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The Rolling Stones - Dirty Work (UMG Remastered)

Track listing:
  1. One Hit (To The Body) 4:44
  2. Fight 3:10
  3. Harlem Shuffle 3:25
  4. Hold Back 3:52
  5. Too Rude 3:13
  6. Winning Ugly 4:32
  7. Back To Zero 4:00
  8. Dirty Work 3:53
  9. Had It With You 3:20
  10. Sleep Tonight 5:13
  11. Key To the Highway - Ian Stewart piano 0:33

Notes


THE ROLLING STONES
UNIVERSAL MUSIC GROUP REMASTERS SERIES 2009
Part 2


Albums:
1. Dirty Work (Catalog #: 2701564)
2. Steel Wheels (Catalog #: 2701567)
3. Voodoo Lounge (Catalog #: 2701571)
4. Bridges To Babylon (Catalog #: 2701645)
5. A Bigger Bang (Catalog #: 2701643)

Label: Polydor/Universal Music Argentina
Format: CD, Album, Reissue, Remastered
Country: Argentina (Issued in Argentina)
Released: 2009 (July 14)
Genre: Rock
Style: Blues Rock, Rock & Roll, Classic Rock
Mastered by: Stephen Marcussen and Stewart Whitmore at Marcussen Mastering, Hollywood, CA.

Lineage: SilverCD's --> EAC (Secure Mode / Offset corrected / Test & Copy Ripping Mode / Cuesheets) --> WAV (44kHz/16bit/2Ch) --> FLAC frontend --> FLAC (level 8) --> Demonoid --> YOU


1986. DIRTY WORK

Dirty Work is The Rolling Stones' 18th studio album (or the 21st, counting their US releases). It was released on 24 March 1986 on the Rolling Stones label by CBS Records. Produced by Steve Lillywhite, the album was recorded during a period when relations between Mick Jagger and Keith Richards soured considerably,[citation needed] and is often regarded as a low point for the band.

The album produced a hit for the Rolling Stones — their cover of "Harlem Shuffle" — and features a number of guest appearances, including contributions by Tom Waits, Patti Scialfa, Bobby Womack, and Jimmy Page on "One Hit (To the Body)."

In 1994 Dirty Work was remastered and reissued by Virgin Records, and again in 2009 by Universal Music.

Track listing

01. One Hit (To The Body) - 4:45
02. Fight - 3:10
03. Harlem Shuffle - 3:26
04. Hold Back - 3:53
05. Too Rude - 3:13
06. Winning Ugly - 4:33
07. Back To Zero - 4:01
08. Dirty Work - 3:54
09. Had It With You - 3:20
10. Sleep Tonight - 5:14
11. Untitled [Hidden Track] - 0:33


1989. STEEL WHEELS

Steel Wheels is an album by The Rolling Stones and was released in 1989. Heralded as a major comeback upon its release, the project is notable for the patching up of Mick Jagger and Keith Richards' relationship, a reversion to a more classic style of music and the launching of the band's biggest world tour at the time. It is also founding bassist Bill Wyman's final studio album with The Rolling Stones, preceding the announcement of his departure in January 1993.

The album was the Rolling Stones' first digital recording. In 1994, Steel Wheels was remastered and reissued by Virgin Records, and again in 2009 by Universal Music.

Track listing

01. Sad Sad Sad – 3:36
02. Mixed Emotions – 4:39
03. Terrifying – 4:54
04. Hold On to Your Hat – 3:32
05. Hearts for Sale – 4:41
06. Blinded by Love – 4:37
07. Rock and a Hard Place – 5:25
08. Can't Be Seen – 4:10
09. Almost Hear You Sigh – 4:37
10. Continental Drift – 5:15
11. Break the Spell – 3:07
12. Slipping Away – 4:30


1994. VOODOO LOUNGE

Voodoo Lounge is an album by The Rolling Stones and was released in 1994. As their first new release under their new alliance with Virgin Records, it ended a five-year gap since their last studio album, Steel Wheels in 1989. Voodoo Lounge is also The Rolling Stones' first album without founding bassist Bill Wyman, who departed the line-up in early 1993.

Released in July 1994, Voodoo Lounge received strong reviews and debuted at #1 in the UK (their first chart-topper there since 1980's Emotional Rescue) and #2 in the US where it went double platinum.

In early 1995, while the Voodoo Lounge Tour was still in full force (not finishing until August that year) Voodoo Lounge won the Grammy Award for Best Rock Album.

CD version is the only format with a 15th track, "Mean Disposition".

In 2009, Voodoo Lounge was remastered and reissued by Universal Music.

Track listing

01. Love Is Strong – 3:50
02. You Got Me Rocking – 3:36
03. Sparks Will Fly – 3:16
04. The Worst – 2:25
05. New Faces – 2:52
06. Moon Is Up – 3:42
07. Out of Tears – 5:28
08. I Go Wild – 4:24
09. Brand New Car – 4:15
10. Sweethearts Together – 4:46
11. Suck on the Jugular – 4:28
12. Blinded by Rainbows – 4:34
13. Baby Break It Down – 4:09
14. Thru and Thru – 6:15
15. Mean Disposition – 4:09


1997. BRIDGES TO BABYLON

Bridges to Babylon is an album by The Rolling Stones and was released in 1997. It would prove to be their final studio album of the 1990s and their last full-length release of new songs until 2005. The album was supported by a massive year-long worldwide tour that met with much success.

The Stones had become a touring phenomenon by this point. The Bridges to Babylon Tour in 1997 consisted of 108 shows, making it the second largest grossing North American tour of all time.

In 2009, Bridges to Babylon was remastered and reissued by Universal Music.

Track listing

01. Flip the Switch – 3:27
02. Anybody Seen My Baby ? – 4:31
03. Low Down – 4:26
04. Already Over Me – 5:24
05. Gunface – 5:02
06. You Don't Have to Mean It – 3:44
07. Out of Control – 4:44
08. Saint of Me – 5:15
09. Might as Well Get Juiced – 5:23
10. Always Suffering – 4:44
11. Too Tight – 3:37
12. Thief in the Night – 5:16
13. How Can I Stop – 6:54


2005. A BIGGER BANG

A Bigger Bang is the twenty-second studio album by The Rolling Stones. It is a follow-up to their previous full-length studio album, 1997's Bridges to Babylon, and like Bridges to Babylon and its 1994 predecessor Voodoo Lounge, the album was again produced by Don Was and The Glimmer Twins.

The album features a more basic, stripped-down style reminiscent of Some Girls, but with a harder, more contemporary edge. Many of these songs were recorded with just the core band of Richards, Jagger, and Watts. Ronnie Wood was absent from some of the sessions, playing on only ten of the sixteen tracks, with only very occasional contributions from outside musicians comprising the recording of the album.

The album is the first on which Jagger also plays bass on some tracks. This results from Ronnie Wood's lesser participation.

In 2009, A Bigger Bang was reissued by Universal Music.

Track listing

01. Rough Justice – 3:12
02. Let Me Down Slow – 4:16
03. It Won't Take Long – 3:55
04. Rain Fall Down – 4:54
05. Streets of Love – 5:10
06. Back of My Hand – 3:33
07. She Saw Me Coming – 3:13
08. Biggest Mistake – 4:06
09. This Place Is Empty – 3:17
10. Oh No, Not You Again – 3:47
11. Dangerous Beauty – 3:48
12. Laugh, I Nearly Died – 4:54
13. Sweet Neo Con – 4:34
14. Look What the Cat Dragged In – 3:57
15. Driving Too Fast – 3:57
16. Infamy – 3:48


UMG Remasters Series 2009 were divided by UMG in 4 parts:

Part 1 - May 4: Sticky Fingers, Goat's Head Soup, It's Only Rock 'n Roll, Black And Blue
Part 2 - June 9: Some Girls, Emotional Rescue, Tattoo You, Undercover
Part 3 - July 14: Dirty Work, Steel Wheels, Voodoo Lounge, Bridges to Babylon, A Bigger Bang
Part 4 - 2010: Exile On Main St.


The torrent includes:

- Covers (front, back, disc, sticker)
- Cuesheets (Noncompliant and Corrected Gaps)
- EAC logs- Audiochecker test
- All tracks are tagged and have the front cover embedded
- m3u playlist
- md5 and sfv


How to properly burn these albums with Nero:

1. Decode FLAC to WAV
2. Open Nero -> Recorder -> Burn Image -> Browse where the [Corrected Gaps].cue file is and select it.
3. Burn !


How to properly burn these albums with Burrrn:

1. Decode FLAC to WAV
2. Open Burrrn and drag & drop the [Noncompliant].cue file into the main Burrrn window.
3. Burrrn !

If you don't follow these steps, your CD-R will not be a 1:1 copy of the original SilverCD.




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Enjoy
Gonzalo
stones4ever (aka gonzalo76)
Demonoid
2009-08-24

Label: Polydor/Universal Music Argentina
Argentina (Issued in Argentina)
Released: 2009 (July 14)

Mastered by: Stephen Marcussen and Stewart Whitmore at Marcussen Mastering, Hollywood, CA

from silver

Reuniting after three years and one solo album from Mick Jagger, the Rolling Stones attempted to settle their differences and craft a comeback with Dirty Work, but the tensions remained too great for the group. Designed as a return to their rock & roll roots after several years of vague dance experiments, Dirty Work is hampered by uneven songs and undistinguished performances, as well as a slick, lightly synthesized production that instantly dates the album to the mid-'80s. Jagger often sounds like he's saving his best work for his solo records, but a handful of songs have a spry, vigorous attack — "One Hit (To the Body)" is a classic, and "Winning Ugly" and "Had It With You" have a similar aggression. Still, most of Dirty Work sounds as forced as the cover of Bob & Earl's uptown soul obscurity "Harlem Shuffle," leaving the album as one of the group's most undistinguished efforts