LITTLE STEVEN – GREATEST HITS – CD 1999

19,99

LITTLE STEVEN – GREATEST HITS

CD EDITADO EN 1999

EMI UPC 724352234028

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Descripción

LITTLE STEVEN – GREATEST HITS

CD EDITADO EN 1999

EMI UPC 724352234028

Detailed item info
Album Features
UPC: 724352234028
Artist: Little Steven
Format: CD
Release Year: 1999
Record Label: Emi
Genre: Hard Rock, Pop, Rock & Pop

Track Listing
1. Lyin in a Bed of Fire (LP Version)
2. Forever (LP Version)
3. Princess of Little Italy
4. Under the Gun (LP Version)
5. I’ve Been Waiting (LP Version)
6. Out of the Darkness (Single Version)
7. Solidarity (LP Version)
8. Los Desparecidos (LP Version)
9. Checkpoint Charlie (LP Version)
10. Undefeated (Everybody Goes Home)
11. Vote!
12. Trail of Broken Treaties
13. Pretoria (LP Version)
14. Native American (LP Version)
15. No More Party’s (Single Version)
16. Bitter Fruit (Single Version)

Details
Distributor: MSI Music Distribution
Recording Type: Studio
Recording Mode: Stereo
SPAR Code: n/a

Album Notes
After he was Miami Steve Van Zant, he became Little Steven (and later Silvio Dante on ‘The Sopranos’). His off-shoot band The Disciples Of Soul held together for a couple of albums and the charged anti-apartheid anthem ‘Sun City’. Includes the original version of ‘Solidarity’, covered by Black Uhuru.

The popular E Street guitarist’s «GREATEST HITS» collection reissued and remastered. Swedish import.Compiler and annotator Sven Peterson notes that «Little Steven» Van Zandt was more successful in Europe than in his native U.S., with two of his albums reaching the Top Ten in Sweden, so it is appropriate that this compilation of his EMI recordings was assembled in Sweden and released in Europe, but not the U.S. Peterson has chosen five tracks each from Little Steven’s three EMI albums, plus the non-LP single «Vote!,» and sequenced them chronologically. Thus, it is possible to trace both the artist’s musical development and, most strikingly, his increasing militancy. The songs from 1982’s Men Without Women recall Van Zandt’s writing for Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes and Gary U.S. Bonds; they are 1960s-style, R&B-tinged pop-rock informed by the wide-screen production sound Bruce Springsteen developed with Van Zandt’s assistance, with lots of screaming lead guitar and horn charts. Starting with 1984’s Voice of America, Van Zandt began to express his political opinions, and in the process to employ other musical styles, such as reggae. (Curiously, Peterson does not use «I Am a Patriot [And the River Opens for the Righteous],» a song widely performed by Jackson Browne that has become one of Van Zandt’s better-known compositions, nor the 1985 Top 40 hit «Sun City,» by Artists United Against Apartheid, an all-star group organized by Van Zandt.) By the time of 1987’s Freedom, No Compromise, Van Zandt has incorporated everything from Latin rhythms to South African mbaqanga to mirror his political concerns, though he sounds most involved singing about the plight of Native Americans. Financially secure from his years with the E Street Band and his production work, Van Zandt made the kind of impassioned, high-quality music he wanted to — «freedom, no compromise» was his artistic motto as well as an album title. If that meant that his commercial prospects were limited, this compilation confirms that his recordings hold up as music and as statements of belief. ~ William Ruhlmann