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Item no. | 185402 |
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Title | The wörld is yours |
Musical Genre | Heavy Metal |
Product topic | Bands |
Band | Motörhead |
Release date | 12/10/10 |
Gender | Unisex |
Product type | LP |
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Media - Format 1-3 | LP |
Warner Music Group Germany Holding GmbH
Alter Wandrahm 14
20457 Hamburg
Germany
LP 1
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1.Born To Lose
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2.I Know How To Die
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3.Get Back In Line
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4.Devil's In My Head
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5.Rock 'N' Roll Music
LP 2
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1.Waiting For The Snake
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2.Brotherhood Of Man
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3.Outlaw
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4.I Know What You Need
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5.Bye Bye Bitch Bye Bye
by Joel McIver (03.01.2011) It’s all too easy when reviewing Motörhead albums to use words like ‘dependable’ and ‘consistent’, which are hack euphemisms for ‘they sound the same as they always do’. What such terms fail to convey is that Lemmy, Phil Campbell and Mikkey Dee are four albums into a rich seam of inspiration that only goes back seven years, since producer Cameron Webb came onboard and reinvigorated their sound. Those four albums, starting with Inferno in 2004 and coming up to date with the splendid The World Is Yours, share plenty of songwriting elements and a definite, post-millennial sophistication. In that sense, Motörhead have indeed been consistent for a while – but anyone who listens to this album and concludes that it sounds identical to their 1990s albums, let alone their 80s and 70s records, is simply wrong. Lemmy is on refreshingly sarcastic form for a bloke who might reasonably be expected to have stopped giving a damn two decades ago. Get Back In Line is a vitriolic stab at warmongers and religious authorities, Bye Bye Bitch Bye Bye drips with almost tangible venom and I Know How To Die pinpoints the take-no-prisoners ethos of this band with an intelligence that few other rock acts can approach. And for anyone who still thinks that Motörhead never break new ground, listen to Brotherhood Of Man, the heaviest song the band have written in years. They’re still contenders: ignore them at your peril.