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| Jack And Diane, Hurts So Good, Pink Houses, Paper In Fire, Small Town, I Need A Lover, new track Without Expression, more. |
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| 1 I Need a Lover |
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| 2 Ain't Even Done with the Night |
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| 3 Hurts So Good |
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| 4 Jack and Diane |
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| 5 Crumblin' Down |
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| 6 Pink Houses |
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| 7 Authority Song |
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| 8 Lonely Ol' Night |
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| 9 Small Town |
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| 10 R.O.C.K. in the U.S.A. |
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| 11 Paper in Fire |
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| 12 Cherry Bomb |
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| 13 Check It Out |
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| 14 Without Expression |
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Album Review
"The Best That I Could Do" is an appropriately self-deprecating title for John Mellencamp's greatest-hits collection, considering that the heartland rocker never seemed too convinced of his own worth. Of course, he had to struggle to get any respect after he was saddled with the stage name Johnny Cougar early in his career, but this 14-track collection proves that he was one of the best unabashed, straight-ahead rockers of the '80s. Fourteen tracks actually turns out to be a little too short to contain all of his great singles -- songs like "Rain On The Scarecrow," "Rumbleseat," "Pop Singer," "Again Tonight" and "What If I Came Knocking" are left off the collection (there's nothing from 1988's "Big Daddy" at all) -- but it's hard to argue with what's here. Over the course of 14 tracks, such classic rock hits as "I Need a Lover," "Hurts So Good," "Jack and Diane," "Crumblin' Down," "Pink Houses," "Lonely Ol' Night," "Small Town," "Paper in Fire," "Cherry Bomb," and "Check It Out," are chronicled, with a new cover of Terry Reid's "Without Expression" added for good measure. It may fall short of being definitive, but only by a small margin, and it remains an excellent overview and introduction to Mellencamp's remarkably consistent body of work. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
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Biography


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Other albums by: John Mellencamp |
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