Playlist: The Very Best of Rick Springfield

Playlist: The Very Best Of Rick Springfield
Greatest hits album by
Released18 July 2006 (We Are the '80s)
17 June 2008 (Playlist)
Recorded1981–1988
GenreRock
Length49:47
LabelRCA Records
ProducerKeith Olsen, Rick Springfield and Bill Drescher
Rick Springfield chronology
Christmas with You
(2007)
Playlist: The Very Best Of Rick Springfield
(2006)
Venus in Overdrive
(2008)

Playlist: The Very Best Of Rick Springfield is a compilation album by Rick Springfield, released by RCA Records in 2008. This collection was originally released with the title We Are the '80s in 2006 but was re-released with the "Playlist" title in 2008, containing the same songs and running order. Both are essentially an upgrade to Springfield's similar Greatest Hits (1989), adding two additional tracks.

Springfield began his recording career in the late 1960s and had limited success in the United States with his 1972 album Beginnings and its single "Speak to the Sky." He released three more albums through 1976, but his musical career would not take off in earnest until 1981 with the release of his first RCA album Working Class Dog. The single "Jessie's Girl" from that album gave Springfield his first and only number one single in the U.S., and won him a Grammy Award for Best Rock Vocal Performance, Male.[1]

Springfield's success continued throughout the 1980s with albums such as Success Hasn't Spoiled Me Yet (1982) that contained the singles "Don't Talk to Strangers" and "What Kind of Fool Am I", and 1983's Living in Oz with the hits "Affair of the Heart" and "Human Touch". Rick Springfield starred in the 1984 film Hard to Hold and the accompanying soundtrack album included his songs "Love Somebody" and "Don't Walk Away." In the mid-1980s, Springfield stated that he started dealing with serious spiritual issues and he began to write more about those in his music. His 1985 release Tao with the singles "State of the Heart" and "Celebrate Youth" saw Rick moving in a more mature and spiritual direction. His 1988 album Rock of Life would be his last album of new material until 1997's Sahara Snow, and contained Springfield's final (of 17) Billboard Top 40 single in the USA. [2]

This compilation contains the majority of Springfield's hit singles from 1981 to 1988, by far his most successful years. The only Billboard Hot 100 charting singles from the 1980s not included are "Souls", "Taxi Dancing," and "Bruce."

  1. ^ "Grammys 1981". Grammys official. Grammys. Retrieved 28 May 2021.
  2. ^ Ken Sharp, sleeve notes to the 2008 CD compilation Playlist: The Very Best Of Rick Springfield, catalog no. RCA 88697 31787 2