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List of non-single songs by Blondie from non-Blondie releases, showing year released and album name Title Year Album "Ring of Fire" [38] 1980 Roadie: Original Motion Picture Sound Track "Ordinary Bummer" [39] 1997 We Will Fall: The Iggy Pop Tribute "More than This" [40] 2006 The New Cars and Blondie: Road Rage
It should only contain pages that are Blondie (band) songs or lists of Blondie (band) songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Blondie (band) songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Blondie's next single in the US was a more aggressive rock song, "One Way or Another" (US number 24), [4] though in the UK, an alternate single choice, "Sunday Girl", became a number one hit. [26] Parallel Lines has been ranked number 140 on Rolling Stone's list of 500 greatest albums of all time. [34]
The Hardest Part (Blondie song) Heart of Glass (song) Hello Joe; I. Immortal Queen; In Love with Love; In the Flesh (Blondie song) Island of Lost Souls (song) K.
The Best of Blondie (released in Germany and the Netherlands as Blondie's Hits) is the first greatest hits album by American rock band Blondie. It was released in October 1981, by Chrysalis Records. [5] The album peaked at number four in the United Kingdom and number 30 in the United States, while becoming the band's only number-one album in ...
Parallel Lines is the third studio album by American rock band Blondie, released on September 8, 1978, [2] by Chrysalis Records.An instant critical and commercial success, the album reached No. 1 on the UK Albums Chart in February 1979 and proved to be the band's commercial breakthrough in the United States, where it reached No. 6 on the Billboard 200 in April 1979.
The song lists at No. 57 on Billboard's All Time Top 100. [17] It was released in the UK two months later, where it became Blondie's fourth UK No. 1 single in little over a year. The song was also played on a British Telecom advert in the 1980s. [citation needed] Record World called "Call Me" a "stirring electronic dance cut". [18]
Compiled by Capitol's Kevin Flaherty and London-based music journalist Steve Pafford, who also wrote the album sleeve notes, Greatest Hits features all of the tracks from the band's very first hits compilation, 1981's The Best of Blondie, including all four long-deleted 'special mixes' by producer Mike Chapman.