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Whitesnake's Greatest Hits is a compilation of Whitesnake's most well-known hits from the 1980s during the Geffen years. It features hit singles from their albums Slide It In, Whitesnake and Slip of the Tongue. The album also contains three tracks previously unavailable in the USA. It sold over million copies.
20th Century Masters – The Millennium Collection: The Best of Whitesnake is a compilation of Whitesnake's biggest hits from the 1980s. It features hit singles from their albums Slide It In, Whitesnake and Slip of the Tongue. The compilation was certified Gold by RIAA in the US [2] and charted at number 50 on the Billboard Top Catalog Albums ...
Three years later, Greatest Hits was released as the band's first compilation album, reaching number 4 on the UK Albums Chart and being certified gold by the BPI. [ 3 ] [ 5 ] The band returned with Restless Heart in 1997, which peaked at number 34 in the UK. [ 3 ]
1987 is the seventh studio album by English rock band Whitesnake, released on 23 March 1987, by Geffen Records in the US and by EMI Records in the UK one week after. It was co-written and recorded for over a year in what would be the first and final collaboration between vocalist David Coverdale and guitarist John Sykes, the final album to feature longtime bassist Neil Murray and the only ...
It should only contain pages that are Whitesnake songs or lists of Whitesnake songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Whitesnake songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
The song was originally written for blues legend B. B. King. [7] The song was the first big hit of Whitesnake's, reaching number 13 on the UK Singles Chart [8] and number 53 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100. This remains one of Whitesnake's most popular and well-known songs. David Coverdale has stated that he prefers the original to the 1989-version.
The 30th Anniversary Collection is a triple CD collection released in 2008, celebrating the 30th anniversary of Whitesnake. It was released by EMI [ 2 ] [ 3 ] and charted at number 38 on the UK Albums Chart .
Around that same time, the song was re-recorded again for a single "radio-mix" version released in June 1987 in the United States and 19 October in their native UK. The success of the song propelled Whitesnake (1987) to nearly hover at the top of the US Billboard chart for several months, marking the band breaking the song into a national anthem.