To celebrate the 40th anniversary of the mighty No Remorse we’re proud to announce a new redux version of this classic, Motörhead compilation entitled Remorse? No! This release features previously unreleased demos, rarities and tracks on vinyl for the first time from the bands history up until 1984.
With initial copies sold in handsome black leather sleeve, No Remorse arrived in September 1984 as Motörhead’s first retrospective compilation and last for Bronze Records after six career-arcing years.
To celebrate the 40th anniversary of the mighty No Remorse we’re proud to announce a new redux version of this classic, Motörhead compilation entitled Remorse? No! This release features previously unreleased demos, rarities and tracks on vinyl for the first time from the bands history up until 1984.
With initial copies sold in handsome black leather sleeve, No Remorse arrived in September 1984 as Motörhead’s first retrospective compilation and last for Bronze Records after six career-arcing years.
To celebrate the 40th anniversary of the mighty No Remorse we’re proud to announce a new redux version of this classic, Motörhead compilation entitled Remorse? No! This release features previously unreleased demos, rarities and tracks on vinyl for the first time from the bands history up until 1984.
With initial copies sold in handsome black leather sleeve, No Remorse arrived in September 1984 as Motörhead’s first retrospective compilation and last for Bronze Records after six career-arcing years.
There have been dozens and dozens of Motörhead compilations released over the decades, but the first one remains definitive, even if it's not perfect. Released in 1984 as a gap-filler – for Motörhead were regrouping in the wake of the bandmember shuffling that followed the odd Another Perfect Day album – No Remorse compiled two-dozen songs across two discs (latter-day editions adding a good serving of bonus tracks, too)…
This particular Best of Motörhead release is a double-disc set on the Sanctuary subsidiary Metal-Is, and it's one of the very, very few Motörhead collections that tries to draw material from throughout the band's career. The compilers couldn't secure the rights to everything, and as such, there's nothing here from albums like 1916 or Bastards. But there are tracks from the later Overnight Sensation, Snake Bite Love, and We Are Motörhead albums, plus four bonus live tracks dating from various points in the group's career…
Although it isn't as extensive as No Remorse, All the Aces: The Best of Motörhead does gather the best-of-the-best of that collection, as well as the cream of the uneven, Bill Laswell-produced Orgasmatron (although the "Ace of Spades" remix that closes the original track listing could have been left off in favor of another, more necessary item). There's plenty of quality material from Motörhead's early-'80s heyday that didn't make the cut here, so it's better to think of All the Aces as a concise survey rather than a definitive encapsulation…
Hammered is the 16th studio album by the band Motörhead, released 9 April 2002, on Steamhammer, their sixth with the label and beating the Bronze Records era total of original full-length album releases…