emailEmail    printPrint

Restless Heart

Whitesnake
Release Date: 03/29/2005
Original Release:  1998
# of Discs:   1
J&R Item # 752963_CD
UPC # 724385680625
Label: EMI Music Distribution
Buying Info
 
Track Details Credits Artist Related Shipping
Disc: 1
1. Don't Fade Away
2. All in the Name of Love
3. Restless Heart
4. Too Many Tears
5. Crying
6. Stay With Me
7. Can't Go On
8. You're So Fine
9. Your Precious Love
10. Take Me Back Again
11. Woman Trouble Blues

Performer: Whitesnake
Distributor: MSI Music Distribution

Notes: Even though they were a global chart-topping, hit-making machine less than ten years prior, David Coverdale came up empty when he tried to find a U.S.-based record company to issue the group's 1997 release, Restless Heart (available Stateside only as an import). To Coverdale's credit, he did not attempt to give Whitesnake a modern-day makeover (which so many pop- metal bands of the late '80s did post-Nirvana, and failed miserably), as he follows in the same melodic rock mold of Whitesnake's previous two releases, 1987's Whitesnake and 1989's Slip of the Tongue. Unlike the late-'80s edition of Whitesnake (which included Steve Vai, Tommy Aldridge, etc.), the 1998 version is not a showcase for rock's most renowned hired guns. In addition to Coverdale, the only holdover from the group's previous album is guitarist Adrian Vandenberg, who FINALLY gets the chance to appear on a full-length Whitesnake recording (after several close calls on the aforementioned releases). Instead of walloping listeners over the skull with an album opening rocker, Coverdale kicks things off on a mellow note, with the bluesy ballad "Don't Fade Away," but harder-edged material soon follows, including the riff-rocking title track, and "Crying," which shows the singer's Zeppelin fixation remains. The times may have changed, but David Coverdale is content with his old sound -- and longtime Whitesnake fans will be pleased. ~ Greg Prato
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.
Click Here for Shipping Options and Policies

Shipping or Dimension weight in pounds: 0.25

PID # 4085946


Recent History

FOLLOW:
SHARE:
Zoom