5. Please Don't Stop Loving Me - (with Porter Wagoner) ~ Dolly Parton
6. Love Is Like A Butterfly ~ Dolly Parton
7. Bargain Store, The ~ Dolly Parton
8. Here You Come Again ~ Dolly Parton
9. It's All Wrong, But It's All Right ~ Dolly Parton
10. Heartbreaker ~ Dolly Parton
11. I Really Got The Feeling ~ Dolly Parton
12. You're The Only One ~ Dolly Parton
13. Starting Over Again ~ Dolly Parton
14. Old Flames Can't Hold A Candle To You ~ Dolly Parton
15. 9 To 5 ~ Dolly Parton
16. But You Know I Love You ~ Dolly Parton
17. Tennessee Homesick Blues ~ Dolly Parton
18. Islands In The Stream - (with Kenny Rogers) ~ Dolly Parton
19. To Know Him Is To Love Him - (with Linda Ronstadt/Emmylou Harris) ~ Dolly Parton
20. Why'd You Come In Here Lookin' Like That ~ Dolly Parton
Album Notes and Credits
Notes & Personnel Info
Personnel includes: Dolly Parton (vocals, guitar); Linda Ronstadt, Emmylou Harris, Kenny Rogers, Porter Wagoner (vocals).
Producers include: Dolly Parton, Bob Ferguson, Gary Klein, Ricky Skaggs, Gregg Perry.
Compilation producer: Al Quaglieri.
Recorded between 1970 & 1988. Includes liner notes by Holly George-Warren. Includes liner notes by Holly George-Warren.
Though various record labels have released several dozen Dolly Parton greatest-hits and "best of" compilations over the years, few have attempted to effectively encapsulate the artist's enviably long and incredibly varied career in a single disc. THE ULTIMATE DOLLY PARTON goes a long way towards filling this void by collecting choice cuts from nearly every era and musical phase of Dolly's tenure. Beginning with stone-cold country classics like "Coat Of Many Colors" and "Please Don't Stop Loving Me" and proceeding through crossover smashes such as "9 To 5" and "Islands In The Stream," the collection will give the uninitiated more than enough prime Parton to dispel any inkling that the singer is all flash. On the contrary, her uncanny pop sensibility, heartstring-pulling, warbling soprano, and emotional directness are apparent in every single note on this disc, and anyone curious about why Dolly Parton is a cultural icon of the highest order would do well to start here.