Come And See The Show: The Best Of Emerson, Lake & Palmer

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Come And See The Show: The Best Of Emerson, Lake & Palmer album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 67:07

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Wow

kdcoffee

A great collection from the prog kings!.

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Most Excellant!

dbender58

This is a great album. Download it now!

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"Prog" is not a dirty word

mjergens

This is a good collection of the best of the best from ELP. If you have to choose one, this is it.

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A minor note

allyouneedislove

The version of "Father Christmas" on this collection is the one with the choir, not the same as the version from Works Vol. 2.

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Thanks eMusic

coopco95843

OMG - grab it while you can!

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Karn Evil 9

yazoostreetboogie

Welcome again my friends to the show that never ends we're so glad you could attend come inside come inside

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Great music, but . . . .

Elmonewt

Why do we need another Best of? I lost count a long time ago, but Best of ELP albums far outnumbered their "proper" albums. All of these tracks on Emusic in their original albums. In the age of Emusic/iTunes, why repackage this yet again? If you are interested in ELP do yourself a favor and download all their albums now before they vanish.

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They Say All Music Guide

Emerson, Lake & Palmer aren’t the first, or among the first hundred, groups you think of as most likely or suitable to be represented by a single-disc collection. But Come and See the Show isn’t the first such anthology, and given that the format’s already proven viable more than once, it likely won’t be the last. If you’re the kind of fan who doesn’t find reduction from the album-length format on which prog rockers Emerson, Lake & Palmer relied a problem, Come and See the Show is a pretty good distillation of their more famous (and usually best) tracks. Some might quibble as to the choices of the secondary tracks (though they’re probably not the general fans most likely to buy such best-ofs), but undeniably the group’s most celebrated songs are present, those including “Lucky Man,” “C’est la Vie,” “Fanfare for the Common Man,” “From the Beginning,” “Knife Edge,” and “Trilogy.” Live versions of “Nut Rocker,” “Toccata,” and “Peter Gunn” vary the pace, as does “I Believe in Father Christmas.” The single-CD best-of format means there isn’t room for their longer extravaganzas, but those will long be available on their individual albums should you want to investigate deeper. – Richie Unterberger

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