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The Very Best of Slade

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Download links and information about The Very Best of Slade by Slade. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Rock, Glam Rock, Hard Rock, Heavy Metal, Pop genres. It contains 34 tracks with total duration of 02:06:57 minutes.

Artist: Slade
Release date: 2005
Genre: Rock, Glam Rock, Hard Rock, Heavy Metal, Pop
Tracks: 34
Duration: 02:06:57
Buy on iTunes Partial Album
Buy on Songswave €1.49
Buy on Songswave €2.16

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Get Down and Get With It 3:51
2. Coz I Luv You 3:26
3. Look What You Dun 2:58
4. Take Me Bak 'Ome 3:16
5. Mama Weer All Crazee Now 3:46
6. Gudbuy T'Jane 3:33
7. Cum On Feel the Noize 4:26
8. Skweeze Me Pleeze Me 4:31
9. My Friend Stan 2:42
10. Everyday 3:11
11. The Bangin' Man 4:12
12. Far Far Away 3:37
13. How Does It Feel? 5:54
14. Thanks for the Memory (Wham Bam Thank You Mam) 4:35
15. In for a Penny 3:36
16. Let's Call It Quits 3:32
17. We''ll Bring the House Down 3:35
18. My Oh My 4:11
19. Run Away 3:46
20. Merry Xmas Everybody 3:28
21. All Join Hands 4:16
22. Gypsy Roadhog 3:24
23. My Baby Left Me - That's All Right 2:24
24. Lock Up Your Daughters 3:30
25. Wheels Ain't Coming Down 3:40
26. Born to Be Wild 3:13
27. Ruby Red 2:53
28. (And Now - The Waltz) C'est La Vie 3:47
29. 7 Year Bitch 4:00
30. Myzsterious Mizster Jones 3:37
31. Do You Believe In Miracles 4:11
32. Still the Same 3:55
33. Radio Wall of Sound 3:47
34. Universe 4:14

Details

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The Very Best of... Slade effectively renders every past Slade hits collection redundant, as remastered sound and a sharp eye for all the band's U.K. chart entries serve up a peerless examination of what remains one of British rock's most flawless careers. No matter that the hits went so badly off the boil around 1975-1976 — still, three-quarters of disc one is nonstop solid gold and the remainder of the set isn't far behind, as Slade's mid-'80s renaissance delivers further smashes "My Oh My" and "Run Run Away." Which would be hits enough for anybody, but the fun doesn't end there. A bonus second disc then digs into the darker recesses of the Top 75 to pull out the band's lesser successes, a mixed bag that runs from "All Join Hands" to "Ruby Red," the 1980 live version of "Born to Be Wild," "Gypsy Roadhog," "C'Est la Vie," and more. It's not a complete guide to Slade on 45 (there's no "Give Us a Goal," for a start), but it comes close enough.