The Best of Carly Simon | |
Type: | greatest |
Artist: | Carly Simon |
Cover: | Carly Simon - Best of.jpg |
Released: | November 24, 1975 |
Recorded: | 1970–1975 |
Genre: | Rock |
Length: | 38:18 |
Label: | Elektra |
Producer: | Eddie Kramer, Richard Perry, Paul Samwell-Smith |
Prev Title: | Playing Possum |
Prev Year: | 1975 |
Next Title: | Another Passenger |
Next Year: | 1976 |
The Best of Carly Simon is singer-songwriter Carly Simon's first greatest hits album, released by Elektra Records, on November 24, 1975.
Covering the first five years of her career, The Best of Carly Simon includes eight top 20 hit singles from her first five albums: Carly Simon, Anticipation (both 1971), No Secrets (1972), Hotcakes (1974), and Playing Possum (1975), as well as two album cuts from No Secrets: "Night Owl" and "We Have No Secrets", the latter of which was released as the B-side to the single "The Right Thing to Do" in 1973.
For many years, this was Simon's only greatest hits collection, and as a result, it became her best selling album. In the late 1990s, sales in the United States alone stood at over three million copies. However, in later years the collection could not be considered a complete or definitive representation of Simon's best or most popular work because it did not include her major hits from the mid-1970s onward, such as "Nobody Does It Better", "You Belong to Me", "Jesse", "Coming Around Again", and "Let the River Run". The fact that Simon had changed record labels several times (moving from Elektra to Warner Bros. to Epic to Arista) made a more wide-ranging collection a difficult proposition. A live album, Greatest Hits Live (1988), went some way to rectifying this issue, but the original recorded versions were eventually collected on the three-disc box set Clouds in My Coffee (1995), the two-disc set Anthology (2002), and the single-disc collections (1998) and (2004). Reflections: Carly Simon's Greatest Hits went on to become a great critical and commercial success, and was certified Gold by both the Recording Industry Association of America on March 2, 2007[1] and the British Phonographic Industry on July 22, 2013.[2]
In a retrospective review for AllMusic, Jim Newsom rated the album 4-stars-out-of-5, and wrote: "Opening with the powerful "That's the Way I've Always Heard It Should Be", and including four tunes from the classic No Secrets album, Simon's insightful lyrics and evocative voice remain fresh years later. This album is a good starting point for those interested in discovering why." Newsom also singled out the track "Anticipation": "...with its classic "I rehearsed those words just late last night," and the repetitive coda "these are the good old days," though merely a ketchup commercial to a later generation, still retains its power here in the original version.
A contemporary review from Robert Christgau stated: "Given her self-knowledge and her fans' taste, a compilation isn't going to get her at her best, though this does collect some of her more attractive melodies. Light a fart for the two big Jacob Brackman statements: "Attitude Dancing", which means exactly what it says, and "Haven't Got Time for the Pain", which doesn't, not quite--the most insidious let's-write-God-a-love-song to date."
Credits adapted from the album's liner notes.[3]
Notes
Album – Billboard (United States)[4]
Album – International
Year | Country | Position |
---|---|---|
1975 | Australia[5] | 42 |
Canada[6] | 40 |