Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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39 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Worth Upgrading For The Upgraded Sound Alone!, April 4, 2006
The sound quality alone was enough for me to upgrade to this new 2006 digitally remastered compilation. While the 1996 'Greatest Hits' remastering was good for it's time this new 2006 remastering by Evren Goknar is brilliant. (Evren also did a wonderful job on 2005's 'Greatest Hits' release by Pat Benatar). The audio is crisp, clean, and full, capturing the audio advancements in mastering 10 years later. It sounds WONDERFUL. The punchy, heavy, driving sounds of "Unskinny Bop" and "Nothing But A Good Time" (listen to those pounding drums at nearly 3 minutes in!) are only two examples of why this collection is worth owning for the audio enhancements.
Many fans who purchased the 1996 Capitol release, 'Greatest Hits 1986 - 1996', may be hesitant to pick up a new Poison hits compilation. If you don't care much about sound quality, don't bother. However, if you are interested in a stunning audio upgrade with new packaging and extra tracks not featured on the '96 release, I highly recommend this release!
Note: Although Amazon.com does not specify, both "I Want Action" and "I Won't Forget You" are present in their single versions.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Take it for what it is, April 26, 2006
For the record, I'm a musician who loves a lot of different genres of music, from prewar blues like Robert Johnson and Son House, to the Beatles to 70's punk, etc, etc, and I love this album. Are Poison musical visionaries? Of course not. They never set out to be. But they sound like THEY ACTUALLY ENJOY PLAYING MUSIC. Playing music, first and foremost, should be FUN, and that's something a lot of rock bands have forgotten. They're not the greatest musicians in the world, but these are fun, catchy pop rock tunes played with a lot of passion, and with tongue firmly in cheek.Some of the bad reviews seem to be motivated more by image and the desire to look cool than anything. Forget about the magazines like Spin or Blender, pay no attention to the whiney-ass Pitchfork Media crowd, and just listen to what you enjoy. Music is music, and it's all good.
And for the record, I'm a guitar player, and C.C. DeVille is nowhere NEAR as bad a guitar player as he's made out to be. He's sloppy, yes, and the guitar tone sucks, but his solos were always melodic and memorable, unlike a lot of the million mile an hour shredders of the the 1980's.
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17 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good, but a wasted opportunity , April 9, 2006
"Poison's Greatest Hits: 1986-1996" (1996) is a near perfect career -spanning compilation that will give casual fans everything they could ever want. Why then, the need for a second compilation "The Best of Poison: 20 Years of Rock" (2006) when it features an almost identical track-listing as the first "Greatest Hits"? The answer is because Poison are going on their twentieth anniversary tour and they need an album commemorating the milestone.
Much like the first "Greatest Hits," "20 Years of Rock" will give the causal Poison fan every major hit and concert staple they will ever want. In of itself, "20 Years of Rock" is a fine compilation, but because there already is an album that serves as a definitive greatest hits for causal Poison fans, "20 Years of Rock" is unnecessary and is a wasted opportunity. Instead of releasing a compilation almost identical to the first, Poison should have opted for a double-disc anthology type best-of album, similar to what Motley Crue did with "Red, White, and Crue" (2005) and Van Halen did with "The Best of Both Worlds" (2004). That way, the causal fan just looking for hits could stick with "Greatest Hits" and the more dedicated listener could have opted for the two-disc anthology.
Both Poison's "Greatest Hits" and "Best Of" compilations focus almost exclusively on their first three albums, "Look What the Cat Dragged In," (1986) "Open Up and Say Ahh...," (1988) and "Flesh and Blood" (1990). A definitive two-disc anthology would have allowed Poison to include all their well-known hits, as well as tracks from Poison's later-day albums "Native Tongue", (1993) "Crack a Smile", (2000, belated) "Power to the People" (2000) and "Hollyweird" (2002).
A lot of Poison's best songs are from their later-day albums, especially "Native Tongue" and "Crack a Smile" (with guitarists Richie Kotzen and Blues Saraceno, respectively) and it's a shame that Poison seem almost hell-bent on ignoring almost half their catalogue by excluding songs from those albums on "20 Years of Rock" and not playing those songs live. Only one song a piece is represented from "Native Tongue," "Power to the People," and "Hollyweird," with nothing from "Crack a Smile" included.
While "20 Years of Rock" is a missed opportunity in terms of being a definitive, career-spanning compilation, it still manages to do its job of giving casual fans all the hits they will want to hear. Although the track-listing from the '96 compilation was slightly better, as it featured cuts from "Crack a Smile" as well as the superb "So Tell Me Why," from "Swallow this Live" (1991). The new songs for "20 Years of Rock," "Rock N' Roll All Nite" (from '87) and "Were an American band" (both covers) are good, but seem like hastily put together obvious choices. The one major advantage of the new "Best Of" over the old "Greatest Hits" is its superior remastering and sound quality.
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