It's hardly a state secret that the Rolling Stones started out as a blues cover band in 1962, and that the blues has always underpinned their long career, even as they flirted at different times with pop, disco, and reggae touches.
The blues was always the touchstone, and this 22‐track collection dips into some of the band's obvious influences, beginning with the Muddy Waters track “Rolling Stone,” a version of Robert Petway's “Catfish Blues” (which is also included here) that gave the group its name, and reaching through to songs like Robert Wilkins' “That's No Way to Get Along,” which appeared on the Stones' Beggars Banquet album as “Prodigal Son,” and Robert Johnson's “Love in Vain,” which the Stones' covered wonderfully on Let It Bleed.