Stones would become, namely the 1980s-foreshadowing shiny black pants, yellow sport coat, and garish red hat that Jagger dons to start the show. The bonus content serves to enhance the overall experience, with historical insight from Jagger in a 2011 interview, a TV sopt with the band from 1978, and a few Saturday Night Live performances from the era. It’s all proof that, some 30-odd years later, Some Girls continues to be one of The Rolling Stones’ best albums. And don’t let the disco song fool you. This is rock and roll at its most vital.” Under The Radar Review by Frank Valish
Ratings :
Discogs : 4.43 / 5