The Definitive Collection (Alan Parsons album)
The Definitive Collection is a 1997 2 CD compilation by The Alan Parsons Project, released through Arista Records. It includes two songs taken from Alan Parsons' first solo album.
The Definitive Collection | |
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Greatest hits album by | |
Released | 1997 |
Genre | Progressive rock |
Label | Arista |
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Track listing
All tracks written by Alan Parsons and Eric Woolfson, except where noted.
Disc 1
- "(The System of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether" - 4.22
- "The Raven" - 4.08
- "I Robot" - 6.02
- "I Wouldn't Want to Be Like You" - 3.23
- "Breakdown" - 3.51
- "Don't Let it Show" - 4.26
- "Voyager" - 2.25
- "What Goes Up" - 3.31
- "The Eagle Will Rise Again" - 4.21
- "Can't Take it With You" - 5.07
- "Pyramania" - 2.44
- "Damned if I Do" - 4.54
- "Lucifer" - 5.03
- "If I Could Change Your Mind" - 5.51
- "The Turn of a Friendly Card (Part 1)" - 2.43
- "Snake Eyes" - 3.18
- "Games People Play" - 4.25
- "Time" - 5.05
- Tracks 1-2 taken from Tales of Mystery and Imagination (1976); they were not included on the European release of this album.[2]
- Tracks 3-6 taken from I Robot (1977).
- Tracks 7-11 taken from Pyramid (1978).
- Tracks 12-14 taken from Eve (1979).
- Tracks 15-18 taken from The Turn of a Friendly Card (1980).
Disc 2
- "Sirius" - 1.57
- "Eye in the Sky" - 4.36
- "Psychobabble" - 4.51
- "Mammagamma" - 3.34
- "Old and Wise" - 4.57
- "Prime Time" - 5.03
- "Don't Answer Me" - 4.13
- "You Don't Believe" - 4.26
- "Let's Talk About Me" - 4.29
- "Days Are Numbers (The Traveller)" - 4.27
- "Stereotomy" - 7.03
- "In the Real World" - 4.19
- "Standing on Higher Ground" - 5.47
- "Too Late" - 4.32
- "Turn it Up" (Ian Bairnson) - 6.13
- "Re-Jigue" (Parsons, Andrew Powell) - 2.31
- Tracks 1-5 taken from Eye in the Sky (1982).
- Tracks 6-8 taken from Ammonia Avenue (1983).
- Tracks 9-10 taken from Vulture Culture (1984).
- Tracks 11-12 taken from Stereotomy (1985).
- Tracks 13-14 taken from Gaudi (1987).
- Tracks 15-16 taken from Alan Parsons' solo album Try Anything Once (1993).
References
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