The Anthology | |
Type: | greatest |
Artist: | Chuck Berry |
Cover: | Chuck Berry - Anthology.jpg |
Released: | June 27, 2000 [1] |
Recorded: | May 21, 1955 – December 22, 1969 in Chicago, Illinois September 28, 1958 in St. Louis February 3, 1972 at the Lanchester Arts Festival, Coventry, England |
Genre: | Rock and roll |
Length: | 2:13:16 |
Label: | Chess |
Producer: | Andy McKaie |
Prev Title: | Live! |
Prev Year: | 2000 |
Next Title: | Live on Stage |
Next Year: | 2000 |
Anthology is a two-disc compilation album by American rock and roll musician Chuck Berry released on July 27, 2000, by Chess Records. It duplicates in its entirety the previous anthology The Great Twenty-Eight ranked at No. 21 on the Rolling Stone 500 greatest all time albums list, as well as the entirety of the later Definitive Collection issued in 2006 as part of the Universal series. The album was later reissued and packaged in 2005 as part of the Universal Records Gold series, and simply retitled Gold.[2] It charted at No. 110 in the UK Albums Chart.
An overview of Berry's Chess recordings, it contains every 45 rpm single released by Berry on the Chess label from his debut in 1955 through March 1965 with the exceptions of the holiday record "Merry Christmas, Baby," "Anthony Boy," "Chuck's Beat" with Bo Diddley, and "Little Marie." This does not include content from every released EP single, but of the 28 A-sides from this time period, 14 were top ten hits on the Billboard R&B singles chart and ten were Top 40 hits on the Billboard Hot 100.
It also includes an additional three singles, "Tulane" from 1970, "Bio" from 1973, and his only No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100, "My Ding-a-Ling" from 1972. After the 31 A-sides, the set's 50 songs total includes eleven b-sides, seven album tracks, and one that appeared on the 1990 rarities compilation, Missing Berries. Four of the b-sides charted independently from their plug side.
Robert Christgau states that although Anthology is less expensive than The Chess Box, it removed several good songs like "Have Mercy Judge" and "Anthony Boy". David McGee, Milo Miles, and Mark Kemp, of Rolling Stone magazine, are of the opinion that Anthology is one of the best of Berry's compilation albums.[3]
All tracks written by Chuck Berry, except where noted.[4]
Technical personnel
Chart (2017) | Peak position |
---|---|
France (Syndicat National de l'Édition Phonographique)[5] | 175 |
Switzerland (Swiss Hitparade)[6] | 48 |
UK (UK Albums Charts) | 110 |