Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Come Dancing with The Kinks

1986 compilation album by the Kinks From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Come Dancing with The Kinks
Remove ads

Come Dancing with The Kinks: The Best of 1977-1986 is a double album compilation by the Kinks, released on Arista Records in 1986.

Quick Facts Compilation album by the Kinks, Released ...
More information Review scores, Source ...

Every one of the band's seven albums released by Arista during the time period indicated is represented here. Designed specifically for the American market, it peaked at No. 159 on the Billboard 200 and failed to chart in the United Kingdom.

Remove ads

Content

Summarize
Perspective

This album comprises a survey of the band's output during their second period of commercial success after their early hits of the mid-1960s, this success predominantly in the United States. After four moderately successful concept albums for their previous label, RCA Records, their contract was not renewed. In 1976 they signed with a company recently launched by ex-Columbia Records head Clive Davis, Arista, making one live and six studio albums for the label during a stay of a decade. In an effort to reverse diminishing cash flow, the band jettisoned the horn players, back-up singers, and the theatricality of the mid-1970s work and embraced the arena rock styles of the period. Ray Davies decamped to New York and worked to write songs with the commercial American market in mind:

I started working with Clive. I think Sleepwalker was an attempt to make it more palatable to radio and that's why Clive wanted to get involved. I was working with him very closely in those days. I rented an apartment in New York, and I would take my demo tapes into his office, he'd play the songs and make comments, and I would go back and work on them.[2]

Of the songs on the album, "A Rock 'N' Roll Fantasy", "Come Dancing", and "Don't Forget to Dance" made the top 40 on the Billboard Hot 100, with two just missing at number 41: "(Wish I Could Fly Like) Superman" and "Do It Again". Six consecutive albums covered by this compilation—Sleepwalker, Misfits, Low Budget, One for the Road, Give the People What They Want, and State of Confusion—all placed in the top 15 on the Billboard 200. Their final studio album for the label, Word of Mouth is also represented in this collection. The band left the label by 1986 for their next album, Think Visual.

Remove ads

Release

The compilation contains thirteen tracks released as singles, including one non-album single, and six album tracks.

The original 1986 CD version varies from the original LP release, removing "Sleepwalker", "Catch Me Now I'm Falling", and "Misfits" entirely. The CD also has the longer 4:40 album version of "Don't Forget to Dance". Aside from the removal of those three tracks, the running order is maintained.[3] These changes result in a shorter runtime of 69:53.

The album was reissued on CD in 2000 with a number of changes. It replaces the single versions of "Catch Me Now I'm Falling", "Sleepwalker", "Misfits", and "Don't Forget to Dance" with the longer album versions, replaces the single of "(Wish I Could Fly Like) Superman" with the 12" disco mix, deletes the intro to "Lola". The songs "Celluloid Heroes" (live version), "Juke Box Music", "Long Distance", and "Heart of Gold" were removed and "A Gallon of Gas", "Full Moon", and "Good Day" were added.

Remove ads

Track listing

Summarize
Perspective

All songs are written by Ray Davies, except for "Living on a Thin Line" by Dave Davies.

Side one

More information No., Title ...

Side two

More information No., Title ...

Side three

More information No., Title ...

Side four

More information No., Title ...

2000 CD reissue

More information No., Title ...
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads