Greatest Hits

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Greatest Hits album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 20   Total Length: 50:08

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Punk channeling other genres

Wombat2000

I don't know precisely what I thought I would get from this album. I'd heard "Blitzkrieg Bop" and "I wanna be Sedated," of course. The biggest lesson for me is the way music has changed so significantly that these tunes sound pretty tame by today's standards. Aside from the already-familiar and enjoyable songs, I also really like the chorus on "Sheena is a Punk Rocker," which amuses me because it has a surfer-feel (as if they were covering the Beach Boys) and they mumble the line to sound like "pun rocker." I also really like "The KKK Took my baby away," because it's just so weird; also, the moaning open lines are reminiscent of 50s love ballads.

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No collection is complete without the Ramones...

LTB

Who doesn't Wanna Be Sedated?

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Long live the Ramones!

tbow24

I saw these guys at the end of the Disco era late 70's in El Paso at the Old Buffalo. Best 10.00 dollars I ever spent! Can't go wrong with these hits my faves "I just want to have something to do" and "I wanna be sedated".

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They Say All Music Guide

Appearing one year after Rhino’s Ramones box set Weird Tales of the Ramones, and appearing four years after Rhino’s first single-disc Ramones collection Loud, Fast Ramones: Their Toughest Hits — which itself appeared after Rhino’s excellent double-disc Hey! Ho! Let’s Go!: The Anthology — Rhino’s 2006 collection Greatest Hits serves up 20 of the group’s basics. Unlike 2002′s Loud, Fast Ramones, Greatest Hits makes no attempt to cover anything other than the group’s peak period: the first 16 songs cover 1976′s Ramones through 1980s End of the Century, with a selection apiece from Pleasant Dreams (“The KKK Took My Baby Away”), Subterranean Jungle (“Outsider”), Brain Drain (“Pet Sematary”) and Too Tough to Die (“Wart Hog”). This makes for a tighter, better listen than Loud, Fast Ramones, even if it’s hard not to feel that Rhino might have gone to the well one too many times with this release. After all, as good as this music is, how many times can it be shuffled around on compilations? (And since the skimpy liner notes for this set are cribbed from the Weird Tales box — there is a letter coding to illustrate each of the Ramones albums and which drummers and bassists played on what, but half of the albums with coding aren’t represented at all — this can’t help feel a little bit like an afterthought.) Nevertheless, anybody looking for a concise collection of the group’s basics will not feel let down by this Greatest Hits, which does indeed offer 20 tracks of prime Ramones rock & roll. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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