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The Best Of includes 36 Motörhead tracks spanning the band's career from 1977 to 2000, including four previously unreleased live tracks recorded in 1981. It also includes three non-Motörhead tracks: Girlschool's cover version of Motörhead's "Bomber", a cover version of Johnny Kidd & The Pirates' "Please Don't Touch" performed by the Motörhead/Girlschool collaboration Headgirl, and Hawkwind ...
Motörhead's "White Line Fever" had been scheduled for release in December 1976, but the issue was cancelled. Wreckless Eric's "(I'd Go The) Whole Wide World" was issued as a single in August 1977. The album did not enter the UK charts.
The album contains the "classic" Motörhead line-up of Lemmy Kilmister on bass and vocals, "Fast" Eddie Clarke on lead guitar, and Philthy Animal Taylor on drums. The sleeve artwork featured the debut of Snaggletooth, the War-Pig , the fanged face logo created by artist Joe Petagno that would become an icon of the band.
White Line Fever is a 1975 Canadian-American action crime neo-noir film directed by Jonathan ... which is the subject of the film's theme song "Drifting and Dreaming ...
White line fever may refer to: Highway hypnosis, an altered mental state induced by driving great distances; White Line Fever, a 1975 American film "White Line Fever", a 1977 song by Motörhead from their debut album Motörhead; White Line Fever, an Australian-rules football show; White Line Fever, a 2002 autobiography by Lemmy
BBC Live & In-Session is a live album by the band Motörhead, released in 2005, which contains the band's appearances on the BBC Radio 1 program from 1978 to 1986 and a concert recording from the Paris Theatre, London in 1979. It is the second live album in North America and certain territories under Sanctuary Records and their subsidiary Metal-Is.
2007 version of "Motörhead" was on CD but used for the music rhythm game Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock which was released in 2007 (Motörhead DLC in 2008) ""Heroes"" was recorded during the band's 2015 Bad Magic album sessions and was one of the final songs recorded by the band before Lemmy died in 2015.
"Midnight at the Oasis" is a song by the American singer Maria Muldaur from her 1973 debut album, Maria Muldaur. Written by David Nichtern , it is her best-known recording. It peaked at #6 on the US Billboard Hot 100 the week of June 1, 1974, and #21 in the UK Singles Chart in 1974. [ 3 ]