LeAnn Rimes - Greatest Hits (2003)
BAND/ARTIST: LeAnn Rimes
- Title: Greatest Hits
- Year Of Release: 2003
- Label: Curb Records
- Genre: Pop, Country
- Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
- Total Time: 01:06:28
- Total Size: 512 Mb / 173 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Blue 2:49
02. How Do I Live 4:26
03. Can't Fight The Moonlight (Graham Stack Radio Edit) 3:35
04. One Way Ticket (Because I Can) 3:43
05. Commitment 4:36
06. I Need You 3:48
07. Written In The Stars 4:18
08. Unchained Melody 3:52
09. The Light In Your Eyes 3:21
10. On The Side Of Angels 3:50
11. You Light Up My Life 3:38
12. Nothin' New Under The Moon 3:30
13. Big Deal 3:07
14. Life Goes On 3:34
15. We Can 3:37
16. Last Thing On My Mind 4:00
17. This Love 3:47
18. Crazy 2:52
01. Blue 2:49
02. How Do I Live 4:26
03. Can't Fight The Moonlight (Graham Stack Radio Edit) 3:35
04. One Way Ticket (Because I Can) 3:43
05. Commitment 4:36
06. I Need You 3:48
07. Written In The Stars 4:18
08. Unchained Melody 3:52
09. The Light In Your Eyes 3:21
10. On The Side Of Angels 3:50
11. You Light Up My Life 3:38
12. Nothin' New Under The Moon 3:30
13. Big Deal 3:07
14. Life Goes On 3:34
15. We Can 3:37
16. Last Thing On My Mind 4:00
17. This Love 3:47
18. Crazy 2:52
With her recording career spanning 8 short years, LeAnn Rimes brings to you this 18-song CD collection featuring her hits "How Do I Live", "Blue", "One Way Ticket", and "Can't Fight The Moonlight" among others!
Not many artists can boast a greatest-hits album by their 21st birthday, but then not everybody logs a Lolita-ish hit at age 13, as the precocious Rimes did with the retro "Blue" in 1996. In many ways, that auspicious debut was her finest hour, full of hypnotic, yodel-laced magic and savant-like promise. Since then, she's recorded a fair amount of bankable pop ("One Way Ticket," "Can't Fight the Moonlight") and a seemingly bottomless well of tripe ("You Light Up My Life," "Written in the Stars" with Elton John). It all sits back-to-back on this collection of 16 familiar tunes, braced with a second DVD disc and three new audio recordings: "This Love," "Last Thing on My Mind" (a duet with Ronan Keating), and the holiday favorite, "O Holy Night." Alas, of the new songs, the first two point up the weakness of much of Rimes's career--her connect-the-dots emotionality. That leaves the heralded Christmas classic, on which she attempts some nervous Whitney Houston canoodling. Best advice: Put the player on "repeat," and enjoy the royal "Blue" treat that got this career rolling, before the aerobicized videos and the embarrassing lawsuit with Daddy. -- Alanna Nash
Not many artists can boast a greatest-hits album by their 21st birthday, but then not everybody logs a Lolita-ish hit at age 13, as the precocious Rimes did with the retro "Blue" in 1996. In many ways, that auspicious debut was her finest hour, full of hypnotic, yodel-laced magic and savant-like promise. Since then, she's recorded a fair amount of bankable pop ("One Way Ticket," "Can't Fight the Moonlight") and a seemingly bottomless well of tripe ("You Light Up My Life," "Written in the Stars" with Elton John). It all sits back-to-back on this collection of 16 familiar tunes, braced with a second DVD disc and three new audio recordings: "This Love," "Last Thing on My Mind" (a duet with Ronan Keating), and the holiday favorite, "O Holy Night." Alas, of the new songs, the first two point up the weakness of much of Rimes's career--her connect-the-dots emotionality. That leaves the heralded Christmas classic, on which she attempts some nervous Whitney Houston canoodling. Best advice: Put the player on "repeat," and enjoy the royal "Blue" treat that got this career rolling, before the aerobicized videos and the embarrassing lawsuit with Daddy. -- Alanna Nash
Country | Pop | FLAC / APE | Mp3
As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
- Unlimited high speed downloads
- Download directly without waiting time
- Unlimited parallel downloads
- Support for download accelerators
- No advertising
- Resume broken downloads