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View Full Version : For any Motörheadbangers out there in NMS land!



ELFMAN
29th December 2015, 10:24 PM
"Born to Lose - Live to Win"
Just wanted to post a wee tribute to one of my heroes who provided a whole heap of soundtrack to my (never-ending) youth, not to mention a healthy dose of attitude and a sense of remaining true to yourself and your beliefs in the face of all sorts of bullsh*t!

Ian "Lemmy" Kilmister of Motörhead, Hawkwind and lest we forget, The Rockin' Vicars, passed away yesterday, one of the last true rockers and without whom 'Heavy Metal' as we know it simply wouldn't exist. Lemmy seemed indestructible, he WAS the living embodiment of Rock & Roll. There was that old joke that after a nuclear war, the only living things left on earth would be cockroaches... and Lemmy! Well I guess it'll just be the 'roaches now.

He united many musical genres - Rock & Roll (he loved Little Richard and Jerry Lee Lewis), Rock, Psych and Punk etc - you'd see all sorts at a Motörhead gig - he was the General Sectretary of the United Nations of guitar-based music! He even roadied in the 60's for my main man Jimi Hendrix! A true icon, and in these days of ten minute 'celebrities', he's like Stonehenge. To quote from Motörhead's "Ace of Spades":

You know I'm born to lose,
and gambling's for fools,
But that's the way I like it baby,
I don't want to live forever..."

Well some of us thought he might just manage it!
Rest in Peace and Noise Lemmy!

maxibaby01
30th December 2015, 12:53 AM
Amen to that!

I was a meathead in the early 80's so The Hammersmith Odeon, Brixton Academy and Guildford Civic were fave haunts to see Lemmy, Phil, Eddie and all the other great bands around at the time!

He was a real pioneer of music, loved his influences from the Blues, R&B (not the cr*p that nowadays seems to have appropriated the name!), rockabilly etc.

Well-read and erudite and maligned by the fickle music press at the time. Great man.

Here's a pic of him with the Reverend Horton Heat as my tribute to anyone out there!


http://images.tapatalk-cdn.com/15/12/29/bddd884e33adc5ca9f8103578b467ea5.jpg


...end...

CiderFex
30th December 2015, 01:41 AM
I used to watch them at t'Sheff City Hall years ago. They used to come around nigh on every year.
My overriding memory of it all used to be the 3-4 days after the gig trying to get my hearing back !!
No Remorse was the first CD that I ever bought.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Blueboy
30th December 2015, 07:14 AM
Yep used to be a heavy metal fan back in the day and saw them on the Bomber tour at the Apollo in Glasgow, awesome band! Seen a load of bands in my time and certain ones stand out and they did! RIP sir

ELFMAN
30th December 2015, 01:29 PM
Yeah, cheers folks. My first 'proper' gig was Motörhead at the Glasgow Apollo in 1979. Talk about in at the deep end! I was 17 and was never the same again. The 'classic' line up of Lemmy, 'Fast Eddie' Clarke and Phil 'Philthy Animal' Taylor (who also sadly passed away recently at 61...). I must admit I didn't follow the band as much after that lineup changed, as that was 'my' era, but it was good to know they were still around and Lemmy and the 'new' guys were still rockin'.

In his later years Lemmy really did become the 'Elder Statesman' of rock, like a more dangerous BB King - another recent departure. Many of the later bands of different genres looked up to Lemmy, so his influence continues. He could be controversial - his penchant for German Militaria was often mistaken for him having extreme Right Wing tendencies - which was untrue as anybody who cared to look beyond the obvious would know, and he was a very clever man who had life fairly well sussed as you could tell from his interviews.

Time marches on, music 'evolves', but musical quality and personal integrity live forever. All I can say is the up there in 'Rock Valhalla' there must be the mother of all jams going on this week. I just hope they got enough Jack Daniels and Coke in for Lemmy!

kevs cooper s
30th December 2015, 02:46 PM
RIP lemmy you sir was a legend

Gez
30th December 2015, 11:06 PM
Yeah, cheers folks. My first 'proper' gig was Motörhead at the Glasgow Apollo in 1979. Talk about in at the deep end! I was 17 and was never the same again. The 'classic' line up of Lemmy, 'Fast Eddie' Clarke and Phil 'Philthy Animal' Taylor (who also sadly passed away recently at 61...). I must admit I didn't follow the band as much after that lineup changed, as that was 'my' era, but it was good to know they were still around and Lemmy and the 'new' guys were still rockin'.

In his later years Lemmy really did become the 'Elder Statesman' of rock, like a more dangerous BB King - another recent departure. Many of the later bands of different genres looked up to Lemmy, so his influence continues. He could be controversial - his penchant for German Militaria was often mistaken for him having extreme Right Wing tendencies - which was untrue as anybody who cared to look beyond the obvious would know, and he was a very clever man who had life fairly well sussed as you could tell from his interviews.

Time marches on, music 'evolves', but musical quality and personal integrity live forever. All I can say is the up there in 'Rock Valhalla' there must be the mother of all jams going on this week. I just hope they got enough Jack Daniels and Coke in for Lemmy!
http://images.tapatalk-cdn.com/15/12/30/d4ae5e3c2a5e3eff7f7ff0948ee07676.jpg

Sent from my SM-G925F using Tapatalk

ELFMAN
31st December 2015, 12:42 PM
Nice one Jamie! I still have all my old gig ticket stubs stashed away somewhere, including one like the above...

Wish I'd kept my combat jacket with all the patches and badges (Jimi Hendrix, Rush, Deep Purple, Pink Floyd, Black Sabbath etc...), took me ages to do the Motörhead logo on the back with "Wake the Dead with Motörhead" in 'Germanic' script. Work of art that jacket... Still not sure what happened to it, it probably grew legs and ran off!

I remember the bouncers at the Apollo used to 'confiscate' Bullet Belts (I never had one, but they were part of the Motörhead regalia) on the way in, often wondered if they had a wee cloakroom just for them, or whether they ended up at The Barras the following week? Ah, memories...

Blueboy
31st December 2015, 06:42 PM
Had a box full of old programmes from the late 70's and gutted to say that my mother had a clear out of the loft one day after I had left home and when I never responded to her requests to come and check what I wanted she turfed them out!! Ah well still got a box with some badges and my memories!

ELFMAN
4th January 2016, 04:45 PM
They can't take away your memories...
that just happens naturally!

Big Gordy
5th January 2016, 09:09 AM
Yeah, cheers folks. My first 'proper' gig was Motörhead at the Glasgow Apollo in 1979. Talk about in at the deep end! I was 17 and was never the same again. The 'classic' line up of Lemmy, 'Fast Eddie' Clarke and Phil 'Philthy Animal' Taylor (who also sadly passed away recently at 61...). I must admit I didn't follow the band as much after that lineup changed, as that was 'my' era

I was at that concert too Euan :smilewinkgrin: and like you that was my Motorhead line-up. I remember a documentary on him a few year ago where his son said he took him aside one day and said "look son, don't do cocain its not good for you....stick to speed its soooooo much better...!!!" What a guy.....he will be sorely missed.