Greatest Hits albums are for housewives and littles girls
mrmatthew
1,575 Posts
That being said...what Greatest Hits albums do you secretly keep filed in your stacks?
No comps, only "Greatest HIts" and "Best Of" single artist lps.
Off the top of my head, my secret shames are:
please rep yours
Comments
But as far as "kinda ashamed" type shit, which im not really ashamed of.....
Anyway...
I recently VG-plussed-up on Harold Melvin and The Blue Notes' Collectors' Item just because I like having "The Love I Lost" and "Bad Luck" back to back.
Shame is for suckers.
--A Chicago double-CD set that's name escapes me
--The Doobie Brothers
--A Creedence tape I snatched from my parents
--Musiquarium, of course
Worth thirding...not to mention most housewives and little girls have more substance than a lot of record elitist nerds that I know.
And make great gateway/introductory formats. I shudder to think where I would be musically if these hadn't crossed my path as a preteen.
A couple more amazing greatest hits series:
Well, let me apologise if my comment came across in so earnest a way, as that wasn't my intention at all. Nevertheless, the premise does rather invite that kind of response. The idea that singles and, by extension, singles-driven genres are inferior by definition and thus best left to people who don't treat music with the requisite level of seriousness is rock-snob bullshit. Personally, I happen to think such a preference is the mark of someone who probably has a far healthier relationship with music than that of someone who gets into internet squabbles over the minutiae of differing degrees of private-bonerism.
That said, I have equal contempt for "just play the hits" faux-populism. For the last couple of evenings, purely for my own amusement, I've been attempting to put together a definitive best-of from Fleetwood Mac's post-Peter Green/pre-Buckingham/Nicks wilderness years - that neglected period forgotten by all but the most die-hard Mac obsessives and studiously ignored by compilers of box-sets and curators of RSD boutique limited-editions - so I'm just as much about the dark and dusty corners as I am the places that everyone knows.
Shout out to rootless for being first to go to bat for Legend (which I nearly did, but bottled out on). I also thought of submitting Stevie's collection from the Anthology/Looking Back series, but then it occurred to me that those comps have above-average pull for record-nerds compared to yer garden-variety hits collections - in Stevie's case, it was his o.g. version of Until You Come Back To Me, while the original 1974 Marvin collection was for some time the easiest place to find You're The Man, and the only place to find it on an album - so I gave 'em the swerve.
That Aretha comp is hands down one of my all time favourite records - perfect selection of perfect music. Don't think it was ever reissued on CD either...
no longer have this belief and I ride hard for Rolling Stones "Hot Rocks" & Clash "Singles".
the premise alone is eye watering