
đ Remembering Our Legend | Take A While And Say A Prayer For Lemmy Kilmister, Frontman of Motorhead Who Died 10-Years-Ago – His Memories Lives On!
Lemmy Kilmister, Frontman of Motorhead, Dies at 70
“We cannot begin to express our shock and sadness, there arenât words…. We will say more in the coming days, but for now, pleaseâŠplay Motörhead loud, play Hawkwind loud, play Lemmyâs music LOUD.”
Heavy metal icon and Motörhead frontman Ian Fraser âLemmyâ Kilmister died from cancer on Monday, the bandâs management has confirmed. He was 70.
Since founding Motörhead in 1975, Kilmister was the bandâs sole constant member, known for his powerful bass playing, gravelly vocals, his massive mutton chops and his seemingly indestructible constitution, which somehow weathered more than 50 years of hard living, hard touring, cigarettes, alcohol and amphetamines.
The bandâs longtime manager Todd Singerman praised Kilmister for mustering the energy to finish the Motörheadâs recent European tour, saying his passing has caught them all by surprise.
He said that neither Kilmister nor anyone on his team knew the rock star had cancer until just a few days ago.
Kilmisterâs health issues caused Motörhead to cancel or cut short several shows on the bandâs fall U.S. tour, citing âaltitude issuesâ at the time.
Kilmister was a diabetic and in 2013 suffered a hematoma.
Kilmister was famously gruff, quick with his fists and did not suffer fools lightly, but for every story of his badassedness, there were others of him taking the time to sign autographs, make sure his opening acts got decent time for their sets, or giving a thoughtful interviews to young rock writers (including this one, several times, many years ago).
âThere is no easy way to say thisâŠour mighty, noble friend Lemmy passed away today after a short battle with an extremely aggressive cancer,â Motörhead said in a statement posted to Facebook. âHe had learnt of the disease on December 26th, and was at home, sitting in front of his favorite video game from The Rainbow which had recently made itâs way down the street, with his family.â
The post continued, âWe cannot begin to express our shock and sadness, there arenât wordsâŠ. We will say more in the coming days, but for now, pleaseâŠplay Motörhead loud, play Hawkwind loud, play Lemmyâs music LOUD.â (Read the full statement below.)
Kilmister was born Dec. 24, 1945, in Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England.
He was bitten by the rock and roll bug at an early age, took up the guitar and later saw the Beatles play at the legendary Cavern Club in Liverpool.
He moved to London in the early 1960s and performed with several bands â the Rainmakers, the Motown Sect, Rockinâ Vicars and, during the psychedelic era, tabla player Sam Gopal â and worked as a roadie for Jimi Hendrix in 1967.
Asked what those gigs were like, Lemmy recalled with a laugh, âConfusing, because we were tripping off our faces on LSD all the time! But it was amazing, seeing Hendrix play every night.â He switched to bass to join legendary psych-rock outfit Hawkwind in 1972, and was with the band during its most fertile era.
His first work for the band was to record the vocals for âSilver Machine,â which went on to become a hit single in the U.K. and the groupâs defining song.
He enjoyed a three-year run with the group but was ejected in 1975 after being busted on tour for possession of cocaine (which turned out to be amphetamines).
He later said that heâd been kicked out of the LSD-centric group not for using drugs, but the wrong kinds of drugs. (Kilmisterâs pre-Motörhead career is neatly summarized in this 2014 article in TheRunout.)
After being ejected from Hawkwind, according to legend, Kilmister burst through the door of his flat and yelled to a friend, âIâm gonna form my own band and call it Bastard!â He later toned that down to Motorhead â ironically, the title of the last song he wrote for Hawkwind â slang for an amphetamine freak, and intended to recreate the vibe of the MC5, a band heâd worshiped.
After a halting start with original guitarist Larry Wallis and drummer Lucas Fox, the lineup gelled with guitarist âFast Eddieâ Clarke and drummer Phil âPhilthy Animalâ Taylor and issued its first single on Chiswick Records in 1977: a re-recorded version of âMotorheadâ backed with the bruising âCity Kids.â Both tracks featured the bandâs signature power riffs, thundering drums, overdriven bass and Lemmyâs inimitable sandpaper voice.
Arriving at the same time as punk, the group was one of the very few to be accepted by both camps â its members wearing leather jackets and battered jeans like punks but growing their hair long like metalheads.
The groupâs threadbare early days were vividly depicited by longtime friend and rock journalist Mick Farren in his 1977 book The Rock and Roll Circus â the chapter was called âThe Poverty Trailâ â but then a funny thing happened: Motörhead became successful.
The groupâs business stabilized with manager Doug Smith (who split with the group years later amid accusations of financial malfeasance) and Bronze Records, while its cover of âLouie Louieâ ushered in the bandâs classic 1979-81 era. Over that period, Overkill, Bomber, Ace of Spades and the live favorite No Sleep âTil Hammersmith (which not only reached No. 1 in the U.K. but provided the inspiration for the title of the Beastie Boysâ âNo Sleep Till Brooklynâ) came in rapid succession, coinciding with the rise of what was referred to as âThe New Wave of British Heavy Metal,â turning Motörhead into bona fide pop stars without compromising an iota of their brutally uncompromising sound.
But the reign was short-lived.
Iron Fist from 1982 was an uneven album and Clarke left the band shortly following. He was replaced by ex-Thin Lizzy guitarist Brian Robertson, who, if anything, was too virtuoso for the bandâs devoutly basic format. He didnât last long, and Motörhead were written off by many.
But after a long series of auditions, Robertson was replaced by two relatively unknown guitarists: WĂŒrzel (aka Michael Burston) and Phil Campbell. No sooner were they onboard than Taylor left, to be replaced by ex-Saxon drummer Pete Gill.
This lineup solidified over months of touring and went into the studio with a surprising producer: New York avant bassist Bill Laswell, whoâd worked extensively with artists like Laurie Anderson and his own group Material, but also worked with Public Image Ltd.
The resulting album, Orgasmatron, brought an enhanced sonic depth to the bandâs sound and ranks as one of their best efforts.
The groupâs resurgence coincided with the rise of thrash metal and itâs hard to think of a more prototypical band for that sound than Motörhead. Its influence was loudly trumpeted by thrash bands from Metallica on down and, as it had a decade earlier, the band caught a rising tide of metalâs popularity and were not only top-drawing headliners on their own.
Taylor rejoined the fold in 1987 and the group enjoyed a second golden age, signing for the first time with a major label â WTG/ Epic Records â for its 1991 album, 1916. Yet again, the Motörheadâs salad days were short-lived.
The band recorded its following LP, March or Die, in Los Angeles during the L.A. riots and Taylor was ejected from the band during the sessions.
Ex-King Diamond drummer Mikkey Dee came on board and, apart from WĂŒrzelâs departure in 1995, the bandâs lineup was to remain stable, through thick and thin, to the present day.
Over the past 20 years, Motörhead enjoyed a sort of Ramones-like living-legend status â indeed, 1916 features a tribute to the four-chord kings of Queens called âR.A.M.O.N.E.S.â â touring hard and releasing a succession of familiar if similar albums, with Lemmy propping up the bar at the Rainbow on the Sunset Strip when he wasnât on tour.
His long career and devil-may-care attitude are documented in the 2010 film Lemmy, produced and directed by Greg Oliver and former Billboard staffer Wes Orshoski.
Lemmy was aware of his legendary status without making a big deal out of it. âItâs really weird,â he told this writer in 1987. âGuys like Geddy Lee from Rush, who used to open for me but have gone on to be much bigger, still talk to me like [gives sheepish smile], âHi Lemmy!,â Itâs weird, but they remember they used to be my support band.â
Lemmyâs decades of hard living â he was rarely seen without a whiskey and a cigarette â began to catch up with him in recent years: he half-seriously said heâd switched from whiskey to vodka for health reasons. And indeed, mortality pops up frequently in the lyrics of Bad Magic, the bandâs 20th and most recent album.
Yet in âThunder and Lightning,â this larger-than-life figure â who, perhaps more than anyone, embodied the rock-and-roll ethos in all its awesomeness and excess, who somehow managed to live fast and die young at 70 â leaves a perfect epitaph for himself:
âLife on the road is not easy my friend / You canât remember you canât pretend / All of your dreams can really come true / All of your nightmares are waiting there too / I always wanted the dangerous life / I always wanted the outlaw delight ⊠I always wanted the screams in the night / I always wanted the noise and the light / Standing onstage, the thrill never fades.â
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