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Culture Club - The Best Of flac album

Culture Club - The Best Of flac album
  • Performer Culture Club
  • Title The Best Of
  • Style Synth-pop
  • Other formats WAV AAC MIDI XM AA WMA MP3
  • Genre Electronic / Pop
  • Size MP3 1778 mb
  • Size FLAC 1543 mb
  • Rating: 4.8
  • Votes: 581

The Best of Culture Club is a greatest hits album of British new wave group Culture Club, released by Virgin Records in 1989. The album was Culture Club's second greatest hits compilation. Although it gathers many less successful singles, the compilation omits the major hit "Move Away", what makes From Luxury to Heartache not being represented by any song.

Other productions from Culture Club. Don't Mind If I Do. At Worst - The Best Of Boy George And Culture Club. From Luxury to Heartache. Waking Up with the House on Fire.

The ten Culture Club tracks are of a piece, from 1982's "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me" (which here leads off with an ominous voice intoning, "Popularity breeds contempt") to "Love Is Love," which wasn't a hit but is a better choice than the missing "War Song," which was. The solo tracks are a more mixed batch, and not only because Top 40 . hits like "Keep Me in Mind," "Sold," and "To Be Reborn" are missing

At best, Boy George and his band Culture Club were a dizzy mix of camp, drag, dub, disco, reggae, and new wave. The androgynous George rhumba-ed his way through hits like "I'll Tumble 4 Ya" and crooned with white boy soul through their reggae classic "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me" as well as the Delta-inspired "Karma Chameleon. Boy George has the best voice, the music is so well written. This album makes people crazy because I can just listen to it over and over.

Rock Pop rock New wave Pop Soul Rhythm and blues Reggae. Do You Really Want To Hurt Me. Time. Church Of The Poison Mind.

After a rocky patch, Culture Club are back with their first album in nearly two decades. For a band releasing their first album together in almost 20 years, Boy George is almost alarmingly calm. Exactly one week away from its release when we interview him, the Culture Club frontman talks about the record with the kind of casual attitude as though he were ticking it off his weekly to-do list. I’d make an album every year if I could, he insists. I don’t think we do it enough. Despite this, the major stumbling block behind a new Culture Club album for the past two decades has been the band themselves

Culture Club was a popular 1980s pop group, perhaps most noticeable for their gender-bending frontman Boy George. The other members of the band were Roy Hay on guitars and keyboards, Mikey Craig playing bass and Jon Moss (ex Damned, London, Adam and the Ants) on drums.