Performer: Motorhead Album: The Complete Best Of Label: Victor Entertainment. Made in Japan. Catalog #: VICP-62264 Style: Heavy Metal Year: 2003 Format: FLAC (image +.cue) Bitrate: lossless Covers: in archive Amount of tracks: 22 Size RAR: 722 mb Upload: Nitroflare.com Recovery: 3% Password: without a password Tracklist:-01. Bomber 3:43. HOCCULTA - 1988 - Back In The Dark Italy Heavy Metal Hard Rock s.a. JUDAS PRIEST IRON MAIDEN SAXON ACCEPT KILLER DIAMOND HEAD TYGERS OF PAN TANG MOTORHEAD THIN LIZZY.zip 97 MB 0.
Aug 03, 2013 13 Motorhead 14 Bomber Bonus Video: 15 Killed By Death It's hard to remember that a VCR was virtually a symbol of opulence way back in 1979 when Motorhead recorded these early promo-videos capturing the band miming live on stage to their best-known hits. 1994 (03) MOTORHEAD - Best Of Motorhead PT. 1993 (02) MOTORHEAD - Best Of Motorhead PT. 1990 (01) MOTORHEAD - Welcome To The Bear. Media for the Masses. Ok so here's a Motorhead discography password for all files is 'cejna' thts pretty much it, oh kod translates as link i think not tht it really matters anyway.
DESCARGA:
http://rapidshare.com/files/128489843/1977_-_Motorhead__LP_.rar
PASS:Gilford
Overkill-1979:
DESCARGA:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=EC8NCR0O
PASS:undiscoaldia.blogspot.com
Bomber-1979
DESCARGA:
http://rapidshare.com/files/54080012/Motorhead_-_Bomber_1979.rar
On parole-1979
DESCARGA:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=90TXME07
A dozen blasts of Thin Lizzy-righteous rock fireworks delivered at Sham 69 speed and coarseness, Motörhead’s most successful studio album sees Lemmy, Eddie, and Phil flicking off three-minute classics like ash from chain-smoked cigarettes. Eventual live standards “Jailbait,” “(We Are) The Roadcrew,” and “The Hammer” barely even stand apart out from similarly scorching deeper cuts “Shoot You in the Back,” “Live to Win,” and “Bite the Bullet.” But of course, the title track opener towers above all, one of the purest statements of rock and roll vitality ever spit out through clenched teeth, and a three-minute insurance policy against its accompanying album ever seeming even the slightest bit weathered by age. — ANDREW UNTERBERGER N%2b%2b mac torrent.
2. 1916 (1991)
Motörhead’s first album of the ‘90s gave us good reason to believe they had another decade like their ‘70s or ‘80s ahead of them. It was not to be, but what a last gasp of greatness: From the opening kick-drum cannonballs of “The One to Sing the Blues,” this is a legendary band un-muddying themselves the correct way, putting crunch and thunder and speed above all else without sacrificing clarity or dirt. But 1916 is also a hard rebuke to anyone who thinks you hear one Lemmy and Co. offering and you’ve heard them all. The quantum leap in production quality gives them new dimensions of power, and for detours there’s the (literally) heavenward chorus of “No Voices in the Sky,” the 90-second Ramones tribute “R.A.M.O.N.E.S.,” and the elegiac, synths-and-strings title closer, which has no parallel in the ‘Head’s catalog or any other rock’n’roller’s — the Chieftains could cover it. Lemmy was quick to obfuscate his maturation over his 40 years onstage. But you don’t get to that point without elevating your craft along the way, even if you’re the type who names an album Orgasmatron. — D.W.
Motorhead Songs List
1. No Sleep ‘Til Hammersmith (1981)
Motorhead The Very Best Of Rar
What does Motörhead need the studio for anyway? These guys weren’t exactly making “Tomorrow Never Knows,” and the military-battalion drums, vertebrae-loosening bass and gasoline-leaking vocals all sound best pushed into the red as one-take slop anyway. Their first live double has “Ace of Spades,” “Stay Clean,” “Overkill,” “(We Are) the Road Crew” and the battering-ram debut “Motörhead,” all meaner and uglier when sweating into each other’s eyeballs than when tracked individually in studio chairs. No Sleep ‘Til Hammersmith is a de facto late-‘70s best-of, covered in unwashed tour-body slime. How Lemmy would have wanted. — D.W.