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Its follow-up "Is This Love" reached number 2 on the Hot 100 and number 9 in the UK. [9] [2] The band's 1989 release Slip of the Tongue was the band's only other album to reach the US top ten, [6] and the last to be certified by the RIAA (reaching platinum status). [7] Whitesnake broke up in 1991.
Love Songs is a compilation album by British hard rock band Whitesnake, released on 6 November 2020 by Rhino Records. [1] The album contains "revisited, remixed and remastered" versions of previously released songs, and is the second in a series called Red, White and Blues Trilogy following The Rock Album (2020) and followed by The Blues Album (2021).
[21] [22] [23] In a 2009 interview with Metro, Coverdale jokingly stated that the name "Whitesnake" was a euphemism for his penis. In fact, it came from the song of the same name found on his first solo album. [24] After completing a small UK club tour, the band adjourned to a rehearsal place in London's West End to begin writing new songs. [12]
The song was released as the lead single from Slide It In on 1 August 1983. [1] Its release coincided with Whitesnake headlining the Monsters of Rock festival at Castle Donington, England. [5] The B-side features the track "Gambler", also found on Slide It In. These are the only two officially released Whitesnake songs to be produced by Eddie ...
"Is This Love" is a song by the English hard rock band Whitesnake, released on 18 May 1987 in the UK as the second single from their self-titled album. The single was a hit for Whitesnake, reaching number nine in the UK Singles Chart , [ 4 ] and number two on the US Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, making it their second-biggest US hit after ...
Shortly after the album's release, Michele Luppi was enlisted as Whitesnake's new keyboardist. [37] Flesh & Blood followed in 2019. [38] In July 2021, Whitesnake recruited Dino Jelusick for their 2022 farewell tour, turning Whitesnake into a septet for the first time. [39] Later that November, Michael Devin parted ways with the band. [40]
Whitesnake's label tried pull the plug on the band's big video plans, and Tawny Kitaen almost wasn't the star. But 36 years and 360 million views later, those images are still among the most ...
David Coverdale revealed that the band did attempt to re-visit some of the older tracks in the Whitesnake discography, such as "Ain't Gonna Cry No More" (from Ready an' Willing), "We Wish You Well" (from Lovehunter), and "Burning Heart" (from Vandenberg's eponymous album). Given how the original "Fool for Your Loving" was given for, he commented: