Product Details
Best Album in the World...Ever! Vol. 8

Best Album in the World...Ever! Vol. 8
Various Artists

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Track Listing

  1. Alright Alright - Supergrass
  2. Girls And Boys - Blur
  3. Waking Up - Elastica (1)
  4. Girl From Mars - Ash (1)
  5. Whatever - Oasis (2)
  6. Girl Like You - Collins, Edwyn
  7. Only One I Know - Charlatans (1)
  8. Do You Rememeber The First Time - Pulp
  9. Yes - McAlmont & Butler
  10. Everyday Is Like Sunday - Morrissey
  11. High And Dry - Radiohead
  12. Zombie - Cranberries
  13. Today - Smashing Pumpkins
  14. La Tristesse Durera (Scream To A Sigh) - Manic Street Preachers
  15. Sit Down - James (1)
  16. Wake Up Boo - Boo Radleys
  17. Animal Nitrate - Suede
  18. This Is Music - Verve
  19. I Want You - Inspiral Carpets
  20. Screamager - Therapy (1)
  21. This Charming Man - Smiths
  22. April Skies - Jesus & Mary Chain
  23. Supersonic - Oasis (2)
  24. Fools Gold - Stone Roses
  25. Connected - Stereo MC's
  26. Out Of Space - Prodigy (1)
  27. Destination Eschaton - Shamen (1)
  28. True Faith '94 - New Order (1)
  29. Leave Home - Chemical Brothers
  30. Bullet - Fluke
  31. Loaded - Primal Scream
  32. Unbelievable - EMF (1)
  33. Real Real Real - Jesus Jones
  34. Personal Jesus - Depeche Mode
  35. Chemical World - Blur
  36. Fifteen Years - Levellers
  37. Lenny Valentino - Auteurs
  38. I Can Dream - Skunk Anansie
  39. Captain Dread - Dreadzone
  40. Lifeforms - Future Sound Of London

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #21127 in Music
  • Released on: 1995-09-01
  • Number of discs: 2

Customer Reviews

The best of the Best of series...4
The mid-nineties was a fine-time for British music; a time when pop music hadn't been pop-starred and manufactured, it was the day of the guitairs and monkey side-burns, tight fitting T-shirts and 'Trainspotting'. It was the day of Brit-pop.
It's no wonder that this album that plucked the best of the charts of the time, comes up with a wide variety of fantastic tunes. With the Brit-poppers and rockers on one CD: Oasis (at their best), Blur, Charlatans, Supergrass, Pulp, Skunk Anansie and Stone Roses, and the dancier tunes of the Prodigy, Primal Scream and KLF on the other.
This is music that takes me back to a very sunny Glastonbury festival in 1995 when Supergrass and Sleeper rocked the NME stage and Boo Radleys 'Wake up Boo' was the theme of the summer.
This album is an absolute must for all that were teens in the mid-nineties and need to be reminded that actually the chart music was pretty damn good back in the day.

With qualifications4
Gosh, I remember this. It was a very timeous release in 1995, compiling a bunch of mostly indie guitar tunes right at the very height of britpop, and it is a pretty good britpop sampler. It has "Alright" by Supergrass, "Wake up Boo" by the Boo Radleys, and Edwyn Collins' "A Girl Like You", three of the most ubiquitous radio hits of the time. And "Whatever" by Oasis. Surprisingly however it does not have Pulp's "Common People" or anything by Sleeper.

There are britpop fellow travellers such as the Prodigy, Fluke and the Chemical Brothers, all of whom appeared on the soundtrack to the Playstation hit "Wipeout" and its sequel, and who were not indie guitar bands at all. There is nothing by Orbital, however.

The biggest omission is drum'n'bass, which was the hippest thing imaginable at the time; instead of Goldie's "Inner City Life" or Tricky's cover of "Black Steel" there is "Lifeforms" by FSOL, which isn't really drum'n'bass and isn't even the best song that FSOL group did. As with britpop in general, of the roughly two hundred people who appear in the bands on this record roughly half a dozen are not white europeans.

It's odd to search for Goldie and find Goldie Lookin' Chain rather than Goldie (pause) Goldie. Drum'n'bass really was quite extraordinarily hip, I can't express it in words.

It is fascinating to read the tracklisting of this decade-old release and ponder on those britpop artists that were popular at the time but have since vanished into obscurity; I believe the majority of the bands have split up since 1995 or are no longer recording (conversely New Order has reformed).

As for being the "best album in the world ever" the title is clearly nonsense; that would imply that the first decent rock single in the world (ever) was This Charming an by the Smiths.