ZZ Top
Rancho Texicano: The Very Best Of ZZ Top
Play Rancho Texicano: The Very Best Of ZZ Top
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MOG Editorial Review
Notorious for their massive beards, sunglasses, and all-black get-ups, you're certainly missing out if you think that radio hits like "Sharp Dressed Man" are all ZZ Top has to offer. With this double-disc retrospective, the band get to display their perfection of blues-rock before gaining iconic status in the '80s. Early tracks like "Francene" and "La Grange" get as much love as more recognizable songs like "Cheap Sunglasses," and this might serve as a revelation for some rock fans with a short-term memory. At their core, this was a band as infatuated with boogie as it was with rock 'n' roll, and the early result a gritty sound that proves they never had to rely on their image in the first place. That being said, no one's going to fault you for rocking out their popular jams.
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AMG Review of Rancho Texicano: The Very Best of ZZ Top
Stephen Thomas Erlewine
All Music GuideSince Rhino released an exhaustive four-disc ZZ Top box in October 2003, some may question the appearance of a double-disc retrospective in June 2004, a mere eight months after the box set. The two may be released awfully close to each other, but they do play to different audiences -- in other words, there are a bunch of fans who want all the hits, but not a full box set, and that's what the 38-track Rancho Texicano: The Very Best of ZZ Top delivers. Not that it gets everything right -- there are a few classic album cuts, like "Leila" and "I Got the Six," that probably should have been included, and ending the set with a live version of "Cheap Sunglasses" and 12" remixes of "Legs" and "Velcro Fly" leaves a bad aftertaste -- but it gets it close enough, containing all of their biggest hits and a great cross-section of album tracks and AOR favorites. And apart from the aforementioned bewildering final three tracks, it's sequenced well, with the down-n-dirty '70s material on the first disc, and the MTV hits from the '80s on the second. There's still a need for a single-disc that has all the biggest hits, but until that comes along, Rancho Texicano is the best and most concise overview of that lil' ol' band from Texas.






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