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What the World Needs Now Is...Jackie DeShannon - The Definitive Collection

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Download links and information about What the World Needs Now Is...Jackie DeShannon - The Definitive Collection by Jackie DeShannon. This album was released in 1994 and it belongs to Rock, Folk Rock, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic genres. It contains 28 tracks with total duration of 01:15:56 minutes.

Artist: Jackie DeShannon
Release date: 1994
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic
Tracks: 28
Duration: 01:15:56
Buy on iTunes $14.99
Buy on Amazon $14.49

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Buddy 1:55
2. Heaven Is Being With You 2:20
3. You Won't Forget Me 2:18
4. Needles and Pins 2:59
5. Hellos and Goodbyes 2:17
6. When You Walk In the Room 3:06
7. Till You Say You'll Be Mine 2:41
8. Breakaway 2:15
9. Should I Cry (Alternate Take) 2:19
10. I Remember the Boy 3:34
11. Dream Boy 2:17
12. Don't Turn Your Back On Me 2:14
13. What the World Needs Now Is Love (1994 Remaster) 3:14
14. A Lifetime of Loneliness 2:35
15. Come and Get Me 2:39
16. Splendor In the Grass (Version #1) 2:23
17. For Granted (From the Motion Picture "C'Mon, Let's Live a Little") 2:52
18. Windows and Doors 2:47
19. I Can Make It With You 3:01
20. 500 Miles from Yesterday 3:25
21. Where Does the Sun Go? 3:16
22. It Shines On You Too 2:42
23. Reason to Believe 3:00
24. The Weight 3:00
25. Come and Stay With Me (Remix) 3:09
26. Put a Little Love In Your Heart 2:35
27. Love Will Find a Way 2:36
28. Brighton Hill 2:27

Details

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Jackie DeShannon's work is actually too diverse to be satisfactorily captured on an anthology, even one that includes 28 tracks, as this one does. Still, considering how hard the one DeShannon anthology that might be better than this one is to find (the Australian import Pop Princess), this has to be cited as the recommended first purchase. Focusing on her output for Liberty between 1959 and 1970, it has all the essentials: her two Top Ten hits, the minor hits like "A Lifetime of Loneliness," and the original versions of "Needles and Pins" and "When You Walk in the Room," and a host of fine girl group, ballad, folk-rock, and singer/songwriter flop singles. From the collector's viewpoint, the most interesting songs are the rarities. The six previously unreleased tracks include the exuberant "Breakaway," a hit for Irma Thomas; the rocker "Dream Boy," cut in 1964 in Britain with Jimmy Page on guitar; and a cover of Tim Hardin's "Reason to Believe." A couple of interesting rarities are "For Granted" (from the little-seen movie C'mon, Let's Live a Little) and the 45 version of "Splendor in the Grass," a somewhat sloppy folk-rock performance on which DeShannon was backed by the Byrds.