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Very Best of Cat Stevens
Cat Stevens
List Price:$18.38
Price:$15.98
 
Rating:
Sales Rank:6834
 
Release Year:2000
Label:A&M
UPC:731454138727
 
Styles:Singer/Songwriter, Soft Rock, Folk-Rock, Pop/Rock, Album Rock, AM Pop
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Tracks


[01] Matthew & Son 2:43
[02] First Cut Is the Deepest 3:03
[03] Lady d'Arbanville 3:44
[04] I've Got a Thing About Seeing My Grandson Grow Old [#] 2:41
[05] Wild World 3:20
[06] Where Do the Children Play? 3:51
[07] Hard Headed Woman 3:48
[08] Father and Son 3:40
[09] Wind 1:42
[10] Morning Has Broken 3:20
[11] Moonshadow 2:50
[12] Peace Train 4:11
[13] Sitting 3:13
[14] Can't Keep It In 3:01
[15] Foreigner Suite [Excerpt] 7:22
[16] Oh Very Young 2:35
[17] Another Saturday Night 2:31
[18] Majik of Majiks 4:31
[19] (Remember the Days of the) Old School Yard 2:45
[20] Just Another Night 3:50
Album Review


It is impossible to compile a single-disc greatest-hits compilation for Cat Stevens that will come close to satisfying all of his admirers. The Very Best of Cat Stevens is the fifth major attempt to do so and, like its predecessors, it is challenged by its subject's success. Remember Cat Stevens: The Ultimate Collection is the longest of the five (24 tracks) and may be the most comprehensive. But The Very Best of Cat Stevens, released just a year later, has several advantages that make it more appealing. To begin with, it is the only compilation to sequence chronologically songs from every one of Stevens' albums, including the experimental Foreigner. It also contains the delightful folk creed "The Wind," which was a glaring omission from the so-called Ultimate Collection. Most significantly, it contains the previously unreleased "I've Got a Thing About Seeing My Grandson Grow Old." Stevens recorded a demo of the song during the Mona Bone Jakon sessions in 1970, but it never saw the light of day until it was remixed for this collection. Perhaps this was because it was considered too eccentric for public consumption, straddling the line between the hook-rich pop of Stevens' '60s records and the groundbreaking folk-rock of his '70s efforts. If so, the public was vastly underestimated. The song is a buried treasure that fits in perfectly in the company of Stevens' best work. ~ Evan Cater, Rovi