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Greatest Hits

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Download links and information about Greatest Hits by Social Distortion. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Rock, Hard Rock, Indie Rock, Punk, Heavy Metal, Alternative genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 49:18 minutes.

Artist: Social Distortion
Release date: 2007
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Indie Rock, Punk, Heavy Metal, Alternative
Tracks: 12
Duration: 49:18
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Another State of Mind 2:38
2. Mommy's Little Monster 3:31
3. Prison Bound 5:23
4. Story of My Life 5:46
5. Ball and Chain 5:42
6. Ring of Fire 3:51
7. Bad Luck 4:22
8. When the Angels Sing 4:16
9. I Was Wrong 3:57
10. Reach for the Sky 3:31
11. Far Behind 4:03
12. Maybeline 2:18

Details

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It's a bit startling to realize that Social Distortion will be celebrating their 30th anniversary in 2008 (with the 25th anniversary of their first LP happening the same year), especially since in the mid-'80s it seemed an open question if Mike Ness would live out the decade, let alone keep making records in the 21st century. Given that they've outlasted so many of their peers on the Orange County punk scene, it's fitting that Social Distortion should get the "career spanning anthology" treatment, and while Greatest Hits only contains 11 songs, it does manage to feature representative cuts from all the band's studio albums up to 2004's Sex, Love and Rock 'n' Roll. Starting with the SoCal sneer of "Mommy's Little Monster" and "Another State of Mind," the band moves onto deeper and more roots oriented material with "Prison Bound," and starts to hit their stride with three tracks from their self-titled 1990 set, "Story of My Life," "Ball and Chain" and "Ring of Fire." Ever since, Ness and his bandmates have shown a knack for finding heart, soul and genuine emotional weight in their tales of life along L.A.'s margins, and this disc coheres as well as any of the group's albums to date, and shows why they still matter to their fans — they've always stayed true to their sound and their ideals, and the new track that closes out this disc, "Far Behind," demonstrates that hasn't changed. Greatest Hits could stand to be longer, but as a summary of Social Distortion's career and what they do best, it does the job with flying colors and never wears out its welcome. Who knows, in 25 years, they may have a second volume ready for fans.