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The Very Best Of (released as The Complete Greatest Hits in the UK, Australia, and New Zealand) is a two-disc compilation album by the Eagles, released in 2003. [3] This album combines all tracks that appeared on the two previously released Eagles greatest hits albums (Their Greatest Hits (1971–1975) and Eagles Greatest Hits, Vol. 2), along with other singles not included on the first two ...
Eagles Greatest Hits Volume 2 is the second compilation album by the Eagles. It features many of their biggest hits not on Their Greatest Hits (1971–1975), including "Hotel California", their signature song. The album was released in 1982, after the band's breakup. That same year, Don Henley and Glenn Frey both released their debut solo albums.
The Rolling Stones (EP) (UK) More Hot Rocks (Big Hits & Fazed Cookies) (US) Chuck Berry Jagger "Can I Get a Witness" 1964 1964 The Rolling Stones (UK) England's Newest Hit Makers (US) Holland-Dozier-Holland: Jagger "Can You Hear the Music" 1973 1973 Goats Head Soup: Jagger/Richards Jagger "Can't Be Seen" 1989 1989 Steel Wheels: Jagger/Richards ...
UK: The Rolling Stones No. 2 US: The Rolling Stones, Now! 1 — — — 14 4 21 2 — — Dec 1964 "Heart of Stone" UK: Out of Our Heads US: The Rolling Stones, Now! "What a Shame" UK: The Rolling Stones No. 2 US: The Rolling Stones, Now! — 19 16 15 — 6 24 5 15 — Jan 1965 "Route 66" UK: The Rolling Stones US: England's Newest Hit Makers ...
The song has been covered by other artists, including the Rolling Stones (on their 1964 self-titled debut album), [4] Gene Vincent (on his 1971 album The Day the World Turned Blue) and Buddy Guy (on his 1980 album Breaking Out). [5] In 1969, Sly and the Family Stone included a funk version of the song with different lyrics on the album Stand!.
It was the first Rolling Stones compilation packaged in the compact disc era, and covered the band's career from 1971's Sticky Fingers to then-most recent studio album Steel Wheels in 1989. It was also the band's first release under their contract with Virgin Records , which had been signed in November 1993, while Voodoo Lounge was being recorded.
Jumping out of a plane was like nothing else I'd ever done — or will do again. The recommended height for a first-time tandem jump is at least 10,000 feet to give about a minute in free fall ...
In a review of the song, Bill Janovitz says, "Though the song still referenced drugs and the road life of a pop-music celebrity, it really is a rare example of Jagger letting go of his public persona, offering a behind-the-scenes glimpse of the weariness that accompanies the pressures of keeping up appearances as a sex-drugs-and-rock & roll star."