Sound & Vision

GOATS HEAD SOUP SUPER DELUXE EDITION

- MIKE METTLER

Show of hands, please—how many of you rate August 1973’s Goats Head Soup as your favorite Rolling Stones album? Anyone? No? Can’t say I blame you. Any record following The Stones’ May 1972 careerdefi­ning double-album masterpiec­e Exile on Main St. would have an impossibly high bar to overcome, no matter what made the final cut. Fact is, Goats Head Soup had a master chef’s menu stacked against it from the outset. And time has very much not been on its side, as Goats Head Soup has long served as a relatively underappre­ciated entry in The Rolling Stones’ somewhat uneven mid-1970s studio-album canon.

However, thanks to a new multidisc box set, Goats Head Soup has been served up for a well-deserved auditory ingly—even though, for some unknown reason, the BD’S onscreen menu doesn’t show you these options.)

Naturally, I instantane­ously gravitated toward the lavish 11¾-by-12½-inch box set. The gray woven-cloth frame around the centered, 6½-inch-square cover image of Mick Jagger’s cheeky, chiffon-gauze-veiled facade lends an admittedly classy touch to the proceeding­s. That said, a few nomenclatu­re points must be deducted for the decision to only feature the band’s name and their signature tongue logo in white at opposite ends of the outer box’s spine without listing the album title there as well. It’s a questionab­le titular omission that detracts from the box’s overall presentati­on and prestige.

Thankfully, the Goats box’s innards go a long way toward bridging that gaffe. A 128-page hardbound book that’s literally bound to the back of the inner right side of the box is laden with much historical detail and vibrant photograph­y. Meanwhile, the four discs themselves are nestled in individual slots on four sturdy, flippable yellow cardboard pages on the box’s left interior side. It’s all somewhat awkward to manage at first, but you get used to it.

Sonically speaking, Giles Martin has seen fit to upgrade and upbraid Goats’ Jimmy Millerprod­uced of-era grungy sheen, something most especially apparent via the broadened scope of his Dolby Atmos mix.

But first, to the 2020 stereo mixes. Disc 1 comprises the requisite core album, and if you’re a fan of the treacly hit ballad “Angie,” you’ll appreciate its acoustical­ly delicate 2.0 presence here. Disc 2 sports 40 minutes of rarities and outtakes, including the much lauded

“Scarlet,” a gnarly collaborat­ion with Led Zeppelin impresario guitarist Jimmy Page, as well as the standard Stones chugger “All the Rage” and the funky backalley slink of “Criss Cross,” along with seven additional instrument­als and alternate mixes.

Disc 3 offers 86 minutes of live material dubbed Brussels Affair – Live 1973, recorded on October 17, 1973 at Forest National Arena in Brussels, Belgium. This is primo ’70s live Stones, as defined by the inherent grit ’n’ grime of tracks like “Midnight Rambler,”

“Happy,” and “Rip This Joint.”

Disc 4 contains the aforementi­oned mighty Dolby Atmos mix, along with three glam-centric videoclips and three bonus audio rarities unlisted in any of the packaging.

In Atmos, the opening track, “Dancing With Mr. D,” drips with slithery, post- Exile sinew, supported by Charlie Watts’ subtle, muted cowbell in the center channel. The clumsily titled “Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreak­er)” beats strong and true with Billy Preston’s restless right-channel clavinet, a lively and fully immersive horn section, and Mick Taylor’s tasty wah-wah guitar riffage wafting on up into the ether. “Winter,” my personal favorite Goats cut, benefits from having pianist Nicky Hopkins’ back-half string arrangemen­t being given a heavenly lift while ethereally surroundin­g Jagger’s emotive, echo-laden vocals. The final track, “Star Star,” finds Keith Richards’ Chuck Berry-inspired rhythms and Jagger’s squeals firing on all-channel cylinders.

Presented in its newly energized box set form, Goats Head Soup can officially take a higher position on The Stones’ recorded menu, coming across as a much more sonically succulent entry than previously thought. Whoever feels remastered and reinvigora­ted aural entrees like these are never as good as they were upon their initial incubation period should dip their spoons into this noticeably better bouillabai­sse of properly seasoned Soup.

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