The Greatest Hits

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (148 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 26   Total Length: 65:24

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Guess Who's Greatest

stmarshall44

Despite what some critics dismiss as fluff,the fact of the matter,is this.Many of the Guess Who's songs,have endured the test of time.They show up,in movie soundtracks,over and over again.Nothing wrong with,feeling good,or cheery..despite what the "Goth" scene tells ya.Have a nice day,indeed.

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Good album

Irwin

This is a "good album", and certainly the Lovin'Spoonful was a good band. However, they were never great, so you might want to pick and choose what you want to download.

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The American Invasion

kathymiller

Consisted of mostly the Lovin' Spoonful, the Byrds, and the (Good) Rascals. Garage band one hit wonders were around, but it was the Spoonful who consistently delivered hits into the top 10. Great songsmithery courtesy of John Sebastian (mostly) and great folk-rock-jugband musicianship. A fun stew. A collection that has Coconut Grove and 6 O'clock alongside the hits is my idea of heaven.

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Spponful

docrbk

Got 'em all...brings back good memories, just like the "feel good" music of Sebastian and the Spoonful Sorry about the typo-couldn't correct it!

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Yup

toots

Yup it's a no brainer... a very good deal for some great music.

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Love this spoonful

Philly-Bill

Hal is right - the sound is better than I remember. Don't care if I'm showing my age. I absolutely WORE OUT these LP's back when they came out (which is the audio quality I remember), and these songs hold up as classic beautiful pop music. Not heavy or deep, but nothing guilty about the pleasures either. Sebastian's writing on these gems makes them self-contained, a variety of styles and moods, not derivative of other styles or artists. They didn't just copy the previous hit, but came up with new ways to charm us. At 12 credits for the full set, this is a no-brainer.

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eMusic Features

Gus Cannon and the Rise of Jug Band Music

By John Morthland

Jug band music originated in Louisville, Kentucky, around 1905, but reached its fullest flowering in Memphis in the 1920s. Though there were others, two groups in particular dominated Beale Street: the Memphis Jug Band, led by Will Shade, and Gus Cannon's Jug Stompers. The former came first and was more popular at the time, but it's the Cannon/Stompers legacy that has best endured. In 1963 the Rooftop Singers, a Greenwich Village folk… more »

They Say All Media Guide

Although it sports the same amount of tracks (26) as Rhino’s 1993 Anthology, up to now the last word in comprehensive Spoonful compilations, the 2000 issue of the umpteenth collection from this short-lived ’60s band gets the nod over all others. Taken from the original first-generation masters, apparently for the first time, the sound quality — with a crispness and definition previously unheard — and even track selection, is the finest yet. “On the Road Again,” “Wild About My Lovin’,” and “Darlin’ Companion,” all excellent tunes representative of the Spoonful’s good-time folksy/jugband style that were omitted from the Rhino set, are included, further reinforcing this as the last word in single-disc anthologies from this legendary band. What’s startling is how many great songs the group recorded in such a short time span. The majority of the tracks were released within a two-year period from 1965-1967, almost all springing from the pen of John Sebastian who also took lead vocals on all the hits. The band was a textbook example of compressed quality, with only three tracks here breaking the three-minute barrier, and many clocking in at just under two. Which means there still could be an even more definitive compilation created by adding five more songs and extending the running time to the 77-minute CD maximum. Until then, this is the Lovin’ Spoonful disc to own. – Hal Horowitz

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