Motörizer

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (135 ratings)
Motörizer album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 38:55

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Brilliant!

Bob242

Great, Fast, hard tracks

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Very good album

EMUSIC-00819A9F

After many listens over last few months, this has become one of my favourite Motorhead releases in the last 20 years. The songwriting is really strong, Lemmy's lyrics are amazing, and production is great. Fave songs are Runaround Man, Rock Out, Back on the Chain, and Thousand Names of God. the lyrics are so good throughout, only a vet like Lemmy could write lyrics in Back on the Chain and When the Eagle Screams

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Standard rock? Not their best...

Lost_Johnny

Whilst I've been very impressed b he last few albums, this one is a disappointment. OK, but too much like standard rock rather than Motorhead's distinctive sound.

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Punk Motor Psycho

Guitarrock

Brutal, fast, punkish this is the new Motorhead release....download or listen to Take That forever! Chukka agrees and scoops up some canapes....

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More Mighty Motorhead for the Fans

Motorheadfan

Mostly fast tracks on this release and no clunkers or slow balleds or anthems may satisfy or dissappoint depending on taste for Lemmy's brand of programming diversity. For me, 'Overnight Sensation' is the best of Motorhead's current power trio incarnation with the last two albums running a close second. 'Motorizer' mixes in well but doesn't quite provide the overall programming impact of those three and Phil is bit more laid back than I would prefer, but this Motorhead is far better than no Motorhead. If you hunger for Lemmy and the tight blast of Mikkey Dee's muscular drum kit, then this will quench your appetite and then some. Production and sound quality is among their best.

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They Say All Music Guide

Even if Motörhead had broken up around 1983 or 1984, they still would have gone down in history as one of the most influential metal outfits of all time. Motörhead, after all, was the first metal band to seriously incorporate punk; they wrote the book on thrash metal and speed metal in the late ’70s and early ’80s, paving the way for Slayer, Metallica, Venom, Megadeth, Testament, Anthrax, Death, Exodus, and countless others. But Motörhead, of course, didn’t break up in 1983 or 1984, and they were still cranking out quality albums in the late 2000s. Lemmy Kilmister (who turned 62 in 2007) shows no signs of slowing down on 2008′s Motorizer, which Cameron Webb produced at Dave Grohl’s 606 Studios in Los Angeles. Despite the fact that Webb has worked with a lot of alt rock and alt metal artists (including Limp Bizkit, Orgy, Godsmack, Buckcherry, Lit, Ben Folds, and Monster Magnet) and produced this 39-minute CD in a studio that is owned by a member of the Foo Fighters and ex-member of Nirvana, Motorizer makes no effort to be alternative-sounding. Instead, the classic Motörhead sound prevails, and forceful, in-your-face tracks such as “Buried Alive,” “Runaround Man,” “When the Eagle Screams,” and “Time Is Right” sound like they could have been recorded 25 years earlier. Motorizer never pretends to be groundbreaking, but if the material is predictable, it is engagingly predictable; Kilmister sounds inspired and focused throughout the album, and at 62, he has yet to overstay his welcome. Motorizer falls short of essential and isn’t quite in a class with Motörhead’s best late-’70s/early-’80s output, but this album is definitely respectable — and it is good to see this seminal thrash/speed trio still plugging away after so many years in metal’s trenches. – Alex Henderson

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