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Best of B.T.O. (So Far) (1976, Mercury Records) is a compilation album by Bachman–Turner Overdrive that contains material from their first five studio albums. "Gimme Your Money Please," a cut from the band's 1973 debut album, was released as a single in 1976 to support this greatest hits package.
BTO's Greatest is a U.S. CD-only compilation album by Bachman–Turner Overdrive. It was released in 1986 by Mercury Records . It was released in Europe also on vinyl.
Reissued in 1990 as All Time Greatest Hits Live; Best of Bachman–Turner Overdrive Live: Released: January 24, 1994; Label: Curb; Formats: CD, MC; More recordings from Tallahassee in 1985; King Biscuit Flower Hour: Bachman–Turner Overdrive: Released: April 7, 1998; Label: King Biscuit Flower Hour; Formats: CD; Recorded at Aragon Ballroom in ...
King Biscuit: Bachman–Turner Overdrive is a live album recorded in Chicago on March 8, 1974, originally for broadcast on the King Biscuit Flower Hour. King Biscuit Records released a remastered version in 2004 as part of the King Biscuit Archive Series with the title "Greatest Hits Live".
Best of Bachman–Turner Overdrive Live is an album of concert material from a 1985 Bachman–Turner Overdrive performance in Tallahassee, Florida.The album was released on Curb Records in 1994, and should not be confused with All Time Greatest Hits Live, which was a 1990 re-release of the 1986 album Live Live Live, featuring other material sourced from the same concerts.
A boulder that fell into the middle of California’s Highway 281 in Clearlake Riviera caused an accident and rocks blocked both lanes of Highway 20 in Sarasota Springs, according to Fox Weather.
A single—a re-release of "Gimme Your Money Please"—was put out from this album, and it also charted well keeping BTO on both the AM & FM airwaves. Although peaking at only No. 19 on the charts, this compilation album became the best-selling Bachman–Turner Overdrive album to date, reaching Double Platinum status in the US. [18]
The album did not produce a true hit single ("Blue Collar" reached #68 on the U.S. Billboard charts and #21 in Canada), but it was certified "Gold" by the RIAA in 1974, largely pulled up by strong sales of Bachman–Turner Overdrive's next two albums (Bachman–Turner Overdrive II and Not Fragile). "Gimme Your Money Please" and "Little Gandy ...