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List of other charted songs, with selected chart positions Title Year Peak chart positions Album US Hard Rock Digi. US Heri. "Take Me to the Top" 1981 22 — Too Fast for Love "The Animal in Me" 2008 — 28 The Saints of Los Angeles "Crash and Burn" 2019 24 — The Dirt Soundtrack
The compilation featured two newly recorded songs: the singles "Bitter Pill" which charted at number 22 on the Mainstream rock charts [7] and "Enslaved" which charted at number 34 on the Billboard Heritage charts. The 2009 version charted at No. 10 on the Top Hard Rock Albums chart and No. 9 on the Top Independent Albums chart on Billboard ...
[14] [15] On March 22, 2019, the band released four new songs on the soundtrack for its Netflix biopic The Dirt, based on the band's New York Times best-selling autobiography of the same name. The soundtrack went to number one on the iTunes All Genres Album Chart, [ 16 ] number 3 on the Billboard Top Album and Digital Album sales charts, [ 17 ...
Though pushed close by last year's shock return with the weighty Saints of Los Angeles, [the album is] the best Mötley Crüe have ever released." [14] "Dr. Feelgood" and "Kickstart My Heart" were nominated for Grammy awards for Best Hard Rock Performance in 1990 and 1991, but lost both years to Living Colour. [22]
The song was praised by Jon Bon Jovi as "the best ballad Mötley Crüe have ever written.” [4] When informed of this, Nikki Sixx laughed because of the gruesome meaning behind the song. [citation needed] As Sixx would later relate in his Heroin Diaries memoir, "You're All I Need" was inspired by some real-life violent impulses.
"Dr. Feelgood" is a song by American heavy metal band Mötley Crüe. It was released as the lead single from their fifth studio album of the same name. "Dr. Feelgood" is Mötley Crüe's only gold single in the U.S.
Girls, Girls, Girls has received mixed but generally positive reviews. In their June 12, 1987, issue The Georgia Straight applauded Mick Mars' guitar being featured more prominently in the final mix than it had been on 1985's Theatre of Pain, and called it their best work since 1981's Too Fast for Love.
The music video shows Neil leaving New York City to join his bandmates in Los Angeles for rehearsal. Produced by Sharon Oreck through O Pictures, "Don't Go Away Mad" is the second of two Crüe videos to be directed by Mary Lambert [6] under the alias "Blanche White" [7] ("blanche" meaning "white" in French).