1979 studio album by Whitesnake
Lovehunter is the second studio album by British band Whitesnake, released in 21 September 1979.[3] It was the bands first UK Top 30 album,[4] charting at No. 29 on the UK Albums Chart.[5] "Long Way from Home", the leading track on the album reached No. 55 on the UK charts,[5] while "Walking in the Shadow of the Blues" was one of the most popular and praised Whitesnake`s songs in the beginning.[4][6] The album became controversial because of its cover art.[4]
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Long Way From Home
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4:57 |
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2
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Walking In The Shadow Of The Blues
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4:24 |
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3
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Help Me Thro' The Day
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4:39 |
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4
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Medicine Man
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3:58 |
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5
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You 'n' Me
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3:25 |
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6
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Mean Business
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Whitesnake • 1979
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3:47 |
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7
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Love Hunter
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Whitesnake • 1979
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5:36 |
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8
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Outlaw
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Whitesnake • 1979
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4:02 |
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9
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Rock 'n' Roll Women
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4:44 |
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10
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We Wish You Well
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Whitesnake • 1979
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1:35 |
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11
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Belgian Tom's Hat Trick
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3:39 |
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12
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Love To Keep You Warm
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3:28 |
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13
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Ain't No Love In The Heart Of The City
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Whitesnake • 1979
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4:54 |
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14
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Trouble
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Whitesnake • 1979
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4:30 |
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No se encontraron resultados
Lovehunter | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 21 September 1979[1] | |||
Recorded | May 1979 | |||
Studio | Rolling Stones Mobile, Clearwell Castle, Gloucestershire | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 41:15 | |||
Label | United Artists Polydor (Japan) | |||
Producer | Martin Birch | |||
Whitesnake chronology | ||||
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Singles from Lovehunter | ||||
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1979 studio album by Whitesnake
Lovehunter is the second studio album by British band Whitesnake, released in 21 September 1979.[3] It was the bands first UK Top 30 album,[4] charting at No. 29 on the UK Albums Chart.[5] "Long Way from Home", the leading track on the album reached No. 55 on the UK charts,[5] while "Walking in the Shadow of the Blues" was one of the most popular and praised Whitesnake`s songs in the beginning.[4][6] The album became controversial because of its cover art.[4]
Leer másThe band worked on the album at Clearwell Castle.[4] Like their two previous recordings it was also produced by Martin Birch.[4] It was the group`s last album to feature Dave Dowle, before being replaced by ex-Purple drummer Ian Paice.[4]
Marsden recalled that at the time band members argued in "a good, healthy, positive" way and "because of that the band got better and more successful with Ready An` Willing (1980) and Come an` Get It (1981)". He considered it a good record, a sentiment Coverdale didn`t share and would have rather released it as an EP.[4]
Both Coverdale and Marsden considered "Walking in the Shadow of the Blues" as one of their best compositions,[6][7] with Coverdale stating that the song "really summed up my musical approach of the time. It was very much my feeling, my perspective and probably my life`s philosophy back then ... Bernie and I put the music together very quickly. It was obviously meant to be as a song. I`m very proud of that one".[6] Eduardo Rivadavia writing for AllMusic described it as combining "near-perfect songwriting with one of Coverdale`s maturest and most compelling lyrics".[8]
Lovehunter`s controversial cover art, showing a naked woman straddling a large snake and blood on her hand from a snake bite, was created by fantasy artist Chris Achilleos.[4] Coverdale recalls such an idea was made as response to the critics, "just to piss them off even more".[4] Actually, it did spur more journalistic criticism for sexism, and the cover was "banned" at the time in the USA (woman was partly covered with a sticker; album sold "in a brown paper bag") and Argentina (woman`s was partly airbrushed with a "chain-mail bikini bottom").[4]
It was the last album cover Achilleos designed for many years, until 2003 and Gary Hughes` rock opera Once and Future King Part I.[9] The original Lovehunter artwork was stolen in the 1980s.[10]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [8] |
Collector`s Guide to Heavy Metal | 7/10[11] |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide | [12] |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide noted that "the playing is as good as on any early-`70s Deep Purple album."[12]
Side one
Side two
Lovehunter was remastered and reissued in 2006 with several bonus tracks taken from Andy Peebles BBC Radio 1 sessions recorded 29 March 1979 (tracks originally from the band`s debut album Trouble).
Whitesnake
Production
Chart (1979) | Peak position |
---|---|
UK Albums (OCC)[13] | 29 |
Chart (2006) | Peak position |
---|---|
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[14] | 194 |
1979 studio album by Whitesnake
Lovehunter is the second studio album by British band Whitesnake, released in 21 September 1979.[3] It was the bands first UK Top 30 album,[4] charting at No. 29 on the UK Albums Chart.[5] "Long Way from Home", the leading track on the album reached No. 55 on the UK charts,[5] while "Walking in the Shadow of the Blues" was one of the most popular and praised Whitesnake`s songs in the beginning.[4][6] The album became controversial because of its cover art.[4]
The band worked on the album at Clearwell Castle.[4] Like their two previous recordings it was also produced by Martin Birch.[4] It was the group`s last album to feature Dave Dowle, before being replaced by ex-Purple drummer Ian Paice.[4]
Marsden recalled that at the time band members argued in "a good, healthy, positive" way and "because of that the band got better and more successful with Ready An` Willing (1980) and Come an` Get It (1981)". He considered it a good record, a sentiment Coverdale didn`t share and would have rather released it as an EP.[4]
Both Coverdale and Marsden considered "Walking in the Shadow of the Blues" as one of their best compositions,[6][7] with Coverdale stating that the song "really summed up my musical approach of the time. It was very much my feeling, my perspective and probably my life`s philosophy back then ... Bernie and I put the music together very quickly. It was obviously meant to be as a song. I`m very proud of that one".[6] Eduardo Rivadavia writing for AllMusic described it as combining "near-perfect songwriting with one of Coverdale`s maturest and most compelling lyrics".[8]
Lovehunter`s controversial cover art, showing a naked woman straddling a large snake and blood on her hand from a snake bite, was created by fantasy artist Chris Achilleos.[4] Coverdale recalls such an idea was made as response to the critics, "just to piss them off even more".[4] Actually, it did spur more journalistic criticism for sexism, and the cover was "banned" at the time in the USA (woman was partly covered with a sticker; album sold "in a brown paper bag") and Argentina (woman`s was partly airbrushed with a "chain-mail bikini bottom").[4]
It was the last album cover Achilleos designed for many years, until 2003 and Gary Hughes` rock opera Once and Future King Part I.[9] The original Lovehunter artwork was stolen in the 1980s.[10]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [8] |
Collector`s Guide to Heavy Metal | 7/10[11] |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide | [12] |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide noted that "the playing is as good as on any early-`70s Deep Purple album."[12]
Side one
Side two
Lovehunter was remastered and reissued in 2006 with several bonus tracks taken from Andy Peebles BBC Radio 1 sessions recorded 29 March 1979 (tracks originally from the band`s debut album Trouble).
Whitesnake
Production
Chart (1979) | Peak position |
---|---|
UK Albums (OCC)[13] | 29 |
Chart (2006) | Peak position |
---|---|
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[14] | 194 |