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Slip of the Tongue

Whitesnake
Release Date: 08/08/2008
Original Release:  1989
# of Discs:   1
J&R Item # 1044380_VY
UPC # 075992424912
Label: Geffen Goldline
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$11.99
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Vinyl
 
Track Details Credits Reviews Artist Related Shipping
Disc: 1
1. Slip of the Tongue
2. Cheap an' Nasty
3. Fool For Your Loving
4. Now You're Gone
5. Kitten's Got Claws
6. Wings of the Storm
7. Deeper the Love, The
8. Judgement Day
9. Slow Poke Music
10. Sailing Ships

Performer: Whitesnake
Artist: Steve Vai
Producer: Mike Clink; Keith Olsen
Distributor: (Independently by Label)

Notes: Limited edition promo version of 1,000 copies comes in an envelope-like slipcase with a wax type seal. When it became known that Vivian Campbell had left Whitesnake and been replaced by six-string master Steve Vai in 1989, the rock world and guitar fans everywhere waited with bated breath for the new line-up's first album together. Vai was supposed to join forces with Whitesnake's other guitarist, Adrian Vandenberg, but a freak injury to Vandenberg's hands prior to the sessions meant that Vai handled all the guitar duties himself. While the album wasn't on par with such past releases as 1984's SLIDE IT IN and 1987's smash self-titled release, SLIP OF THE TONGUE was another hit--the band, and especially singer David Coverdale, was once again in fine Zeppelin-esque form. A re-recording of an earlier UK hit, "Fool For Your Loving," was an MTV favorite, while such raunchy rockers as the album-opening title track, "Cheap An' Nasty," and "Kittens Got Claws" fitted in well with the then-thriving party/glam metal climate. Once the world tour for SLIP OF THE TONGUE wrapped up, Coverdale would quietly retire Whitesnake.
Record Collector (magazine) (p.99) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[T]he opening title track has a looming atmosphere, effortless wails and guitar trickery..."
Former Deep Purple vocalist David Coverdale formed the hard-rock/metal outfit Whitesnake in 1978. While the band's macho rock sound and "what's-wrong-with-being-sexy?" sexist aesthetic garnered them a respectable amount of commercial success in the U.K. and Europe, the band didn't hit big in the U.S. until the release of their 1987 self-titled album. Anchored by the fist-pumping single "Here I Go Again," the album sold millions and forever solidified Whitesnake's place in hair-metal lore.
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PID # 4254410


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