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  2. Celebrate: The Greatest Hits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celebrate:_The_Greatest_Hits

    Celebrate: The Greatest Hits is a compilation album by Scottish rock band Simple Minds, released on 25 March 2013. [1] There were three different formats released: a single-disc version for the North American market, a two-disc version, and a three-disc version.

  3. The Best of Simple Minds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Best_of_Simple_Minds

    The Best of Simple Minds is the second greatest hits album by Simple Minds, released in 2001. New versions of the "Theme for Great Cities" were released, and some copies (such as the US version), included the remixes by Raven Maize. A new edition was released in November 2007 with an extra DVD of the Verona concert film.

  4. Simple Minds discography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_Minds_discography

    The discography of the Scottish art rock–new wave band Simple Minds consists of 21 studio albums (either original or covers and counting 1981's Sons and Fascination/Sister Feelings Call as a double album release), eleven live albums, ten compilation albums, fourteen box sets, 68 singles, and five video albums.

  5. Simple Minds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_Minds

    The new-look Simple Minds made their début with a short set of greatest hits at the Scotland Rocks For Kosovo festival, with Mark Taylor returning on keyboards. The displaced Forbes and Gaynor, having apparently been told that the band was not appearing at the festival, formed a new band of their own to play the same concert.

  6. Don't You (Forget About Me) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don't_You_(Forget_About_Me)

    The song became Simple Minds' breakout hit, [10] as well as its biggest American hit. [10] [19] Cashbox said that "though the lyric theme is a simple enough declaration, the lead vocals and vivid orchestration make the tune complex and moving". [23] The song was included on the band's greatest hits compilation album, Glittering Prize 81/92 ...

  7. Simple Minds' Jim Kerr talks 'Catholic guilt' over 'Breakfast ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/simple-minds-jim-kerr...

    But of course, no Simple Minds stock-taking, 45 years into their career, would be complete without a look back at their biggest hit, the Breakfast Club theme and 1985 U.S. No.1 smash “Don't You ...