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Greatest Hits
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Greatest Hits
Current price: $16.99
Barnes and Noble
Greatest Hits
Current price: $16.99
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Grand Funk Railroad
took their veiled
Motown
/
Stax
influences and grafted them onto a fuzz-drenched hard
blues-rock
template, and muffler dragging roared out of Flint, Michigan like the little engine that could, confounding the critics and building an impressive record sales portfolio in the 1970s by giving their ardent, blue-collar fans no more and no less than what was expected of them. Distilled into a 14-track greatest-hits set like this one, it's easy to see that
Grand Funk
(they dropped -- then re-added -- the "Railroad" part of their name as the juggernaut rolled on) was essentially a singles band (although their albums did phenomenally well back in the day) with not a whole lot to say but a knack for saying it really well, which, when you think about it, is usually a sure ticket into the Top 40.
Greatest Hits
has all the essential jukebox fare (lacking only their so-so cover of
the Rolling Stones
'
"Gimme Shelter"
), including the cliched but emotionally right
"Heartbreaker,"
everybody's favorite guilty pleasure, the mock epic
"I'm Your Captain,"
and a pair of
pop-soul
gems, the group's cover of
the Soul Brothers Six
's
"Some Kind of Wonderful,"
and
Mark Farner
's best-ever song, the marvelous
"Bad Time,"
which came complete with cellos and fuzz guitar. For most, this single-disc collection will be more than adequate, but listeners looking for the complete
story should check out
Capitol
's three-disc
Thirty Years of Funk
from 1999, or the four-disc
Trunk of Funk
, also from
, released in 2002. The very best is here, though. ~ Steve Leggett
took their veiled
Motown
/
Stax
influences and grafted them onto a fuzz-drenched hard
blues-rock
template, and muffler dragging roared out of Flint, Michigan like the little engine that could, confounding the critics and building an impressive record sales portfolio in the 1970s by giving their ardent, blue-collar fans no more and no less than what was expected of them. Distilled into a 14-track greatest-hits set like this one, it's easy to see that
Grand Funk
(they dropped -- then re-added -- the "Railroad" part of their name as the juggernaut rolled on) was essentially a singles band (although their albums did phenomenally well back in the day) with not a whole lot to say but a knack for saying it really well, which, when you think about it, is usually a sure ticket into the Top 40.
Greatest Hits
has all the essential jukebox fare (lacking only their so-so cover of
the Rolling Stones
'
"Gimme Shelter"
), including the cliched but emotionally right
"Heartbreaker,"
everybody's favorite guilty pleasure, the mock epic
"I'm Your Captain,"
and a pair of
pop-soul
gems, the group's cover of
the Soul Brothers Six
's
"Some Kind of Wonderful,"
and
Mark Farner
's best-ever song, the marvelous
"Bad Time,"
which came complete with cellos and fuzz guitar. For most, this single-disc collection will be more than adequate, but listeners looking for the complete
story should check out
Capitol
's three-disc
Thirty Years of Funk
from 1999, or the four-disc
Trunk of Funk
, also from
, released in 2002. The very best is here, though. ~ Steve Leggett