Greatest Hits (Boston album)

Greatest Hits is the first compilation album by the American rock band Boston. The album, released on June 3, 1997, features songs originally released on both the Epic and MCA labels, as well as three previously unreleased recordings ("Tell Me", "Higher Power" and "The Star-Spangled Banner"). Tom Scholz, the band's leader, felt that the album's sound quality was not up to his standards, so a remastered version of the album was released in 2009 with a slightly different track listing. Boston embarked on a tour for this album both times it was released.[2]

Greatest Hits
Greatest hits album by
ReleasedJune 3, 1997 (1997-06-03)
Recorded1975–1997
GenreHard rock
Length75:23
LabelEpic/Legacy
ProducerTom Scholz
Boston chronology
Walk On
(1994)
Greatest Hits
(1997)
Corporate America
(2002)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

The album was certified double platinum by the RIAA on December 4, 2003, and it has sold 2,234,000 copies in the United States as of August 2014.[3]

The cover features the guitar-shaped spaceship flying low over a planet with turquoise rocks and a turquoise tower in the distance. The backside shows a personification of New York City. To this day it is still a mystery why they choose NYC instead of Boston, the city they are named after and which they usually show on their artwork.

Track listing

All tracks are written by Tom Scholz, except where noted.

1997 Original
No.TitleFrom albumLength
1."Tell Me"Previously Unissued, 19974:04
2."Higher Power" (Scholz, David Sikes)Previously Unissued5:06
3."More Than a Feeling"Boston, 19764:45
4."Peace of Mind"Boston, 19765:05
5."Don't Look Back"Don't Look Back, 19785:57
6."Cool the Engines" (Brad Delp, Fran Sheehan, Scholz)Third Stage, 19864:35
7."Livin' for You"Walk On, 19944:55
8."Feelin' Satisfied"Don't Look Back, 19784:11
9."Party" (Scholz, Delp)Don't Look Back, 19784:08
10."Foreplay/Long Time"Boston, 19767:48
11."Amanda"Third Stage, 19864:15
12."Rock and Roll Band"Boston, 19763:00
13."Smokin'" (Scholz, Delp)Boston, 19764:20
14."A Man I'll Never Be"Don't Look Back, 19786:32
15."The Star-Spangled Banner/4th of July Reprise" (John Stafford Smith, Tom Scholz[Note 1])Previously Unissued2:44
16."Higher Power [Kalodner edit]" (Scholz, Sikes)Previously Unissued3:52

All tracks are written by Tom Scholz, except where noted.

2009 reissue
No.TitleFrom albumLength
1."I Had a Good Time"Corporate America, 20024:16
2."Higher Power" (Scholz, David Sikes)Greatest Hits, 19975:05
3."More Than a Feeling"Boston, 19764:45
4."Peace of Mind"Boston, 19765:01
5."Don't Look Back"Don't Look Back, 19786:03
6."I Need Your Love" (Fred Sampson, Scholz)Walk On, 19945:22
7."Cool the Engines" (Delp, Sheehan, Scholz)Third Stage, 19864:36
8."Party" (Scholz, Delp)Don't Look Back, 19784:06
9."Feelin' Satisfied"Don't Look Back, 19784:11
10."Foreplay/Long Time"Boston, 19767:48
11."Amanda"Third Stage, 19864:18
12."Rock and Roll Band"Boston, 19763:00
13."Smokin'" (Scholz, Delp)Boston, 19764:23
14."A Man I'll Never Be"Don't Look Back, 19786:40
15."The Star Spangled Banner/4th of July Reprise" (Smith, Scholz)Greatest Hits, 19972:43

Personnel

Charts and certifications

Charts
Chart (1997) Peak
position
Canadian Top Selling Albums[4] 61
US Billboard 200[5] 47
Chart (2014) Peak
position
US Catalog Albums[5] 1

"Higher Power" Peaked at #17 on the Billboard Heritage Rock Chart on July 5, 1997. It spent 9 weeks on the chart.

Certifications
Organization Level Date
RIAA – US Gold[6] April 20, 1999
Platinum[6] May 15, 2000
2× Multi-Platinum[6] December 4, 2003

Notes

  1. Boston credits this song to three composers – "F.S. Key", "J.S. Smith", and "T. Scholz" – but none of Francis Scott Key's contributions to the original song (lyrics only) were used in this version.
gollark: * Gibson you utterly, utter you Gibson.
gollark: Gibson you utterly, utter Gibson.
gollark: This Markov chain is just badly thingied.
gollark: No, wait, someone actually just said that.
gollark: > [09:09:58 PM UTC] generic_rust_advocate_5#1339: Gibson, CEASE enkickment.How realistic!

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.