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Also in 1990, a ten CD box set was released in the UK, containing rare songs from the Cult's singles. The CDs in this box set were all issued as picture discs with rice paper covers, housed in a white box called Singles Collection , or a black box called E.P. Collection '84 - '90 .
British rock band The Cult has released 11 studio albums, two live albums, six compilation albums, seven video albums, five box sets, 20 EPs and 37 singles. Albums [ edit ]
Pure Cult is the first of several greatest hits compilations by the British rock band The Cult, released in 1993. The title of the original release was Pure Cult: for Rockers, Ravers, Lovers, and Sinners while the 2000 reissue was titled Pure Cult: The Singles 1984–1995.
Songs with (*) are single edits, rather than album versions. Tracks 4, 16 taken from Dreamtime. Tracks 1, 6, 8 taken from Love. Tracks 3, 7, 13 taken from Electric. Tracks 2, 11, 17, 19 taken from Sonic Temple. Tracks 12, 18 taken from Ceremony. Track 5 taken from Songs from the Cool World. Tracks 10, 14 taken from The Cult.
Topics about The Cult songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories Pages in category "The Cult songs" The following 13 pages are in this category ...
Sonic Temple is the fourth studio album by British rock band The Cult, released on 10 April 1989.Described by guitarist Billy Duffy as "rock music from a European perspective with the sensibilities of punk", [6] the album features some of the band's most popular songs, including "Fire Woman" and "Edie (Ciao Baby)".
In January 1993, the song was re-released as "Sanctuary MCMXCIII" and experienced chart success once more, matching its original peak on the UK Singles Chart and entering the top 10 in New Zealand. One of the earliest songs written for what would become the Love album, "She Sells Sanctuary" was first performed during the Dreamtime tour in the ...
High Octane Cult is a United States and Japan greatest hits compilation featuring every single The Cult had released at the time, with the additional "Beauty's on the Street" and "In the Clouds". It was released by The Cult's then record company Beggars Banquet Records without The Cult's participation.