40 Greatest Hits may refer to:
30 Greatest Hits is a 2007 compilation released by the Red Elvises.
Disc One
Disc Two
Greatest Hits is a compilation of previously released material from Oakland, California rapper Richie Rich. The project contains songs from the 415 debut album (41Fivin) and the Richie Rich solo debut (Don't Do It). The song "Making Records" first appeared on the EP Geeks Revenge (Rodney), released in 1990.
Hits (stylized as ...Hits), released in 1998 and again in 2008, following the success of "In the Air Tonight" on the Cadbury ad campaign, is the only greatest hits collection of Phil Collins studio recordings. The collection included fourteen Top 40 hits, including seven American number 1 songs, spanning from the albums Face Value (1981) through Dance into the Light (1996). One new Collins recording, a cover of Cyndi Lauper's "True Colors", also appeared on the collection and was a popular song on adult contemporary stations. ...Hits was also the first Phil Collins album to include four songs originally recorded for motion pictures (all of them U.S. number 1 hits) as well as his popular duet with Philip Bailey, "Easy Lover" (a UK number 1 hit).
In 1998, the album reached number 1 in the United Kingdom and number 18 in the United States. On 4 August 2008, it became the number 1 album on the New Zealand RIANZ album chart. In July 2012, the album re-entered the U.S. charts, reaching number 6 on the Billboard 200 when the album price was deeply discounted very briefly by Amazon.com. It has sold 3,429,000 in the US as of July 2012.
Hits 53 is a compilation album released in the UK in July 2002. It contains 41 tracks over two CDs, including four number one singles on the UK Singles Chart from Gareth Gates, Will Young, Holly Valance, and Liberty X.
The music video for Gareth Gates song "Anyone of Us (Stupid Mistake)" is featured on disc two as a special enhanced feature, able to be watched when put into a PC.
"Underneath Your Clothes" by Shakira is sometimes given in online track listings but does not feature, instead "Whenever, Wherever" features (Hits 52 previously featured this song in Spanish language).
Greatest is a greatest hits compilation album released in 1998 by the band Duran Duran.
Greatest was an update of the 1989 tenth anniversary compilation album, Decade: Greatest Hits. The new release included songs from their eponymous debut album through 1997's Medazzaland. The album includes all 14 songs featured in Decade: Greatest Hits, plus "New Moon on Monday" and four singles from the '90s, however both "Save a Prayer" and "Rio" are presented in their shorter US versions in order to fit on a single CD whereas they appeared in their full versions on the former compilation. For some unknown reason, "Perfect Day" (from 1995 album, Thank You) wasn't added to the album. "My Own Way" and "Careless Memories" were originally going to be in the album but due to the favor of the later singles. ("Serious" and "Eletric Barbarella")
The album was released by EMI after parting ways with the band after the disastrous Medazzaland album release in 1997, and marked the first of many releases designed to capitalise on the band's extensive EMI-controlled back catalogue.
Free: The Future of a Radical Price is the second book written by Chris Anderson, Editor in chief of Wired magazine. The book was published on July 7, 2009 by Hyperion. He is also the author of The Long Tail, published in 2006.
Free follows a thread from the previous work. It examines the rise of pricing models which give products and services to customers for free, often as a strategy for attracting users and up-selling some of them to a premium level. That class of model has become widely referred to as "freemium" and has become very popular for a variety of digital products and services.
Free was released in the United States on July 7, 2009, though the night before, on his blog, Chris Anderson posted a browser readable version of the book and the unabridged audiobook version. Anderson generated controversy for plagiarizing content from the online encyclopedia Wikipedia in Free. Anderson responded to the claim on his The Long Tail blog, stating that there were disagreements between him and the publisher over accurate citation of Wikipedia due to the changing nature of its content, leading him to integrate footnotes into the text. Also on his blog, he took full responsibility for the mistakes and noted that the digital editions of Free were corrected. The notes and sources were later provided as a download on his blog.
I remember when we used to be in our teens
A-wearin' bobby socks and old blue jeans
That was long ago, so I'd like to say
I love you in the same old way, uh-hah
I love you in the same old way
Mmmmmm, I remember when we used to babysit your brother
And who was watching us?
Your father and mother
That was long ago and I'd like to say
I love you in the same old way, uh-hah
I love you in the same old way
Now, heaven, I'm in heaven again
And I still remember where and when
And I love you, you still love me, hah
And that's the way its gonna be
Ah, I remember when we were in school
A-learning how to live by the golden rule
That was long ago and I'd like to say
I love you in the same old way, uh-hah
I love you in the same old way
Ho!
Mmmmmm, heaven, I'm in heaven again
And I still remember where and when
I still love you, you know you love me
And that's the way its gonna be
Ho! I remember when we used to be in school
A-learning how to live by the golden rule
That was long ago and I'd like to say
I love you in the same old way, uh-hah
I love you in the same old way, uh-hah
I love you in the same old way, uh-hah