The Best Of
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Rock With The Caveman - Tommy Steele
- Singing The Blues
- Knee Deep In The Blues
- Butterfingers
- Water, Water
- A Handful Of Songs
- Shiralee (from the film "Shiralee")
- Hey You!
- Nairobi
- Happy Guitar (from the film soundtrack "The Duke Wore Jeans")
- The Only Man On The Island
- Come On, Let's Go - Tommy Steele, Roland Shaw And His Orchestra
- Tallahassee Lassie - Tommy Steele, Roland Shaw And His Orchestra
- Give! Give! Give! - Tommy Steele, Roland Shaw And His Orchestra
- Little White Bull (from the soundtrack "Tommy the Toreador") - Tommy Steele, Stanley Black and his Orchestra
- What A Mouth (What A North And South) - Tommy Steele, Harry Robinson
- The Writing On The Wall - Tommy Steele, Roland Shaw
- Half a Sixpence - Tommy Steele, John Keating
- Sweet Georgia Brown - Tommy Steele, Roland Shaw
- Must Be Santa - Tommy Steele
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #15330 in Music
- Released on: 2000-02-28
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: .21 pounds
- Running time: 48 minutes
Customer Reviews
Just the hits of the first British rock star
Tommy's place in British rock history has been largely ignored, possibly because he was always more interested in being an all-round family entertainer, something at which he became hugely successful in the sixties and beyond. As a singer-actor, he appeared in several successful West end plays and also appeared in several movies, including Finian's rainbow alongside Fred Astaire and Petula Clark.
Nevertheless, Tommy's earliest successes were as a singer - he was Britain's first indigenous rock'n'roll star. Although some of his hits were covers of American songs (the prevailing fashion in fifties Britain), he did not rely entirely on those. Indeed, he wrote some of his own songs.
His first British chart success was with Rock with the caveman, a typical slice of rock'n'roll. His biggest success (and only number one hit) was with a cover of Singing the blues. Curiously, Tommy's version and Guy Mitchell's version both reached number one in Britain - they swapped places at the top of the charts. Many people think that Guy's version was the original, but actually both were covers - Marty Robbins recorded the original version. Both Guy and Tommy also covered another Marty original, Knee deep in the blues.
As time went by, Tommy's desire to be an all-round entertainer was reflected in the diversity of material that he recorded. Among his other British hits were Butterfly (but it was Andy Williams who topped the charts with it), Handful of songs, Water water, Shiralee, Nairobi, Happy guitar and the children's song Little white bull.
This 20-track collection has all Tommy's UK hits and just two of his other recordings, these being Half a sixpence and Sweet Georgia Brown. Every song here, including those two, is available on the 68-track double CD, Decca years 1956-1963. So if you just want Tommy's hits, buy this. If you want to explore his music in greater depth, go for the double-CD instead.


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