The Rolling Stones - The Singles Collection -box Set 1971-2006- - 2011 -
One star deducted for missing tracks and inconsistent mastering. Still, for the price of a concert T-shirt, you get 45 stories of survival, swagger, and occasional genius.
Like many 2010s-era Stones reissues, the audio sources are inconsistent. Some tracks sound like fresh remasters; others (especially early ’80s singles) seem pulled from older, compressed CD masters. “Undercover of the Night” lacks the vinyl’s low-end punch. One star deducted for missing tracks and inconsistent
Here’s a well-rounded, critical look at box set (released 2011). A Sweeping, Flawed Capstone to the “Second Act” When the Rolling Stones released The Singles Collection: 1971–2006 in late 2011, it arrived as the natural companion to 2009’s Singles Collection: 1963–1971 (the London/Decca years). Where that earlier box traced the band’s transformation from blues-obsessed teens to jet-black rock royalty, this three-disc (or 45-disc vinyl behemoth) set covers the era when the Stones became a self-sustaining industry: their own label (Rolling Stones Records), the iconic tongue logo, and a shifting sound that veered from disco to punk-surf to stadium balladry. What You Get The standard physical release is three CDs containing 45 A- and B-sides spanning 1971’s “Brown Sugar” to 2006’s “Biggest Mistake” (from A Bigger Bang ). The digital edition runs 54 tracks, adding some non-UK single cuts. For vinyl obsessives, the limited edition box (45 × 7″ singles in repro sleeves) is a work of fetishistic beauty — but at a collector’s price. Some tracks sound like fresh remasters; others (especially