The Rolling Stones - From the Vault: Live at the Tokyo Dome (2015) [24bit FLAC]

  • 28 Jan, 10:26
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Artist:
Title: From the Vault: Live at the Tokyo Dome
Year Of Release: 2015
Label: Eagle Vision – EVSBD30979 / Blu-ray, Stereo
Genre: Rock
Quality: 24bit-96kHz FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 02:16:38
Total Size: 3.19 GB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Intro: Continental Drift (0:51)
2. Start Me Up (4:00)
3. Bitch (4:05)
4. Sad Sad Sad (4:03)
5. The Harlem Shuffle (4:28)
6. Tumbling Dice (4:23)
7. Miss You (6:52)
8. Ruby Tuesday (3:26)
9. Almost Hear You Sigh (5:30)
10. Rock and a Hard Place (5:26)
11. Mixed Emotions (5:23)
12. Honky Tonk Women (5:01)
13. Midnight Rambler (10:58)
14. You Can't Always Get What You Want (7:53)
15. Can't Be Seen (5:12)
16. Happy (4:27)
17. Paint It Black (4:07)
18. 2000 Light Years From Home (7:05)
19. Sympathy for the Devil (7:45)
20. Gimme Shelter (8:11)
21. It's Only Rock & Roll (But I Like It) (4:26)
22. Brown Sugar (4:33)
23. (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction (9:30)
24. Jumping Jack Flash (9:12)

Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Recorded at the end of the record-breaking Steel Wheels tour, From the Vault: Live at the Tokyo Dome captures the reunited Rolling Stones at a moment of triumph and, as it happens, bridges two eras. Steel Wheels set the stage for the crowd-pleasing veterans, the group that put the '80s unpleasantness behind them so they could haul the hits around the globe in service of pushing a new record. It also was the last time founding member Bill Wyman would tour with the band. As such, this double-disc set is noteworthy: it's one of the last times Wyman played with the group, so there's a bit more of the recognizable Stones funk to the rhythms than there are in the years that would follow. That said, this set still feels more routine than not, probably because it's loaded with familiar items that remain part of the set in the 2010s. The departures from the norm are the tunes from Steel Wheels -- quite a lot, actually; almost half the record -- and "20,000 Light Years from Home," which hits a lot harder than the Satanic Majesties version. Apart from that, the only surprises are the vulgarities Mick Jagger slides into "It's Only Rock 'n' Roll" -- remnants of a dirtier past -- but even if this is exceptionally slick, this live album still entertains just like it was meant to do.