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The 50 Greatest Hits is a compilation album by American singer Elvis Presley, originally released on November 18, 2000. It features 50 of Presley's best known songs and was re-released on 11 August 2017 to mark 40 years since his death.
ELV1S: 30 #1 Hits received mostly favorable reviews from music critics. Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic gave the album a mostly positive review, but wrote that it still lacked a lot of good material and that several factors were working against it, such as the number of hits Elvis had and the songs that did not make it to No. 1. [16]
1995 Elvis Gold - The Very Best Of The King (CD BMG 74321249742) 1996 The Original Elvis Presley Collection (CD, Box Set RCA, BMG Nederland BV) 1997 The 100 Top-Hits Collection (CD RCA 3642933) 1998 The Elvis Presley Collection: The Romantic (CD Time/Life Music 80607) 1999 Pot Luck (CD reissue RCA 07863677392)
Elvis Aron Presley "Santa Claus Is Back in Town" — — 25 41 — "The Sound of Your Cry" 1982 — — — 59 The Sound of Your Cry "Green Green Grass of Home" 1984 — — — 76 I Can Help and Other Great Hits "The Last Farewell" — — — 48 Elvis Presley: A Golden Celebration "Ain't That Loving You Baby" 1987 — — — 47 — "Love Me ...
The collection received mixed reviews, with Roy Carr and Mick Farren, in Elvis: The Illustrated Record, a book released the following year, calling the album title misleading: "Predictable Las Vegas standards hardly fall under the category of 'Greatest Hits,'" they write. "One seriously wonders exactly who records like this are aimed at," they ...
Elvis Is Back! Girl of Mine: Les Reed, Barry Mason: 1973: Raised on Rock: The Girl of My Best Friend: Beverly Ross, Sam Bobrick: 1960: Elvis Is Back! Girls! Girls! Girls! Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller: 1962: Girls! Girls! Girls! Give Me the Right: Fred Wise, Norman Blagman: 1961: Something for Everybody: Go East-Young Man: Bernie Baum, Bill ...
Elvis' 40 Greatest is a compilation album by American singer and musician Elvis Presley.It was released in 1974 and was the UK's biggest-selling album over the Christmas period of that year, but along with all albums on K-tel, Ronco and Arcade, it was ineligible for the UK Albums Chart until 1975 because it was felt that heavy TV advertising and low pricing distorted the charts.
"Hourglass" is the first single released from Squeeze's seventh album, Babylon and On. Aided by an optical illusion-filled music video directed by Ade Edmondson, it received substantial airplay on MTV, and "Hourglass" became the highest-charting hit the band ever had in the United States, peaking at number 15 on the Billboard Hot 100, while reaching number 16 in the UK Singles Chart.