Greatest Stiffs

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (55 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 20   Total Length: 66:43

Write a Review4 Member Reviews

Please log in before you review a release. Log in

user avatar

Get wrecked with Eric

IlCattivo

I found him a little hard to take 30 years ago but now he makes lots of sense. Great pop/rock songs with an inimitable style.

user avatar

love it like a bad habit!

kitty23

I have always loved alt/punk/indie/brit/new age/undergrnd hip hop etc everthing basically.when i saw stranger than fiction it did one of my favorite things in the world.introduced me to an artist whom i hadnt been formerly familiar with.whole wide world is awesome i fell in love with it in that film.but check out the rest of the album to.

user avatar

Soundtrack Search

karenuhoh

If you enjoyed Harold Crick's rendition of "Whole Wide World" in "Stranger than Fiction," perhaps you will enjoy the original version on this album.

user avatar

a goldmine

thegroovewrangler

A neophyte stumbling upon this album will be floored. Relegated to cult status at best, Wreckless Eric at his best tossed off one catchy rock song after another. If you're an indie rocker looking to add a cool, obscure cover to your repertoire, just throw a dart at this album's tracklist and go!

Recommended Albums

They Say All Media Guide

There’s one complaint with Metro’s Greatest Stiffs collection — Wreckless Eric’s unhinged version of Devo’s “Be Stiff,” the song that the British indie Stiff made all their second-wave artists record, isn’t here. It was the best out of all the versions of “Be Stiff,” and it would have been a highlight of his Stiff recordings even if he’d been the only one to cut it there. Apart from that, and maybe the absence of his smashing version of Ian Dury’s “Rough Kids,” this is a flawless collection of his terrific recordings for Stiff, drawing highlights from those three full-length albums, including songs that haven’t been easily available on CD. And while Wreckless’ incoherent, slurred growl may be an acquired taste, it’s totally rock & roll, and the best early songs here — “Whole Wide World,” “Reconnez Cherie,” “Semaphore Signals,” “Take the Cash (K.A.S.H.),” among others — are wild, terrific rock & roll, while the songs toward the end of the record prove that he’s a fine pop songwriter as well. Wreckless Eric may be a cult act, but this record proves why he has a cult. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

more »