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Motorhead were formed by
bassist Lemmy (Ian Kilmister) in
the mid seventies when he was
sacked from Hawkwind in 1975.
Joining him were drummer Lucas Fox
and ex-Pink Fairies guitarist
Larry Wallis and they were signed
to United Artists, but their debut
album, "On Parole", only saw the
light of day in 1980. Ex-Power of
Zeus/Continuous Performance
guitarist "Fast" Eddie Clark
replaced Wallis and "Philthy" Phil
Taylor, a friend of Lemmy's, who
had no previous musical
experience, replaced Fox. This
combination would last six or so
years in which time they became
the most famous trio in hard rock,
enjoying a number of hit singles.
Later additions/replacements
included Thin Lizzy's Brian
Robertson, Michael Burston (aka
Wurzel), Phil Campbell and ex-
Saxon drummer Pete Gill. Album
releases were very consistent and
ensure that the bands' popularity
remained sky high. In the late
eighties/early seventies, Lemmy
made his acting debut in the
"Comic Strip" movie," Eat the
Rich" and he has subsequently
featured in insurance adverts.
Motorhead have released in excess
of twenty albums to date.
Motorhead
Motorhead - The Chase is better
than the Catch , from "Ace of
Spades". Motorhead are the subject
of this week's Dino Quiz (number
207), and a copy of "The Best of
Motorhead", a great double CD set
complete with extensive notes, is
the giveaway prize. The band were
formed by ex-Sam Gopal's Dream and
ex-Hawkwind bassist (and sometime
guitarist) Ian Kilmister, aka
Lemmy, in 1975, after he'd been
sacked from Hawkwind after being
detained for five days at Canadian
customs on possession of drugs
charges. He decided to form
Motorhead, naming the band after
one of the last tracks he wrote
for Hawkwind, and recruited
ex-Pink Fairies guitarist Larry
Wallis and drummer Lucas Fox. They
made their debut supporting
Greenslade, of all bands, at
London's Roundhouse in July 1975
and they recorded the band's debut
album, ''On Parole", although the
album was only officially released
in 1980. Fox then left to join
Warsaw Pakt and was replaced by
"Philthy" Phil Taylor, a friend of
Lemmy's who had no previous
musical experience. Wallis left to
rejoin the Fairies and was
replaced by "Fast" Eddie Clarke,
previously of Power of Zeus. The
Lemmy/Clarke/Taylor trio would
last for six years until 1982, in
which time they became one of the
most famous trios in hard rock.
Clarke left in May 1982 and was
replaced by ex Wild Horses/Thin
Lizzy guitarist Brian Robertson,
who, in turn, was replaced by
Wurzel (Michael Burston). Saxon's
Pete Gill replaced Taylor and
remained with the band until 1987.
Motorhead had continued to record
and release albums that ensured
that their popularity, both as a
live act as well as a recording
act, remained constantly high. The
band are still around today and a
new studio album is due in the not
too distant future. Question: Who
was Motorhead's bassist, vocalist
and founder, previously with
Hawkwind?
(If you have more info on this
band, please
e-mail us)

Biography by Stephen Thomas
Erlewine
Motörhead's overwhelmingly loud
and fast style of heavy metal
was one of the most
groundbreaking styles the genre
had to offer in the late '70s.
Though the group's leader, Lemmy
Kilminster, had his roots in the
hard-rocking space rock band
Hawkwind, Motörhead didn't
bother with his old group's
progressive tendencies, choosing
to amplify the heavy biker rock
elements of Hawkwind with the
speed of punk rock. Motörhead
wasn't punk rock — they formed
before the Sex Pistols and they
loved the hell-for-leather
imagery of bikers too much to
conform with the safety-pinned,
ripped T-shirts of punk — but
they were the first metal band
to harness that energy and, in
the process, they created speed
metal and thrash metal. Unlike
many of their contemporaries,
Motörhead continued performing
into the next century. Although
the band changed its lineup
many, many times — Lemmy was its
only consistent member — they
never changed their raging
sound.
The son of a vicar, Lemmy
Kilmister (born Ian Fraiser
Kilmister; December 24, 1945)
first began playing rock & roll
in 1964, when he joined two
local Blackpool, England, R&B
bands, the Rainmakers and the
Motown Sect. Over the course of
the '60s, he played with a
number of bands — including the
Rockin' Vickers, Gopal's Dream,
and Opal Butterfly — as well as
briefly working as a roadie for
Jimi Hendrix. In 1971, he joined
the heavy prog rock band
Hawkwind as a bassist. Lemmy was
originally slated to stay with
the band only six months, yet he
stayed with the group for four
years. During that time, he
wrote and sung several songs
with the band, including their
signature song, the number three
U.K. hit "Silver Machine"
(1972).
Lemmy was kicked out of Hawkwind
in the spring of 1975, after he
spent five days in a Canadian
prison for drug possession. Once
he returned to England,
Kilminster set about forming a
new band. Originally, it was to
have been called "Bastard," but
he soon decided to call the band
Motörhead, named after the last
song he wrote for Hawkwind.
Lemmy drafted in Pink Fairies
guitarist Larry Wallis and
drummer Lucas Fox to round out
the lineup. Motörhead made its
debut supporting Greenslade in
July. Two months later, the
group headed into the studio to
make its debut album for United
Artists with producer Dave
Edmunds. Motörhead and Edmunds
clashed over the direction of
recording, resulting in the
group firing the producer and
replacing him with Fritz Fryer.
At the end of the year, Fox left
the band and Lemmy replaced him
with his friend, Philthy Animal
(born Philip Taylor), an amateur
musician.
Motörhead delivered its debut
album to UA early in 1976, but
the label rejected the album.
Shortly afterward, former Blue
Goose and Continuous Performance
guitarist "Fast" Eddie Clarke
joined the band. Following one
rehearsal as a four-piece,
Wallis left the band, leaving
Motörhead as a trio; this is the
lineup that would later be
recalled as the group's classic
period. However, the band spent
most of 1976 struggling,
performing without a contract or
manager and generating little
money. At the end of the year,
they cut a single, "White Line
Fever"/"Leavin' Here," for Stiff
Records which wasn't released
until two years later. By the
summer of 1977, the group had
signed a one-record contract
with Chiswick Records, releasing
their eponymous debut in June;
it peaked at number 43 on the
U.K. charts. A year later, the
band signed with Bronze Records.
Overkill, Motörhead's first
album for Bronze, was released
in the spring of 1979. The album
peaked at number 24, while its
title track became the band's
first Top 40 hit. Motörhead
continued to gain momentum, as
their concerts were selling well
and Bomber, the follow-up to
Overkill, reached number 12 upon
its fall release. The band was
doing so well that UA released
the rejected album at the end of
the year as On Parole. Ace of
Spades, released in the fall of
1980, became a number four hit,
while the single of the same
name reached number 15.
Ace of Spades became Motörhead's
first American album, yet the
group was making little headway
in the U.S., where they only
registered as a cult act. Back
in England, the situation could
hardly have been more different.
Motörhead was at the peak of its
popularity in 1981, releasing a
hit collaboration with the
all-female group Girlschool
entitled Headgirl and entering
the charts at number one with
their live album, No Sleep 'Til
Hammersmith. Though the group
was rising commercially, there
was tension within the band,
particularly between Clarke and
Lemmy. Clarke left the band
during the supporting tour for
1982's Iron Fist, reportedly
angered by Kilmister's planned
collaboration with Wendy O.
Williams. Former Thin Lizzy
guitarist Brian Robertson
replaced Clarke.
The new lineup released Another
Perfect Day in the summer of
1983. Another Perfect Day was a
disappointment, only reaching
number 20 in the U.K. Robertson
left two months later, being
replaced by two guitarists:
former Persian Risk member
Phillip Campbell and Wurzel
(born Michael Burston). Shortly
afterward, Taylor left to join
Robertson's band Operator, and
was replaced by former Saxon
drummer Pete Gill. This lineup
released a single, "Killed by
Death," in September of 1984,
but shortly afterward the group
left Bronze and the label filed
an injunction against the band.
As a result, Motörhead was
prevented from releasing any
recordings — including a bizarre
collaboration between Lemmy and
page-three girl Samantha Fox —
for two years.
Motörhead finally returned to
action in 1986, first with a
track on the charity compilation
Hear 'n Aid and later with the
Bill Laswell-produced
Orgasmatron, which was released
on their new label, GWR.
Orgasmatron was successful with
the band's still-dedicated cult
audience in England and America,
and received some of the group's
best reviews to date. The
following year, they released
Rock 'N' Roll, which was equally
successful. In 1988, the live No
Sleep at All appeared, and Lemmy
made his acting debut in the
comedy Eat the Rich. Two years
later, the band signed to WTG
and released The Birthday Party.
Taylor briefly rejoined the band
in 1991, appearing on that
year's 1916, before Mikkey Dee,
formerly of King Diamond, took
over on drums. Dee's first album
with the band was 1992's March
or Die, which didn't chart in
the U.S. yet played to their
U.K. cult following. WTG dropped
the band after the album's
release and the band started
their own label, appropriately
called Motörhead, which was
distributed through ZYX. Their
first album for the label was
1994's Bastards.
For the remainder of the '90s,
Motörhead concentrated on
touring more than recording.
Outside of the band, Lemmy
appeared in insurance
commercials in Britain. He also
acted in Hellraiser 3 and had a
cameo in the porno movie John
Wayne Bobbit Uncut. In 1997, the
group moved to the
metal-oriented indie label
Receiver and released Stone Dead
Forever; the live Everything
Louder Than Everyone Else
followed in 1999, and a year
later they returned with We Are
Motörhead. Hammered appeared in
2002 and was followed by 2004's
Inferno. In 2005 the Sanctuary
label reissued some of the
band's classic albums (Overkill,
Ace of Spades, and Iron Fist) in
two-CD deluxe editions. A
collection of all-new material,
Kiss of Death, arrived in 2006.

"Fast"
Eddie Clarke
Lucas Fox
Peter Gill
Lemmy
Brian Robertson
"Philthy Animal" Taylor
Larry Wallis
Würzel
Mikkey Dee
Philip Anthony Campbell

Saxon
Metallica
Judas Priest
Iron Maiden
Girlschool
Diamond Head
Voivod
UFO
Killing Joke
Vardis
Slayer
Queensrÿche
Pantera
Megadeth
Celtic Frost
Anthrax
Deliverance

If you
have any contribution to make to
this band or something to add,
email me - Japie Marais.


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