Big Squeeze: The Very Best of Squeeze

RELEASE
June 18, 2002
LABEL
Universal International
GENRES
Pop/Rock, New Wave, Punk/New Wave, Alternative/Indie Rock, Contemporary Pop/Rock, College Rock

Album Review

Over the course of Squeeze's 25-year career, an inexplicable number of greatest-hits compilations have surfaced (seven, to be specific), and nearly all of them have suffered from a serious flaw, whether it's the exclusion of important hit singles or the inclusion of mediocre album cuts and B-sides. The only two worthwhile compilations -- 1982's Singles 45's & Under and 1994's Greatest Hits -- both suffered somewhat by not covering the entirety of the band's career. Big Squeeze is the attempt to remedy this mess, as it is the first hits compilation that covers the band from 1977 to 1998, including most of the important singles along the way, as well as tacking on a bonus disc of B-sides. Granted, Squeeze released some great singles -- enough to substantiate a straight-up two-disc singles compilation, really -- but for a casual fan, this is truly the best introduction. Big Squeeze includes the entirety of Singles 45's & Under (save for the substitution of "Labelled with Love" for "If I Didn't Love You"), and then goes on to pluck their more important later-day singles, including their biggest U.S. chart hit, 1987's "Hourglass," and their 1995 Top 20 British comeback, "This Summer." The second disc is an interesting, if flawed, journey through Squeeze's B-sides catalog. The band has a treasure trove of nearly 100 non-album cuts available, so it's surprising that Big Squeeze wastes space on throwaways like "Suites from Five Strangers" and "Squabs on Forty Fab," but most of the rest of the tracks live up to the high standard of the band's singles and album cuts. There is also an insightful track-by-track commentary written by both Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford, although it's poorly organized and inexplicably fails to identify who is speaking in each part of the liner notes. Qualms aside, the most significant feature of Big Squeeze is that unlike most of the other Squeeze compilations, this one makes sense as a retrospective. [Big Squeeze was also reissued in 2005 as Gold].
Jason Damas, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. Take Me, I'm Yours
  2. Goodbye Girl
  3. Cool for Cats
  4. Up the Junction
  5. Slap and Tickle
  6. Another Nail in My Heart
  7. Pulling Mussels (From the Shell)
  8. Is That Love
  9. Tempted
  10. Black Coffee in Bed
  11. Annie Get Your Gun
  12. Labelled with Love
  13. Last Time Forever
  14. Hourglass
  15. Some Fantastic Place
  16. Third Rail
  17. This Summer
  18. Electric Trains
  19. Heaven Knows
  20. Domino
  21. Suites from Five Strangers
  22. Squabs on Forty Fab
  23. Model
  24. Spanish Guitar
  25. Elephant Girl
  26. Trust
  27. Yap, Yap, Yap
  28. The Fortnight Saga
  29. Wedding Bells
  30. What the Butler Saw
  31. Going Crazy
  32. Introvert
  33. Who's That
  34. Vanity Fair
  35. Christmas Day
  36. Maidstone
  37. Discipline
  38. Periscope
  39. All's Well