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One interview with another band, Motörhead had time slots before them in studio and everything was tuned to them, so they assume, "great maybe we sound similar" , they connected all instrument and sound was awful .
His accent wasn't that bad, I saw them in 1983 and after the concert I was lucky enough to drink with the band for a few Hours, most of that talking to Lemmy . I didn't go all fan girl on him and just treated him like another guy at the gig, he appreciated that and we about everything but music funnily enough ! When I said I was going he got a pair of drum sticks from Phil Taylor and a few of his guitar picks and gave them to me, I still have his picks. He was a great guy, very down to earth....
Tangential, Rob and, I thiiiiiink it was Dio, while being interviewed, Lemmy out of nowhere walks in behind and gives Rob a "wet willy." Essentially an inserted wet index to an unsuspecting ear. Clearly these got along. I miss that silly comradery
My favorite Lemmy moment is the documentary of him from 2011 or 2010. He is showing off all the stuff he collected in his years of touring the world. The interviewer asked him what the most precious thing he has. Without hesitation, he goes "My son." It's so on brand that Lemmy didn't know he was a father for years until he met his own son at a drug deal. Upon learning he was a father, Lemmy made continuous efforts to remain in his son's life as much as he could.
So, late 70's, I worked for an agency supplying crew for gigs - loading, unloading, rigging, lights, etc. I was incredibly lucky to get a few gigs with this line up of Motorhead. Lemmy was the best guy I ever worked for - he really cared about the crews. if you were his crew, he was on your side. RIP.
That was kind of a joke. He was at Electric Ladyland studio with Hendrix. Hendrix had the mic like this to not look at people in the studio. Hendrix believed he couldn't sing and was always quite self conscious. Lemmy picked it up from Hendrix. Just more rock history Lemmy was part of.
Shout out to Fast Eddie Clarke whose iconic bluesy guitar really helped define the Motörhead sound. Everyone always talks about Lemmy, but Eddie was just as crucial to the band’s success.
Yeah Eddie Ckark, top guitar player I think he decided to leave when Lemmy wanted Motorhead to do a single with the Nolan sisters. Can't blame him , Eddie that is. Lemme just fancied a few of them !
Got tears back in mEyes when I hear Motörhead songs en this is a speicil one. I miss that band so hard. Saw them 5 or 6 times live and had each concert a fucking blast and awesome time. R.I.P Lemmy
Beth, I love you because YOU are such a Rock & Roll bird finding all this stuff out for yourself (and then, passing it unto the world your age and younger!)
Lem stated when asked, you can yell easier if you're positioning your head up, it allows him to be louder. There's a video some where in which he states this.
I was lucky enough to have met Lemmy before a gig back in 1999, what a great guy, approachable and funny. We took some photos with him, and that photo of me standing next to him is one of my most prized possessions. When he passed, he became the first celebrity I actually grieved for. I shed real tears for him.
The definitive versions of all of those classic early 'Head songs are to be found on the live album 'No Sleep til Hammersmith'. At the time of its release, it was promoted as being a live album that will 'melt speakers and short circuit turntables'. And so it still is, decades later....
Motorhead is one of the few bands that transcends the music style...Motorhead is iconic. I am lucky that I've seen them many times live and it was always epic.
I know that Lemmy denies that Motörhead was heavy but their influence on the genre cannot be denied. It doesn't matter what sub-genre of metal you're a fan of; all metal fans love Motörhead. The same can be said of punk.
he started to hate it cos its the only song people would talk about. Even with Metallica covering 4 non AoS songs it's still the only one that would get commercial play.
To his selfless credit, he understood what it means to give the people what they want. He said he'd continue to play it at every show because the fans want to hear it and that it'd be like going to see Little Richard (one of Lemmy's favorite singers) and not hearing him play Tutti Frutti.
In 1978 my cousin, Paula, put on a record. I was 8 at the time and this unlike anything I had ever heard. I was a Motörhead from that day on. RIP Lemmy, though a God never dies.
Oh I love this song 🤩. I remember when they had Brian May as a guest guitarist during a gig and it was brilliant. RIP Lemmy, you were one in a million.
An iconic song by the band who pretty much invented both extreme metal and hardcore punk. Lemmy is one of my biggest heroes. There's a great documentary about him from 2010 called Lemmy .... with a rude subtitle that I won't mention here ..., but I highly recommend the movie.
That's nothing like extreme metal or punk, how the hell did you come to that conclusion ? Motorhead played blues, rock and roll, on steroids and VERY loud, Lemmy pushed that point for years. I'm a 61 year old musician, been playing metal since the late 70's.
@@MickH60 I came to that conclusion when I saw them being cited as a big influence by the likes of Metallica, Slayer, Anthrax, GBH, Venom, Discharge, and Napalm Death. I think I'll take their opinion over that of some rando in the RUclips comments. And as far as Motorhead being classified as metal, Lemmy himself said many times, including in the documentary that I mentioned, that he disagreed with it and thought of them as just a rock and roll band. If they were classed as metal often enough for Lenmy to be repeatedly asked about it, then it's pretty commonplace. Of course, all of these things could have been found from a simple google search, but randos in the RUclips comments don't seem to be able to do that. Also, your age is irrelevant. Ignorance can happen at any age.
I saw Motörhead with Clutch at a small theater and it was the most adrenaline packed, ear splittingly painful experience of my life. I loved every second of it. That was almost 14 years ago and I still haven’t recovered.
It takes a while. I saw em on 1916 tour at Bradford. Then cobbled together the entire bands autographs afterwards. Doctors tell me I have to come to terms with never fully recovering.
As soon as you demonstrated how a nice, clean crooning version of "the Ace of Spades" wouldn't work, I immediately decided I wanted to hear a cover by Puddles.
I really freaked out the first moment I listened to Motorhead. My dad had bought me their No Remorse compilation. I went on to buy everything from them and am glad to have seen a good number of their concerts in Brasil (including the first one that was so messy he wrote a song about it)
Lemmy credited Little Richard (and 'Tutti Fruitti' especially) as a big inspiration, and how for the initial 'WOP BOP A LOO WOP', Little Richard sounded like he was shredding his larynx.
My fave by Little Richard is 'Rip it up', in which he also does quite some vocal artistry, but the entire abandonment, attitude, drive, dynamic, energy, groove, immediacy, pressure, release, tightness of that title is pure magic and goes ever so well with its lyrics. Such a bawler! Almost like the seed of thrash metal long before there was heavy metal, a pure rock'n'roll song going hard as hell, as shorthanded as throwing a tantrum and yet taking a long shot into the future.
Seeing the closeups of Lemmy bring back all those scents from the clubs, leather, beer, whiskey, smoke. Motorhead at L'amour Brooklyn in 1985 is still probably the loudest show I'd ever been to.
another band who lift are Status Quo. I remember back in the day, if a party was dying you would stick a Quo album on and before the first track was done, everyone was moving - certainly worth a listen
I met Lemmy when I was a 14-year-old kid sneaking into an 18+ only gig at Longhorn Ballroom. He autographed my friend's leg cast and got us into the front row on the *other* side of the barricade since my friend needed to keep his leg elevated. He told me to 'Stay clean, kid." Wendy O. Williams opened up, so it was quite the experience overall.
I used to sing for fun, but could never sing like this because I hadn't drunk enough whiskey or smoked enough cigarettes. I still haven't 30 years later. lol
Had the absolute honor of seeing Motorhead back in 1988 as the supporting act for Slayer on their South of Heaven tour. I've been a Motorhead fan for a LONG time and even though they weren't hugely popular or as iconic as they became I was THRILLED to see them live.
Welcome back to the gooood of music. 😉 Lemmy put his head in this position, because he wouldn t see that there only some people in the audience. Some nice insides about Lemmy and Motörhead you could see in "Lemmy the Movie" from 2008/2009. Lemmy was in an another band before Hawkwind. 😉 Wikipedia say: Kilmister played in various bands, including The Rainmakers and then The Motown Sect for about three years. In 1965 he finally became guitarist with Reverend Black and The Rockin' Vicars (later The Rockin' Vickers). [22] With them he recorded the singles Zing! Went the Strings of My Heart (1965), It's Alright (1965) and Dandy (1966). He left the band in early 1967 and went to London.
I've only seen them 3 times. I was functionally deaf for 3 days after every show. Yes, I wore ear plugs. The sound pressure alone could alter your heart rhythm. Everyone sounded like Charlie Brown's parents. ISYN. In their contract, it was specified.. "EVERYTHING LOUDER THAN EVERYTHING ELSE!!!"
This is just a pure example of pure exuberance and don't give a fuck.... really unashamedly bombastic and pure fun and aggression with a bit of Rye irony in the lyric as well. Truly a forever classic. There's no way these guys could have known they were basically inventing a genre in real time as they recording this album but damn.. it's still holds up.
"Lemmy". Here you have an Englishman growing up largely in Wales. My wife always considered the name to be a corruption of the nickname for Brits -- Limey -- being brought about by the thick Welsh accent. (That would explain people calling him "Lemmy" in his youth, well before he started yanking on the one-armed bandits). His legal name -- Ian Fraser Kilmister -- makes him sound like he should have been a member of the House of Lords (I'd love to see the fully-grown Lemmy set loose in that "august" body -- perhaps he could have made a friend of Lord Sutch [hanging-out with the mercuric Vivian Stanshall and his terrapin army should prepare a man to get along with anyone]).
BETH! Awesome! And plaudits to you for being the first reactor I know of to even mention HAWKWIND! 😃. A totally underrated band mostly known only to musos for their seminal contributions to developing punk, metal, psychedelia AND electronic music! The Sex Pistols said if it were not for Hawkwind, they would never have existed. And Motorhead spanned the punk and metal scenes, of course. A Hawkwind reaction would be awesome. Nick Turner's vocals on Brainstorm are totes proto-punk. The live version from Space Ritual (1973!) is the best. It's quite long so you might want to edit it down. But it's a seminal moment in metal.and punk history that deserves more attention I think ❤
Early on Motorhead toured as support band for Hawkwind. I met Lemmy at one of those gigs after soundcheck, I was barely 16/17 at the time and nervous as hell. however, despite his demeanour, he was the sweetest friendliest dude and even gave my mate his last Motorhead badge. That night Motorhead blew Hawkwind off the stage. They were like an artillery barrage lasting 40 minutes, you felt it as much as heard it.
I'm a huge Motorhead fan 🖤 I love seeing the introduction of new people to the band...you look like you had fun ❤️ I'd recommend his very first vocal performance, from Hawkwind called Silver Machine. 😁👍
Beth, I love your channel. I hope you can interview artists who are alive so you can learn or talk to them about where there sound comes from so there is no mystery about it.. keep up the good work.
Thats a blast from the past, I haven't listened to Hawkwind for about 30 years. So we can all be glad that 'Ace of Spades' wasn't called 'slot machine'!
Lemmy was in many bands before Hawkwind from the mid 60s, most notably The Rocking Vickers. Others include Opal Butterfly, Sam Gopal, The Rainmakers, The Motown Sect, plus some after Hawkwind and during Motorhead. Absolute legend.
Lemmy was interviewed and said he held his head in that position because in the beginning, motorhead would get " 10 people and a dog watching us. I didn't want to see that there was only 10 people and a dog there. Therefore, I put the micrplophone in that position."
In some cases he used a more natural vocal style, actually singing instead of the distorted shouting. My examples for it would be the song I Don't Believe A Word and also 1916 (Sabaton released a decent cover of it).
Some of their later albums were indeed musically much more mature and "better"... but us morons wanted more of the raw hard and never bought those albums (well, not in the numbers that Bomber, Overkill and Ace of Spades sold. And frankly, I class myself as one of those neantherthals: Motorhead made me into a metalhead, and I wanted that Motorhead. Only decades later did I realise that Lemmy was right.
I wish I could remember the band name but it was a group 30years younger than Lemmy. They came back stage and Lemmy asked them if they wanted a drink. Sure! He turned around and grabbed a bottle of Jack, took the top off and handed it to one of them. Turned around grabbed a second bottle and handed it to the other one and said cheers! They looked at each other like “we are in way over our heads!” No, I wasn’t there I heard it in a documentary.
I always assumed that Lemmy had the microphone set high in order to improve his singing, but then I saw an interview where he said that he did it because he had terrible stage fright and didn't want to look at the audience...🤣 Now you've done Motorhead and mentioned Hawkwind, it might be fun to react to a Hawkwind song! Have a go at Spirit Of The Age or Brainstorm for starters. DO get somebody to prewatch videos for you though, because some of the early ones feature a topless/naked dancer: the immortal Stacia!
And those are a couple of how many possible suggestions for Hawkwind reactions? I wouldn't know where to start recommending Hawkwind....... Quark? Damnation Alley? Psy Power? Wrong Step? High Rise? Masters of the Universe? Psychadelic Warlords?
@@trevorfolker3665 Oh hell yeah, it never stops, but you've got to start somewhere. The trouble is finding high quality videos: reactors, especially vocal coach reactors, prefere live video to just listening to the track.
An absolute rock 'n roll classic🤘and iconic lineup! I would love to have you react to Robin Trower, "Day Of The Eagle". Another timeless masterpiece of rock 'n roll history!
Motorhead was opening for another band we were going to see here in Detroit at Pine Knob but we were late. This was literally the only song I had heard of theirs and got there just in time to hear it as their last song, totally worth. "Who would win a fight, Lemmy or God? It's a trick question, Lemmy IS God!" - Airheads 🤘🏼
All time banger! I saw them twice, first opening for Ozzy Osbourne with Randy Rhodes on lead guitar in a large arena, very loud and awesome performance by both bands, they both had their A games going. The 2nd time it was just Motorhead in a large bar, they had a wall of Marshalls, all at 10 and blew us right out of that hall, they were the loudest band I ever saw because of the confined space they played in. Deep purple was much louder but outside in a huge open park, the sound was able to disperse where Motorhead played like they had to go all out, all concert in a confined space and just blew us away. Ringing ears for a couple days and took time to recover from that night! More Motorhead! Do One Track Mind and enjoy! 🔥🎵🎸🎤🎸🎶🔥
I'll admit, I still love the end solo in the OG Guitar Hero version of this song. I'd never heard the song before and thought that was part of it. Then I heard the actual song and was like, "why'd it just stop?"
Hi, German here. It's Lemmy's fault that I made a fool of myself at scholl back in the day. I thought it was pronounced "Motörhead", you know, with an "Ö".
It sort of is. Motörhead is the one English speaking band that uses the umlaut correct, although by pure chance. Lemmy just thought it looks mean. Motor isn't pronounced "motor," but "moter" or "motör." And the t is rather pronounced d. This is the phonetic spelling of motor: məʊtə (Eng.) or mō-tər (Am. Eng.). The o and o aren't pronounced the same. An upside down letter means "sound like." I would liken the second o in "motor" to the e in "her" and i in "girl." Dictionaries have the same upside down e for the e and i in those words. Pronouncing it motor, with both os as o works too. Or modor if you like. Not only does the UK have tons of dialects, English is truly a global language. You can even pronounce it like Alexei Sayle does in Ullo John! Gotta New Motor? ruclips.net/video/OGMTCfjnP6Y/видео.html
Hawkwind were annoyed that the only "chart success" they had was with Silver Machine, sung by Lemmy. They hated playing it after he left. On the Live 79 album, the last track is Silver Machine (requiem) which suddenly explodes part way through. Fun times.
If anyone ever asks how to define a rock star, you might just say, "LEMMY!" He might not have made as much money as some others but his influence on the music itself is like gravity...it's there, whether you know it or not, LOL He brought his "A game" as a singer, songwriter and performer to every show, from the first time Motorhead took a stage until he simply physically couldn't do it any longer.
I have the 12" single rerelease of "motorhead" by Hawkwind. Lemmys vocals are a bit different... worth a listen "Silver Machine" is worth checking out too
Lemmy wrote songs for Ozzy as well, Philthy Phil Rapper, their drummer was the first drummer to tour with a double bass kick drums... In my opinion they are the Founder Fathers of Thrash (Speed) Metal.
Something else that made Lemmy sound unique was that he also had a condition which partly explained why when he talked at normal volumes he would mumble quite often, but once on stage theyve turned the sound up so much that he is actually shouting which naturally got rid of the mumbling. And ofc the mic setup, he did that because he wanted to avoid looking at the crowd in the beginning when it was just three blokes and a dog.
I was at work rigging at a festival in Norway, when I got a notice from someone that "there's a junkie backstage stealing equipment". So I went behind, and found Lemmy. I told him, and he laughed his arse off 😅
Just a guess, but the mic position might (!) also be a result of him having a (pretty heavy - that Rickenbacker is not really light-weight) bass hanging around his shoulder. Maybe that slightly backwards posture just felt more relaxing for him.
He talked about his mic position in an interview once i'm pretty sure he said he feels like he's choking when he sings with his head down and he can't get air properly, it was something to that effect.
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Please can you do Rainbow cos I think he's one of the best singers of all time and really underrated? Thank you!!
It's time for Eddie Berg one take reaction!. ❤ 🤞
ruclips.net/video/HNAD360Op_8/видео.htmlsi=NlllO8G5IASnCBwh
I'll never forget Lemmy, whiskey and cigar in hand, asking Rob Halford, 'How do yeh keep yeh voice in soch prasteen cundishun?'
🤣🤣🤣
One interview with another band, Motörhead had time slots before them in studio and everything was tuned to them, so they assume, "great maybe we sound similar" , they connected all instrument and sound was awful .
His accent wasn't that bad, I saw them in 1983 and after the concert I was lucky enough to drink with the band for a few Hours, most of that talking to Lemmy . I didn't go all fan girl on him and just treated him like another guy at the gig, he appreciated that and we about everything but music funnily enough ! When I said I was going he got a pair of drum sticks from Phil Taylor and a few of his guitar picks and gave them to me, I still have his picks. He was a great guy, very down to earth....
Lol
Tangential, Rob and, I thiiiiiink it was Dio, while being interviewed, Lemmy out of nowhere walks in behind and gives Rob a "wet willy."
Essentially an inserted wet index to an unsuspecting ear.
Clearly these got along. I miss that silly comradery
We are Motörhead and we play rock n roll! 🤘🤘Miss em... 😭 R.I.P Lemmy!
You think he reads this? LOL
My favorite Lemmy moment is the documentary of him from 2011 or 2010. He is showing off all the stuff he collected in his years of touring the world. The interviewer asked him what the most precious thing he has. Without hesitation, he goes "My son."
It's so on brand that Lemmy didn't know he was a father for years until he met his own son at a drug deal. Upon learning he was a father, Lemmy made continuous efforts to remain in his son's life as much as he could.
For an Older , Wiser Lemmy you need to hear 1916 , the greatest anti-war song ever written , brings a tear to a glass eye .
1916 is one of the greatest ballads in history.
Absolutely the song that needs to be looked at for 11 november remembrance day
Yes! 1916 was the first Motörhead album I bought, and that title track just left me stunned.
Orgasmatron. Unbeliavable good lyrics and very different for MH
A classic "Soldiers Lament"
So, late 70's, I worked for an agency supplying crew for gigs - loading, unloading, rigging, lights, etc. I was incredibly lucky to get a few gigs with this line up of Motorhead. Lemmy was the best guy I ever worked for - he really cared about the crews. if you were his crew, he was on your side. RIP.
Lemmy had a vocal range of about six notes. But they were six fucking good notes.
Not really, not if you consider whorehouse blues and 1916. The man could sing.
Absolutely love Philthy Animal on the drums as well
If I remember correctly he started having his microphone that high to awoid seeing the lack of audience In the start of Motörhead 😃
Exactly right. That's what he said in his book.
I saw an interview with Lemmy where said this. They were playing for six men and a dog and this way he didn't have to look at the empty club.
That was kind of a joke. He was at Electric Ladyland studio with Hendrix. Hendrix had the mic like this to not look at people in the studio. Hendrix believed he couldn't sing and was always quite self conscious. Lemmy picked it up from Hendrix. Just more rock history Lemmy was part of.
Shout out to Fast Eddie Clarke whose iconic bluesy guitar really helped define the Motörhead sound. Everyone always talks about Lemmy, but Eddie was just as crucial to the band’s success.
So, soooo true!! Eddie Clarke is one of my all time Heroes!!
Yeah Eddie Ckark, top guitar player I think he decided to leave when Lemmy wanted Motorhead to do a single with the Nolan sisters. Can't blame him , Eddie that is. Lemme just fancied a few of them !
Not with the Nolan Sisters but with Wendy O Williams and the Plasmatics in 1982.
Great! I remember them popping up in the living room of The Young Ones playing this song. Fantastic, in a time when metal was rarely on the telly.
I remember that as well! As a huge Motörhead fan and heavy metal over all we were lucky as hell stumbling on to stuff like that back in the time.
Got tears back in mEyes when I hear Motörhead songs en this is a speicil one. I miss that band so hard. Saw them 5 or 6 times live and had each concert a fucking blast and awesome time. R.I.P Lemmy
I saw them live and that's exactly how we shows. A unique energy, which I have not seen anymore.
This song is short, fast, beautiful and us metal heads love it ! RIP Lemmy xx
Beth, I love you because YOU are such a Rock & Roll bird finding all this stuff out for yourself (and then, passing it unto the world your age and younger!)
(I can tell when you bop around when you are really enjoying rock & roll....
It touches my heart!)
Long live Motörhead!!
Iconic song this, bloody amazing!!
One of the baddest human beings to
Ever walk our planet. But also a great gentleman. We won’t see his like again.
One of the few bands respected by both punks snd metal heads. Of which I was both at one time in my teens.
Lem stated when asked, you can yell easier if you're positioning your head up, it allows him to be louder.
There's a video some where in which he states this.
I was lucky enough to have met Lemmy before a gig back in 1999, what a great guy, approachable and funny. We took some photos with him, and that photo of me standing next to him is one of my most prized possessions. When he passed, he became the first celebrity I actually grieved for. I shed real tears for him.
The definitive versions of all of those classic early 'Head songs are to be found on the live album 'No Sleep til Hammersmith'. At the time of its release, it was promoted as being a live album that will 'melt speakers and short circuit turntables'. And so it still is, decades later....
Motorhead is one of the few bands that transcends the music style...Motorhead is iconic. I am lucky that I've seen them many times live and it was always epic.
Seeing them live was always one of those rare times where I was actually afraid for my hearing afterward. haha!
I too loved Lemmy's voice and bass playing.
I know that Lemmy denies that Motörhead was heavy but their influence on the genre cannot be denied. It doesn't matter what sub-genre of metal you're a fan of; all metal fans love Motörhead. The same can be said of punk.
with years Lemmy started to hate this song, but never refused to play it, cause motorhead fans love this song
he started to hate it cos its the only song people would talk about. Even with Metallica covering 4 non AoS songs it's still the only one that would get commercial play.
To his selfless credit, he understood what it means to give the people what they want. He said he'd continue to play it at every show because the fans want to hear it and that it'd be like going to see Little Richard (one of Lemmy's favorite singers) and not hearing him play Tutti Frutti.
In 1978 my cousin, Paula, put on a record. I was 8 at the time and this unlike anything I had ever heard. I was a Motörhead from that day on.
RIP Lemmy, though a God never dies.
Oh I love this song 🤩.
I remember when they had Brian May as a guest guitarist during a gig and it was brilliant. RIP Lemmy, you were one in a million.
An iconic song by the band who pretty much invented both extreme metal and hardcore punk. Lemmy is one of my biggest heroes. There's a great documentary about him from 2010 called Lemmy .... with a rude subtitle that I won't mention here ..., but I highly recommend the movie.
That's nothing like extreme metal or punk, how the hell did you come to that conclusion ? Motorhead played blues, rock and roll, on steroids and VERY loud, Lemmy pushed that point for years. I'm a 61 year old musician, been playing metal since the late 70's.
@@MickH60 I came to that conclusion when I saw them being cited as a big influence by the likes of Metallica, Slayer, Anthrax, GBH, Venom, Discharge, and Napalm Death. I think I'll take their opinion over that of some rando in the RUclips comments. And as far as Motorhead being classified as metal, Lemmy himself said many times, including in the documentary that I mentioned, that he disagreed with it and thought of them as just a rock and roll band. If they were classed as metal often enough for Lenmy to be repeatedly asked about it, then it's pretty commonplace. Of course, all of these things could have been found from a simple google search, but randos in the RUclips comments don't seem to be able to do that. Also, your age is irrelevant. Ignorance can happen at any age.
Awesome to see, you do a reaction on Motörhead! Lemmy had such a unique style and
Sound. Nothing else like them
I saw Motörhead with Clutch at a small theater and it was the most adrenaline packed, ear splittingly painful experience of my life. I loved every second of it. That was almost 14 years ago and I still haven’t recovered.
It takes a while. I saw em on 1916 tour at Bradford. Then cobbled together the entire bands autographs afterwards. Doctors tell me I have to come to terms with never fully recovering.
Lemmy was and still is a legend
As soon as you demonstrated how a nice, clean crooning version of "the Ace of Spades" wouldn't work, I immediately decided I wanted to hear a cover by Puddles.
I really freaked out the first moment I listened to Motorhead. My dad had bought me their No Remorse compilation. I went on to buy everything from them and am glad to have seen a good number of their concerts in Brasil (including the first one that was so messy he wrote a song about it)
Everything louder than everything! Love u Lemmy!
A song about hope, love, and redemption of the human spirit. A song that emphasizes the innocence of youth and the resilience of family. 🙂
Absolutely iconic. You can't not hear it and just want to move
Lemmy credited Little Richard (and 'Tutti Fruitti' especially) as a big inspiration, and how for the initial 'WOP BOP A LOO WOP', Little Richard sounded like he was shredding his larynx.
My fave by Little Richard is 'Rip it up', in which he also does quite some vocal artistry, but the entire abandonment, attitude, drive, dynamic, energy, groove, immediacy, pressure, release, tightness of that title is pure magic and goes ever so well with its lyrics. Such a bawler! Almost like the seed of thrash metal long before there was heavy metal, a pure rock'n'roll song going hard as hell, as shorthanded as throwing a tantrum and yet taking a long shot into the future.
Seeing the closeups of Lemmy bring back all those scents from the clubs, leather, beer, whiskey, smoke. Motorhead at L'amour Brooklyn in 1985 is still probably the loudest show I'd ever been to.
another band who lift are Status Quo. I remember back in the day, if a party was dying you would stick a Quo album on and before the first track was done, everyone was moving - certainly worth a listen
I met Lemmy when I was a 14-year-old kid sneaking into an 18+ only gig at Longhorn Ballroom. He autographed my friend's leg cast and got us into the front row on the *other* side of the barricade since my friend needed to keep his leg elevated. He told me to 'Stay clean, kid." Wendy O. Williams opened up, so it was quite the experience overall.
Lemmys voice was an iconic mix of whiskey, Marlboros and rusty nails, it was perfect for motorhead
I used to sing for fun, but could never sing like this because I hadn't drunk enough whiskey or smoked enough cigarettes. I still haven't 30 years later. lol
Had the absolute honor of seeing Motorhead back in 1988 as the supporting act for Slayer on their South of Heaven tour. I've been a Motorhead fan for a LONG time and even though they weren't hugely popular or as iconic as they became I was THRILLED to see them live.
I love seeing you rock out to this, Beth,
Welcome back to the gooood of music. 😉
Lemmy put his head in this position, because he wouldn t see that there only some people in the audience.
Some nice insides about Lemmy and Motörhead you could see in "Lemmy the Movie" from 2008/2009.
Lemmy was in an another band before Hawkwind. 😉
Wikipedia say:
Kilmister played in various bands, including The Rainmakers and then The Motown Sect for about three years. In 1965 he finally became guitarist with Reverend Black and The Rockin' Vicars (later The Rockin' Vickers). [22] With them he recorded the singles Zing! Went the Strings of My Heart (1965), It's Alright (1965) and Dandy (1966). He left the band in early 1967 and went to London.
The Greatest R'n'Rer ever walked on this Planet ! LEMMY 4EVER !
I've only seen them 3 times.
I was functionally deaf for 3 days after
every show. Yes, I wore ear plugs. The sound pressure alone could alter your heart rhythm.
Everyone sounded like Charlie Brown's parents. ISYN.
In their contract, it was specified..
"EVERYTHING LOUDER THAN EVERYTHING ELSE!!!"
This is just a pure example of pure exuberance and don't give a fuck.... really unashamedly bombastic and pure fun and aggression with a bit of Rye irony in the lyric as well. Truly a forever classic. There's no way these guys could have known they were basically inventing a genre in real time as they recording this album but damn.. it's still holds up.
Back in the day, it was life-affirming to hear them do this live!
Yes, I see the irony in what I just said, and the most famous lyrical line in the song: "...I don't wanna live forever!"
"Lemmy". Here you have an Englishman growing up largely in Wales. My wife always considered the name to be a corruption of the nickname for Brits -- Limey -- being brought about by the thick Welsh accent. (That would explain people calling him "Lemmy" in his youth, well before he started yanking on the one-armed bandits). His legal name -- Ian Fraser Kilmister -- makes him sound like he should have been a member of the House of Lords (I'd love to see the fully-grown Lemmy set loose in that "august" body -- perhaps he could have made a friend of Lord Sutch [hanging-out with the mercuric Vivian Stanshall and his terrapin army should prepare a man to get along with anyone]).
BETH! Awesome! And plaudits to you for being the first reactor I know of to even mention HAWKWIND! 😃. A totally underrated band mostly known only to musos for their seminal contributions to developing punk, metal, psychedelia AND electronic music! The Sex Pistols said if it were not for Hawkwind, they would never have existed. And Motorhead spanned the punk and metal scenes, of course. A Hawkwind reaction would be awesome. Nick Turner's vocals on Brainstorm are totes proto-punk. The live version from Space Ritual (1973!) is the best. It's quite long so you might want to edit it down. But it's a seminal moment in metal.and punk history that deserves more attention I think ❤
Thank you Beth
Hey, that's Motörhead! And they play rock 'n roll.
Long live Motörhead, probably the best live band in the world.
Early on Motorhead toured as support band for Hawkwind. I met Lemmy at one of those gigs after soundcheck, I was barely 16/17 at the time and nervous as hell. however, despite his demeanour, he was the sweetest friendliest dude and even gave my mate his last Motorhead badge. That night Motorhead blew Hawkwind off the stage. They were like an artillery barrage lasting 40 minutes, you felt it as much as heard it.
Of course, Lemmy was in Hawkwind before Mötorhead
@@pdcrmr indeed he was. I saw Hawkwind when Lemmy was still in the line up. January 1975.
I'm a huge Motorhead fan 🖤
I love seeing the introduction of new people to the band...you look like you had fun ❤️
I'd recommend his very first vocal performance, from Hawkwind called Silver Machine. 😁👍
That 🎵Ace of Spades🎵is Amazing!💖🔥💖🌞
Beth, I love your channel. I hope you can interview artists who are alive so you can learn or talk to them about where there sound comes from so there is no mystery about it.. keep up the good work.
Absolutely love this song and I honestly think it’s got the best ending of any rock song ever.
I was fortunate enough to have seen motorhead live in 2011 a few years before lemmy passed
Thats a blast from the past, I haven't listened to Hawkwind for about 30 years. So we can all be glad that 'Ace of Spades' wasn't called 'slot machine'!
Thank you Beth 🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹
Lemmy was in many bands before Hawkwind from the mid 60s, most notably The Rocking Vickers. Others include Opal Butterfly, Sam Gopal, The Rainmakers, The Motown Sect, plus some after Hawkwind and during Motorhead. Absolute legend.
I learned something new on vocal techniques !
Lemmy was a darn good musician too. Motorhead's bass lines are crazy hard
Lemmy was interviewed and said he held his head in that position because in the beginning, motorhead would get " 10 people and a dog watching us. I didn't want to see that there was only 10 people and a dog there. Therefore, I put the micrplophone in that position."
Reaching 70 years of age with that lifestyle...big respect. Lemmy is god
In some cases he used a more natural vocal style, actually singing instead of the distorted shouting. My examples for it would be the song I Don't Believe A Word and also 1916 (Sabaton released a decent cover of it).
Some of their later albums were indeed musically much more mature and "better"... but us morons wanted more of the raw hard and never bought those albums (well, not in the numbers that Bomber, Overkill and Ace of Spades sold. And frankly, I class myself as one of those neantherthals: Motorhead made me into a metalhead, and I wanted that Motorhead. Only decades later did I realise that Lemmy was right.
Cirith Ungul 'Frost and Fire's
Razor 'Violent Restitution'
Enjoy!
I for one do love Another Perfect Day from the bottom of my heart.
I wish I could remember the band name but it was a group 30years younger than Lemmy. They came back stage and Lemmy asked them if they wanted a drink. Sure! He turned around and grabbed a bottle of Jack, took the top off and handed it to one of them. Turned around grabbed a second bottle and handed it to the other one and said cheers! They looked at each other like “we are in way over our heads!” No, I wasn’t there I heard it in a documentary.
Young Lemmy sang in a pychedelic 60s band called Sam Gopal. His voice couldn't be more different, clear, melodic, delicate 😅
Singing upwards like that, reminds me of Liam Gallagher... there is a reason they assume that stance, it's for power and projection
I always assumed that Lemmy had the microphone set high in order to improve his singing, but then I saw an interview where he said that he did it because he had terrible stage fright and didn't want to look at the audience...🤣
Now you've done Motorhead and mentioned Hawkwind, it might be fun to react to a Hawkwind song! Have a go at Spirit Of The Age or Brainstorm for starters. DO get somebody to prewatch videos for you though, because some of the early ones feature a topless/naked dancer: the immortal Stacia!
And those are a couple of how many possible suggestions for Hawkwind reactions? I wouldn't know where to start recommending Hawkwind....... Quark? Damnation Alley? Psy Power? Wrong Step? High Rise? Masters of the Universe? Psychadelic Warlords?
@@trevorfolker3665 Oh hell yeah, it never stops, but you've got to start somewhere. The trouble is finding high quality videos: reactors, especially vocal coach reactors, prefere live video to just listening to the track.
I've met and drank with Lemmy, he didn't have stage fright ever, that's his wacky sense of humour...!!!
@@MickH60 Maybe, or maybe he just got over it in time.
An absolute rock 'n roll classic🤘and iconic lineup! I would love to have you react to Robin Trower, "Day Of The Eagle". Another timeless masterpiece of rock 'n roll history!
Roger Daltrey tends to raise his head up a lot when he sings too.
The first Speed Metal Song I Guess , in the 70s ! And great Lyrics , one of the most important Songs bringing music to a new level and quality!
He's a bloke that's for damn sure
Lemmy = legend !!!
You know it’s going to be a great day when Beth gets to breakdown God singing!
WHEN I DO CPR WE TILT THE HEAD UP TO OPEN THE AIR WAY
Motorhead was opening for another band we were going to see here in Detroit at Pine Knob but we were late. This was literally the only song I had heard of theirs and got there just in time to hear it as their last song, totally worth. "Who would win a fight, Lemmy or God? It's a trick question, Lemmy IS God!" - Airheads 🤘🏼
All time banger! I saw them twice, first opening for Ozzy Osbourne with Randy Rhodes on lead guitar in a large arena, very loud and awesome performance by both bands, they both had their A games going. The 2nd time it was just Motorhead in a large bar, they had a wall of Marshalls, all at 10 and blew us right out of that hall, they were the loudest band I ever saw because of the confined space they played in. Deep purple was much louder but outside in a huge open park, the sound was able to disperse where Motorhead played like they had to go all out, all concert in a confined space and just blew us away. Ringing ears for a couple days and took time to recover from that night! More Motorhead! Do One Track Mind and enjoy! 🔥🎵🎸🎤🎸🎶🔥
I'll admit, I still love the end solo in the OG Guitar Hero version of this song. I'd never heard the song before and thought that was part of it. Then I heard the actual song and was like, "why'd it just stop?"
Hi, German here. It's Lemmy's fault that I made a fool of myself at scholl back in the day. I thought it was pronounced "Motörhead", you know, with an "Ö".
It sort of is. Motörhead is the one English speaking band that uses the umlaut correct, although by pure chance. Lemmy just thought it looks mean. Motor isn't pronounced "motor," but "moter" or "motör." And the t is rather pronounced d. This is the phonetic spelling of motor: məʊtə (Eng.) or mō-tər (Am. Eng.). The o and o aren't pronounced the same. An upside down letter means "sound like." I would liken the second o in "motor" to the e in "her" and i in "girl." Dictionaries have the same upside down e for the e and i in those words.
Pronouncing it motor, with both os as o works too. Or modor if you like. Not only does the UK have tons of dialects, English is truly a global language. You can even pronounce it like Alexei Sayle does in Ullo John! Gotta New Motor? ruclips.net/video/OGMTCfjnP6Y/видео.html
Hawkwind were annoyed that the only "chart success" they had was with Silver Machine, sung by Lemmy. They hated playing it after he left. On the Live 79 album, the last track is Silver Machine (requiem) which suddenly explodes part way through. Fun times.
Love this reaction ❤️
Lemmy said that the reason he uses the mic in such a high position is because he used to get stage fright and didn't have to see the audience.
Lemmy is Rockin still ♠️🎼🎵🎶🎤🎸🎸🥁🔈🔊🔉🔊🔈🎼🎵🎶☠️🤘 Ace of ♠️🤘🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥💨💨💨💨💨💨💨💨🏴☠️‼️
Motörhead was my introduction to metal when I was 5.
If anyone ever asks how to define a rock star, you might just say, "LEMMY!" He might not have made as much money as some others but his influence on the music itself is like gravity...it's there, whether you know it or not, LOL He brought his "A game" as a singer, songwriter and performer to every show, from the first time Motorhead took a stage until he simply physically couldn't do it any longer.
amen! glad I saw them opening for Iron Maiden! I'm not a big fan but man that show was awesome! thanks for the memories!
Whan saw for the first time live on stage the Motorhead in a small basketball stage,after can't hear clean for 3-4 days🤘
I have the 12" single rerelease of "motorhead" by Hawkwind. Lemmys vocals are a bit different... worth a listen
"Silver Machine" is worth checking out too
Lemmy wrote songs for Ozzy as well, Philthy Phil Rapper, their drummer was the first drummer to tour with a double bass kick drums... In my opinion they are the Founder Fathers of Thrash (Speed) Metal.
Something else that made Lemmy sound unique was that he also had a condition which partly explained why when he talked at normal volumes he would mumble quite often, but once on stage theyve turned the sound up so much that he is actually shouting which naturally got rid of the mumbling.
And ofc the mic setup, he did that because he wanted to avoid looking at the crowd in the beginning when it was just three blokes and a dog.
Filthy Animal: We're ARTISTS! We're sensitive as shite!!!
Lemmy once said "We are so loud,if we moved in next door to you your lawn would die".
Before we had Lemmy, now all we have is Lammy.
I was at work rigging at a festival in Norway, when I got a notice from someone that "there's a junkie backstage stealing equipment". So I went behind, and found Lemmy. I told him, and he laughed his arse off 😅
Just a guess, but the mic position might (!) also be a result of him having a (pretty heavy - that Rickenbacker is not really light-weight) bass hanging around his shoulder. Maybe that slightly backwards posture just felt more relaxing for him.
He talked about his mic position in an interview once i'm pretty sure he said he feels like he's choking when he sings with his head down and he can't get air properly, it was something to that effect.
a defining song in the history of both Metal and Punk
If you analyze “Dancing in the Flames” please do the live version! Less produced vocals from The Weeknd