Greatest Hits Culture Club

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CD

  • Release Date: 06/21/2005
  • Sales Rank: 2,917
  • Label: VIRGIN RECORDS US
  • UPC: 724387371224

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
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Greatest Hits

1LISTENDo You Really Want to Hurt Me 4:24
2LISTENTime (Clock of the Heart) 3:44
3LISTENI'll Tumble 4 Ya 2:38
4LISTENWhite Boy Dance Mix 4:42
5LISTENChurch of the Poison Mind 3:33
6LISTENKarma Chameleon 4:14
7LISTENMiss Me Blind 4:32
8LISTENIt's a Miracle 3:26
9LISTENVictims 4:57
10LISTENBlack Money 5:21
11LISTENThe War Song 4:16
12LISTENMistake No. 3 4:39
13LISTENLove Is Love 3:53
14LISTENMove Away 4:16
15LISTENI Just Wanna Be Loved 4:32
16LISTENCold Shoulder 4:36
17LISTENYour Kisses Are Charity Blouse and Skirt Mix 4:20

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

There have been plenty of Culture Club collections over the years, but 2005's Greatest Hits is the first since 1993's At Worst...The Best of Boy George and Culture Club to be assembled with any thought or care. The rest have been cheap budget-line collections, but they did all serve up the big hits -- "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me," "Time (Clock of the Heart)," "I'll Tumble 4 Ya," "Church of the Poison Mind," "Karma Chameleon," "Miss Me Blind," "It's a Miracle" -- even if sometimes that's all they served up. Greatest Hits digs deeper (even if it doesn't include the Boy George solo hits on At Worst; it also doesn't have the Malcolm McLaren intro that mars the beginning of "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me" on that disc), but the question for most listeners will be: do I need to dig deeper than the biggest hits? Most listeners will be happy with that aforementioned seven and find any disc that runs ten songs longer, as this does, to be kind of tiresome, even if it includes the gloriously silly "The War Song," which is the goofiest protest single ever. That said, those who do want a good 17-song cross-section of the band's entire career will be very happy with this, since it has all the singles in good sound -- even if it's unlikely that most listeners will listen to this much past track eight or ten (the latter is "Black Money," one of the rare first-rate Culture Club album tracks). Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

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