Every time I hear "She Bop" I think to myself: "Oh yes, that was the first song that you recorded by hand on the radio!" At the time I was four, and the song ended up in front of "Heaven is a place on Earth" by Belinda Carlisle and "Sailing" by Rod Stewart on an orange BASF cassette ... somewhere is an even in a drawer somewhere, from nostalgia reasons. Then Cyndi went into my consciousness a little under, because at that time I was not yet clear on who I hear what da. My parents came then one day (1997) from the town home with a stack of CDs and this here was also in between. Ma said: "The you know ... surely you hear it at times ... THE sleep, I bet!" So I stopped and I heard yes and "Girls just wanna have fun" was my idea and my beloved "She Bop" I realized again and read it first routieren for several hours, until my mother hand in with my then fourteen years my room flushed the Skip button. After I then leaves me on the fast songs like Marvin Gaye cover version "What's going on," Roy Orbison's "I Drove All Night" and China-style breakbeat lastigem as the "mega-horny" (uuuuhaaaa, Dieter Bohlen greet) had heard "That's what I think" sick came with age (16 to date), the maturity of the great ballads. I hear "Time after time" and think to myself, hopefully no one lays hands on it. Unfortunately, the dance combo Novaspace did exactly this and I clenched my original at parties repeatedly contrast to himself had to concede to my friends that the original is better. "All Through the Night" recorded with The Hooters is anyway the ne plus ultra and while I actually very much appreciated Phil Collins and his "True Colors" version is not bad either, Cyndi's version still has the unique fragile. The songs that have managed to not (or only marginally) in the charts, but for me are very become of my favorites, because they will never gecovert with security and songs such as "The World Is Stone", "Who Let in the rain "," Sally's Pigeons "or the Gene Pitney cover" I'm gonna be strong "by Cyndi are unique way of interpreting the most beautiful and easy abrundenste piece of music for a grandiose best-of disc, as it could not be better , From gentle-delicate whisper to violently Röhrig-screeching, it dominates everything and you know: "This is Cyndi" And this is a cross-section of their skills. Songs that have been with me so now all the nineteen years together on a CD that not a single bad title includes. I bow to my "Queen of Pop", Cyndi Lauper!