Greatest Hit (...And 21 Other Pretty Cool Songs) | |
Type: | greatest |
Artist: | Dream Theater |
Cover: | Greatest_hit_big.jpg |
Caption: | Cover art by Hugh Syme |
Released: | March 29, 2008 |
Recorded: | October 14, 1991 – February 25, 2005 at various studios |
Genre: | |
Length: | 138:16 |
Label: | Rhino |
Producer: | John Petrucci, Mike Portnoy, David Prater, Duane Baron, John Purdell, Kevin Shirley |
Prev Title: | Systematic Chaos |
Prev Year: | 2007 |
Next Title: | Chaos in Motion 2007–2008 |
Next Year: | 2008 |
Greatest Hit (...And 21 Other Pretty Cool Songs) is a compilation album by American progressive metal band Dream Theater released in Australia on March 29, 2008, and by Rhino Records in the United States on April 1.[1] The title alludes to their only top 10 radio hit, "Pull Me Under". It features three songs from their breakthrough album Images and Words remixed by Kevin Shirley: "Pull Me Under", "Take the Time", and "Another Day". It also features the song "To Live Forever", an Awake-era re-recording of the song from the Images and Words sessions (featured as a B-side of the single "Lie"), which was previously unreleased on a full-length album. Several single edits of popular Dream Theater songs are also featured on this compilation.
The songs have been divided in two discs: the first one, dubbed "The Dark Side", features heavy, metal-influenced songs, while the second one, entitled "The Light Side", spotlights the band's melodic side. The set spans the years from 1991 to 2005, therefore it doesn't include any songs from Dream Theater's debut album, When Dream and Day Unite, their A Change of Seasons EP (although it was released in 1995) or their 2007 release Systematic Chaos.
Then-drummer Mike Portnoy explained in the album's booklet that the selection of songs were carefully made to appeal both to new listeners and already existing fans by offering different versions of songs on other albums to "make the newcomer want to buy the albums from whence they came" and to "give different versions of songs already on other albums" to the current fan. He also suggests that a third disc should have been included called "The Epic Side".
Chart (2008) | Peak position | |
---|---|---|
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100) | 77 | |
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[2] | 28 | |
UK Albums (OCC)[3] | 113 | |
US Billboard 200[4] | 122 |