One record at a time: 202. Jean MIchel Jarre - Images: The Best Of

This album was released in 1991 and provided a welcome update to the dreary "Essential". Whilst Jarre expresses a dislike of compilation albums, he was content enough to work with label engineer Bruno Mylonas to remix several tracks and segue them together with new interludes. Also included are two new recordings and a rare non-album track. By the early nineties, compilation albums had moved on and the general public now expected new material alongside the hits.

Once we have obligatory "Oxygene Part IV" and "Equinoxe Part V" introduction out of the way, Jarre delivers a new version of "Magnetic Fields Part II" based on the version recorded for the Paris La Défense concert. Personally I don't like this mix as it sounds flat and what I can only describe as 'plastic'. Both "Oxygene Part 2" and "Computer Weekend" have been edited and there is some new percussion and other minor changes to the latter.

There's a wholesale re-recording of "Equinoxe Part IV" that is based on the version played at La Défense (far be it for me to suggest it is the same recording and Jarre merely mimed at the concert). Like the re-recording of "Magnetic Fields Part II" this new version sounds pretty dreadful compared to the original and is very brief. We then move onto "Band in the Rain" and the first side finishes with "Second Rendez-Vous".

Whilst the sleeve and labels tell us the first track on the flip side is "London Kid", the track that actually plays is "Zoolookologie". I think the intention was to include different tracks for different markets but the whole thing seems to have been too complicated for someone and this UK pressing of the LP plays the European tracklisting.

There's a very short edit of the first movement of "Ethnicolor" before the abomination that is a new recording of "Orient Express". I can give an illustration of how bad this mix is by relaying a story. In 1991 I worked in the record department of a high-street shopping chain. One day, not long after this album was released, I persuaded the deputy manager to play it over the PA. Things were going well until "Orient Express" come on and suddenly the manager marched up to me saying, "Are you telling me people actually listen to this?" Despite answering in the affirmative the CD was promptly replaced by "Queen: Greatest Hits" and no more was said about it. Whilst I hated all of the managers in that store, I do have to agree that "Orient Express" probably isn't amongst M. Jarre's best moments. 

At this point of the running order you might ask yourself the question, "If some of these new versions are so bad, why are they included on a 'Best Of' compilation?" I too am mystified by this and my confusion has always been compounded by the inclusion of, what was by then, a five year old b-side. I acknowledge that not many people would have been familiar with "Moon Machine" when this album was released, but the quality of the music doesn't really warrant inclusion. The album does finish with two genuinely new compositions "Eldorado" and "Globetrotter", but to say they are mediocre is a kindness. 3/5