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The Essential Adam Ant
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The Essential Adam Ant
Current price: $7.99
Barnes and Noble
The Essential Adam Ant
Current price: $7.99
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Prior to the 2003 release of
The Essential Adam Ant
, there hadn't been a career-spanning hits compilation on his career apart from the 1999
Sony International
set
The Very Best of Adam and the Ants
. This 17-track collection shares 15 songs with that 22-song collection (as well as the same cover picture), so it would seem to be pretty much interchangeable, but that isn't the case. Even though this is shorter, this is the preferable collection since it has a logical chronological sequence and includes two essential songs: the sexy menace of
"Physical (You're So)"
and the deliriously intoxicating
"Home in the Country,"
one of his greatest and most underrated cuts. In contrast, the only song from
The Very Best Of
that should have been here is
"Car Trouble,"
and while that's one of his finest, it's not a deciding factor in making one collection better than the other. Song for song, from the angular
post-punk
of
"Zerox"
to the lovely adult
pop
"Wonderful,"
takes every step right, and the result is the best summation of his career. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
The Essential Adam Ant
, there hadn't been a career-spanning hits compilation on his career apart from the 1999
Sony International
set
The Very Best of Adam and the Ants
. This 17-track collection shares 15 songs with that 22-song collection (as well as the same cover picture), so it would seem to be pretty much interchangeable, but that isn't the case. Even though this is shorter, this is the preferable collection since it has a logical chronological sequence and includes two essential songs: the sexy menace of
"Physical (You're So)"
and the deliriously intoxicating
"Home in the Country,"
one of his greatest and most underrated cuts. In contrast, the only song from
The Very Best Of
that should have been here is
"Car Trouble,"
and while that's one of his finest, it's not a deciding factor in making one collection better than the other. Song for song, from the angular
post-punk
of
"Zerox"
to the lovely adult
pop
"Wonderful,"
takes every step right, and the result is the best summation of his career. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine