Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Rip Her to Shreds" was included on Blondie's first greatest hits compilation The Best of Blondie, released in October 1981. Two versions of the song are featured in the 2011 film Bridesmaids where the original studio version plays in the opening of the film and the live version plays during the end credits. [9]
Live by Request is a live and video album by the band Blondie released in the US in 2004, [2] ... "Rip Her to Shreds", ... "Good Boys" music video; Personnel
Reviewing Blondie in 1977 for Rolling Stone, Ken Tucker called the album "a playful exploration of Sixties pop interlarded with trendy nihilism" and found that all the songs "work on at least two levels: as peppy but rough pop, and as distanced, artless avant-rock". He noted that Harry performed with "utter aplomb and involvement throughout ...
Music videos: 35: Blondie performing at Summercase 2008 in Barcelona ... "Rip Her to Shreds" — ... † Live at CBGB's 1977 was released as a bonus DVD in the deluxe ...
During the intro sequence the song "Call Me" is played, making it another music video. "Sunday Girl" (incomplete) is played during the end credits. The Best of Blondie video album was re-released on DVD in 2002 as a part of Greatest Video Hits to coincide with the release of the album Greatest Hits. The songs "Call Me" and "Sunday Girl" were ...
The No Exit Tour [1] was a 1998–1999 worldwide concert tour by American new wave band Blondie to promote their revival and reformation as a band and their latest album No Exit, which was released during the tour. The tour marked the band's first live performances in 16 years, save for small festival appearances in 1997.
When it reached number two on the Kent Music Report in November 1977, [4] Australia became the first territory in which Blondie achieved a hit single. In Ian Meldrum 's 2014 autobiography, Debbie Harry elaborated saying "We met Ian in 1977... he asked if we had any videos [and] we gave him videos for "X Offender" and "In the Flesh".
Atomic: The Very Best of Blondie includes the band's best known songs from the 1970s and 1980s, as well as two new remixes of the title track. The compilation reached number 12 on the UK Albums Chart and has been certified platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI).