Voodoo Lounge The Rolling Stones

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CD - Remastered / Reissue

  • Release Date: 07/14/2009
  • Original Release: 1994
  • Sales Rank: 20,080
  • Label: UMVD LABELS
  • UPC: 602527015712

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Voodoo Lounge

1LISTENLove Is Strong 3:50
2LISTENYou Got Me Rocking 3:36
3LISTENSparks Will Fly 3:16
4LISTENThe Worst 2:24
5LISTENNew Faces 2:51
6LISTENMoon Is Up 3:41
7LISTENOut of Tears 5:27
8LISTENI Go Wild 4:24
9LISTENBrand New Car 4:15
10LISTENSweethearts Together 4:45
11LISTENSuck on the Jugular 4:27
12LISTENBlinded by Rainbows 4:33
13LISTENBaby Break It Down 4:09
14LISTENThru and Thru 6:15
15LISTENMean Disposition 4:08

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Funny that the much-touted "reunion/comeback" album Steel Wheels followed Dirty Work by just three years, while it took the Stones five years to turn out its sequel, Voodoo Lounge -- a time frame that seems much more appropriate for a "comeback." To pile on the irony, Voodoo Lounge feels more like a return to form than its predecessor, even if it's every bit as calculated and Bill Wyman has flown the coup. With Don Was, a neo-classic rock producer who always attempts to reclaim his artist's original claim to greatness, helming the boards with the Glimmer Twins, the Stones strip their sound back to its spare, hard-rocking basics. The Stones act in kind, turning out a set of songs that are pretty traditionalist. There are no new twists or turns in either the rockers or ballads (apart maybe from the quiet menace of "Thru and Thru," later used to great effect on The Sopranos), even if they revive some of the English folk and acoustic country-blues that was on Beggars Banquet. Still, this approach works because they are turning out songs that may not be classics but are first-rate examples of the value of craft. If this was released ten years, even five years earlier, this would be a near-triumph of classicist rock, but since Voodoo Lounge came out in the CD age, it's padded out to 15 tracks, five of which could have been chopped to make the album much stronger. Instead, it runs on for nearly an hour, an ironically bloated length for an album whose greatest strengths are its lean, concentrated classic sound and songcraft. Still, it makes for a stronger record than its predecessor. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

A fairly good triumphby Anonymous

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June 30, 2004: This album released in July 1994 was the comeback album for the Stones. Well, it does exactly what is suppose to. It rocks righteously. But, in some places that's just not the case. The ill-advised "Suck on the jugular" easily is the worst song the band has ever recorded or written, along with the syrupy ballad "Out of Tears". Then the good in other places like the sleanky-chugaluggin' "Brand New Car" with tight horn arrangements and fine guitar wah-wahs by Mr. Rock'n Roll himself, Keith Richards. Speaking of Keith, the fine country ballad "The Worst", which is not that at all, serves the man well as does the stomping six minute blues-rock epic "Thru and Thru". Even though the album, which would have been stronger three songs shorter, isn't their best, it has enough of the goods we expect from the Stones to be an enjoyable listen.

This review was written about the CD edition.