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Playlist: The Very Best of Quiet Riot
Barnes and Noble
Playlist: The Very Best of Quiet Riot
Current price: $14.99
Barnes and Noble
Playlist: The Very Best of Quiet Riot
Current price: $14.99
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Playlist: The Very Best of Quiet Riot
features 15 tracks defined on the back jacket as "the life-changing songs, the out-of-print tracks, the hits, the fan favorites everyone loves, and the songs that make the artists who they are." While it may boast little in the way of rare, live, unreleased, or "out-of-print" material, it certainly eclipses 1996's
Greatest Hits
collection as the most listenable
Quiet Riot
overview on the market. All 14 tracks (15 is a CD-ROM cut) are culled from the group's three biggest albums --
Metal Health
(1983),
Condition Critical
(1984), and
QR III
(1986) -- and while many listeners may only know the group's breakout hit, a cover of
Slade
's
"Cum on Feel the Noize,"
the band consistently turned out its own quality
pop-metal
during its mid-'80s heydays. Less successful singles like
"The Wild and the Young,"
"Sign of the Times,"
"Slick Black Cadillac,"
and
"Metal Health (Bang Your Head)"
may not make as many appearances on the myriad genre compilations as their more famous predecessor, but they're as good (if not better) than much of the juvenile crap that pushed them out of the limelight. ~ James Christopher Monger
features 15 tracks defined on the back jacket as "the life-changing songs, the out-of-print tracks, the hits, the fan favorites everyone loves, and the songs that make the artists who they are." While it may boast little in the way of rare, live, unreleased, or "out-of-print" material, it certainly eclipses 1996's
Greatest Hits
collection as the most listenable
Quiet Riot
overview on the market. All 14 tracks (15 is a CD-ROM cut) are culled from the group's three biggest albums --
Metal Health
(1983),
Condition Critical
(1984), and
QR III
(1986) -- and while many listeners may only know the group's breakout hit, a cover of
Slade
's
"Cum on Feel the Noize,"
the band consistently turned out its own quality
pop-metal
during its mid-'80s heydays. Less successful singles like
"The Wild and the Young,"
"Sign of the Times,"
"Slick Black Cadillac,"
and
"Metal Health (Bang Your Head)"
may not make as many appearances on the myriad genre compilations as their more famous predecessor, but they're as good (if not better) than much of the juvenile crap that pushed them out of the limelight. ~ James Christopher Monger