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Bryan Adams Album - Best of Me
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Customers rating:
(40 ratings)
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Release Date:2002-05-14
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Type:Audio CD
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Genre:Pop, Pop/Rock Music, Rock, Rock/Pop
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Label:A&M
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UPC:606949330927
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Approx. Price:$13.98
(USD)
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Review - Amazon.com :
If Bryan Adams's no-frills, blue-collar image evokes a Canadian take on Springsteen, his voice--and especially his pop sensibility--recalls Rod Stewart during his post-Faces Top 40 years. There's a deceptively effortless sincerity that masks the sometimes mundane themes of the infectious hits (the cheap nostalgia of "Summer of '69" and the various romantic concerns of "Run to You," "The Best of Me," and "Please Forgive Me") gathered on this updated hits collection. (Just five of the tracks appear on his previous So Far, So Good anthology.) It's hardly surprising to learn that Adams began his career as a tunesmith covered by everyone from BTO and Loverboy to Kiss and Bonnie Tyler. That eclecticism bubbles up throughout this modern compilation, from the flamenco flavors of Don Juan De Marco's "Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman" to the MTV Unplugged classical-strings-backed rendition of "I'm Ready" and the surprisingly effective electronica of "Cloud Number Nine." This collection chronicles Adams's rise from '80s AOR (album-oriented-rock) contender to '90s MOR (middle-of-the-road) superstar, thanks to his Grammy- and Oscar-winning hit "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" from Robin Hood and harmonizing with Sting and Stewart on Three Musketeers' "All for Love." --Jerry McCulleyCustomer review - 2002-07-08
- Missing the meat & potatoes...incomplete and disappointing.This recent release from Bryan Adams is noticably skimpy on the hits, of yesterday. Although I am a big fan of Adams, I have to say that this compilation seems to be focusing more on Adams' ingenious output from the '90s and, therefore, is missing many of the songs - which brought him fame - from the turbulent '80s. His break out hit from '82, Cuts Like A Knife, isn't here! The tender ballad, Straight From The Heart, is absent, also. This Time, Heaven(how could they omit that), It's Only Love(with Tina Turner), Somebody, Kids Wanna Rock, Heat Of The Night, and Do I Have To Say The Words? should have all been included, as well! A 2 disc collection, with all of these songs included, would have been more deserving to Bryan Adams fans, worldwide. I would recommend the So Far, So Good album, for a more '80s based hit collection. We might have to wait another 10 years for a more stellar and complete collection, from the great Bryan Adams! Best Of Me is very disappointing, in the meantime.
Customer review - 2003-07-28
- Missing too many key tracks to be a good collection.This collection is the most glaring example of record companies using greatest-hits compilations strictly as marketing tools rather than comprehensive retrospectives. Leery about damaging sales of the artist's original records, these compilations omit some glaringly important tracks so that, theoretically speaking, you'd have to get the original records on top of the compilations to get the missing tracks. Let's see...what are we missing? Adams' first #1 hit "Heaven" (are you *kidding*!?); "Cuts Like a Knife", one of his early hits; "Straight from the Heart"; and the underrated, sweeping "Thought I'd Died and Gone to Heaven". For its hit status, "Can't Stop This Thing We Started" was a no-brainer; unfortunately, the adjective also applies to the songwriting and performance. This song remains one of the penultimate annoying Canadian rock songs, alongside "Enid", "You Ain't Seen Nothin' Yet" and "Life Is a Highway". And for song selection, The Best of Me pales in comparison with the earlier Adams compilation, So Far So Good, thanks to the addition of those heinous mid-to-late-'90s Adams compositions: "Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman?", with all those repetitive "reallys", gets on one's nerves fast, especially with the faux-Spanish arrangement; "Please Forgive Me" is melodic and nice, but also covered in syrup; and the worst of the bunch, "All for Love" from The Three Musketeers, where Adams, Sting and Rod Stewart combine to make the most unharmonious, mismatched, and plain grating singing partners of all time. Adams and Stewart's raspy voices already conflict mightily, but add that to Sting's self-conscious faux-reggae phrasing, and you got an aural cacophony. The songwriting is well below par, as well. I still like the guilty pleasures that form the stronger song choices: Early album-rock track "Run to You", the jam-band favourite "Summer of '69", and the mega-hit "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You". Cheesy? Yes. But also tuneful and a time capsule for 1991. This little song sold three million copies and touched a chord (the world's best-selling single since "We Are the World", a record Adams held until Whitney Houston's remake of "I Will Always Love You"). So Far, So Good would definitely have been a better purchase. I bought The Best of Me from a bargain bin, and even then, it was a waste, given the weak latter-day material and the omissions.
Customer review - 2002-05-14
- Best of Bryan - Part 2!Whether you're a Badfan or not (a fan-based reference to "Bryan ADams fan"), this is a great collection of tunes - plus a stellar new one! Basically a "Best of Bryan" part 2 album, with part 1 being "So Far So Good." The bulk of the album is music from his 90's work, as opposed to the primarily 80s-driven "So Far So Good." Three of Bryan's four #1 hits are here, including the timeless "Everything I Do (I Do It For You)" ballad from Robin Hood, the hot latin ballad "Have You Ever Really Loved A Woman," and the spectacular collaborative piece by Bryan, Sting, and Rod Stewart "All For Love" from the Three Musketeers Soundtrack (his other #1 hit was "Heaven," which you can find on the "So Far So Good" CD!). Other top hits and well-known tunes are "Can't Stop This Thing We Started," "Let's Make A Night To Remember," and "Please Forgive Me." The classic and always-popular "Summer of 69" is here, too, although it's a little out of place given the 'second half' angle of Bryan's career on this CD. The lead-off track, "Best of Me" is a brand new single and a solid turn-out from Bryan, letting his fans know he's still got what it takes to write, sing, and play great music. If you're a fan, you've clearly got to own this - I believe it's the first time the hard-to-find "All For Love" has appeared on a Bryan Adams CD; "I'm Ready" is a live recording, and the little-known "Back to You" is also a lively live rendition. All in all, a thoroughly solid album and worthy companion piece to "So Far So Good" - if you're new to Bryan's music, pick up both of them today... you'll get no better introduction to one of the legends of the genre, and one of my personal favorites to boot.
Customer review - 2002-05-23
- The BEST indeed!It's another collection of Bryan Adams tunes. Are we happy? Are we rejoicing? You bet!!!! This is BA at his best. Though a longtime country fan, I just got into Bryan Adams recently. I must tell you that I enjoy his work immensely, as he is a talented singer/songwriter/instrumentalist. His voice is unique, and you know it's Bryan Adams whenver he comes on the radio! Back to this album. I won't go song-for-song, but I will tell you the "best of the Best", so to speak. There are the acoustical "I'm Ready" and "Back To You," of course. "Summer of '69," "Can't Stop This Thing We Started", and "Please Forgive Me" are still good. There is a re-vamped version of "Cloud Number Nine," as well as the sexy "Let's Make a Night To Remember." "When You're Gone" features Melanie C., and "All For Love"--tied for the best Adams song ever--sports two other well-known artists; get ready...Rod Stewart and Sting! "Inside Out" is much better than Trisha Yearwood's country version, and "The Only Thing That Looks Good on Me Is You" is still hip. The other best Adams song is, of course, "(Everything I Do) I Do It For You." I could go on and on, but then I might bore you so much you'd take this pitiful review to heart and not buy the CD. Please don't judge Bryan Adams' talent by my way with words. He deserves much more than this review gives him. I can only say one more thing, really, without being too tacky: How can you not by the BEST? Buy it! But it! Buy it! (You really won't regret it, honestly).
Customer review - 2004-06-24
- Not All That BestIt just surprises me when it really comes to hits collections. They really don't seem to hit the nail on the head. It really isn't anything new here, especially when a better hits collection by the same artist was issued earlier. Bryan Adams truly knows about making great songs, but not always hits collections. During his beginnings in the 80's, he defied the feeling of Rock music and Pop combined. That still hasn't changed here. His music is still as universal, with a lot of strength that people think of a guilty pleasure. Well, he might seem like that right now, but there is more to this Canadian than guilty. The Best Of Me, the second Bryan Adams Greatest Hits collection of his big songs from the 80's and 90's. All in all, the songs here include his biggest hits from the era, including his biggest movie ballads, Everything I Do (I Do It For You) from Robin Hood: Prince Of Thieves, Have You Ever Really Loved A Woman? from Don Juan Demarco, as well as other great pop songs to his career. The album also includes other great songs that were also on his earlier hits collection such as Summer Of '69, Can Start This Thing We Started, and Run To You. The album also adds some other goodies such as Back To You from his appearance on MTV Unplugged, Cloud Number Nine, and Let's Make A Night To Remember. There also are some downsides to this collection, the album does overlook some of Bryan's die hard hits from the 80's such as Heaven, This Time, Cuts Like A Knife, It's Only Love his duet with Tina Turner, and other good songs. Those songs were featured on his earlier hits collection, So Far So Good from 1993. All in all, fans might seem a whole lot uninterested in this collection, but is a strong welcome to any Bryan Adams and his strong feel in music. If this was combined with the other hits collection, than more people would've bought The Best Of Me. Still, Bryan Adams quality hasn't changed in the music, and people still appreciate his music today, straight from that heart.
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