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16 Biggest Hits

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (96 ratings)
16 Biggest Hits album cover
01
Here You Come Again
2:57 $0.99
02
9 To 5
2:58 $1.29
03
Jolene
2:40 $1.29
04
Islands In The Stream
Artist: Dolly Parton & Kenny Rogers
4:08 $0.99
05
I Will Always Love You
2:54 $1.29
06
Coat Of Many Colors
3:04 $0.99
07
The Seeker
3:14 $0.99
08
Two Doors Down
3:01 $0.99
09
Single Women
3:38 $0.99
10
All I Can Do
2:23 $0.99
11
Heartbreak Express
3:13 $0.99
12
Don't Call It Love
3:20
$0.99
13
Love Is Like A Butterfly
2:20 $0.99
14
Rockin' Years
Artist: Dolly Parton duet with Ricky Van Shelton
3:25 $0.99
15
Why'd You Come In Here Lookin' Like That
2:33 $0.99
16
Romeo
Artist: Dolly Parton (with Billy Ray Cyrus, Tanya Tucker, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Kathy Mattea, Pam Tillis)
3:33 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 49:21

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seriously?

LordCancer

emusic recommendations are whack. since I started rating music my ability to find good music has sunk off the face of the earth. this album sucks a ten ton horse cock. what utter garbage. i hope dolly dies today.

user avatar

Some of her best hits all in one place

ani_says_so

This has all of my favorite Dolly hits, especially tracks 1-6. Her music is great to listen to when I am in different moods.

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They Say All Music Guide

16 Biggest Hits is a fairly accurate title in the case of this Dolly Parton best-of, which is representative of her musical output from the early ’70s up to her turn-of-the-’80s comeback that began with White Limozeen (1989), compiling most of her best, if not necessarily biggest, hits from this time span. With so many hits to her name over several decades, Parton isn’t easily summarized on a single-disc collection like this. The Essential Dolly Parton, released in 2005 by Legacy, was more ideal; over the course of 37 songs, it showcased the country icon’s colorful array of career highlights much better. Consequently, there are at least a good dozen songs that could have been chosen for 16 Biggest Hits, from early-’70s gems like “Mule Skinner Blues (Blue Yodel No. 8)” and “Joshua,” to late-’70s country-pop like “Heartbreaker” and “I Really Got the Feeling,” to gaudy ’80s wonders like “Potential New Boyfriend” and “Tie Our Love (In a Double Knot).” Yet what’s here on 16 Biggest Hits is fitting and well satisfying: “Coat of Many Colors” (1971), “Jolene” (1973), “I Will Always Love You” (1974), “Love Is Like a Butterfly” (1974), “The Seeker” (1975), “All I Can Do” (1976), “Here You Come Again” (1977), “Two Doors Down” (1977), “9 to 5″ (1980), “Single Women” (1982), “Heartbreak Express” (1982), “Islands in the Stream” (1983), “Don’t Call It Love” (1985), “Why’d You Come in Here Lookin’ Like That” (1989), “Rockin’ Years” (1991), and “Romeo” (1993). All of these songs were hits, half of them chart-toppers. – Jason Birchmeier

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