The Twenty-fifth Anniversary Anthology

The Twenty-fifth Anniversary Anthology is a compilation album released by The Fixx in 2006 in celebration of their 25th anniversary. It contains singles, album and live tracks from their previous albums, together with a cover version of Nancy Sinatra's "These Boots Are Made for Walkin'" that was originally recorded for the multi-artist album When Pigs Fly: Songs You Thought You'd Never Hear.[1] The eight page booklet contains an essay by Josh Norek.

The Twenty-fifth Anniversary Anthology
Compilation album by
ReleasedJanuary 24, 2006
GenrePop / Rock
Length73:08 (CD 1)
78:04 (CD 2)
LabelRainman
RM05082
The Fixx chronology
Stage One
(2004)
The Twenty-fifth Anniversary Anthology
(2006)

Track listing

CD 1

  1. "Stand or Fall" – 3:46
  2. "The Fool" – 5:16
  3. "Red Skies" – 4:15
  4. "Shuttered Room" – 2:46
  5. "Lost Planes" – 3:20
  6. "One Thing Leads to Another" (Live) – 3:36
  7. "Deeper And Deeper" (Live) – 4:30
  8. "Saved by Zero" – 3:34
  9. "Are We Ourselves?" (Live) – 3:06
  10. "Secret Separation" (Live) – 3:53
  11. "Built for the Future" – 4:03
  12. "Driven Out" – 3:58
  13. "Precious Stone" – 3:03
  14. "Calm Animals" – 4:08
  15. "Shred of Evidence" – 3:39
  16. "Cause to be Alarmed" – 3:44
  17. "All is Fair" (Live) – – 4:30
  18. "How Much is Enough?" – 3:58
  19. "No One Has to Cry" – 4:02

CD 2

  1. "Woman on a Train" (Acoustic) – 6:32
  2. "Cameras in Paris" (Acoustic) – 5:13
  3. "One Jungle" (Acoustic) – 3:32
  4. "Freeman" – 6:07
  5. "Mayfly" – 5:44
  6. "Two Different Views" – 5:02
  7. "We Once Held Hands" – 7:45
  8. "Happy Landings" – 4:17
  9. "These Boots Are Made for Walkin'" – 5:42
  10. "Want That Life" – 3:49
  11. "Are You Satisfied?" – 5:46
  12. "You Don't Have to Prove Yourself" – 4:11
  13. "No Hollywood Ending" – 3:53
  14. "Touch" – 4:36
  15. "Saved by Zero" (Acoustic) – 5:53
gollark: Is ARM actually *that* different to x86 at this point?
gollark: Also, with syscalls you can do stuff like "input" and "output" and "writing to disk".
gollark: Strictly speaking I think there's nothing stopping a misbehaving C function from editing the stack.
gollark: Don't they also do syscalls and stuff?
gollark: So just flip between them instead?

References

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