Greatest Hits Volume Three

Greatest Hits Volume Three (or variants) may refer to:

  • Greatest Hits Vol. III (Alabama album), 1994
  • Greatest Hits, Vol. 3 (Johnny Cash album), 1978
  • Greatest Hits Vol. III (The Everly Brothers album), 1977
  • Greatest Hits Volume III, a 1997 album by Billy Joel
  • Greatest Hits Volume III (Barry Manilow album), 1989
  • Greatest Hits 3 (Tim McGraw album), 2008
  • Greatest Hits, Vol. 3 (Ronnie Milsap album), 1991
  • Greatest Hits Vol 3 (Olivia Newton-John album), 1982
  • Greatest Hits 3 (The Oak Ridge Boys album), 1989
  • Greatest Hits III (Queen album), 1999
  • Greatest Hits Vol. 3 (The Supremes album), 1969
  • Greatest Hits Vol. III (Umphrey's McGee album), 1998

It may also refer to other albums that include the phrase "Greatest Hits Volume Three":

  • Greatest Hits Volume Three: Best of the Brother Years 1970–1986 (2000) by The Beach Boys
  • John Denver's Greatest Hits, Volume 3 (1984)
  • Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits Volume 3 (1994)
  • Elton John's Greatest Hits Vol. 3
  • Greatest Hits Volume III: I'm a Survivor (2001) by Reba McEntire

Famous quotes containing the words greatest, hits and/or volume:

    A vocation makes us unthinking; that is its greatest blessing. For it is a bulwark behind which we are permitted to withdraw when commonplace doubts and cares assail us.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)

    From a hasty glance through the various tests I figure it out that I would be classified in Group B, indicating “Low Average Ability,” reserved usually for those just learning to speak the English Language and preparing for a career of holding a spike while another man hits it.
    Robert Benchley (1889–1945)

    Measured by any standard known to science—by horse-power, calories, volts, mass in any shape,—the tension and vibration and volume and so-called progression of society were full a thousand times greater in 1900 than in 1800;Mthe force had doubled ten times over, and the speed, when measured by electrical standards as in telegraphy, approached infinity, and had annihilated both space and time. No law of material movement applied to it.
    Henry Brooks Adams (1838–1918)