Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The front cover consists of a collage referring to all twelve tracks. Greatest Hits was reissued on compact disc by Legacy Records on March 26, 2002. The remastered version added a bonus track, "The Air That I Breathe" from 1974, which was the Hollies' last top ten song in the U.S.
Hollies' Greatest/Vol. 2: Released: November 1972; Origin: UK; Label: Parlophone (PCS 7148) Format: stereo LP — 32 — The Hollies' Greatest Hits: Released: April 1973; Origin: North America; Label: Epic (KE 32061) Format: stereo LP — — 157 US: Gold [8] The History of The Hollies: 24 Genuine Top Thirty Hits: Released: November 1975 ...
A New Zealand Hollies Greatest Hits compilation made No. 1 in that country in 2001, dislodging the Beatles' 1 collection from the top spot. While re-establishing the band as a touring attraction over 2000 to mid-2004, Carl Wayne only recorded one song with them, " How Do I Survive? " the last (and only new) track on the 2003 Greatest Hits ...
The Hollies' Greatest Hits is the name of: The Hollies' Greatest Hits (North America) The Hollies' Greatest Hits (1968 West German album) The ...
"Bus Stop" is a song recorded and released as a single by the British rock band the Hollies in 1966. It reached No. 5 in the UK Singles Chart. [6] It was the Hollies' first US top ten hit, [7] reaching No. 5 on the Billboard charts in September 1966. In Canada the song reached No. 1 and was their second top ten hit there.
Cash Box praised the song's "simplicity and straightforward happiness." [ 3 ] The name Jennifer Eccles also features in the song " Lily the Pink " by The Scaffold ; the reference is an in-joke , as Graham Nash , who left the Hollies in December 1968, sang backing vocals on this recording; Nash had been married to Rose Eccles from 1964 until 1966.
The Hollies' Greatest Hits was the first greatest hits collection by English pop group the Hollies. The album was released by Imperial Records in the US in May 1967 [ 1 ] and by Capitol Records in Canada, under the title The Hits of the Hollies and with two different tracks, in July 1967. [ 2 ]
It was their first original single, with their previous four singles having all been covers. An EP including the song was later released in October 1964, also entitled Here I Go Again. In the US, an album entitled Here I Go Again was released in June 1964 and was largely based on the UK album Stay with the Hollies.