![]() Then there is the soulful “Shelter Me” that is harder to categorize. Some are here: “Long Cold Winter”, “Dead Man’s Road”, and “Sick For the Cure”. Some of their slower material either bordered on blues, or were just flat-out blues songs. Each one of these tracks is worthy to be on this compilation. Cinderella have successfully employed ballads since day one, because they happen to be quite good at them.Īmong their greatest ballads: “Don’t Know What You Got (‘Til It’s Gone)”, “Heartbreak Station”, “Coming Home”, “Wind of Change”, and “Nobody’s Fool”. Then the ballad “Through the Rain” also from Still Climbing provides the balance. From the same album, “Free Wheelin'” and “Talk is Cheap” both show fearless commitment to the genre. As “Bad Attitude Shuffle” indicates, they simply doubled down on their own brand of bluesy hard rock with bite. Cinderella did not “go grunge” as so many others did. Fortunately Cinderella’s edition of the Gold series offers value for the money and unreleased live tracks to boot.Īll the Cinderella albums are represented, including the criminally underrated Still Climbing album from 1994. ![]() ![]() When a band like Cinderella, who only have four studio albums, get a double CD “best of” compilation, it had better be good.
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