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Return to the Valley of the Go-Go's

1994 compilation album by the Go-Go's From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Return to the Valley of the Go-Go's
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Return to the Valley of the Go-Go's is the second compilation album by American rock band the Go-Go's, released in 1994. The compilation was released in two versions, a single-disc version and an expanded double-disc version.

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Background

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Despite the tensions that had resulted in their dissolution in 1985, the Go-Go's gradually began to reassemble; songwriter and keyboardist Charlotte Caffey wrote for and performed on most of singer Belinda Carlisle's solo albums.[1] The group's members eventually resolved legal and creative differences and began to collaborate as a band again, beginning with a compilation album that would be a more comprehensive representation of the band than their 1990 greatest hits album.[2]

Return to the Valley of the Go-Go's documents the history of the Go-Go's from their genesis in the Los Angeles punk rock scene through their success as a mainstream new wave band. The compilation includes rehearsal, demo, and live recordings that had never been previously released, the original Stiff Records version of the band's first single "We Got the Beat", as well as the group's major hits, B-sides, and deeper tracks culled from the studio sessions that generated the Go-Go's' first three LPs.[3] The collection also features new live material and three new "reunion tracks" written and studio-recorded by the band in 1994 for the collection.[4] One of these new songs, "The Whole World Lost Its Head", gave the band its first top 40 hit in Britain.[5]

The CD release includes a booklet that features photos and liner notes from the members of the band, including a group history, reflections, and anecdotes about each member's favorite songs.[3]

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Critical reception

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Writing for Rolling Stone, critic Paul Corio said that the compilation "offers trippy joy in abundance."[4] In a retrospective review, AllMusic's Ned Raggett ranked Return to the Valley of the Go-Go's, compared to other best-of compilations of the band, as "the clearest winner, by a long shot."[3]

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Track listing

Single-disc version

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Double-disc version

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Chart positions

Albums

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Singles

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References

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