Crew [Road Crew] – Alan Rogan, Chuck McGee, Rob Davis
Drums – Charlie Watts (tracks: 2 to 11)
Edited By [In DSD] – Masaru Takagi
Engineer [Assistant] – Barry Bongiovi, David "DB" Brown, Kooster MacAllister, Larry Alexander, Malcolm Pollack, Phil Gitomer
Guitar, Vocals – Keith Richards (tracks: 2 to 11), Ron Wood (tracks: 2 to 11)
Keyboards – Ian McLagan (tracks: 2 to 11)
Liner Notes [Japanese, 2009] – Isao Inubushi
Liner Notes [Lyrics Translated By] – 狩野ハイディ, 若月眞人
Mastered By – Robert C. Ludwig
Mixed By – Bob Clearmountain
Painting [Front Cover] – Kazuhide Yamazaki
Photography By – Ken Regan, Michael Halsband
Piano – Ian Stewart (tracks: 2 to 11)
Producer – The Glimmer Twins
Product Manager – Minoru Harada
Recorded By – Bob Clearmountain, David Hewitt
Research [Artwork Research] – Junichi Yamada
Research [Tape Research] – Mick McKenna
Saxophone – Ernie Watts (tracks: 2 to 11)
Transferred By [DSD Flat Transferred] – Mick McKenna, Richard Whittaker
Transferred By [From DSD] – Yumetoki Suzuki
Vocals, Guitar – Mick Jagger (tracks: 2 to 11)
Notes
"Take The A Train" is a studio recording.
The CD is housed in a mini gate-fold card sleeve replica of the original LP sleeve with original obi. Housed together with a booklet in a box with it's own obi.
On the front of the box: Genuine Platinum SHM for audiophile only Pure platinum reflective coating • SHM body • Turquoise blue label • High resolution cutting
From the inside of the gate-fold: ℗1982 Original sound recordings made by Promotone BV
From the inner sleeve: Recorded [...] with the Record Plant remote (New York) Mixed [...] at Power Station Studios Assistant Engineers: Malcolm Pollack, Barry Bongiovi and Larry Alexander (Power Station) Phil Gitomer, Kooster McAllister and David "DB" Brown (Record Plant)
From the booklet: DSD flat transferred from UK original analogue master tapes [...] at FX Copyroom, London, in 2011. Edited in DSD [...] at Sunrise Studio, Tokyo, in 2011. 176.4Hz/24bit transferred from DSD [...] at Universal Music Studios, Tokyo, in 2014. HR (High-Resolution) cutting from 176.4kHz/24bit at Victor Creative Media, in 2014.