Linda Ronstadt - Greatest Hits (2015 Remaster) (2015) Hi-Res

  • 29 Nov, 09:12
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Artist:
Title: Greatest Hits (2015 Remaster)
Year Of Release: 1976 / 2015
Label: Rhino / Elektra
Genre: Pop Rock, Country Rock, Folk Rock
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-96kHz
Total Time: 55:17
Total Size: 128 / 356 Mb / 1.20 Gb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Different Drum (2015 Remastered Version) (2:38)
02. Love Has No Pride (2015 Remaster) (4:13)
03. You're No Good (2015 Remastered Version) (3:43)
04. Tracks of My Tears (2015 Remaster) (3:14)
05. Heat Wave (2015 Remaster) (2:46)
06. Someone to Lay Down Beside Me (2015 Remaster) (4:30)
07. Blue Bayou (2015 Remaster) (3:55)
08. Poor Poor Pitiful Me (2015 Remaster) (3:42)
09. It's so Easy (2015 Remaster) (2:28)
10. Tumbling Dice (2015 Remaster) (3:07)
11. Just One Look (2015 Remaster) (3:13)
12. How Do I Make You (2015 Remaster) (2:18)
13. Hurt so Bad (2015 Remaster) (3:11)
14. I Can't Let Go (2015 Remaster) (2:42)
15. I Knew You When (2015 Remaster) (2:56)
16. Don't Know Much (feat. Aaron Neville) (2015 Remaster) (3:34)
17. Winter Light (2015 Remaster) (3:17)

Greatest Hits is Linda Ronstadt's first major compilation album, released at the end of 1976 for the holiday shopping season. It includes material from both her Capitol Records and Asylum Records output, and goes back to 1967 for The Stone Poneys' hit "Different Drum."

It remains the biggest-selling album of Ronstadt's career, being certified seven times Platinum (over 7 million US copies shipped) by the Recording Industry Association of America in America alone, with 1.87 million units consumed after 1991 when SoundScan started tracking sales. It peaked at No. 6 on the main Billboard album chart and also reached No. 2 on Billboard's Top Country Albums chart, where it remained for over three years.

The album was criticized by the Rolling Stone Record Guide for being "premature," as Ronstadt continued to have record-breaking mainstream successes for many years following this release. By the time this collection came out, however, Ronstadt had already been recording hit records (as a solo artist and with the Stone Poneys) for a decade, and there were many examples of other artists releasing greatest hits albums much sooner, such as Elvis Presley.

In terms of being released while the performer was still in the midst of their career, this collection is unusual for a major artist in that it compiled works from two unrelated labels thanks to, as the sleeve states, a "special arrangement" between Asylum and Capitol; this overlap mirrors the situation in which Ronstadt briefly alternated releasing albums between Capitol and Asylum in 1973–74 in order to fulfil her contract with Capitol.




  • Guest Pedro
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And the Password?
  • mufty77
  •  11:34
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Many thanks for Flac & 24-96.