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Still Life (American Concert 1981) [Live]

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Download links and information about Still Life (American Concert 1981) [Live] by Rolling Stones. This album was released in 1982 and it belongs to Rock, Hard Rock, Rock & Roll, Heavy Metal, Pop genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 40:04 minutes.

Artist: Rolling Stones
Release date: 1982
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Rock & Roll, Heavy Metal, Pop
Tracks: 12
Duration: 40:04
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Intro: Take the "A" Train (Live) (featuring Duke Ellington And His Orchestra, Duke Ellington) 0:27
2. Under My Thumb (Live) 4:18
3. Let's Spend the Night Together (Live) 3:50
4. Shattered (Live) 4:10
5. Twenty Flight Rock (Live) 1:47
6. Going to a Go-Go (Live) 3:23
7. Let Me Go (Live) 3:36
8. Time Is On My Side (Live) 3:38
9. Just My Imagination (Running Away With Me) [Live] 5:22
10. Start Me Up (Live) 4:21
11. (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction (Live) 4:24
12. Outro: Star Spangled Banner (Live) (featuring Jimi Hendrix) 0:48

Details

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By 1981, the Rolling Stones were considered rock’s elder statesmen, though Mick Jagger and Keith Richards had yet to turn forty. For their 1981 American Tour, they took on corporate sponsorship, had concerts filmed for the movie Let’s Spend the Night Together and released this live album. While it is not “prime” Stones, it does capture the group cruising on the success of their latest studio album, Tattoo You, and their latest classic, “Start Me Up.” The selections for this collection feel loose and arbitrary. “Under My Thumb,” “Let’s Spend the Night Together,” “Time Is On My Side” and “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” represent their 1960s catalog. The Smokey Robinson and the Miracles cover, “Going to a Go-Go,” and the Temptations cover, “Just My Imagination (Running Away With Me)” represents their debt to soul music. Eddie Cochran’s “Twenty Flight Rock” goes back to their roots, while “Shattered” and “Let Me Go” flash their resurgence in the wake of the punk era. Strange to think that this was the beginning of the Stones becoming primarily a lucrative live act whose studio albums would be clearly secondary.