Greatest Hits [1996]

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (12 ratings)
Greatest Hits [1996] album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 56:47

Write a Review 1 Member Review

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Oh man!

shark-meister

I can hear the top-hat in this re-re-release. Compared to the 1980 version, Jim comes through with crystal clarity. The electronic organ puts a definite date on this collection of tone poems from a long lost era of violence, love, peace and "dropping out" from society's norm. This should be a valued part of anyone's music collection, along with Country Joe, Stones, Moody Blues and Pink Floyd. Here is a defining set of music that encompasses the emotions of a generation long gone and lost, ground down by time itself and cast off to the shores of retirement.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

Originally released in 1980 to coincide with the Jim Morrison biography No One Here Gets Out Alive, the life of Greatest Hits began as a ten-track release on vinyl that acted as a very succinct introduction to the Doors, with several of the band’s most enduring songs — “Light My Fire,” “Break on Through,” “Touch Me,” “Hello, I Love You,” “Riders on the Storm” — included. The only poor choice was “Not to Touch the Earth,” which could have been replaced with any number of more significant songs in the band’s catalog. When Elektra reissued the title on CD in the mid-’90s, the label removed “Not to Touch the Earth” and added a couple additional tracks to the program. This time, the extended version of “The Ghost Song,” which had surfaced on the reissue of An American Prayer (the original version is a couple minutes shorter), was the poor choice — it too is not the kind of thing a casual fan needs on an overview. As of 2006, a better choice for a single-disc Doors compilation remained Rhino’s The Very Best of the Doors. The two-disc Legacy: The Absolute Best, Rovi – Andy Kellman

more »