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Greatest Hits (Blackhawk album)

Greatest Hits
Bhgreatest.jpg
Greatest hits album by Blackhawk
Released May 16, 2000
Recorded 1993-2000
Genre Country
Label Arista Nashville
Producer various
Blackhawk chronology
The Sky's the Limit
(1998)The Sky's the Limit1998
Greatest Hits
(2000)
Spirit Dancer
(2002)Spirit Dancer2002

Greatest Hits is the first greatest hits package released by the country music band Blackhawk. It includes hits from their first four studio albums, as well as the newly recorded "It Takes a Woman", "I Need You All the Time" and "Ships of Heaven". "I Need You All the Time" was released as a single from the album, peaking at #40 on the country charts in the US in 2000. "Ships of Heaven" was one of the last songs written by band member Van Stephenson before his death.

Greatest Hits includes twelve tracks from the band's first four studio albums: "Goodbye Says It All", "Every Once in a While", "I Sure Can Smell the Rain", "Down in Flames" and "That's Just About Right" from Blackhawk (1993); "I'm Not Strong Enough to Say No", "Big Guitar", "Almost a Memory Now" and "Like There Ain't No Yesterday" from Strong Enough; "Postmarked Birmingham" from Love & Gravity, and "There You Have It" and "Always Have, Always Will" from The Sky's the Limit. Of these, "Always Have, Always Will" was the only one that was never issued as a single. Three of the band's chart singles are not included on this compilation: "King of the World" from Strong Enough, "Hole in My Heart" from Love & Gravity, and "Your Own Little Corner of My Heart" from The Sky's the Limit.

Three new tracks are included as well: "It Takes a Woman", "I Need You All the Time" and "Ships of Heaven". "I Need You All the Time" was the only one to be released to radio, peaking at #40 on the country charts in the US in mid-2000. "Ships of Heaven" was also one of the last songs to be written by Van Stephenson, who died shortly after the album's release.

"Ships of Heaven", written by guitarist Van Stephenson, centers around a person who is dying but has lived a full life and therefore does not want his loved ones to "cry for" him when he is gone. He reflects on love he has experienced in life and explains that it was strongest in the end, and that now he will sail "on the ships of heaven" and wait to see his loved ones in the future: "I'll be sailing on the ships of heaven / When the tide rolls out for the last time / You'll find me sailing on the ships of heaven / Waiting for the day I come sailing back to you."


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