B.B. King - Greatest Hits
B.B. King
Mca
| List Price: |
$18.98 |
| Amazon Price: |
$10.97 |
| Lowest New Price: |
$9.00 |
| Lowest Used Price: |
$7.29 |
| Total New: |
41 |
| Total Used: |
23 |
DVD Details:
- Starring:
- Director:
- Format:
- Rated:
- Studio: Mca
- Theatrical Release Date: Dec 31, 1969
- DVD Release Date: Aug 25, 1998
- Run Time:
- ASIN: B00000ADG3
- UPC: 008811174620
- Sales Rank: 3060
Tracks:
1: Every Day I Have the Blues - B.B. King, Memphis Slim
2: Sweet Little Angel - B.B. King, King, Riley
3: How Blue Can You Get? - B.B. King, Feather, Leonard
4: Paying the Cost to Be the Boss - B.B. King, King, Riley
5: Don't Answer the Door - B.B. King, Johnson, Mark [2]
6: Why I Sing the Blues - B.B. King, Clark, Dave [Saxoph
7: The Thrill Is Gone - B.B. King, Darnell, Rick
8: I Like to Live the Love - B.B. King, Crawford, Dave [1]
9: Hummingbird - B.B. King, Russell, Leon
10: To Know You Is to Love You - B.B. King, Wonder, Stevie
11: Chains and Things - B.B. King, Clark, Dave [Saxoph
12: Better Not Look Down - B.B. King, Sample, Joe
13: Never Make a Move Too Soon - B.B. King, Hooper, Stix
14: There Must Be a Better World Somewhere - B.B. King, Pomus, Doc
15: Playin' with My Friends - B.B. King, Cray, Robert
16: When Love Comes to Town - B.B. King, Bono
Amazon Customer Reviews:
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
    Too focused on mediocre latter-day material, 2004-06-28
This certainly isn't everything you could ever want from the Beale Street Blues Boy, but it does give the first-time listener a pretty accurate idea about what to expect from B.B. King. For better or worse.
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br /His excellent and highly influential 50s singles are missing, which is a shame, especially since some of those were actually sizable hits and this compilation has the audacity to call itself "Greatest Hits".
br /There are lot of great moments here anyway, like the swinging "Paying The Cost To Be The Boss", the epic "Why I Sing The Blues", and the slow burner "How Blue Can You Get" among them, and they sit next to two cuts from King's highly succesful "Live At The Regal" album, an excellent "Sweet Little Angel" and a hideous "Every Day I Have The Blues" which falls miles short of Memphis Slim's potent original ("Nobody Loves Me").
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br /And there are just too many mediocrities on this album. B.B. King experimented with some sort of pop-blues fusion in the 70s and 80s, and the compilers have included "To Know You Is to Love You", "I Like To Live The Love" and "Hummingbird" from that unfortunate era. The duets with Robert Cray on "Playin' With My Friends" and rock group U2 on "When Love Comes To Town" are not much more uplifting, and too much of this material was recorded well after King's prime.
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br /If you like B.B. King at his most pop-friendly, you will probably enjoy this compilation. If you like him at his grittiest, you will certainly be disappointed. May I suggest the new "Ultimate Collection" instead.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
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