Now available at lower price! 1997 Mercury release & his first ever 'best of' for the label with 'Under The Boardwalk' & 'Miami' added as bonus tracks! 16 tracks total, also featuring the single 'Without Expression... more »', plus the hits 'I Need A Lover', 'Jack« less
Now available at lower price! 1997 Mercury release & his first ever 'best of' for the label with 'Under The Boardwalk' & 'Miami' added as bonus tracks! 16 tracks total, also featuring the single 'Without Expression', plus the hits 'I Need A Lover', 'Jack
Melanie W. (novelwriter) from SURFSIDE BCH, SC Reviewed on 8/10/2006...
This is real great because I have the cassettes with the songs. I was glad to see he had put out a greatest hits album. I am looking forward to volume 2.
CD Reviews
Mellencamp, 'nuff said.
03/09/1999
(5 out of 5 stars)
"John Mellencamp has delivered a catharsis. His works as an artist has displayed his growth or better yet his life, . . our lives. If you've grown up in a "small town", then you take comfort in the ecclesiastical lyrics. In an age of get what you can while you can, John Mellencamp has brought to bare the souls of what people, all people, really want. To live happy lives, find someone to love, grow old, die and have your name written in the book of life with an everlasting glow as well as fun along the way.. However, don't worry about being bogged down with a lot of "message" tunes. His music has stood the test of time because he is, quite simply, a great entertainer and an original artist. A rare combination to say the least in today's crowed music world. The only problem with this release is that all of his songs aren't on it."
Under the Boardwalk!
James E. Bagley | 03/05/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I paid the import price for this album just to get Under the Boardwalk. It's worth it just for this rare gem"
Get the American version for far less money
James E. Bagley | Sanatoga, PA USA | 03/04/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Initially this collection was envisioned as a lengthy single-disc career overview of the noted rocker, with 17 singles spanning his twenty years on the Mercury label. Ultimately, it was pared back to 14 singles emphasizing the first decade, with such recent hits as "Get A Leg Up," "Wild Night," and "Key West Intermezzo (I Saw You First)" being dropped from the lineup (the prolific Mellencamp deserved a double-disc retrospective anyway, so hopefully we will see a second set highlighting his more recent material in the not too distant future).After Mellencamps's first couple of albums on Mercury in 1979 and 1980, it was hard to envision that such a long, substantial career lie ahead. As represented here by initial hits "I Need A Lover" and "Ain't Even Done With The Night," Mellencamp (then known as John Cougar) came across as a rebel with a few good riffs (copped from the Rolling Stones?) and simplistic lyrics which rarely went beyond stud-boy prowling (a la Eddie Money). This trite image would thankfully be altered by 1982's American Fool album and, especially, its second single "Jack and Diane," a slice of life saga of a boy and girl growing up in the midwest (as Mellencamp did). The lyrics remained simple, but they acquired a nostalgic eloquence to which a broader audience could relate.1983's Uh-Huh (with its enclosed singles "Crumblin' Down," "Pink Houses," and the raucous "Authority Song") showed even more of an emphasis on heartland reflections, while Mellencamp hit his artistic peak with 1985's thematically varied Scarecrow album. His odes to rock and roll heroes ("R.O.C.K. In The U.S.A."), the simple life ("Small Town"), and young love ("Lonely Ol' Night") made it onto this Best Of, while the throbbing yet haunting "Rain On The Scarecrow" unfortunately does not (it's the most sorely missed Mellencamp single from this era). After Scarecrow, Mellencamp closed out his first ten years at Mercury with his most sonically enjoyable effort to date, 1987's The Lonesome Jubilee (represented here by "Paper In Fire," "Cherry Bomb," and "Check It Out)." Collectively, these aforementioned singles make The Best That I Could Do one of the strongest compilations in recent memory.The Best That I Could Do does not, as hinted in the subtitle (1978-1988), look exclusively at Mellencamp's first decade of Mercury hits. There is also one new track to end the set: a remake of Terry Reid's "Without Expression." Unlike most Mellencamp singles, the tune is not immediately infectious. Once this midtempo philosophical tale sinks in upon repeated listenings, however, it easily takes its place among Mellencamp's best recordings and bodes well for his future output. Also added to this import version is Mellencamp's version of Under The Boardwalk. It is not one of his better recordings, but if one must have it, buy the album it comes from, Rough Harvest. Buying the domestic version of this cd AND Rough Harvest would cost far less than buying just this one import."