The Best Of (James album)

The Best Of is the first of four compilation albums by British band James (the second album is B-Sides Ultra).

The Best of James
Greatest hits album by
Released23 March 1998
Recorded1984–1997
GenreAlternative rock
Length69:19
LabelMercury Records/Fontana Records
James chronology
Whiplash
(1997)
The Best of James
(1998)
Millionaires
(1999)
Singles from The Best of James
  1. "Destiny Calling"
    Released: 9 March 1998
  2. "Runaground"
    Released: 25 May 1998
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic link
Q[1]

Track listing

  1. "Come Home" (Flood mix) from Gold Mother (1991 Re-release)
  2. "Sit Down" from Gold Mother (1991 Re-release)
  3. "She's a Star" from Whiplash
  4. "Laid" from Laid
  5. "Waltzing Along" (single version) from Whiplash
  6. "Say Something" from Laid
  7. "Born of Frustration" from Seven
  8. "Tomorrow" from Whiplash
  9. "Destiny Calling" Previously unreleased
  10. "Out to Get You" from Laid
  11. "Runaground" Previously unreleased
  12. "Lose Control" from Gold Mother (1991 Re-release)
  13. "Sometimes" from Laid
  14. "How Was It for You?" from Gold Mother
  15. "Seven" from Seven
  16. "Sound" from Seven
  17. "Ring the Bells" from Seven
  18. "Hymn from a Village" from James II

A limited edition version contains a second CD of live material, recorded at Whitfield St Studios in London on 21 January 1998:

  1. "Runaground"
  2. "Ring the Bells"
  3. "Out to Get You"
  4. "Johnny Yen"
  5. "Lose Control"
  6. "Laid"
  7. "Sound"

Reception

"They're as stubborn (another admirable James trait) as disenfranchised mules; their audience is not growing (Whiplash sold 150,000) and they've influenced precisely nobody," observed Q's John Aizlewood, "but every track here – including new songs 'Runaground' and 'Destiny Calling, which unveil the mature James: "Tell us when our time is up/Show us how to die well/Show us how to let it all go" – bristles with inspiration."[1]

gollark: As I said, you could use the solar system's most high-powered gravitational confinement fusion reactor, it's just a bit hard to get to.
gollark: I suppose most would work.
gollark: > ITER (originally the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor[1]) is an international nuclear fusion research and engineering megaproject, which will be the world's largest magnetic confinement plasma physics experiment. It is an experimental tokamak nuclear fusion reactor that is being built next to the Cadarache facility in Saint-Paul-lès-Durance, in Provence, southern France.[2]
gollark: What?
gollark: Or put it into the fusion confinement torus thingy at ITER.

References

  1. Q, April 1998
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