Blood, Sweat & Tears - Blood, Sweat & Tears Greatest Hits (1972) [Vinyl]

Artist: Blood, Sweat & Tears
Title: Blood, Sweat & Tears Greatest Hits
Year Of Release: 1972
Label: CBS
Genre: Jazz-Rock, Classic Rock, Blues Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [192kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 41:23
Total Size: 1.62 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Blood, Sweat & Tears Greatest Hits
Year Of Release: 1972
Label: CBS
Genre: Jazz-Rock, Classic Rock, Blues Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [192kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 41:23
Total Size: 1.62 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
A1 – You've Made Me So Very Happy (03:26)
A2 – I Can't Quit Her (03:38)
A3 – Go Down Gamblin' (02:46)
A4 – Hi-De-Ho (04:05)
A5 – Sometimes In Winter (03:08)
A6 – And When I Die (03:26)
B1 – Spinning Wheel (02:39)
B2 – Lisa, Listen To Me (02:58)
B3 – I Love You More Than You'll Ever Know (05:58)
B4 – Lucretia Mac Evil (03:07)
B5 – God Bless The Child (05:57)
Sometimes, a greatest-hits set is timed perfectly to gather together a group's most successful and familiar performances just at the point when that group has passed the point of their maximum exposure to the public, but before the public memory has had a chance to fade. That was the case when Columbia Records assembled this compilation for release in early 1972. At that point, Blood, Sweat & Tears had released four albums and scored six Top 40 hits, each of which is heard here. But lead singer David Clayton-Thomas had just quit the group, so that the unit that recorded songs like "You've Made Me So Very Happy" was not working together anymore. And even when Clayton-Thomas returned, the band would continue to decline commercially. As such, BS&T's Greatest Hits captures the band's peak in 11 selections--seven singles chart entries, plus two album tracks from the celebrated debut album when Al Kooper helmed the group, and two more from the Grammy-winning multi-platinum second album. Using the short singles edits of songs like "And When I Die" emphasizes their radio-ready punch over the more extended suitelike arrangements on the albums, but this selection gains in focus what it lacks in ambition. For the millions who learned to love BS&T in 1969 when they were all over AM radio, this is the ideal selection of their most accessible material. (A later CD reissue of Blood, Sweat & Tears' Greatest Hits replaced each singles edit with the original full-length version.) © William Ruhlmann