From Queenpedia.com
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|valign="top"|[[Image:GhIIIcd2.jpg|thumb|150px|left|UK CD]] | |valign="top"|[[Image:GhIIIcd2.jpg|thumb|150px|left|UK CD]] | ||
|valign="top"|[[Image:GhIIIrevcd2.jpg|thumb|150px|left|UK CD back]] | |valign="top"|[[Image:GhIIIrevcd2.jpg|thumb|150px|left|UK CD back]] | ||
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- | |valign="top"|[[Image:GhIIICassRussia2.jpg|thumb| | + | |valign="top"|[[Image:GhIIICassRussia2.jpg|thumb|100px|left|Russia Cassette back, Gala Records]] |
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Revision as of 17:36, 12 January 2009
Queen had a tradition of issuing greatest hits compilations every ten years, offering a retrospective on the singles they released during that period. Because Freddie died in November 1991, shortly after the release of the second edition, and only one posthumous album and a tribute single by the surviving members appeared since then, some concessions had to be made in time for Queen's third greatest hits collection. However, this time, huge errors were made, the first being that this compilation appeared in November 1999, a full two years before it should have. Strike one. Another (this time arbitrary) tradition had been to issue only UK singles that reached the Top 30. This meant that Tie Your Mother Down, Spread Your Wings, Love Of My Life (live), and Back Chat were all absent from the compilation. Surely, some exceptions could have been made, so as to offer an album that felt more like a Queen album, instead of the haphazard mess that Greatest Hits III became? At the very least, Flick Of The Wrist (technically a #2 hit, considering it was a double A-side with Killer Queen), Body Language, Scandal, and A Winter's Tale should have been included. Strike two. Instead, what Queen fans are left with is a sorry excuse for a compilation, sullying the otherwise spotless reputation that its elder companions have afforded it. While the presence of a remix of Under Pressure, featuring newly-recorded instrumental bits from Brian and Roger, was appreciated, it wasn't a hit single until a month after it first appeared on the album. On top of that, what were solo singles doing on the compilation? The band had always made a deliberate effort to keep their solo careers separate from Queen, so the fact that four solo singles graced the album was downright offensive. And while the rap remix of Another One Bites The Dust was technically a hit single, it should have been reserved, say, for a separate "Queen+" compilation, that would also have featured the George Michael rendition of Somebody To Love, as well as anything else that may have fallen under such a header. Strike three, yer out! There are few reasons to buy the compilation: the single edit of Heaven For Everyone is finally available, and a more widespread release of Thank God It's Christmas (inexplicably labeled as a bonus track) is appreciated, and the few legitimate hits present – those from Made In Heaven, These Are The Days Of Our Lives, and Las Palabras De Amor (The Words Of Love) – certainly deserve to be heard. Other than that, Greatest Hits III stands as a total failure; while this author generally tries to remain completely objective and unbiased, he has taken the same route as Queen did with this compilation and broken tradition. In simple terms, Greatest Hits III is the dregs of a barrel being scraped dry. Had some actual thought gone into the compilation, with more emphasis on the "forgotten" singles from Queen's past, this would have been a rather decent collection, but it only confirmed that any old thing with the Queen name slapped on it can suddenly pass as worthwhile, while the long-awaited anthology projects and any live concerts from the 1970s still collect dust. Tracklists
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