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The Best and the Rest of the Zombies (1984) (8-song record on Back-Trac/CBS Special Products) The Zombies (1984) (22 track LP on See for Miles) The Zombies: The Collection (1988) Castle Communications; Meet the Zombies (1988) (LP on Razor) Greatest Hits (1990) (CD/Cassette on DCC Compact Classics)
"Tell Her No" is a hit single written by Rod Argent and included by English rock band the Zombies on their debut album The Zombies in 1965. It peaked at No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the United States in March 1965 and was one of three big American hits by the Zombies (the others being "She's Not There", in 1964, and "Time of the Season", in 1969).
It should only contain pages that are The Zombies songs or lists of The Zombies songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Zombies songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
"She's Not There" is the debut single by the English rock band the Zombies, written by keyboardist Rod Argent. It reached No. 12 in the UK Singles Chart in September 1964, [1] and No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States at the beginning of December 1964.
[31] [37] At the time, O'Riordan received criticism for "Zombie" ' s "hard-hitting lyrics"; she nevertheless pointed out that the song was written from a humanitarian point of view. [13] O’Riordan's mother Eileen has stated, "It wasn’t written as a political song but as an anti-violence, an anti-war song."
The original five-piece line-up reformed briefly in 1997 for the launch party of the Zombie Heaven boxset. They performed " She's Not There " and "Time of the Season" at London's Jazz Café . In 2001, Blunstone and Argent resurrected the Zombies as a recording and touring unit with ex-Argent and the Kinks bass guitarist Jim Rodford , his son ...
The "Dancing with the Stars" contestant shared that she struggles with imposter syndrome and has to work to “block out the negative voice”
Billboard ranked People!'s version as No.53 in their top 100 songs for 1968, [19] [20] while it was ranked #75 in the Cashbox annual charts. [21] The success of People!'s version of "I Love You" frustrated The Zombies. According to Zombies member Colin Blunstone: "That was a bit of a heartbreaker. It wasn't a favourite song of mine to be ...