Gold (Tears for Fears album)

Gold is a compilation album by the English rock band Tears for Fears. It was released by Hip-O Records/Mercury Records on 8 August 2006. It covers releases by the band between 1983 and 2005.

Reception
James Christopher Monger at AllMusic states "Gold successfully brings their whole surprisingly weighty career into focus" and "With the exception of the impossibly fun -- and more than a little "Beatlesque" -- title cut, all of the album's best songs are featured, making this compilation essential for anybody who wonders what happened after 1990."

Popmatters' Mike Schiller says "this unimaginatively assembled, yet adequately comprehensive, two disc compilation becomes the best summary of the band’s career yet released." He also comments that "offerings from The Hurting, Songs From the Big Chair, and The Seeds of Love comprising the first disc, and Elemental, Raoul and the Kings of Spain (both basically solo discs for lead vocalist Roland Orzabal), and 2004 reunion disc Everybody Loves a Happy Ending making up the second." Mike Duqette at The Second Disc states "this generic compilation is the most comprehensive, covering even the Raoul album, and has a few bonus cuts (the hard-to-find "Floating Down the River" and a new live version of "Mad World"). He goes on to comment that this album was "originally intended to be a career-spanning box, including a bunch of rarities that had missed inclusion on the previous remasters. The usual record company shuffling of feet ensued, and this set was quietly dumped into stores."

Personnel
According to MusicBrainz:


 * Curt Smith – bass, lead vocals, keyboard
 * Roland Orzabal – guitar, keyboard, lead and backing vocals
 * Ian Stanley – keyboard
 * Manny Elias – drums, percussion
 * Chris Hughes – drums, percussion

Additional personnel


 * Phil Collins – membranophone
 * Nicky Holland – additional vocals, piano
 * Neil Taylor – guitar solo
 * Oleta Adams – guest lead vocals

Gold: The Videos
A video compilation was released in 2007 and included 15 videos spanning the band's first four albums.