The Greatest Hits (Texas album) Poll

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A Texas greatest hits poll might be worth doing? I'm not really a fan and nor is anyone I know but there's some good singles.

same really, except i'd go so far as to say there's some great singles

Poll Results

OptionVotes
Black Eyed Boy 3
I Don't Want A Lover 2
In Our Lifetime 2
When We Are Together 2
Summer Son 2
Halo 2
Inner Smile 1
Prayer For You 1
In Demand 1
Put Your Arms Around Me 0
Guitar Song 0
Everyday Now 0
So Called Friend 0
So In Love With You 0
Say What You Want 0
Insane 0


boxedjoy, Sunday, 15 March 2026 01:54 (two months ago)

not included: the Wu-Tang version of Say What You Want (a banger, even though it's not in key with itself); the bizarrely great Sunship garage remix of "In Demand"; the unexpected disco thwomp of Giorgio Moroder's mix of "Summer Son" - definintely all worth celebrating but not in the spirit of a Greatest Hits poll.

White On Blonde was one of the first albums I was gifted for myself, although in retrospect it was clear it belonged to my parents as much as me. Those singles were ubiquitous for a year, and with good reason. It's easy to slag them off as a band for being a bit safe, a bit middle of the road, a bit familiar - but if it was that easy to write songs as catchy and instantly familiar as some of these then every band wanting success would do it.

Some of these are excellent. In the late 90s so many bands tried to faux-Motown but none came as close as Black Eyed Boy. Summer Son and Say What You Want are more than generous with their hooks, Inner Smile is such a jubilant, joyous rushy mix of love and lust, and Put Your Arms Around Me is a great rock ballad.

boxedjoy, Sunday, 15 March 2026 02:03 (two months ago)

the wonky off-keyness of Say What Wu Want is a huge part of its charm

i feel like i have to vote for Halo which is such a gigantic chorus but maybe i think this over

podcast Diderot (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 15 March 2026 03:29 (two months ago)

It's easy to slag them off as a band for being a bit safe, a bit middle of the road, a bit familiar - but if it was that easy to write songs as catchy and instantly familiar as some of these then every band wanting success would do it

100% this - I was pretty much exactly the right age (15-18ish) to be quite snotty about Texas during their late-90s commercial renaissance while simultaneously really enjoying about 75% of their single output

Inner Smile is poss the true answer here but I'm going to throw a vote at When We Are Together for the gorgeous tumbling verse-cadences. When choosing singles from The Hush they obviously really didn't want to risk deviating from the WoB formula - single 1: slinky shuffle, single 2: polite rocker, single 3: euphoric fauxtown. Nothing wrong with this!

This GH came too early to include Sleep with Paul Buchanan but that's another massive charmer

technopolis, Sunday, 15 March 2026 05:27 (two months ago)

This article is about the Scottish musician. For the Australian sex worker, see Sharleen Spiteri (sex worker).

mookieproof, Sunday, 15 March 2026 05:50 (two months ago)

As I said in the Now thread "Inner Smile" is my favourite Texas song, but it's possibly also my favourite Gregg Alexander song, so woozy. I dooo get why the yeah-yeah-yeah would grate but idk I just find does really sound like real happiness, not at all forced, it's like 3 minutes of smiling eyes and stomach butterflies. This is also the quality that powers "Life Is a Rollercoaster" which is similarly airy and beguiling (so much so Ronan decided to stop singing in that annoying throaty way he always had).

Good loping StoneBridge remix of "Inner Smile" too

I like most of the imperial phase singles just fine but it's the handful of more upbeat ones that do it most. "Summer Son" puts those tolling Trevor Horn bells to better use than Steps, and "Black-Eyed Boy" is a superior Motown-but-not-soul semi-pastiche, probably better for being by Texas than by more self-conscious Britpop also rans. Great intro. As for the early stuff I guess "I Don't Want a Lover" is superior to anything Simple Minds were doing in 89.

Texas are exactly the sort of band that are due a revival among younger listeners who don't care that they were ubiquitous uncool MOR in the heyday. I guess a lot of the stuff that's 'in' though was big in America and this is why Texas (and others, e.g. the Corrs) don't get mentioned.

you can see me from westbury white horse, Sunday, 15 March 2026 13:11 (two months ago)

know nothing about this band. summer son sounds like a great lost st et song. there’s probably tons of 90s uk pop i’ve never heard that sounds like this?

mig (guess that dreams always end), Sunday, 15 March 2026 15:10 (two months ago)

the only Texas song I know is Jacques Lu Cont’s breathtaking cinematic remix of “what about us”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XfCSJYIIfDo

brimstead, Sunday, 15 March 2026 16:32 (two months ago)

I'm quite allergic to Texas, but the song they did with Rae & Christian is very pretty. The downtempo hip-hop arrangement suits her vocals more than dad rock chug, I think.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=89gHiitsWGY

chap, Sunday, 15 March 2026 17:59 (two months ago)

“Prayer for You”

Come On, (Eazy), Sunday, 15 March 2026 21:24 (two months ago)

…because it’s less glossy than the other singles I’ve heard, more akin to K.T. Tunstall / Alannah Myles, that kind of thing that sounds like a band playing beginning to end rather than a studio job.

Come On, (Eazy), Sunday, 15 March 2026 21:33 (two months ago)

Texas played my uni in Freshers Week when I Don’t Want A Liver was getting a big push by the record company. Think that Gun were the support act? That was during the height of my Big Black / Butthole Surfers fandom so needless to say I wasn’t having any of it. Later on my wife bought White On Blonde from Asda and she used to have it on pretty heavy rotation in her Nissan Micra. I did quite enjoy that tbh. This is all just anecdotal jibber-jabber obviously, but it does make me wonder if there was really all that much difference between Texas and say, the Afghan Whigs other than one had a haircut like my mum’s. Anyway, Say What You Want

Reggaeton Sax (NickB), Sunday, 15 March 2026 22:07 (two months ago)

lol typo

Reggaeton Sax (NickB), Sunday, 15 March 2026 22:07 (two months ago)

As I said in the Now thread "Inner Smile" is my favourite Texas song, but it's possibly also my favourite Gregg Alexander song, so woozy.

haha wow did not realize this but relistening this is totally a companion piece to "You Get What You Give"

corrs unplugged, Monday, 16 March 2026 10:25 (two months ago)

The downtempo hip-hop arrangement suits her vocals more than dad rock chug, I think.

Sharleen did a nice disco-house track with Roger Sanchez, "Nothing 2 Prove". Definitely her voice lends well to that sort of record which is probably why Texas are remixed very well.

you can see me from westbury white horse, Monday, 16 March 2026 11:14 (two months ago)

This has to be "Say What You Want" for me, what a jam. I do find there's an uncredited lift of Prince/Martika's "Love Thy Will Be Done" in it though.

corrs unplugged, Monday, 16 March 2026 12:17 (two months ago)

At the time it would have been Black Eyed Boy or maybe When We Are Together. After reminding myself of some of their singles this morning, I'm going with Halo. Great string arrangement and nice Pretenders vibes on that one.

kitchen person, Monday, 16 March 2026 14:06 (two months ago)

Great piece on the Wu Tang collaboration https://www.theguardian.com/music/2020/dec/15/sharleen-spiteri-homegirl-texas-wu-tang-clan-became-pops-weirdest-pals

The Brits performance is great too.

Dan Worsley, Monday, 16 March 2026 14:35 (two months ago)

It was!

podcast Diderot (Noodle Vague), Monday, 16 March 2026 14:51 (two months ago)

That Guardian piece is very charming!

Were Texas the last significant beneficiaries of the Chris Evans Radio 1 Breakfast Show effect? He threw his weight behind Say What You Want at a point when they seemed entirely washed up; it crashed into the top 5 in January 97 and by the end of that month he'd stormed off R1 permanently

Possibly missing some crucial other promotional x-factor but at the time it was unclear to me why Texas were suddenly and immediately glossily massive. Their early 90s albums didn't really do anything and since the previous one we'd had Parklife and Oasis and the Spice Girls etc. Was a devoted fanbase clamouring for their return at this point - is there any affection for the pre-WoB material?

technopolis, Monday, 16 March 2026 15:12 (two months ago)

Brits love a plucky underdog/comeback story. Helps it’s a fantastic track which moves on from their earlier work and the Chris Evans effect was huge. He was even able to help The Divine Comedy get a top 20 hit.

Dan Worsley, Monday, 16 March 2026 15:30 (two months ago)

Then Meth started rhyming over it, with these lines about pirates and bottles of rum, because that was his perception of the UK back in those days.

Kim Kimberly, Monday, 16 March 2026 16:25 (two months ago)

Gregg Alexander did a lot of stuff with the same blissed-out woozy vibe at this time, The Game Of Love and Murder On The Dancefloor as well as the Ronan Keating songs that not even Ronan Keating can ruin

boxedjoy, Monday, 16 March 2026 18:00 (two months ago)

there’s probably tons of 90s uk pop i’ve never heard that sounds like this?

it's strange - I think Texas very quickly became a lazy shorthand for popular, beige, unexciting music. Because in their imperial phase (White On Blonde and The Hush) their music was everywhere, the music feels very familiar and safe by drawing on obvious pop/rock traditions, and there's nothing very edgy or provocative about them. I bet even fans would struggle to name the members who aren't Spiteri. If Dido hadn't happened they'd have probably had more of these criticisms.

But I can't actually think of 90s UK (or big-in-the-UK) pop that sounded quite like them at their peak. The Corrs were a trad band who got the glossy Mutt Lange treatment, Dido's music was too trip-hop and post-electronica to align, singer-songwriters like David Gray or even Robbie Williams were probably equally as big commercially but more concerned with moves of authenticity. Gabrielle, or Emma Bunton's "What Took You So Long?" have the same Radio 2 ease but I think Texas were just a little bit odder. The Wu Tang and Rae & Christian remixes didn't happen by accident after all.

boxedjoy, Monday, 16 March 2026 18:09 (two months ago)

also I cannot find it now but there was definitely a t-shirt in Dean Blunt's merchandise range which was just a print of Spiteri and Method Man at the Brits and I was furious when I missed out on it

boxedjoy, Monday, 16 March 2026 18:15 (two months ago)

wow that brits performance is something and wonderful details from the guardian piece

spiteri has mad chops for hitting the notes on that completely off key sample

corrs unplugged, Tuesday, 17 March 2026 07:47 (two months ago)

Great posts from boxedjoy

I haven’t listened to White on Blonde since the year of its release but I’m excited to do so now

Tim F, Tuesday, 17 March 2026 09:39 (two months ago)

four weeks pass...

Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.

System, Tuesday, 14 April 2026 00:01 (one month ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll's results are now in.

System, Wednesday, 15 April 2026 00:01 (one month ago)

Say What You Want 0

Didn’t expect that.

Dan Worsley, Wednesday, 15 April 2026 05:26 (one month ago)

I thought there would be a clear winner so an even spread of votes is nice to see

boxedjoy, Wednesday, 15 April 2026 07:05 (one month ago)

haha oops forgot to vote

write-in 1 vote for Say What You Want

This has to be "Say What You Want" for me, what a jam. I do find there's an uncredited lift of Prince/Martika's "Love Thy Will Be Done" in it though.

― corrs unplugged, 16. marts 2026 12:17 (four weeks ago) bookmarkflaglink

corrs unplugged, Wednesday, 15 April 2026 09:46 (one month ago)

I feel like Texas are the closest reference point for After ? (Though lack of US success for Texas means they are never actually brought up).

you can see me from westbury white horse, Wednesday, 15 April 2026 10:22 (one month ago)

I like Say What You Want, but wanted to hear the other songs before casting judgement. However, I forgot. I learned about them because my manager at Sam Goody in 1997 really liked the White on Blonde album, but I would have needed to refamiliarize myself with any of the other tunes.

When I took a trip to the U.K. the following year, one souvenier I brought back was the 12" record of the Method Man collab. I bought it unheard, transported it across the ocean, and then thought it was terrible when I finally listened. Fortunately, I had a DJ friend who ate it up, so I let him keep it.

The Texas discography Wikipedia page doesn't even include a column for US peak chart positions. That's how much they didn't break through here.

I will listen to the Texas Greatest Hits album later today, I promise

peace, man, Wednesday, 15 April 2026 10:49 (one month ago)


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