There's not much I can add to what's been said; the first two albums (Child Is Father to the Man and the eponymous album) were given decent treatment and "3" was treated like a K-Tel release of some one-hit wonder! The liner card is no better than you could make with a home printer, the release year is not even listed and, completely ridiculously, the playlist is all screwed up! Sony makes it appear that the "Sympathy for the Devil" suite is fifteen-and-a-half minutes long (whereas it's only nine-and-a-quarter) and that there are thirteen cuts on the album (only ten -- sorry). As to evaluating the work, I can't say better than the review written by "Charlie Law" -- quite astute! BUT -- I can and will provide a proper playlist here and now:1 Hi-De-Ho 4:252 The Battle 2:413 Lucretia MacEvil 3:004 Lucretia's Reprise 2:315 Fire and Rain 4:016 Lonesome Suzie 4:357 Symphony for the Devil / Sympathy for the Devil 1:25/7:50 I. Emergence A. Fanfare II. Devil's Game A. Labyrinth B. Satan's Dance C. The Demand III. Submergence A. Contemplation B. Return8 He's a Runner 4:139 Somethin' Comin' On 4:3310 40,000 Headmen 4:44 Interpolation: "Ballad" from 15 Hungarian Peasant Songs; I Mean You; Excerpt from Lieutenant Kije Suite; Etude for Lew and Zoloff)["Zoloff" probably should have been "Soloff" -- Columbia also spelled "Winwood" as "Windwood".]When I first heard BS&T 3 about forty years ago (yikes!), I didn't think it as good as the second album, but hearing it again has changed my mind: It may not have quite the energy of the eponymous album (Bobby Colomby thought they were sort of running down on "3"), but in many ways it's a far more interesting album, the influences more far-ranging. If you haven't heard it yet, it ain't no rock'n'roll album, folks.