All Time Greatest Hits Neil Sedaka

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CD

  • Release Date: 10/25/1990
  • Original Release: 1988
  • Sales Rank: 42,674
  • Label: RCA
  • UPC: 078635687620

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  • Overview
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  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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All Time Greatest Hits

1LISTENBreaking up Is Hard to Do 2:16
2LISTENThe Diary 2:16
3LISTENHappy Birthday, Sweet Sixteen 2:35
4LISTENLittle Devil 2:43
5LISTENYou Mean Everything to Me 2:39
6LISTENOh! Carol 2:16
7LISTENStairway to Heaven 2:41
8LISTENNext Door to an Angel 2:25
9LISTENKing of Clowns 2:38
10LISTENRun Samson Run 2:52
11LISTENCalendar Girl 2:38
12LISTENSweet Little You 2:03
13LISTENAlice in Wonderland 2:33
14LISTENLet's Go Steady Again 2:36

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

When RCA Records launched a new series of CD and cassette compilation albums under the name All Time Greatest Hits in March 1988, its first entries were by Neil Sedaka, Harry Belafonte, and José Feliciano. The Sedaka album is just about foolproof, at least as far as the artist's 1960s RCA recordings are concerned. Among its 14 selections are all 12 of the tracks found on the late-1962 LP Neil Sedaka Sings His Greatest Hits, the two additions being the early-1963 singles "Alice in Wonderland" and "Let's Go Steady Again." That means 14 of Sedaka's first 15 Billboard chart singles are included (the exception being "I Go Ape," which got to number 42), accounting for all of his Top 40 hits prior to the 1970s except "Bad Girl," which reached number 33 late in 1963. With new digital processing for the CD era, the album's sound is excellent, making the collection a scrapbook of early-'60s pop. Sedaka is a master at doo wop-styled and light rock & roll arrangements, and he sings engagingly in his light, soaring tenor, frequently double-tracked. There is nothing here of any emotional weight, despite the constant focus on teenage romantic concerns, but the songs are irresistibly catchy. One might have hoped that RCA would take advantage of the CD's greater possible length to create a collection longer than 35 minutes, and there are no annotations at all (the inside of the one-page CD booklet is blank). But it's hard to argue with the contents, which neatly encapsulate Sedaka's first hitmaking era. William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

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