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Simply Red 25: The Greatest Hits is a compilation album by Simply Red, released in 2008 as both a standard and deluxe edition which contained material from their 25-year career. In the US it was released in 1CD format.
East West Records issued the compilation album Greatest Hits in 1996, reportedly against Hucknall's wishes. [citation needed] The album featured one new track, a cover of the 1973 Aretha Franklin hit "Angel" which was co-produced with The Fugees (who also served as backing musicians). Released as a single, "Angel" reached #4 in the UK.
Greatest Video Hits (2002) Home Live in Sicily (2003) Classic Albums: Stars (2005) Cuba (2006) Stay – Live at the Royal Albert Hall (2007) Simply Red 25: The Greatest Hits (2008) Simply Red Farewell – Live in Concert at Sydney Opera House (2011) Simply Red: Live at Montreux (2012) Symphonica in Rosso (2018)
Greatest Hits is the first compilation album released by British pop and soul group Simply Red, released in 1996, which contained material from their first five studio albums (Picture Book, Men and Women, A New Flame, Stars and Life) and included a newer track, a cover of Aretha Franklin's 1973 classic, "Angel".
Big Love is the eleventh studio album by British pop group Simply Red.The album was released on 29 May 2015 by East West Records. [4] It is their first studio album since Stay (2007), and the first album to only feature original material since Life (1995). [5]
Hucknall, born at Saint Mary's Hospital, Manchester, on 8 June 1960, [4] [5] [6] was an only child. His mother abandoned the family when he was three; the upheaval caused by this event inspired him to write "Holding Back the Years", which would become one of Simply Red's biggest and best-known hits.
Greatest hits album by . Simply Red. Released: 2003: Recorded: 1984–1999: The Very Best of Simply Red is a two-CD compilation album by Simply Red, originally ...
Mick Hucknall: Producer(s) Stewart Levine: ... Greatest Hits in 1996, Simply Red 25: The Greatest Hits in 2008 and Song Book 1985–2010 in 2013. Critical reception