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Greatest Hits Volume II ("Weird Al" Yankovic album)

Greatest Hits Volume II
Weird Al Yankovic Greatest Hits Volume II.jpg
Greatest hits album by "Weird Al" Yankovic
Released October 25, 1994
Recorded 1984-1994
Genre Comedy
Length 43:32
Label Scotti Brothers
"Weird Al" Yankovic chronology
Permanent Record: Al in the Box
(1994)Permanent Record: Al in the Box1994
Greatest Hits Volume II
(1994)
The TV Album
(1995)The TV Album1995
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4.5/5 stars
The Rolling Stone Album Guide 3.5/5 stars

Greatest Hits Volume II is a compilation album of songs by "Weird Al" Yankovic, featuring his best known songs that did not appear on "Weird Al" Yankovic's Greatest Hits, plus the new single "Headline News" which had first appeared on the boxed set Permanent Record: Al In The Box, released a month prior. The compilation album was met with mostly positive critical reviews, and it managed to chart on the Billboard 200 at number 198. However, it ranks as one of Yankovic's least-selling records.

The music featured on the album spans a decade, with the earliest songs being recorded in 1985, and the most recent song being recorded in 1994. Yankovic's third album, Dare to Be Stupid has two songs featured: "This is the Life" and "Yoda". "Christmas at Ground Zero" first appeared on the 1986 release Polka Party!. "Money for Nothing/Beverly Hillbillies*" was culled from the 1989 album UHF – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack and Other Stuff. "Smells Like Nirvana", "Polka Your Eyes Out", and "You Don't Love Me Anymore" were taken from Yankovic's 1992 album Off the Deep End. Finally, "Achy Breaky Song" and "Jurassic Park" first appeared on the 1993 record Alapalooza.

The album also includes "Headline News", which had previously appeared on Permanent Record: Al in the Box; the single had been recorded and released specifically for the box set, but Yankovic also insisted it be available as a commercial single so his fans would not have to purchase something they usually would not be able to afford. The single edit of "UHF" is included on this disc, as opposed to the six-minute version available on UHF – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack and Other Stuff; this was done because Yankovic figured that "fans would appreciate having both versions available."


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