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20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection: The Best of Donnie Iris
20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection: The Best of Donnie Iris

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Artist: Donnie Iris
Label: Mca
Category: Music

List Price: $9.98
Buy New: $5.25
You Save: $4.73 (47%)



New (40) Used (19) from $4.92

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 23 reviews
Sales Rank: 7583

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 112521
UPC: 008811252120
EAN: 0008811252120
ASIN: B00005O553

Release Date: September 18, 2001
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand new Item. CD, DVD, Book, VHS more than 400 000 titles to choose from. ALL days Low Price !

Tracks:

  • Ah! Leah!
  • I Can't Hear You
  • Agnes
  • Sweet Merilee
  • Love Is Like A Rock
  • That's The Way Love Ought To Be
  • My Girl
  • Tough World
  • This Time It Must Be Love
  • Do You Compute?
  • She's So European
  • The Rapper (live)

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Customer Reviews:   Read 18 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars almost everything you need   October 11, 2001
 13 out of 13 found this review helpful

Dominic Ierace was a barkeeper's son from Pennsylvania. In 1970, he became Donnie Iris--the guitarist and frontman for The Jaggerz, hitting the top of the charts with "The Rapper." It wasn't until a decade later that he found his next success with the smash single, "Ah! Leah!" It was at the height of `new wave,' and this song was all over the radio. Iris' attention-getting overdubbed vocals were the focal point, but above all, this was a great power-pop tune. The album's rocking title track, "Back on the Streets" (unfortunately missing from this collection) received airplay at the time as well, but it never attained the same degree of success. The following year, Iris released King Cool, which featured the hits "Sweet Merilee" and "Love is Like a Rock." After that, there were two more albums, but both quickly took up residence in the cutout bins.

The Best of Donnie Iris collects all the singles from the four albums, along with a few album tracks and a live version of "The Rapper." It's not perfect, but aside from the omission of "Back on the Streets," it's the only Donnie Iris CD you need.


4 out of 5 stars Nice New Wave Rock From Donnie Iris!   May 25, 2002
 13 out of 14 found this review helpful

I really liked Donnie Iris's album "Back On The Streets" which included the hit "Ah Leah" which in my opinion was his best song. The other songs on this 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection: The Best Of Donnie Iris are really good with a few standouts. Other than the above hit "Ah Leah" you've got "Love Is Like A Rock"," That's The Way Love Ought To Be", "Do You Compute" and an excellent "live" version of "The Rapper", originally an early seventies hit for The Jaggerz. Iris had a knack for writing some pretty catchy songs, many of which are kind of corny but still good none-the-less. If you like groups like The Rubinoos, The Plimsouls, The Knack or The Romantics then you'll certainly enjoy this collection. Recommended!


4 out of 5 stars Cooler as Iris   October 4, 2004
 8 out of 9 found this review helpful

Donnie Iris is an underrated songwriter who managed to concoct about a dozen letter perfect pop songs in a short career. Although he still records and tours, this single disc condensation of his four MCA albums provides a dozen pure pop thrills. The 1980 breakthrough single, "Ah! Leah!," soars with multiple harmonies and a big guitar hook and an instantly catchy chorus ("here we go again"). His first album was a bit starchy, as Iris and partner Marc Avsec were trying too hard as a two man band. But the addition of a full band for touring led to the new moniker, Donnie Iris and the Cruisers, and a great album, "King Cool."

Targeting hip new wavers and classic rock, songs like "Love is Like a Rock" and "That's the Way Love Oughta Be" became radio staples. "My Girl," Iris' biggest hit, was a creamy vocal confection that sounded uncannily like Huey Lewis and The News. This success made them toughen up their sound for "The High and The Mighty" and the initial blast of "Tough World." Despite that single's urgency and catchy nature, Iris failed to crack the top 40. Not like the Cruisers were anything less than a great band, "This Time it Must Be Love" should have been a smash.

Confused, the band cut one more MCA disc, 1983's "Fortune 410." The first single leaned in a new-wave keyboard direction, but "Do You Compute" was ahead of the Internet by a decade. On the other hand, "She's So European" is a moment worthy of Cheap Trick. (Think "She's Tight.") That was Iris' last big gasp at the charts, but he did record a couple more albums and one more great single ("Injured In The Game Of Love" for Sony). The bonus track here is a live version of "The Rapper," Iris' first hit with 70's one hit wonders The Jaggerz. (It was a b-side to one of the singles.) If you have a soft spot for simple eighties pop ala Huey Lewis or Marshall Crenshaw, or just miss the classic drum roll that leads into "Ah Leah!," this is a solid collection at a budget price.



3 out of 5 stars Buy it if you like "Ah Leah!" - the rest is good too!   March 26, 2002
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

The liner notes to this CD tell how Iris went for a look in line with the nerdy Buddy Holly-inspired new wavers of the early 80's (Elvis Costello, Marshall Crenshaw, Moon Martin), but in fact he eerily looks like Eugene Levy ("American Pie", "Best In Show", "Greg The Bunny", "SCTV").

That said, Iris' sound was definitely new-wave-inspired, but that influence was usually buried under a wall of excellent radio-friendly hard rock. "Ah Leah!" remains one of the greatest songs of the 80's, a tune that kind of came and went during its initial chart run, but still creeps into classic rock playlists just often enough that you never get sick of it. The metallic four-chord guitar progression is anchored by a pulsating bass, catchy verse and chorus, punchy synthesizers, and Iris' multi-tracked vocals that make it one of the ultimate singalong tunes of the decade.

"Love Is Like A Rock" gets less recognition these days, but it is equally fun, replete with another crunching guitar riff that alternates with a more funky guitar part on the chorus while tribal percussion plays throughout. And of course, those catchy multi-tracked gang vocals. "My Girl", Iris' third and final Top 40 hit, was actually his biggest single but is probably his least-remembered. It's kind of a throwback to the doo-wop sound of the 50's. "Sweet Merilee" starts out like an jazzy version of a Police song awash in keyboards, then goes into another killer chorus.

"Do You Compute" was a gimmicky song designed to show off a few electronic sound effects, but was a pretty decent song nonetheless. It failed to ignite much interest, missing the Top 40 by a good 25 places or so. There are some other decent songs on the collection including "The Rapper", a live remake of his big 70's hit with the Jaggerz, and some dumb ones ("Agnes" is a pretty bad ripoff of the Spencer Davis Group's "Gimme Some Lovin'"). Beyond the 3 or 4 more well-known tunes here, it's mostly a hit-and-miss collection of songs that only diehard Iris fans would know (I doubt any of them received much if any airplay), but still do their part to recreate the early 80's rock vibe, a time after the progressive art-rock of the 70's but before the cheesy hair metal groups, a time when bands like Journey, Foreigner, Van Halen, Tom Petty, Rush, Styx, REO Speedwagon, and Sammy Hagar defined rock music for the day. And because you've never heard most of these tunes, you aren't burned out on them like you might be some of those other groups. Listen to this, and for a few spins, it'll be like the era never ended!


5 out of 5 stars Excellent Greatest Hits Collection   February 4, 2004
 5 out of 6 found this review helpful

O.K., in a perfect world, Donnie Iris would be popular enough to be performing at the Superbowl halftime show and tearing Janet Jackson's top off instead of Justin Slumberlake (or whatever the hell his name is). Unfortunately, in the real world, 99% of the world's population has no idea who Donnie Iris even is. But you do, because you're reading this, and that means you have good taste in music. Anyway, back to my review. This cd is 100% prime Donnie Iris, with no filler. Just about everything you could possibly want is on this disc, although I strongly recommend that you search out all of his discs. Great songwriting, superb vocals, and rocking guitar are all Donnie's trademarks, and every song on this collection demonstrates this. If you don't own any Donnie Iris music, pick this one up. Trust me, you'll be back for more.

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