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joe cocker - best of (2003)

Track listing:
  1. Unchain My Heart 5:05
  2. You Can Leave Your Hat On 4:12
  3. When The Night Comes 3:56
  4. Up Where We Belong 3:50
  5. Now That The Magic Has Gone 4:36
  6. Don't You Love Me Anymore 4:07
  7. I Can Hear The River 3:38
  8. Sorry Seems To Be The Hardest Word 3:57
  9. Shelter Me 4:19
  10. (All I Know) Feels Like Forever 4:36
  11. Night Calls 3:26
  12. Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me 5:27
  13. Now That You're Gone 4:15
  14. Civilized Man 3:51
  15. When A Woman Cries 4:14
  16. With A Little Help From My Friends 10:19

Notes


After starting out as an unsuccessful pop singer (working under the name Vance Arnold), Joe Cocker found his niche singing rock and soul in the pubs of England with his superb backing group, the Grease Band. He hit number one in the U.K. in November 1968 with his version of the Beatles' "A Little Help From My Friends." His career really took off after he sang that song at the Woodstock festival in August 1969. A second British hit came with a version of Leon Russell's "Delta Lady" in the fall of 1969 (by then, Russell was Cocker's musical director) and both of his albums, With a Little Help From My Friends (April 1969) and Joe Cocker! (November 1969), went gold in America. In 1970, his cover of the Box Tops' hit "The Letter" became his first U.S. Top Ten. Cocker's first peak of success came when Russell organized the "Mad Dogs & Englishmen" tour of 1970, featuring Cocker and over 40 others, and resulting in a third gold album and a concert film. Subsequent efforts were less popular, and problems with alcohol (both on-stage and off-) reduced Cocker's once-powerful voice to a croaking rasp. But he returned to the U.S. Top Ten with the romantic ballad "You Are So Beautiful" in 1975 and topped the charts in a duet with Jennifer Warnes on "Up Where We Belong," the theme from the 1982 film An Officer and a Gentleman. He has survived, still charting into the '90s, albeit with less frequency than he did in the '70s and '80s. He also continued to work throughout the new millennium. No Ordinary World was his first release since 1997's Across from Midnight. Respect Yourself appeared in 2002.