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Her Greatest Hits: Songs of Long Ago is the first official compilation album by Carole King. It was released in 1978 and features twelve songs that had previously appeared on her six studio albums for Ode Records released between 1971 and 1976. The album was re-released on CD/Cassette in 1999 with two additional tracks.
It features a diverse lineup of artists including Richard Marx, Aretha Franklin, Rod Stewart, Celine Dion, The Bee Gees and Amy Grant. The idea of this release was to re-create King's 1971 album Tapestry track-for-track using other artists. The album peaked at number 53 on the Billboard 200 [2] and was certified Gold by the RIAA in the United ...
The Best of Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac is a compilation album by British blues rock band Fleetwood Mac released in November 2002 and focusing on the Peter Green years. The album serves as a digitally remastered replacement for the band's Greatest Hits, with the remastering and cover art taken from the 1999 box set The Complete Blue Horizon Sessions 1967–1969.
As with their other ’60s albums, Fleetwood Mac is missing some of the band’s key songs from the period, including their only U.K. No. 1 single, “Albatross,” and “Black Magic Woman ...
While it became the band's first studio album to miss the charts in the UK, it helped to expand the band's appeal in the United States. In Europe, CBS released Fleetwood Mac's first Greatest Hits album in late 1971. In 1972, six months after the release of Future Games, the band released their sixth studio album, Bare Trees.
Christine McVie, songwriter behind many of Fleetwood Mac's most enduring songs, died following a short illness it was confirmed on Wednesday. Christine McVie Was Always Fleetwood Mac's Greatest ...
all Fleetwood Mac releases from Fleetwood Mac (1975) to Mirage Tour (1983) Tango in the Night (1987) The Dance (1997) all Fleetwood Mac releases from Say You Will (2003) onwards; as a session musician on Behind the Mask (1990), 25 Years – The Chain (1992) and Time (1995).
Rolling Stone compared the album favorably to Poster and Robb's 2011 tribute album, Rave On Buddy Holly. [3] NPR's Stephen Thompson also compared this album and the producers' prior Buddy Holly tribute, saying they both "possess both a sense of cohesion and a reasonably high hit rate", giving highest praise to The New Pornographers' "perfect power-pop throwback" cover of "Think About Me", and ...