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Ultimate Classic Rock

How Motorhead Began Their Climb With ‘Bomber’

Bombs once again rained down on London on Oct. 27, 1979. Thankfully, these weren't dropped by the fearsome Luftwaffe of WWII nightmares, but by the three, long-haired and wild-eyed hooligans behind Motorhead , who were armed with their third studio album, Bomber .

Barely six months had passed since Motorhead unveiled their powerful sophomore album, Overkill , which put the hard-rocking trio on a career fast-track that reflected the accelerated tempos driving most of their tunes. This was in stark contrast to the three or four years leading up to 1979, when events had moved at a snail’s pace for the band, almost stalling outright at one time or another.

Indeed, since 1975, Motorhead leader Ian ‘Lemmy’ Kilmister had been fighting to establish his post- Hawkwind musical enterprise: first dispensing with original Motorhead-bangers Larry Wallis and Lucas Fox so guitarist "Fast" Eddie Clarke and drummer Phil "Philthy Animal" Taylor could share in his fledgling band’s ignominious existence, characterized by playing poorly attended pub gigs, living in squats, and generally starving for their art.

Still, despite these persistent hardships, Motorhead still managed to survive long enough to put out their eponymous debut. After Overkill 's solid showing, Lemmy, Eddie and Philthy's collective confidence had been battle-tested to such a point that not even critics who proclaimed them the worst band in the world could stop Motorhead from reaching No. 12 in the U.K. with Bomber .

The record packed just as much musical ammunition as its predecessor. Foremost was its high-flying title track, which quickly soared into the U.K. Top 40 and became a concert staple in the years ahead. But in order to sample the album closer's rewards, fans had to navigate an aerial battlefield filled with certified Motorhead favorites like "Sharpshooter," "Poison" and "Stone Dead Forever."

More intriguing still, not all of Bomber ’s tunes flew by at their trademark breathtaking pace. It offers more slow-paced numbers than almost any other LP they've done since, including fierce and threatening grinds like "Lawman," the spine-chilling "Sweet Revenge" and "Step Down," which features a rare lead vocal by Clarke.

What listeners couldn’t guess based on these winning results is that Bomber ’s rushed recording sessions had been fraught with challenges, ranging from mounting pressure to follow up Overkill  with producer Jimmy Miller (famous for his work with the  Rolling Stones ), whose struggles with heroin addiction rendered him unreliable and often unavailable (his problems inspired album opener "Dead Men Tell No Tales").

Motorhead still turned in Bomber  with a blend of expediency and excitement that would become their hallmark, and the next few years would see their once-endangered career undertake a full-throttle ascent to the rarefied heights of 1980’s inimitable Ace of Spades , and the U.K. No. 1 live album, No Sleep ’til Hammersmith .

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  • Published 29 December 2015

Kiss frontman Gene Simmons hugging Lemmy

Kiss frontman Gene Simmons hugging Lemmy

Lemmy, the lead singer of the heavy metal band Motorhead, has passed away, only days after finding out he had an aggressive form of cancer. Ian Fraser Lemmy Kilmister was diagnosed on Boxing Day.

Gene Simmons, lead singer of American hard rock band Kiss tweeted the above photo. , external

Motorhead's offficial Facebook page , external announced his death and encouraged people to post their condolences:

Facebook post announcing the death of Lemmy

And the tributes have been coming in thick and fast both to BBC News and on social media.

# Lemmy , external and #RIPLemmy , external have become top trends in countries including Russia, Venezuela, Sweden and the United Arab Emirates.

Musicians have been sharing their grief on Twitter. Here's Queen guitarist Brian May , external 's post:

Queen guitarist Brian May tweets: 'Sitting here, Re-tweeting, distracted, and wondering what I can possibly say about our utterly unique friend Lemmy's passing. ouch. Bri'

The rock band Metallica , external :

Heavy metal band Metallica tweet: 'Lemmy, you are one of the primary reasons this band exists. We're forever grateful for all of your inspiration. RIP'

Duff McKagan , external , Guns N' Roses bassist:

Duff MKagan tweets: 'Rest in Peace Lemmy. A hell of a man who suffered no fools. U shall be missed brother and THANK u 4 the years of unwavering kick ass R&R'

And away from the celebrity world of rock, Motorhead fans have been sharing their memories of the man and his music:

"The first time I heard ace of spades when I was 15, I was hooked on the unique sound and shear power of Lemmy!"

Michael Kay in London, UK emails: I saw Motorhead in Toronto in 1982 at the Masonic Temple where the entire band came out and signed autographs with the freezing cold fans waiting in line to get in. It was an incredible moment; no other rock band would have ever done such a thing and they were just nice guys who really appreciated the fans. In 2010 I saw them in London. They just about melted the Hammersmith Apollo down with the heat of their music. What a legendary band; we all feel a huge loss for Phil and especially Lemmy.

Caroline Coxton in Buxted, East Sussex, UK: In 2003, I was the education consultant for the Commonwealth War Graves Commission and produced a DVD for schools about a young boy who died on the Somme. Lemmy graciously gave me permission to use his song 1916 as part of the soundtrack - no royalties required. It's the most tender and moving song and shows a different side to a heavy metal giant. Hardly anyone believed the song was by Motorhead! Such a gent. RIP Lemmy.

Ian Black, who got in touch with BBC News via Whatsapp , remembers being in the right place at the right time at one of their gigs:

"He threw a bass guitar to me..."

And Jacquie Hahn shared her treasured photograph of her family and Lemmy:

Lemmy poses with Mr Hahn and his daughter, with her arm in plaster (which he signed)

Jacquie said: My husband took our daughter to her first Motorhead concert a few years ago. Unfortunately she broke her arm a few days before, but this did get her and her dad - a Motorhead devotee of many years - backstage to have her cast signed by the man himself. He also gave her a couple of girly Motorhead t-shirts for her and her sister. Duff McKagan signed that cast too, and it's a treasured thing.

Zed and Bruce Ryland in Bristol, UK emails: We met Lemmy in his local bar the Rainbow in LA. He was such a gent. He made time to speak to us even though we interrupted his Space Raiders game. Lemmy was by far one of the nicest blokes you could meet, unspoilt by his fame and never forgot his fans. RIP Lemmy. Rock the heavens man.

Some are incredulous , external at those who have not heard of Lemmy:

@AllTimeChipmunk tweets: 'How can you have lived through the 80s and not know who the legend Lemmy was???

Dawn Wilson in Bradford, UK emails: I met Lemmy when he was playing in Bradford around 10 years ago. He came into the casino I worked in. He let us take photos of him with us, I even got to wear his famous hat. He was so friendly and down to earth, what a great guy. Going to be sadly missed.

Jem Matthews in Stithians, Cornwall, UK: I met Lemmy twice when the band were in Oxford on tour. He had that "wildman" tag but was always a true gent and he always had time for a chat if you happened to bump into him. My last meeting with him was in a record store on Little Clarendon Street in Oxford where all three of the original line up were signing copies of the Ace of Spades album. Again he had time for a chat. Lemmy you were a thoroughly decent bloke.

Dylan Chamberlain: Lemmy would often be at the Marquee club on a Friday night at the old Wardour Street (London) venue. He would always chat and talk about the music scene providing you supplied a JD and coke. A real loss, but, a genuine rock star and the only one that was truly accessible to his fans and that is not something that can be labelled to many. RIP Lemmy.

Leopold Aries , a dedicated fan in Paris, has Motorhead permanently on his back:

A Motorhead tattoo on the back of Leopald Aries

At Hellfest Festival in Clisson, France

Leopold said: I saw Motorhead twice. Each time it was really powerful. Lemmy live was AWESOME. He was a real Metal God! Age has no importance. Motorhead played better than many young bands. The whole Metal family lost his father last night. RIP.

Marcus in Welwyn Garden City, UK: What a legend. I met him in a pub 26 years ago and asked if I could sit and chat. "You can do what you like son as long as you buy me a drink", he said. Five JD and cokes later I left on top of the world. Still tell the story to this very day. What a gentleman.

Andy Smith in Brisbane, Australia emails: When I saw Motorhead for the Bomber tour I was deaf for two days. My favourite tune is still Ace of Spades. I pop it on to liven parties up.

Simon Longmore, West Midlands, UK: We truly have lost a rock legend, Lemmy was a true inspiration. RIP Rock god.

Hugh Webb: Motorhead bomber tour Hammersmith Odeon 1979, nuff said.

And illustrator Steve Beaumont, from Leeds, UK, sent his rock farewell:

Hand covered in ink making the rock sign with little finger and pointer finger in air

Compiled by Sherie Ryder

More on this story

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Smashed Hits: Ace of Spades

Lemmy, real name Ian Fraser Kilmister, performs with Motorhead at the Great Hall in Cardiff, Wales, UK in 2005

“The best advice anybody’s given me? Don’t die ashamed”: An epic interview with Lemmy about fame, Bob Dylan and driving on LSD

Even nine years after his death, Motörhead frontman Lemmy remains one of rock’s greatest and funniest icons

Motorhead frontman Lemmy posing for a photo in 2013

Almost nine years after his death, Lemmy remains one of rock’s greatest icons – and one of the all-time great interviewees. In 2013, as Motörhead prepared to release their 21st album, Afterlife, he sat down for an epic chat that covered everything from driving on LSD while wearing fly glasses to the merits of The Beatles vs the Rolling Stones.

In the dimly lit control room of Paramount Studios in Hollywood, California, sits a man dressed in black, his black cowboy hat nodding to music that cranks from several speakers. 

He has a drink in each hand – red wine in one, Jack and Coke in the other, the Jack apparently to disguise the taste of the wine. Some of the vast array of buttons and dials on the mixing desk move about on their own as if dancing to the music, and the man leans forward and turns the volume up. Somewhere in California, seismologists exchange worried glances. Motörhead have a new album.

The man in question is, of course, Lemmy – vocalist, bassist and living legend – and the rumours of his demise have clearly been greatly exaggerated. True, he’s slowed down, finally showing signs of age. But it’s easy to believe that the silver-tipped cane he now carries is as much for show as to assist his walking. And there’s a 50/50 chance it was made in Germany and has a dagger inside.

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Motörhead has been your life for almost 40 years now.

Yeah. I am Motörhead all the time. When you work in a factory you get to clock out, but I don’t. I’m Motörhead 24 hours a day, so I think like that. I think Motörhead. That’s all I am to a very large extent. I know intellectually that there was a time when I wasn’t in Motörhead, but I can’t actually remember what it felt like.

You’ve led Motörhead through good times and bad. What are the challenges of being the band’s leader?

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The challenge is for us to all be in the same place at the same time, and I’m as much to blame as those other two cunts, Phil [Campbell, guitarist] and Mikkey [Dee, drums]. We have keepers and minders who whip the herd into line. But half the time we have to fetch them along.

How would you describe your leadership style?

Absentee landlord. You can get away with anything with me as long as it doesn’t hurt the band or the performance. I don’t care what you do otherwise. Your private life is your private life, and if you choose to make it public, then it’s your public life. 

You’re not a strict disciplinarian, then?

If you’re not pulling your weight then you’ve got to go, but apart from that I’m really sloppy. You’ve got to have somebody to blame, basically. That’s why I never ride on the crew bus, because the crew need to bitch about the band, and I know that because I was in a crew, or several crews. You don’t want the band with you in the bus because you have to let go about the band, especially if they’re all cunts. I flatter myself that I’m not. Because I was in a crew I tend to be more sympathetic to the crew than to the band.

When you were in Hawkwind in the early 70s, Dave Brock called the shots. What did you learn about leadership from him?

Oh, very little! I could have learned to be incredibly self-centred, but I didn’t. Brock wrote everything – he wouldn’t let anybody put anything else out. It took me three albums before I could get The Watcher on an album, and that’s only because he ran out of ideas.

Lemmy with Hawkwind in 1974

What was the weirdest thing that happened in your time with Hawkwind?

The weirdest gig was us and The Sweet and Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band. The Sweet went on first, then Bonzos, then us. I always thought it should have been the other way around because I wanted to get back and fuck this bird. But the Bonzos were great, all flying helmets and goggles and all that shit. 

When Motörhead started out, you were branded ‘The Worst Band In The World’. But you’ve won a Grammy and you’re a hugely respected band, idolised by the likes of Metallica. Do you still feel like outsiders?

No. It’s difficult to feel like an outsider when you’re accepted by everybody. I tried. We’re outsiders as far as the industry’s concerned because even when they gave us a Grammy, they still managed to put the knife in because it was for a cover of somebody else’s song. They still managed to not give us a Grammy really, and that was only a mercy fuck because it was our thirtieth year.

Is the music business run by people who know nothing about music?

You wouldn’t believe the shit I’ve seen from record companies. These people talk nonsense all day. If we did our gig like they do their office work, nothing would ever happen. And it’s nonsense, all of it! Moving units. You wouldn’t believe the amount of time they spend talking about that and the target group. It’s just crap. In the old days you’d have one national chart and you had to get in that one because it was the only one that mattered. We got number one and about three or four down from us was the Bee Gees and it didn’t matter – that was what was important because you’d made it through everyone. How can you have a heavy metal chart? You’re preaching to the converted anyway. Country chart, what the fuck does that mean?

You’re one of the most famous rock stars in the world. Can you ever go out without being recognised?

Yes! In the dark, with a mask on! That comes with the gig, doesn’t it? If you try to be famous all your life, don’t bitch when you are! That ain’t right. Especially when people ask for an autograph. You tried to be that person that people would ask for an autograph, so give it to them! Get a grip on who you are. You’re that guy who wanted to be famous – desperate for it, right? You went though all that terrible stage fright and poverty and now you can’t sign an autograph? Fuck you!

Have you ever refused to give an autograph?

There was one guy once in the parking lot of wherever the fuck we were, Newcastle or somewhere up north. He came up to the bus and banged on the door and said, “Can you bring the band out? I want them to sign my albums. I bought all their albums and I want them to sign them all now because it’s cold out here.” He wasn’t understanding how it works. Politeness is the key. You ask, you don’t tell. The worst thing you can ever do with Motörhead is tell us to do something because then we’ll never do it. One of them certainly won’t do it and the other two will follow along for an easy life. People like that think they own you because they bought two albums. I like people with a bit of respect and humility and generally I’ll sign anything, I don’t mind.

Motörhead – Overkill (Official Video) - YouTube

Is it weird that people freak out when they meet you?

It’s weird to me, but it’s not to them because they’re impressed. I’m not impressed by me. Never was much. I always wanted to be better looking. People go, “Oh wow, Lemmy, you’re God!” And I go, “No, God’s taller, much taller.”

How have you managed to keep your feet on the ground?

I could always bring myself back down. There are lessons to be learned from both ends of that. On stage you couldn’t see who was in Hawkwind because it was about the light show, so we weren’t the heroes to look at; we weren’t spotted in the street. We got famous as a band and we got a lot of money to play with when we did the Space Ritual tour. That was a fucking great band, standing there out of your mind on whatever… People would hand you shit out of the crowd and we were so wrecked. We used to drive out to this abandoned mansion in Virginia Water, these huge, overgrown gardens, and we’d drive out there and drop acid. Those were some of the best times. I drove a van up to Marshall’s in Bletchley, tripped out of my skull, with a pair of those fly-eyes glasses on. There was eight of everything, so I just went for the middle one.

Do people always feel they have to keep up with you when you’re out socialising?

Yeah, they do. More people used to.

Has anyone ever drunk you under the table?

No, but there’s been a couple of chicks who’ve come close. They can drink more than we can! But then I used to get wailed and you couldn’t see any difference in me.

Who has failed the most miserably to keep up with you on a night out?

Well, it wasn’t you, Mörat. There were a lot of people worse than you! You failed to remember that you’d kept up!

Motörhead will always be remembered for Ace Of Spades. What other songs should you be remembered for?

I like a lot of our songs because I write them. I don’t know which ones are really worth remembering. I think Sacrifice is great and I really like In The Black on Inferno . But Ace Of Spades was one of those obvious instant ones, the most obvious instant one we ever wrote, and that’s why people latched onto it. We didn’t get to number one with it, but the album did very well because we were on a roll with Overkill and Bomber and then Ace Of Spades . And then No Sleep ’Til Hammersmith went straight in at number one and we couldn’t follow it. Iron Fist was fucking miserable. There’s three or four good songs on there, but those last two numbers are terrible.

When things got bad for Motörhead in the 90s, did you ever consider giving up?

No, because if you give up then you’ve definitely got fuck all. You have to start all over again from scratch and I never fancied that much. I’d done it three or four times and I didn’t want to start again at the Bricklayer’s Arms… or the Bricklayer’s Feet for that matter. I went through all the forming a band and sitting in the back of a truck about five times, but I believed in myself because I knew I didn’t play bass like anybody else. I knew no one was copying me, either! And the band had a unique sound.

Motorhead sitting on a park bench in 2013

Phil Campbell has been your right-hand man in Motörhead for a long time.

Twenty-nine years now. I’ve seen more of him than his wife has!

Phil seems like an idiosyncratic fellow. What’s he really like?

It’s true, he is very idiosyncratic. I’ve never figured him out. You know how he got the job with Motörhead? He came to the audition with three different kinds of speed!

You auditioned two guitarists that day in 1983 – Phil and Würzel – and both of them ended up in the band.

Yeah, Phil and Würzel  were supposed to shoot it out, to see who was gonna be the one. And that was the day that [drummer] Phil Taylor left the band, so there was only me in Motörhead for about four hours. I went to the studio and said, “I’m just gonna be ten minutes,” and I went to the pub. When I came back, Phil and Würzel  were already going, “Well, if you play this solo then I can play this one,” already talking as a band. I was very impressed so I hired both of them.

You’ve talked about Little Richard being the greatest rock’n’roll singer of all time.

He was the greatest rock vocalist ever, there’s no doubt. The Beatles are close, and the Everly Brothers, and all kinds of other people are close, but nobody comes within fifty yards of Little Richard . He just took a song and ran away with it, and he was so joyful – he was full of good meaning and good intentions. I didn’t find out he was gay for years. You saw these pictures with the pencil moustache and the pancake make-up, but in those days you didn’t think about stuff like that. He was just this real exotic creature from America, that land past Mars where people go when they’re really rich and can afford to go on a plane. I never thought I’d go to America.

Have you ever met Little Richard?

No, unfortunately. But he’s rubbish now. We played this festival with The Head Cat [Lemmy’s occasional rockabilly band] and Little Richard was playing. I was really excited to see him, but he came on stage, played a verse of Good Golly Miss Molly , then stopped and started handing out Bibles and telling his life story. This is not what I had come to hear, so I had to exit stage left rather smartly. It was terrible! He was funny in his early interviews though, like, “I am the prettiest thing you’ve ever seen; wherever you’re going I’ve been and I’m back!” He was just fucking great. The king and the queen of rock’n’roll.

You’re a huge fan of The Beatles. Do you have a favourite Beatles album?

Oh, I like all of them except for Yellow Submarine . And even that’s alright.

Back in the 60s it was always The Beatles versus the Stones. Whose side were you on?

I didn’t care, I liked both of them. If push came to shove and I had to choose one, then it would be The Beatles, but I liked the Stones too. That first album was fantastic! The Beatles were more melodic and they had harmonies. The Stones didn’t have any harmonies, and I always loved harmonies because of The Everly Brothers.

MOTÖRHEAD - Heartbreaker (Official Video) - YouTube

You always said that The Beatles were the real bad boys, too.

Well, the Stones were from the London suburbs and The Beatles were from Liverpool. Liverpool’s rough, and that’s what made the music so great. All these people came back from America on the merchant ships and brought the records with them, and all the bands did the same 20 songs! But the Stones were great and I won’t hear nothing against the Stones.

Apart from charging hundreds of quid for a ticket on their latest tour?

Yes, well, that’s Jagger isn’t it? Of course it’s outrageous, but the Stones are a corporate company. That’s something Motörhead will never do. There is Motörhead Inc., but I don’t know anything about it. I don’t know if we’ve got an office or where it is if we have. I’ve never been to our office, I don’t know where it is, couldn’t find it on a map. But I don’t need to. My job isn’t being in an office and I didn’t sign up to this gig to be in a meeting. I’m here to play bass and sing and that’s what I do.

It’s well known that you were a roadie for Jimi Hendrix in the late 60s. Did Hendrix have a special aura about him?

Kind of, yeah. He was a wild man and chicks would go nuts for him. The aristocracy in England wanted to fuck Jimi Hendrix , and half of them were guys! Hendrix was incredibly sexually magnetic on stage. He had a body like a snake, and you knew that he knew what he was doing. And it wasn’t offensive with him, it’s just like, “That’s what I do.” Backstage it was like, take a number and wait! I saw him take three chicks into a hotel room and they all came out smiling.

Some people only have that charisma on stage.

Oh, Hendrix was worse off stage! He didn’t have a guitar to get in the way! But then he took a guitar everywhere with him. He took it in the toilet, took it everywhere. He was a great guy as far as I knew him and I met him a couple of times. I sold him acid or went to get acid for him.

Who do you admire as a lyricist? Bob Dylan? John Lennon? 

I did like Bob Dylan , I thought he was great, but he was a great con man! He strung a lot of nonsense together and made it seem like it was really important. Masters Of War was my favourite because that was straight down the line, right in the bollocks, but stuff like Bob Dylan’s 115th Dream , about going to America with Columbus, that’s just nonsense! But the Eagles wrote good lyrics. Some of their songs are fantastic, like Take It To The Limit and New Kid In Town . They’re all very evocative of the West as it never was, but it’s a nice vision.

What lyric of yours are you most proud of?

I’m proud of quite a lot of them now. They used to be pretty duff, beginner’s stuff. The first really good one I did was Orgasmatron , with really big words like ‘obsequious’!

Lemmy onstage at Download 2013

Did you get the title ‘Orgasmatron’ from the Woody Allen movie Sleeper?

No – I didn’t even know about that movie then. There was an orgasmatron in the movie Barbarella too, somebody told me. I mean, I saw the movie but it didn’t register. I was too busy looking at Jane Fonda’s tits. I didn’t care what the machine was called!

How do you approach writing lyrics?

I don’t want to pass on bad messages, you know? I always thought Slayer made a mistake with Raining Blood . We became good friends on that tour and I remember saying to their singer, Tom Araya, “You realise there’s people in the audience who think you mean that? They think you wanna see blood.” Then the next night half a chair came past his head and he’s lost it, like, “How dare you?” You should be careful what you say in songs because people ain’t there when you write it and they don’t know what you meant.

So what are you saying in the lyrics on Motörhead’s new album?

There’s one song, Queen Of The Damned , that’s a fairly straight story. It’s about a guy and one of his ex-birds is gonna kill him! But you can’t tell from the lyrics what most of the songs are about. And you should never analyse rock’n’roll. As soon as you analyse it, the deeper you get, the less it means. You should just get that fire up your spine from hearing it. You shouldn’t have debates about it. Fuck me, when Bob Dylan first came out he wrote a load of nonsense, complete balderdash! It was good balderdash, but it was still balderdash, and everyone used to go, “Oh, so deep!” And Hendrix used to go on stage and mumble and they’d all go, “Yes! The messiah!” 

Have your songs ever been misinterpreted?

It’s really weird what people pick up. I got a letter about 20 years ago from this guy that said, “I realise from your lyrics that you’re a man who believes in the future of the white race,” and he sent me all this literature, all this neo-Nazi bullshit. I just tore it up and threw it away – it was just too wrong to talk about! But it’s like the Bible – you can read anything into it, you can make it mean anything.

You wrote the lyrics for Ozzy Osbourne’s song Mama, I’m Coming Home , and Ozzy said that what you’d written in that song was part of his own life story. Where did that come from?

I just wrote a song. He sent me a tape of the song with where he wanted the lyrics, and I think he gave me the title, but that was it. I’m good at that because that’s how I write our songs – I come up with a title and then write the song around it. Later, Ozzy and me were doing interviews in the same tent at this festival and this guy says, “The song Mama I’m Coming Home is the most personal thing you have written. Was it a big wrench?” And Ozzy just goes, “He wrote it!”

Hellraiser (30th Anniversary Edition - Official Animated Video) - YouTube

You also earned a lot of money writing for Ozzy.

I had a good time writing songs for him because when I came to America I was broke, I had nothing in the bank. Sharon Osbourne said, “Do you want to write four songs?” and they gave me this lump sum that was more money than I’d ever seen in my life! More money than I’d ever earned with Hawkwind and Motörhead, even when we were number one. I never got royalties, but that was alright with me. I’ve written a few more since, for him. I wrote Desire and I Don’t Want To Change The World , and on Ozzmosis I wrote My Little Man , which is very personal. I did write one about Randy Rhoads [Ozzy’s former guitarist, who died in 1982], but it bothered Ozzy because he got too deep into it. I’m good at putting myself in other people’s head, y’know?

Writing lyrics for Motörhead, you’ve always been drawn to the darkest subjects, such as war.

I can imagine why people do almost anything, wrong or right. I can imagine why people were in the SS and what it was like the first time they found out they had to kill people. Some of them liked the idea and some must have been horrified, but they still had to do it. That’s why I don’t feel bad about collecting all the Nazi stuff, because I know I’m the furthest thing you’d ever find from a Nazi. I’d never have gone for that, except maybe the uniforms! But I wouldn’t do that, couldn’t do that. I would desert.

You’re well-read on history. Which books, historical or otherwise, have made the biggest impression on you?

A couple of them are fiction, actually. Bomber by Len Deighton, and also Winter by Len Deighton, which tells the story of two brothers from Berlin. One became a lawyer for the SS and stayed there, and the other one moved to America. Bomber inspired me to write the song. That’s a great fucking book! There’s been a lot of good books about Hitler, and a lot of really bad ones, and the thing you get out of all of them is that nobody knew why he did it and they all think he’s a cunt. The only guy in the Nazi hierarchy I had any respect for was Goering because he was the only one at the Nuremberg Trials who stood up and said, “It was me! I did it and I’d do it again!” Everybody else hid behind the dead Führer and said they were following orders, but Goering said he did it. He knew they were going to kill him anyway, but he cheated them. Before his execution, he ate poison. What a cunt, eh?

Is there anything in Lemmy: The Movie that you think in retrospect was too personal or too revealing?

Well, the trash basket was pretty bad, but other than that, no. It was alright, it told no lies, didn’t pull any punches and I didn’t have to leave the theatre before the lights came on. I wasn’t embarrassed by it.

It’s certainly one of the loudest movies ever made.

That’s Motörhead! A fan once told me, “I love going to see Motörhead for two reasons. One, I love the music, and two, I can’t hear my wife nagging at me for three days after!” We found a guy asleep in one of the bass bins once, just crashed out, and it’s a fucking incredible sound in there!

Motorhead posing for a photograph on a sidewalk

What’s the best advice anyone’s ever given you?

Don’t drop any money on the floor! Or on a more serious note, don’t die ashamed. That stuck with me and I don’t know who told me. 

What essential items do you always take on tour with you? 

Shoes, clothes… I always come back with a suitcase more than I went with. I’ve been doing that for years and I still never learn, I still never take an empty case with me. My apartment was full of suitcases at one point.

“And then I went on a guitar-buying jag on the last American tour. I got some beautiful guitars, two Firebirds and a Les Paul, two SG basses. And this big old Gibson 355 that I bought off this lunatic who lived in the mountains in Pennsylvania. We met him in the parking lot at the bottom of the mountain because we couldn’t get the bus up there. He was like, “If y’all are back here again, just come by and say hi. Just look for the bullet holes in the front yard.”

When you’re home in Los Angeles, you spend a lot of your time at the famous rock’n’roll hangout the Rainbow Bar And Grill. Do you consider that place to be an extension of your living room?

No, my living room’s a lot smaller. And it doesn’t have a bar in it!

When did you first visit the Rainbow?

In 1973 with Hawkwind, when we first went over there. I was very impressed with it because it was much, much more fun then. In the 70s, America was much more fun than it has been for a long time. Endless whoopee!

It seems like drugs were more social back then, too. People shared, instead of hiding it away.

Yeah, we’ve drifted. We’ve become islands when we were a continent. Or sometimes incontinent, though thankfully I never was.

So many bands cite Motörhead as an influence. Which bands do you hear that influence in?

Everything influences you, even if it influences you not to play like that. Bands have told me they like Motörhead. I mean, Mötley Crüe used to play Motörhead to go on stage, same with Guns N’ Roses . I was amazed by that because Guns N’ Roses were like the Stones at the time. And now Slash is a really good friend of mine. We share an experience of defibrillators. He’s a really nice guy. When I came out of the hospital, after surgery, he came round to my house about five times and he’s on the phone all the time. I went up to his house, too. Nice house!

But you’ve never gone for the rock-star mansion yourself?

Nah, what’s that worth? You can only be in one room at a time. Home is where you leave your shit. And if you get a bigger place it’s because you’ve got more shit. But that doesn’t matter. What does that mean, that you can invite other people from mansions around? Go around comparing mansions? It’s all bullshit, and I don’t need a pool because I can’t swim anyway.

MOTÖRHEAD - Lost Woman Blues (Live) - YouTube

When you look back on your life and career, is there anything you would have done differently?

Well, I’d have been better looking, but apart from that I’ve had a pretty good time. Even if I don’t get better and I’ve done my last show, I can’t complain. I’ve realised nearly all of my dreams and most people don’t get to do one of them. Most people have to go and do a job they fucking despise all their life, just because they got married too early or there’s no other jobs around. 

I used to do that job – I used to be in the Hotpoint factory and it was fucking terrible. By seven thirty in the morning you’re working, all you’ve got to talk to is the foreman who comes around with a clipboard, looking over your shoulder like a fucking vulture. And then at the break you can talk to all these people with The Daily Mirror stuck in their back pocket. You can feel your brain dying. 

I had this fucking machine that you had to wind with a brass handle, and they gave you a big thing full of little brass nuts and you had to tighten them all up. When you got rid of all of them they took them away and gave you another lot. It did me one favour – it convinced me I’d rather starve to death than do it again. I lived on the streets rather than do that job again.

How have you changed as you’ve got older?

Well, a lot my hair fell out and a lot of it didn’t. I’m sick now and I’m hoping to get better, but if I don’t then tough luck. I can still make albums even if I have to sit down and play them. If I can’t do it right on stage I ain’t gonna do it, so we’ll have to see if I get better from this shit. I think I’m gonna get all the doctors together and bang their heads together and say, “Do it! No matter what it takes!” I’m taking all these pills and I don’t feel any better at all, so why am I taking them?

Have you ever found yourself saying, “It was better in the old days…”?

It was better in the old days, there’s no question about that. The thing is, you can argue about which old days. I don’t see anything happening that I wish I was young for. I mean, we had the TV on in the studio yesterday while we ate and there’s all these young bands on, and they were fucking rubbish! Every one of them was worse than the one before! 

You once said you’d like to settle down and raise horses.

Yeah, one day. I can’t see it though, can you? You don’t get very loud horses. I love horses, but I’ve been away from that life for so long that I don’t know if I could even ride a horse. I guess you never lose that – it’s like a bike. Well, it’s not like a bike – it’s got four legs and a big head, and you don’t have to get underneath it and fix it with spanners!

If you had made more money in your career, would it have made you happier?

No, it would have made me richer. I find that people with a lot of money are much less happy than me.  When I used to go to the Embassy Club in London, I met a lot of millionaires and you couldn’t get a smile out of them with a fucking crowbar! All they’re doing is worrying about money the whole fucking time, and the more you have, the more you seem to need to get. It becomes a sport, but that’s the death of the mind, looking after money all the time. It’s a terrible thing and it’s going to bring every country in the world down, including this one. I think this one might be next! The economy’s gone to fuck and they can’t control it. All they can do is outsource jobs to make themselves pay less and then nobody’s getting any work here. They’ve blown it. The American economy was the best in the world and they’ve blown it.

How do you measure happiness?

With a stick and a piece of string. What the fuck is happiness? You wanna be happy, then don’t expect it, don’t hang on for it. 

What, then, is the meaning of life?

Life is like being in the army: long periods of terrible boredom interspersed with brief periods of incredible terror. You can be happy for a while, but don’t think that it will last, because it can’t last, given the statistics. Everything’s completely random. There is no plan. 

Originally published in Classic Rock Presents Motörhead: Aftershock

A veteran of rock, punk and metal journalism for almost three decades, across his career Mörat has interviewed countless music legends for the likes of Metal Hammer, Classic Rock, Kerrang! and more. He's also an accomplished photographer and author whose first novel, The Road To Ferocity , was published in 2014. Famously, it was none other than Motörhead icon and dear friend Lemmy who christened Mörat with his moniker. 

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Motörhead Final Tour Gets GLS Assist with Lighting, Automation

  • By: PLSN Staff
  • International News
  • February 9, 2016

BERLIN – Lighting rental company GLS supplied lighting equipment and crew to Motörhead’s final “Bad Magic” tour, which ended in Berlin in December.

More details from GLS ( www.hslgroup.com ):

No-one knew at the time, but that was to be the last gig for the legendary heavy metal band whose incredible 40 year career ended with the passing of its iconic leader Lemmy (Ian Fraser Kilmister) aged 70 on 28th December 2015 … just two and a half weeks after he absolutely rocked Berlin at his last public show. While Lemmy’s lifestyle epitomised rock ‘n’ roll, his music inspired several generations of and genres of ‘metal’ to follow and character, his original thinking, wit and to-the-bone humour won him fans worldwide.

“Going out with a bang” in true Motörhead style, the final tour featured one of the most iconic stage props – the Motörhead bomber – flying for the first time in many years! The ‘fast-and-furious’ Bad Magic lighting scheme – matching the dynamic of the music –  was designed by Caio Bertti, based in Sao Paulo, Brazil, who had worked with the band for around 18 months, and the last in a long line of bomber pilots was Jamie Catt. The tour and production was managed by the unfazable Eddie Rocha, also based in Brazil.

GLS – a new member of the HSL Family – MD Ian Turner stated, “While we were all gutted when we heard the news, it was simply fantastic to have been involved on the road with Motörhead again. “The lighting and the bomber looked amazing, making it arguably the best Motörhead show yet in terms of production values, enthusiasm … and sheer performance. The bomber was simply stunning to watch.  It was the first and, in my opinion, still the best moving truss piece EVER!”

The bomber – a completely awesome industrial-strength metal-tastic stage prop – had been completely refurbished with new lighting ahead of the tour, including moving lights for the first time, and a new certificate of airworthiness, running on Kinesys automation! This gave it vastly more maneuverability plus the ability to track up and downstage by 7 meters, nosedive, pitch and roll quickly from side to side, etc. … all bringing lots of extra drama and excitement combining with the full force of the music!

The bomber was also the starting point for Caio’s brand new lighting design. Weight loading considerations – as the original metalwork is quite substantial – meant on-board lighting had to be chosen very carefully, so fixtures needed to be as multi-functional as possible allowing him to maximize the looks. Robe’s Pointes were chosen for the task! The four Pointes rigged on the wings were joined by four Robe LEDWash 600s, eight Showtec Sunstrips (active) outlining the 8 metre wingspan … and a retro tribute that no self-respecting Motörhead bomber could have been without – four bars of 4 ACLs, two 2-cell Moles and four single PAR 64s!

Its four propeller lights were vintage custom fixtures dating back almost as far as the 36 year old bomber itself … which were fitted by GLS’s technical department. It flew twice on the tour – first during the set opener and eponymous “Bomber”, then in the finale “Overkill” which brought the full-tilt performance to an ear-shattering crescendo!

The rest of the lighting design was evolved around the basic brief for a simple, powerful, in-the-face, LOUD and uncompromising rock ‘n’ roll show. “Anyone in the industry can recognize a Motörhead song from three chords,” commented Caio, “and so I wanted them to be able to do the same with the lightshow”. To that end he made it very clean, with direct, distinctive and definite color combinations  – no more than two at a time – mixed with lots of beam technology and nano-second timing as he ran the show totally ‘live’ on the flash buttons.

Another big influence on the design were the practicalities of being able to get the rig – including the bomber at all the larger gigs – in, rigged and ready on time for a 2.30 sound-check each day. When flown into its ‘home’ position, the bomber formed an effective mid truss, with two staggered side trusses surrounding it plus an upstage and a front truss.

The front truss was rigged with four Robe LEDWash 600s and four 600E Spots for key lights along with eight 8-lite blinders for audience abuse. Spread across all the other trusses were 16 x Pointes, 48 x LED PARs, eight Clay Paky Stormy color changing LED strobes and a shed-load more standard PARs and ACLs.

Positioned on the floor were another 6 x Pointes, 8 x LED PARs, additional generic PARs and ACLs, 8 more Stormy color changing strobes plus four Robe atmosphere generators – two hazers and two smoke machines … atmosphere was instrumental to the visual equation with all those beams!

Caio ran the show on an Avolites Sapphire Touch console with a Titan Network Processor (TNP). Having been raised on Avo and used the brand for many years on Sepultura, and with the Motörhead lightshow being run completely live … it was his control platform of choice. “The Sapphire is great,” he commented, “It has all the new generation lighting control features you expect, but with that fantastic old-skool hands-on ergonomics and tactility at which Avo has always excelled”.

Before coming on-board with Motörhead, Caio lit Brazilian metal heroes Sepultura for many years, so the metal aesthetic experience was already in place, and he knows Swedish LD Stefan Sjoland, who, when he had to leave the Motörhead live creative team … put Caio up for the LD job.

Caio is also a director of leading Brazilian rental company LPL, and so knows a thing or two about what to expect from the rental companies he works with when touring internationally. Commenting on GLS he says, “They are all fantastic people! We share the same attitude and passion for the industry, the same dedication to ensuring all the little details are correct and to getting it right every time. My crew were fabulous and it is a real pleasure working with everyone at GLS”.

Joining Caio on the road from GLS were crew chief Karen Brown, lighting technician Chris Randall and Jamie Catt who also coordinated all the automation elements.

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  • November 27, 1980 Setlist

Motörhead Setlist at Hammersmith Odeon, London, England

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  • Song played from tape The Good, The Bad And The Ugly ( Ennio Morricone  song) Play Video
  • Ace of Spades Play Video
  • Stay Clean Play Video
  • Live to Win Play Video
  • Metropolis Play Video
  • Shoot You in the Back Play Video
  • The Hammer Play Video
  • Jailbait Play Video
  • Leaving Here ( Eddie Holland  cover) Play Video
  • Fire, Fire Play Video
  • Love Me Like a Reptile Play Video
  • Fast and Loose Play Video
  • Over the Top Play Video
  • Capricorn Play Video
  • Too Late Too Late Play Video
  • (We Are) The Road Crew Play Video
  • No Class Play Video
  • Bite the Bullet Play Video
  • The Chase Is Better Than the Catch Play Video
  • Overkill Play Video
  • Bomber Play Video
  • Motorhead ( Hawkwind  cover) Play Video

Edits and Comments

7 activities (last edit by [deleted user] , 22 Aug 2020, 20:44 Etc/UTC )

Songs on Albums

  • (We Are) The Road Crew
  • Ace of Spades
  • Bite the Bullet
  • Fast and Loose
  • Live to Win
  • Love Me Like a Reptile
  • Shoot You in the Back
  • The Chase Is Better Than the Catch
  • Too Late Too Late
  • Over the Top
  • Leaving Here by Eddie Holland
  • Motorhead by Hawkwind

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Motörhead Gig Timeline

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motorhead bomber tour

Bomber Ultimate Bundle

Featured product

England tee.

The original iconic Motörhead tee, featuring the classic warpig 'Snaggletooth' design.

The  character was birthed by artist Joe Petagno when Lemmy approached him with the task of designing a logo for Motörhead.  His end creation was a hybrid beast: part dog, part gorilla, part boar. Lemmy’s dream was for ol’ Snaggle to become a symbol that unites those who wear it: a uniquely feral, badass biker patch found on jackets and vests (T-shirts, too!).

This tee features the classic Warpig England design as a front print, with Everything Louder than Everything else printed on the back.

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  6. Motörhead Bomber -live @ Helsinki (last tour)

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COMMENTS

  1. History & Tour Archive

    History & Tour Archive. We are creating the "Ultimate" presentation list of Motörhead tour dates and media. Your help is invaluable. The three sources of information for the foundation of this ever growing document of the bands live shows come from Steffano Loi, Alan Burridge via his amazing book "Keep Us On The Road," and Paul May, who went through official band paperwork and the other two ...

  2. Tours

    Anything you might want to add to this section, please send to [email protected] with the subject "tours". From Stefano: "I've heard Motörhead the first time in 1985 and I begun to compile the past tour dates in 1988 because I felt I was confined in my beloved island of Sardinia and I was dreaming to see Motörhead on stage back then.

  3. Motörhead Concert & Tour History

    Motörhead has had 1,548 concerts. Motörhead is most often considered to be Rock, Metal, Hard Rock, British, Album Oriented Rock (AOR), Heavy Metal, UK, Rock And Roll, Alternative Metal, Nu Metal, England, Speed Metal, NWOBHM, Classic Metal, Rock'n Roll, and British Metal. was on October 17, 2023 at Brixton Academy in London, England, United ...

  4. Motörhead Concerts & Live Tour Dates: 2024-2025 Tickets

    April 11th 2014. Club Nokia. March 24th 2014. Beale Street Music Festival. February 24th 2014. January 25th 2014. The Warfield. Find tickets for Motörhead concerts near you. Browse 2024 tour dates, venue details, concert reviews, photos, and more at Bandsintown.

  5. Bomber (album)

    Bomber is the third studio album by English rock band Motörhead. It was released on 12 October 1979 by Bronze Records, their second with the ... Such was the sleeve's impact that the band insisted on the now infamous Bomber lighting rig for their accompanying tour - a 40-foot (12 m) Heinkel replica that moved from side to side over the stage ...

  6. Bomber

    Follow Bomber - Motorhead Tribute and be the first to get notified about new concerts in your area, buy official tickets, and more. Find tickets for Bomber - Motorhead Tribute concerts near you. Browse 2024 tour dates, venue details, concert reviews, photos, and more at Bandsintown.

  7. No Remorse Tour

    The No Remorse Tour, sometimes called No Remorse Death on the Road Tour was a concert tour by heavy metal band Motörhead in support of their compilation album, No Remorse. ... "Motorhead" Encore "Bomber" "Overkill" Other songs played. Over the Top" "Too Late Too Late" "America" "Locomotive" Tour dates. Date City Country Venue

  8. On this day in 1979 the Bomber tour...

    On this day in 1979 the Bomber tour flew over Newcastle City Hall and unleashed it's deafening payload! Who was there? https://motorhead.lnk.to/1979FA #Motorhead79

  9. Bloodstock

    As part of the tribute to Lemmy, there is also the Lancaster BOMBER at the festival, which was suspended above the stage during the 1979 Bomber tour and subsequent others, through 2015. photos by Katja Ogrin. Fans were be able to view the installation and pay tribute to Lemmy and his legacy in the RAM Gallery on site. Lemmy's dressing room ...

  10. Motörhead Bomber (Live Hammersmith) (HQ)

    BomberAin't a hope in hell, Nothing's gonna bring us down, The way we fly, Five miles off the ground, Because we shoot to kill, And you know we always will, ...

  11. How Motorhead Began Their Climb With 'Bomber'

    How Motorhead Began Their Climb With 'Bomber'. Eduardo Rivadavia Published: October 27, 2014. Bronze. Bombs once again rained down on London on Oct. 27, 1979. Thankfully, these weren't dropped ...

  12. Motörhead Concert Setlist at The Over-The-Top Heavy Metal Brain Damage

    Get the Motörhead Setlist of the concert at Bingley Hall, Stafford, England on July 26, 1980 from the Bomber Tour and other Motörhead Setlists for free on setlist.fm! Motörhead Concert Setlist at The Over-The-Top Heavy Metal Brain Damage Mayhem Party 1980 on July 26, 1980 | setlist.fm

  13. Motorhead's Lemmy: Your memories

    Hugh Webb: Motorhead bomber tour Hammersmith Odeon 1979, nuff said. And illustrator Steve Beaumont, from Leeds, UK, sent his rock farewell: Image source, Steve Beaumont. Compiled by Sherie Ryder.

  14. Motörhead on tour Bomber

    Motörhead performed 77 concerts on tour Bomber, between Theatre Royal on August 20, 1980 and Gaumont Theatre on November 28, 1979. 1980 20 Aug. Theatre Royal Bomber. Nottingham United Kingdom. 1980 26 Jul. The Over-The-Top Heavy Metal Brain Damage Mayhem Party 1980 Bomber. Stafford United Kingdom. 1980 15 May. Openluchttheater Bomber.

  15. Motörhead

    Motörhead [a] (/ ˈ m oʊ t ər h ɛ d /) were an English rock band formed in London in 1975 by bassist and lead vocalist Lemmy Kilmister, guitarist Larry Wallis and drummer Lucas Fox.Lemmy was also the primary songwriter and only constant member. The band are often considered a precursor to the new wave of British heavy metal, which re-energised heavy metal in the late 1970s and early 1980s. [1]

  16. 1980-11-08

    Date: 08 Nov 1980. Location: Deeside, Flintshire, Wales. Venue: Leisure Centre

  17. Motörhead Tour Statistics: 1979

    Motorhead (Hawkwind cover) Play Video stats: 17 : Stay Clean Play Video stats: 17: 10: The Train Kept A-Rollin' (Tiny Bradshaw cover) Play Video stats: 16 : White Line Fever Play Video stats: 16: 12: Iron Horse/Born to Lose Play Video stats: 15 : Too Late Too Late Play Video stats: 15: 14: Bomber Play Video stats: 13: 15: Keep Us on the Road ...

  18. The story behind Motörhead's Bomber album artwork

    Yet the band's most spectacular sleeve art was on 1979's Bomber: a winged chunk of customised heavy metal dreamed up by illustrator Adrian Chesterman. Lemmy, 'Fast' Eddie Clarke and a bug-eyed Phil 'Philthy Animal' Taylor are shown bearing down from the gunner cockpits of a Jerry fighter in the Blitz. Fascinated by military regalia ...

  19. "The best advice anybody's given me? Don't die ashamed": An epic

    Bomber by Len Deighton, and also Winter by Len Deighton, which tells the story of two brothers from Berlin. One became a lawyer for the SS and stayed there, and the other one moved to America. Bomber inspired me to write the song. That's a great fucking book!

  20. Motörhead Final Tour Gets GLS Assist with Lighting, Automation

    The bomber - a completely awesome industrial-strength metal-tastic stage prop - had been completely refurbished with new lighting ahead of the tour, including moving lights for the first time, and a new certificate of airworthiness, running on Kinesys automation! This gave it vastly more maneuverability plus the ability to track up and ...

  21. Motörhead Setlist at Hammersmith Odeon, London

    Use this setlist for your event review and get all updates automatically! Get the Motörhead Setlist of the concert at Hammersmith Odeon, London, England on November 27, 1980 from the Ace Up Your Sleeve Tour and other Motörhead Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  22. 1979-11-10

    Existing Media "Where Lemmy named the fan club Motörheadbangers and also the maiden flight of the Bomber lighting rig!" - Alan Burridge

  23. Motörhead

    Bomber "Limb From Limb" "White Line Fever" Motorhead; View & edit this setlist on Setlist.fm . Videos. No videos have been uploaded. Photos. No photos have been uploaded. View Edit History. Seen By: Mark Ascott: Comments & Reviews: Sign Up or Login to comment.

  24. Motorhead

    Motorhead. Officially licensed merchandise, T shirts, hoodies, and much more. The largest range available on the net. Skip to content. Submit. Close search. Cart. 0 items. ... Bomber Album Cover Tee. Regular price £30.00. Sale price £30.00 Sale. Bomber Burst Hoodie. Bomber Burst Hoodie. Regular price £50.00. Sale price £50.00 Sale.