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Moorepage
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Placebo Greatest Hits Album -The band went back to the original 1996 master tapes to rework and embellish all ten tracks. Widely praised for including the Bowie duet and the French version of “Protège Moi.” Criticized for omitting “Song to Say Goodbye” (which came later on Meds ) and for re-recording “36 Degrees” without warning. A standard practice for greatest hits albums is the inclusion of new tracks to entice hardcore fans to buy music they already own. Placebo delivered two new songs that have since become classics in their own right. placebo greatest hits album A greatest hits album lives or dies by its sequencing. Here is how the standard edition of the Placebo greatest hits album unfolds, and why it works. remains one of the most iconic opening riffs of the era. Its chugging, menacing guitar line and Molko’s sardonic delivery ("A friend in need's a friend indeed") is a masterclass in building tension. But the ballads are where the band truly shines. "Every You Every Me" —famously featured on the Cruel Intentions soundtrack—is a anthem of toxic love and dependency. It remains a staple at alternative clubs worldwide, proving that the songwriting duo of Molko and Stefan Olsdal had a knack for melody that could cut through the distortion. The band went back to the original 1996 Since their self-titled debut in 1996, has released eight studio albums and sold roughly 14 million records worldwide. For fans looking to capture the band's career-spanning highlights, there are two primary "Greatest Hits" collections to consider, alongside several other compilations. Essential Greatest Hits Albums A Place for Us to Dream (20 Years of Placebo) Release Date: October 7, 2016. This is the most comprehensive retrospective, featuring spanning their first two decades. Highlights: Released after the Sleeping with Ghosts (2003) tour, this compilation marked the end of Placebo’s first major era with original drummer Steve Hewitt (who left in 2007). It was designed as both a career retrospective and a bridge to their fifth studio album, Meds (2006). Placebo delivered two new songs that have since Contrary to the title, this isn't a Nirvana cover. It’s a slow-burning anthem about suburban boredom. "Since I was born / I started to decay" – a perfect thesis for Generation X’s younger siblings. Their biggest US radio hit, thanks to its bizarre refrain: "A friend in need's a friend indeed / But a friend with weed is better." The video, featuring Molko as a superpowered insomniac, is peak 90s MTV. | # | Song | Original Album | Year | Notes | |---|-------|----------------|------|-------| | 1 | | Placebo (1996) | 1996 | Debut single re-recorded for this compilation. | | 2 | Teenage Angst | Placebo | 1996 | Second single. | | 3 | Nancy Boy | Placebo | 1997 | Their first major UK hit (#4). | | 4 | Bruise Pristine | Placebo | 1995/1997 | Originally a 1995 demo; re-recorded for the album as a single. | | 5 | Pure Morning | Without You I’m Nothing | 1998 | Their biggest US alternative radio hit. | | 6 | You Don’t Care About Us | Without You I’m Nothing | 1998 | Notably darker, less commercial single. | | 7 | Every You Every Me | Without You I’m Nothing | 1999 | Global breakthrough; featured in Cruel Intentions . | | 8 | Without You I’m Nothing (feat. David Bowie) | Without You I’m Nothing | 1999 | Re-recorded duet version; Bowie provides harmony vocals. | | 9 | Taste in Men | Black Market Music | 2000 | Lead single from third album. | | 10 | Slave to the Wage | Black Market Music | 2000 | Notable for its catchy piano riff. | | 11 | Special K | Black Market Music | 2001 | Fan favorite about drug-induced dissociation. | | 12 | The Bitter End | Sleeping with Ghosts | 2003 | Lead single; heavier, riff-driven sound. | | 13 | This Picture | Sleeping with Ghosts | 2003 | Second single from Sleeping with Ghosts . | | 14 | Protège Moi | Sleeping with Ghosts (French edition) | 2003 | French-language version of “Protect Me from What I Want.” | | 15 | Twenty Years | New track | 2004 | Previously unreleased ; written as a reflective anthem. | |
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