Track Listing 1. Is There Something I Should Know? 2. Reflex 3. View to a Kill 4. Ordinary World 5. Save a Prayer 6. Rio 7. Hungary Like the Wolf 8. Girls on Film 9. Planet Earth 10. Union of the Snake 11. New Moon on Monday 12. Wild Boys 13. Notorious 14. I Don't Want Your Love 15. All She Wants Is 16. Electric Barbarella 17. Serious 18. Skin Trade 19. Come Undone 20. Planet Earth 21. Girls on Film (Short Censored Version) 22. Chauffeur 23. Hungry Like the Wolf 24. Save a Prayer 25. Rio 26. Is There Something I Should Know? 27. Union of the Snake 28. New Moon on Monday (Edit Version 1) 29. Reflex 30. Wild Boys (7" Final Edit) 31. View to a Kill 32. Notorious 33. Skin Trade 34. I Don't Want Your Love 35. All She Wants Is 36. Serious 37. Burning the Ground 38. Ordinary World 39. Come Undone (Censored Version) 40. Electric Barbarella
| Details | | Distributor: | MSI Music Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Personnel includes: Duran Duran; Jonathan Elias (samples). Producers include: Duran Duran, Nile Rodgers, Bernard Edwards, Chris Kimsey, Daniel Abraham. Compilation producer: Nigel Reeve. Hong Kong release featues different and more videos than the U.S. edition. DVDI is in NTSC/Region code 0 format. Though '80s nostalgia was an inevitability, the truth is that some of the most influential voices of that era never went away. The members of Duran Duran had their mortgages paid off long before GREATEST was conceived, so their sincerity in releasing a best of album is not to be doubted. One listen is enough to convince the most forgetful fan that every once in a while, the musical taste of teenage girls is right on the mark. GREATEST follows the teen heartthrobs from their inspiring early days (the quintessential new wave anthem "Planet Earth," the stylish, more-than-suggestive "Girls On Film") straight through to their later work ("Electric Barbarella," a whirring, modern dance cut). In between, the classic "Hungry Like The Wolf" and the mournful "Save A Prayer" give evidence of the band's mastery of the pop form, while the Bond theme "View To A Kill" and "Notorious" trace their development during the decade with which they are inextricably linked.
| See an error? Submit a change request |