![]() ![]() The most notable exception is the beginning of disc one, which begins with a winning combination of Gimme All Your Lovin’, Sharp Dressed Man, La Grange and Tush. For the most part, both discs are arranged in loose chronological order covering their studio albums from 1971’s ZZ Top’s First Album through to 2003’s Mescalero (strangely enough, there are no tracks here that have been released since the group’s previous greatest hits compilation, 2004’s Rancho Texicano, making me question the necessity of this particular compilation). There is a single-disc edition and a double-disc edition, but this review concerns the latter and its collection of a whopping forty songs spanning the trio’s lengthy career. ![]() The Very Baddest of ZZ Top marks the group’s fourth greatest hits compilation in as many decades. ![]()
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