Amazon.co.uk Review
It's a shame that the people responsible for
The Very Best of The Smiths were neither shameless nor honest enough to include "Paint a Vulgar Picture" on this compilation. Morrissey's awesomely prescient analysis of record company rapacity ("Re-package! Re-package! Re-evaluate the songs/ Double-pack with a photograph/Extra track and a tacky badge") would have been a suitable introduction: The Smiths are already one of the most collected, compiled and anthologised bands in rock history (we've been here already with
Best. . . 1,
Best. . . 2,
The World Won't Listen,
Louder Than Bombs and
Singles, and there's nothing new on
The Very Best Of bar a claim that it is "Digitally Remastered", as if anyone can tell). However, it could reasonably be argued that
The Very Best Of is not entirely redundant: it appears at a time when the British indie tradition that The Smiths raised to heights still unequalled is now in the hands of people who never knew these songs, who were still in short pants when The Smiths split in 1988. It might be hoped, therefore, that this collection will serve two purposes: one, to inspire today's crop in pursuit of the heights scaled here; two, to remind an increasingly unfussy audience of just how dull, timid and witless the likes of Travis, Coldplay and Stereophonics sound alongside "This Charming Man", "The Boy With The Thorn in His Side" and "How Soon Is Now?".
--Andrew Mueller
CD Description
Hits collection from arguably the greatest singles band of all-time, The Smiths. With the lyrical wordplay of Morrisseyand the mercurial guitar-playing of Johnny Marr, The Smithsblazed a trail across the eighties with a slew of truly great singles, all of which are included here. Includes 'The Boy With The Thorn In His Side', 'Panic' and 'There Is A LightThat Never Goes Out'.