Motley Crue - Discography- All Albums -mp3 320k... Here
Motley Crue rose from 1980s Los Angeles glam-metal to become one of rock’s most notorious and influential bands. Their discography traces a trajectory from raucous party anthems to darker, reflective work—each album capturing a distinct era of excess, conflict, reinvention, and redemption. Presented here as a curated listening sequence in high-quality MP3 320 kbps, this exposition guides a listener through the band’s major studio albums, highlighting key tracks, themes, and production notes to enhance appreciation.
The breakthrough. Pentagrams, leather, and stadium ambition.
Heavier than the debut, with producer Tom Werman adding polish without losing menace. This album turned them into satanic panic icons—though the band later admitted the imagery was pure marketing.
Essential 320kbps Tracks:
Note: The 1999 Remaster on iTunes Store (256kbps AAC – not MP3) is inferior. For true 320kbps MP3, buy from HDtracks (they offer MP3 320) or Bandcamp (official band page offers select Crüe titles).
Shout at the Devil (1983) — The band’s first major-label step: heavier guitars, more polished hooks, controversy-fueling imagery.
Theatre of Pain (1985) — Glam aesthetics peak: dramatic ballads and glossy production. Motley Crue - Discography- All Albums -Mp3 320k...
Girls, Girls, Girls (1987) — Ode to strip-club culture and sleaze-rock; tight grooves and bluesier riffs.
Dr. Feelgood (1989) — Commercial apex with tightened songwriting and slick production; themes of addiction and recovery.
Mötley Crüe (1994) — Rawer sound; darker lyrical themes reflecting internal turmoil. Motley Crue rose from 1980s Los Angeles glam-metal
Generation Swine (1997) — Experimentation with modern textures and satirical lyrics.
New Tattoo (2000) — Return to basics: harder rock focus and concise songwriting.
Saints of Los Angeles (2008) — Comeback album balancing nostalgia and contemporary rock. Note: The 1999 Remaster on iTunes Store (256kbps