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Playlist: The Very Best of Ronnie Spector

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Download links and information about Playlist: The Very Best of Ronnie Spector by Ronnie Spector. This album was released in 2014 and it belongs to Rock, Rock & Roll, Pop, Teen Pop genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 47:08 minutes.

Artist: Ronnie Spector
Release date: 2014
Genre: Rock, Rock & Roll, Pop, Teen Pop
Tracks: 14
Duration: 47:08
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. He Did It (featuring The Ronettes) 2:28
2. So Young (featuring The Ronettes) 2:35
3. You Baby (featuring The Ronettes) 2:55
4. Baby, I Love You (featuring The Ronettes) 2:51
5. Do I Love You? (featuring The Ronettes) 2:55
6. Walking In the Rain (featuring The Ronettes) 3:16
7. (The Best Part of) Breakin' Up (featuring The Ronettes) 3:03
8. Be My Baby (featuring The Ronettes) 2:41
9. I Can Hear Music (featuring The Ronettes) 3:15
10. Try Some, Buy Some (Remastered) 4:11
11. Say Goodbye to Hollywood (featuring E - Street Band, The) 3:11
12. Love on a Rooftop 4:59
13. You Can't Put Your Arms Around a Memory 3:55
14. All I Want 4:53

Details

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Ronnie Spector may not have been the best vocalist to emerge from Phil Spector's stable of stars in the '60s, but no one else sounded quite as passionate and convincing as they sang his pocket-sized symphonies of teenage love and angst. (Phil himself was impressed enough that he married her.) Ronnie's hits with the Ronettes were easily her best-known work, but long after the group parted ways and she split with Phil Spector, she remained a great rock & roll singer capable of making outstanding records. Playlist: The Very Best of Ronnie Spector is a 14-track collection that leads off with nine classic tunes from the Ronettes — among them the incredible "Be My Baby," "Walkin' in the Rain," and "Baby, I Love You" — before moving on to some lesser-known collectors' items from her solo years, including "Try Some, Buy Some" (written for Ronnie by George Harrison), "Say Goodbye to Hollywood" (a cover of the Billy Joel hit featuring backing by Bruce Springsteen & the E-Street Band), and a striking version of Johnny Thunders' "You Can't Put Your Arms Around a Memory," with background vocals from Joey Ramone. Running through 14 songs in 47 minutes, Playlist: The Very Best of Ronnie Spector is a long way from the career-inclusive anthology this rock & roll survivor and force of nature deserves, but at the very least, it offers some examples of the great records Ronnie made after her days with the Ronettes, and despite being skimpy, this is a highly enjoyable collection, and the last five tracks will be an eye opener for people who think Ronnie folded her tent when the girl group era ended.