Super Colossal Smash Hits of the 90's: The Best of the Mavericks
Super Colossal Smash Hits of the 90's: The Best of the Mavericks
ASIN: B00002Z775
Track Listings
| 1. Things I Cannot Change |
| 2. Pizziricco |
| 3. Here Comes My Baby |
| 4. Think of Me (When You're Lonely) |
| 5. Dance the Night Away |
| 6. All You Ever Do Is Bring Me Down - Flaco Jimenez, The Mavericks |
| 7. Here Comes the Rain |
| 8. I Should Have Been True |
| 9. There Goes My Heart |
| 10. What a Crying Shame |
| 11. This Broken Heart |
| 12. From Hell to Paradise |
Super Colossal Smash Hits of the 90's: The Best of the Mavericks,The Mavericks,Mercury Nashville,Americana,Contemporary Country,Country,Country & Western,Neo-Traditionalist Country,Pop
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Super Colossal Smash Hits of the 90's: The Best of the Mavericks
The Mavericks Manufacturer: Polygram Int'l ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000031XAE Release Date: 1999-11-29 |
Tracks:
Album Description
European edition of the acclaimed country-rock group's 1999 hits compilation with three bonus tracks NOT on the U.S. release, 'I've Got This Feeling' and covers of the classic pophits 'World Without Love' & 'Are You Lonesome Tonight'. 15 tracks total. 1999 release.Album Details
This 15 Track Collection features their Most Popular Songs and Six New Tracks Including the Double A-Side Single 'Here Comes My Baby'& 'Things I Cannot Change'. Has Three Tracks Not on the Us Version: World Without Love / Think of Me / I've Got this Feeling.Customer Reviews:
Great introduction to the Florida pop-country group.......2005-06-27
Pricey, but worth it!.......2001-09-25
9 of these 15 tracks are from their first four MCA discs(tracks 7 through 15). There is one song from their MCA self-titled debut, the Patsy-Cline influenced "This Broken Heart"; the rest are from the "From Hell to Paradise"/"Music for All Occasions"/"Trampoline" discs. This is a fairly good collection of four key songs from the "...Hell to Paradise" disc, but there's only two songs each from the stellar "...All Occasions" and nearly essential "Trampoline" discs. For the true fan, no abridged view of these vital discs could be satisfying enough, and for the non-fan, this is too little to get a good feel for what a great band this is. Anyway, the real reason for fans to buy this is for the six songs not on any of those prior CD's.
Four of those six songs are on the domestic "Super Colossal Hits.." disc: The dynamic "Things I Cannot Change" original, and peppy covers of the early Cat Stevens' tune "Here Comes My Baby" and Buck Owens' "Think of Me", and a latin-tinged trifle of a tune called "Pizziricco" that is easily the weakest of these four 'new' songs. The two songs not on the domestic hit collection are 1) a fabulously swinging, horn-section-dominated version of Elvis's "Are You Lonesome Tonight?" that could previously only be obtained on the "Babe II: Pig in the City" soundtrack, and 2) the exclusive gem that makes this disc worth tracking down to the dedicated: an excellent, understated reading of "World Without Love" that can be found nowhere else. This tune was written by Paul MCartney circa 1965 and given to his then-girlfriend's brother, Peter Asher, to record. Peter and Gordon had a minor hit with it---but in the hands of the Mavericks, it is slowed down a bit and filled with Raul Malo's achingly beautiful tenor. There is no harmony vocal line (as one had come to expect in the song based on the Peter and Gordon version), but this supremely gorgeous reading of the song makes the steep price of this disc much easier to digest.
Look at it this way: you'd have to buy the domestic hits version and the Babe II soundtrack to get the other 'exclusive' songs on here besides "World Without Love", and by then you'd have spend about 2/3rds of the cost of this disc anyway.
As of this fall of 2001 writing, these are the most recent 'new' recordings available from this excellent band. I recommend you seek out and cherish your copy of this disc and hope that it can help tide you over until the Mavericks drought ends.
Album Review: