Motorhead IS Rock 'N' Roll. They embodied everything great about it, the hedonism, the rebellion, the aggression. R.I.P. "Fast Eddie" Clarke, "Philthy Animal" Taylor, and, Ian Fraser "Lemmy" Kilmister.
Motorhead was so early that there weren't any metal subgenres yet, but there was not a single metal band that they didn't influence, so thrash bands especially picked up on their speed and outlaw vibe. The Lem always said they were just a rock 'n roll band
Lemmy was such a larger than life character. It was really eye-opening when I went and saw Henry Rollins do spoken word years ago, and he spoke very funnily but also very personally about his friendship with Lemmy in his last few years. There's a 30 minute clip on UA-cam of one of his spoken word where he talks about Lemmy. It's pretty much the same as what I saw. It made me reconsider Lemmy in a new light. Endless respect for the guy. RIP.
That sure is a must watch. A very talented storyteller talking about a once in a lifetime character, with a huge amount of respect and love. Really touching
Motorhead came out of the 70s - the music was based on the main drug Lemmy and the band liked which was crank or speed - methamphetamines. Loud, fast, and raw sounding music amps the effects of speed. People outside of the drug culture - took a long time in adjusting their hearing to this kind of music - but kids flocked to it, as youth often do, with exuberance and spectacle of a band that appears to be playing over-the-top, non-conformist, adrenaline inducing, musical assaults in large venues veering in unexpected ways like tightrope walkers about to fall, but pulling it back, at the last second, to resolve in a crescendo of delight. The audience would lose their minds. Straight ahead, non-apologetic, fearless - Motorhead pioneered a sound and attitude that defied the conventional wisdom of its era. It rocked harder than any band before it. And opened the door to many bands that followed. R.I.P. Lemmy
This song right here is the genesis of Thrash. It also popolarized the double bass drum for thrash. Lemmy was one of the onou guys who rockers and punks could agree on (those were some deep factions back in the 70s). Metallica's Lars Ulrich and James Hetfield bonded over their love of Motorhead when they first met. The song on their first album whiplash was them trying to write a Motorhead like song. Motorhead have so many amazing tracks no one knows about. Their 90s and 2000s albums have so many gems. Theyre worth a deep dive.
Lemmy wanted Motorhead to be the MC5 when he founded them...and he was Hawkwind's bassist/singer - the song 'Motorhead' was the last song he wrote for Hawkwind.
Motorhead are traditional heavy metal and belonged perfectly alongside bands like Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, Saxon, and Ozzy. "Heavy Metal is Rock and Roll...it's just another name for it." - Lemmy. It's not that Lemmy didn't consider Motorhead metal, in his book he does refer to Motorhead as a metal band, it's just that Lemmy hates labels. "there's only two types of music...music you like and music you don't." "Heavy Metal is the true spirit of Rock and Roll." - Lemmy
@@SoulSingerDiscovers Venom is the band (from Newcastle) that's the missing link between Motörhead and thrash. They took what Motörhead did, played it faster, louder, rawer and filled it with Satanic lyrics to scare people. They are also credited with inventing/popularising the term "black metal". Recommended songs: Black Metal, Witching Hour, Heaven's On Fire. Slower songs like Welcome To Hell and Bathory are also interesting :).
@@SoulSingerDiscoversVenom is a legend and pretty much they were starters of black metal. The name of their second album gave the whole genre the name. I like them Satanism and all included. They did not sound like black metal today, but hey, they started 1979. They had a strong punk flavor in their music and they were incredibly influential, be it for black metal, thrash, or whatever extreme metal came after them. They never became fame, but so were a lot bands in black metal that had a huge impact on metal, like Bathory. Definitely worth to check out. (Venom as well as Bathory, who also invented Viking Metal, their album "Twilight of the Gods" is a milestone and guess what - I wear a Bathory t-shirt regularly. Because I think Quorton, the head of Bathory, was an effing genius.) But I digressed. Check these bands❤ out.
Motorhead are exactly what hard rock should be. Raw, loud, unapologetici, no thrills and just playing what they want to play. If you like it great, if you don't, they are going to carry on anyway. For me, they have been a huge influence on my life and Lemmy is one of my all time heroes.
By that, I mean they don't try to be what they are not. They don't wear flashy stage clothes or try to have the highest tech and lasers for the stage show. They just go out and depend on their own originality and brilliance. Hard to ttalk about them in the past tense :(
@@darrencooke4207 I know what you meant BUT the saying is "no frills" whereas YOU said "no thrills" which is wrong. I first saw Motorhead on the Bomber tour in 1979 & their stage show was one of the most advanced & hi-tech around at that time.
I've saw Motorhead live dozens of times and they will always be one of my favorite bands. I was introduced to them on late Sunday night as I was watching The Young Ones on MTV, and they were the musical guest on that particular episode. Was blessed enough once, to actually Lemmy (Actually, I've met three different members of the band at different times), and he was truly one of the nicest guys I have ever met! He treated my brother, my friend and me with all kinds of respect, signing autographs and taking pictures with each of us. (I will take that memory with me to my grave!) I look at Motorhead as one of the most perfect metal/punk hybrids EVER! Respected and loved by both genera's. No they're not uber-technical like Dream Theatre, but their music is distinct and instantly recognizable. Lemmy's bass playing is almost eunique, as he plays chords instead of just keeping the rhythm with individual strings. I view them as both pioneers and the Godfathers of thrash. James Hetfield and Metallica have sung Motorhead's praises and influences for as long as I can remember. I'm glad you gave them a second chance. I'm sorry you were traumatized by Ace Of Spades, as it's my favorite Motorhead song, but I understand why, due to what happened. If you want to check out a 180 degree of this song, you should check out Lemmy's duet with Ozzy on the song I Ain't not Nice Guy. 😀 Love your channel....Keep up the amazingly awesome and kick ass work Till the next video... 🤘
To break out of that "Ace of Spades" sound, I recommend listening to their cover of David Bowie's "Heroes"... it might just change your mind about Motorhead.
Best song on this album. One of my favs. Part of the distortion in Lemmy's voice, at least on studio tracks, was due to him recording the track twice and playing them both at the same time on the studio tracks. That's how he got that sound on the album songs.
Motörhead predates trash metal quite a lot, and while they were often classified as metal due to their rough soundscape, especially in the early 1980s, it was more about people wanting to put labels on something that did not really fit any of them very well. Lemmy insisted Motörhead was rock'n'roll, and I'm not gonna argue with that.
Lemmy considered Motorhead's influences to be 50s and 60s rock and roll - Little Richard, The Beatles ect. He formed Motorhead after being kicked out of space rockers Hawkwind (his vocals were on 'Silver Machine' which was pretty high in the charts) and wanted this new band to be faster, dirtier, angrier and louder. Essentially it's still old school rock and roll. Also there's a superb mash up of Overkill with James Brown's Super bad somewhere on YT
@@stoicsceptic8420 He was stopped near the US/Canada border, which led to him to be kicked out of the band (after they got him back for one gig, according to Lemmy, as his replacement couldn't make it in time)
Lemmy always said it was music to piss your parents off. This song was the genesis of thrash metal. Phil the drummer set up his kit with a double kick one day and was just messing around at rehearsal and it turned into this song. How you felt at the end of the video is how a lot of us metalheads feel every day, a lot of us are angry or frustrated people and this music helps us get some of that out
Nothing about Motorhead was ordinary loved by rockers punks and shoe retailers. They toured religiously so you could set your calendar by them and played both the east and west coast of Scotland (unlike the one date in Scotland makes it a UK tour brigade) Live on stage was the best way to experience them
I imagine Scotland is same boat as us here in Canada lol. They'll announce a "North America tour" and it'll be 20+ American dates and a Toronto show maybe Vancouver if they remember western Canada exists but that's rare
There's nothing to debate or discuss. They're a rock & roll band. Nothing more, nothing less. If you don't like it, they weren't playing it for you in the first place.
Motorhead is one of My favorites! They self described as rock music. Still one of the loudest shows I ever saw, was Motorhead! You probably like the song Hellraiser by Motorhead. It was in the Hellraiser 3 movie, and Pinhead is in the music video with Lemmy! Keep up the great work My Fine Scottish Lady ❤!
Ace of Spades is a great song ... but on repeat for weeks is torment! It's hard to imagine that Lemmy went from the marvellous weirdness of Hawkwind to the stripped down rock 'n' roll that was Motorhead :D. I confess I was never a big fan of the tunes on the whole but Lemmy had that working class, down-to-earth, honesty that meant I always had time for him.
Motorhead, Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, all part of the "New Wave of British Heavy Metal", they were just before thrash and heavily influenced all the later thrash bands that would soon follow.
Not quite, sure Iron Maiden was but not Judas priest or Motörhead. Judas released their debut album 1973 and Motörhead 1975. Qualifying as just heavy metal. Al though they got a second coming with the nwobhm.
Being a Motorhead fan since the late 70's I can confirm that Motorhead were a pivotal influence on everykind of fast paced derivative of 'Heavy Metal'. A suggestion is to go to a metal club (say Solids just near Central Station) and ask to hear a Motorhead song. Then drink in the vibe in the room. It will be both cathartic and therapeautic. 'The ONLY way to feel the noise is when it's good and loud' as the song says.
I used Ace of spades after a frustrating day at work to get my blood pressure to an acceptable level again by playing it several times on war level volume, and it helped.
Motörhead - it's real source of heavy metal itself, without it this genre was never be what it is. You should try Motörhead ballads, like "Dead And Gone", "One More Fuкing Time", "Till The End" etc. :)
This track always reminds me of a drunken house party where we all tried to play this on drums Expert+ on Guitar Hero Metallica edition. No one could make it through. Bunch of unfit blokes. Then my brothers mate, April, who'd so far sat in the corner, stepped up, smashed it, and went on to learn drums... proper drums 👏🏻
"killed by death" is a fabulous Motorhead song that is a different vibe and is to be played at my funeral. Lemmy was influenced by 60`s rocker Eddie Cochrane.
Yup. He wrote the song Silver Machine for Hawkwind. But because he was just the lowly base player they didn't want him to sing it. But apparently no one in the band had the range to sing it, including the lead singer Dave Brock. So they eventually allowed him to do it, as he was the only one in the band who could.
It’s absolutely Rock and Roll. Crossover . Not metal or trash . I saw them in 1980 at Reading . Or about then. I was not sober , That I can tell. Ramones is their Twins
i can guarantee you that there is at least 1 song from Motorhead that you will absolutely like ; and that song is called _1916_ . it is a sharp departure from anything else they ever did ; and you'll be thanking me once you hear it -- and that's a promise 🙏. for me, the deeper i deconstruct the song/production, the better it gets. Sabaton did a cover/tribute to it a couple of years ago ; and while the 2 versions are completely different (in terms of sound/production), they are each as close to perfect in their delivery/presentation as can be done. (speaking of which .... perhaps we could get a double-feature?) and yes, while Lemmy calls it just simply "rock 'n' roll" , they are deffo pioneers of speed metal / thrash, with a bit of a punk-ish sound thrown it.
Lemmy smoked two packs of Reds a day and drank a fifth of Jack a day. That's where he gets his voice. That, and they were ridiculously loud. Motorhead falls in the pioneer movement along with Black Sabbath, Deep Purple and Led Zepplin. They were just a tad later. They double kick of the drummer was an attempt to recreate the fast foot of John Bonham from Zepplin. It's a cheat code. Say what you want about Motorhead, but they forged bridges between the metal and punk crowd. They started genres. They were rock and roll at it's grossest and hardest. And you are bobbing your head.
Lemmy and the boys never saw themselves as anything other than a Rock & Roll band. I totally agree with that. But, interestingly enough most older Metal bands including Trash cites them as a huge influence on them. Their drummer, the late Phil Taylor was one of the first one to play double-bass drums that way and that fast. It was unknown for the time And yeah, a lot of their songs sound the same and that's why I love them 🤘👍
my first Live Rock Concert in Germany, November 29, 1992 (i was 15): Opening act: DIO, second: MOTÖRHEAD, Headliner : RAMONES, and ii have only good memories!!
The song Motörhead was created during Lemmy's Hawkwind years. I like and have their first albums. A little Lemmy story: a friend of mine knew the drummer of the Band Kingdom Come from Altona, Hamburg, Germany. He told him this story: he was sitting at the Hamburg airport, when a guy showed up and sat down next to him. Introducing himself: "Hello. My name is Lemmy Kilmister. And I want us both to have a good time." And pulled out a bottle of vodka, which they shared :-)
I first got into Motorhead back in 1988. Lemmy was inspired by Little Richard and the MC5. High energy, rough and raw. He does a cover of Stand By Me, that you should check out.
Oh, sorry for your extreme exposure to Ace of Spades, one of my favourite Mh songs:) Also, it’s lovely to see intelligent people like you on Yt, thank you!
I had a similar traumatic experience working at circuit city way back when Britney Spears came out with hit me baby one more time. Brutal. I feel for you.
Lemmy always classed Mötorhead as Rock n Roll. They were the one band that was able to unite rockers, metalheads and punks. Now, many of their songs reflect their hedonistic fast living, but Lemmy could have his very emotional and sombre moments. Two that I would highly recommend are "1916" which Sabaton did a good cover of, but does lack the raw emotion that Lemmy put across. The second is "Don't Let Daddy Kiss Me", a brutally emotional song Lemmy wrote as he felt that people didn't get the message in Aerosmith's "Janie's Got a Gun"
Lemme says rock and roll. But we consider Motorhead metal. And understand that with metal the music is as important than the singing/lyrics. Sometimes even more.
I discovered Motorhead in 1981 with their No Sleep Till Hammersmith live album. Saw them live in 1984 at the Tower Theater in Philadelphia. LOUDEST concert I had ever seen. Lemmy was funny and Motorhead played Rock and Roll the way it was supposed to be, loud fast, and filthy. Overkill was a very early Motorhead, their later stuff was better produced and they even came out with a few tear jerkers like 1916. Fun reaction.
One of the best lyricists you will find, lemmy was a true poet, check out orgasmatron if you don't believe me, and its alot gentler than this. Or queensryche and silent lucidity, one of the best songs ever recorded.
Overkill and Ace Of Spades are the archetypal fast Motorhead songs but they have loads of mid-tempo songs, check out Born To Raise Hell or their cover of Louie Louie, they even have a few slow songs such as Metropolis, and 1916 is almost a ballad. Their first album pre-dated NWOBHM by a couple of years but they came to be regarded as one of the leading lights of the movement. Also check out Silver Machine by Hawkwind to hear Lemmy's clean vocals before he developed his trademark growl.
A lot of people have arguements in the comments...........thats the understatement of the year!!!! I burst out laughing when you said that, briliant. try 1916 and Hellraiser 2 totally different styles from this. Motorhead influenced a huge ammounts of bands over the years, I guess you could say they were pioneers, but they were so generally admired for just being Motorhead throughout their career
Motörhead is one of the biggest influences of all Big 4 Bands. It is not wrong to say without Motörhead metal would be not what it is today and most metal musicians acknowledge this fact.
It's a pitty that you experienced that in your youth. That's one of Lemmy's best songs, too. I hate when someone gets a good song ruined by external influences. I've had several that I've had the same kind of thing with other band/songs, so I feel you, lass.
Its not the big 4 of metal, only of thrash, and all 4 deserve their place based on sales, tours and influence. Motorhead are a 70's band who were very much a big influencer on thrash metal. They played "rock'n'roll" but was a fusion of punk, metal and a hard blues. Their songs cover a lot of tempo ranges but driving fast tunes were their staple.
Motorhead saw themselves as rock & roll, never heavy metal, but they heavily influenced early thrash metal with their speed & intensity. They were also aggy enough that early punks, who hated bands with long hair, were into them!
Motorhead’s sound was in part a reaction to Lemmy’s time in Hawkwind, stripping out the space rock keyboards and synth-stacks in favour of a more aggressive, punchy sound (though Hawkwind can do aggressive when they want to - Brainstorm on the Space Ritual album ❤). It’s also Rock’n’Roll’s answer to punk, every bit as rebellious as the Pistols but with real tight musicianship and no nonsense. Lemmy’s voice wasn’t musical and his playing style owes more to rhythm guitar than conventional bass, but it’s that combo along with the driving drums and high-octane guitars that really makes Motorhead’s sound special. You should check out Girlschool. Their sound is similarly pummelling and they did collaborations with Motorhead as Head Girl.
The very BEST versions of all these early 'Head tracks are on the blistering live album 'No Sleep til Hammersmith', they go several levels beyond the studio versions.....
Love to see ya again! As a Motörhead fan I have tro be a litle picky now... you missed a part of the song when your camera went off. The song is restarted twice and your break is in the first restart, but your last part of the video starts from the second and last restart of the song. I think the guitar solo in the first restart is the best in the whole song. However, Motörhead witj their including of the rawness and speed from punk rock was a great influncer of what to became the more extreme metal to come, as thrash metal, speed metal, death metal and black metal (also summarized in the term "extreme metal"). This way to almost refuse to stop playing with very long outros or even restart the song to do several endings is something that most probably inspired Manowar to do similar in many of their songs and even more when playing live. About Lemmy and he's voice; he's well known for smoking and drinking alot, also using amphetamine and sometimes coke. So he had this distorted/hars voice from the early days. But it also went worse by the years and at the last decade or decades of his life it was hard to even hear what he was sayning in interwievs.
oh no..... I love Motorhead, and Ace of spades... but, i am pretty much positive you heard it more in that time period than I have in my entire life!! (46yrs btw) that's horrible.. That amount of Ace of Spades would be nothing short of........................OVERKILL!!! :D :D :D :D
Would love to see you react to the (vastly superior) live versions of this from either the literally legendary 'No Sleep 'Til Hammersmith' or 'Stage Fright' live albums...both of those absolutely crush the studio version you have here.
Yeah, it always bothers me a bit when people react to studio versions of Motorhead, although it's usually Ace of Spades so a plus point for choosing a better track!
Lemme would always tell interviewers who asked about playing metal, "We're not a heavy metal band. We play rock n' roll." He swore to his death that they didn't play metal, despite the MASSIVE influence they had on countless metal bands. I saw them a couple of times, and it was always a great show. Lemme was a unique individual
@@EleanorMcHughthe funny part about Peter Murphy denying Bauhaus being goth is that he and the band played up the goth esthetic in their outfits, as well as their music.
I think Lemmy built Motorhead just because he wanted to do something that had NEVER been finr, kind of like when KISS fused goal withbhorror, science fiction and theatricality, or when the Beatles wrote Shelter Shelter and created heavy metal before it existed. Queen did something similar when they write stone Cold Crazy. You never know where new ideas will come from :)
I can feel your pain regarding the repeated commercial musical abuse. I worked in a video store around the time Disney rereleased Little Mermaid, and we were required to play it on repeat-so I got to hear it 4 times per day. Needless to say, I am still not a fan of that movie. I am, however, a big fan of Motorhead, thrashy/bashy and Soul Singer Discovers! Kudos for facing your trauma :D
Lemmy would growl at you that Motorhead were a rock and roll band Not thrash Not metal. Rock and Roll. Lemmy said everything he did came from Elvis. But they were definitely pioneers of speed metal and had a huge influence on early thrash. Motorhead were accepted by both punks and metalheads. Their repertoire was actually very diverse, from speed metal to 1950's rock n roll, through power ballads to 1916, which is just a snare and a voice, and will make you cry.
When it comes to Motörhead and punk, I see where you are coming from. Lemmy himself said their aim was to take rock'n'roll and drop all the superficial and fancy stuff built over it over the years and embrace the very core. Which has similar anti-prog vibes than punk; make rock'n'roll rough, loud and unsophisticated again.
If you want to hear the bass drums getting machine-gunned, might I suggest "The Serpentine Offering", by Dimmu Borgir (preferably the 2012 performance at Wacken Open Air, with the full orchestra and choir)
Lemmy would always say at the beginning of their gigs, ‘we are Motörhead and we play rock and roll’
Yep ... just at a faster tempo than anyone else. Then again, given the meaning of the term 'motorhead', makes sense ...
Saw Motörhead at the variety theater in Cleveland during the eighties, and they were so loud they literally destroyed the place.
yep, Lemmy hadn't got time for subgenres, just get on with it and play lol
saw them on "no sleep til Hammersmith"-tour, so loud, 4 days no hearing after, but it was real fun@@waltstilwell4933
I wonder if somebody covered those songs in actual, original 50's Rock'n'Roll style. Somebody like Postmodern Jukebox? Could be fun.
Motorhead IS Rock 'N' Roll. They embodied everything great about it, the hedonism, the rebellion, the aggression. R.I.P. "Fast Eddie" Clarke, "Philthy Animal" Taylor, and, Ian Fraser "Lemmy" Kilmister.
Wurzuls dead to you know?
did you just read the wiki?
Glad you mentioned Wurzel. His contribution to the Motörhead legacy definitely can’t be denied.
Motorhead was so early that there weren't any metal subgenres yet, but there was not a single metal band that they didn't influence, so thrash bands especially picked up on their speed and outlaw vibe. The Lem always said they were just a rock 'n roll band
Fun fact: this song was the inspiration behind the name of the legendary thrash metal band Overkill.
If you're ever curious about what Lemmy sounds like when he's not screaming, check out the Motorhead song "1916."
Great recommendation. Also the live version of Whorehouse Blues. Both superb tracks
Lemmy doesn't scream!
@@Mardenski100 Yes! Lemmy sounds like a man who drinks 5 bottles of Mexican Tequila per day!!
@@Mardenski100
Haha, yeah, what an awkward thing to say.
or sam gopals escalator album from 1968
What a wonderful noise. I miss Motorhead.
Motorhead were the bridge between punk & metal. Truly one of a kind.
Lemmys start to the concerts: "We are Motörhead and we play rock 'n' roll" - Enuff said. 🙃🙃
When i saw live on stage the Motorhead in a small basketball stage in Athens Greece,after i can't hear clean for 3-4 days later😂😂😂
And so worth it, though for me the ringing in my ears did get annoying after a week of seeing them in Amsterdam live 😂
Lemmy was such a larger than life character. It was really eye-opening when I went and saw Henry Rollins do spoken word years ago, and he spoke very funnily but also very personally about his friendship with Lemmy in his last few years. There's a 30 minute clip on UA-cam of one of his spoken word where he talks about Lemmy. It's pretty much the same as what I saw. It made me reconsider Lemmy in a new light. Endless respect for the guy. RIP.
That sure is a must watch. A very talented storyteller talking about a once in a lifetime character, with a huge amount of respect and love. Really touching
Motorhead came out of the 70s - the music was based on the main drug Lemmy and the band liked which was crank or speed - methamphetamines. Loud, fast, and raw sounding music amps the effects of speed. People outside of the drug culture - took a long time in adjusting their hearing to this kind of music - but kids flocked to it, as youth often do, with exuberance and spectacle of a band that appears to be playing over-the-top, non-conformist, adrenaline inducing, musical assaults in large venues veering in unexpected ways like tightrope walkers about to fall, but pulling it back, at the last second, to resolve in a crescendo of delight. The audience would lose their minds. Straight ahead, non-apologetic, fearless - Motorhead pioneered a sound and attitude that defied the conventional wisdom of its era. It rocked harder than any band before it. And opened the door to many bands that followed. R.I.P. Lemmy
This song right here is the genesis of Thrash. It also popolarized the double bass drum for thrash. Lemmy was one of the onou guys who rockers and punks could agree on (those were some deep factions back in the 70s). Metallica's Lars Ulrich and James Hetfield bonded over their love of Motorhead when they first met. The song on their first album whiplash was them trying to write a Motorhead like song. Motorhead have so many amazing tracks no one knows about. Their 90s and 2000s albums have so many gems. Theyre worth a deep dive.
Lemmy wanted Motorhead to be the MC5 when he founded them...and he was Hawkwind's bassist/singer - the song 'Motorhead' was the last song he wrote for Hawkwind.
Motorhead are traditional heavy metal and belonged perfectly alongside bands like Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, Saxon, and Ozzy. "Heavy Metal is Rock and Roll...it's just another name for it." - Lemmy. It's not that Lemmy didn't consider Motorhead metal, in his book he does refer to Motorhead as a metal band, it's just that Lemmy hates labels. "there's only two types of music...music you like and music you don't." "Heavy Metal is the true spirit of Rock and Roll." - Lemmy
To get from Motörhead to Slayer, you'll need to go through Venom 😈
Sounds mysterious 😊
@@SoulSingerDiscovers Venom is the band (from Newcastle) that's the missing link between Motörhead and thrash. They took what Motörhead did, played it faster, louder, rawer and filled it with Satanic lyrics to scare people. They are also credited with inventing/popularising the term "black metal". Recommended songs: Black Metal, Witching Hour, Heaven's On Fire. Slower songs like Welcome To Hell and Bathory are also interesting :).
@@SoulSingerDiscoversVenom is a legend and pretty much they were starters of black metal. The name of their second album gave the whole genre the name. I like them Satanism and all included. They did not sound like black metal today, but hey, they started 1979. They had a strong punk flavor in their music and they were incredibly influential, be it for black metal, thrash, or whatever extreme metal came after them. They never became fame, but so were a lot bands in black metal that had a huge impact on metal, like Bathory.
Definitely worth to check out. (Venom as well as Bathory, who also invented Viking Metal, their album "Twilight of the Gods" is a milestone and guess what - I wear a Bathory t-shirt regularly. Because I think Quorton, the head of Bathory, was an effing genius.)
But I digressed. Check these bands❤ out.
@@SwordOfHeimdall Teachers Pet and Buried Alive!!!Cheers!!!!
And merciful fate
Motorhead is my all-time favorite band. I saw them in concert 7 times, and they were always incredible.
Motorhead are exactly what hard rock should be. Raw, loud, unapologetici, no thrills and just playing what they want to play. If you like it great, if you don't, they are going to carry on anyway. For me, they have been a huge influence on my life and Lemmy is one of my all time heroes.
*no frills
By that, I mean they don't try to be what they are not. They don't wear flashy stage clothes or try to have the highest tech and lasers for the stage show. They just go out and depend on their own originality and brilliance. Hard to ttalk about them in the past tense :(
@@darrencooke4207 I know what you meant BUT the saying is "no frills" whereas YOU said "no thrills" which is wrong.
I first saw Motorhead on the Bomber tour in 1979 & their stage show was one of the most advanced & hi-tech around at that time.
I see what you mean. Sorry for the spelling mistake
I've saw Motorhead live dozens of times and they will always be one of my favorite bands.
I was introduced to them on late Sunday night as I was watching The Young Ones on MTV, and they were the musical guest on that particular episode.
Was blessed enough once, to actually Lemmy (Actually, I've met three different members of the band at different times), and he was truly one of the nicest guys I have ever met! He treated my brother, my friend and me with all kinds of respect, signing autographs and taking pictures with each of us. (I will take that memory with me to my grave!)
I look at Motorhead as one of the most perfect metal/punk hybrids EVER! Respected and loved by both genera's.
No they're not uber-technical like Dream Theatre, but their music is distinct and instantly recognizable. Lemmy's bass playing is almost eunique, as he plays chords instead of just keeping the rhythm with individual strings.
I view them as both pioneers and the Godfathers of thrash. James Hetfield and Metallica have sung Motorhead's praises and influences for as long as I can remember.
I'm glad you gave them a second chance. I'm sorry you were traumatized by Ace Of Spades, as it's my favorite Motorhead song, but I understand why, due to what happened.
If you want to check out a 180 degree of this song, you should check out Lemmy's duet with Ozzy on the song I Ain't not Nice Guy. 😀
Love your channel....Keep up the amazingly awesome and kick ass work
Till the next video... 🤘
Thank you so much for this wonderful comment and for watching my dude 😊💜
To break out of that "Ace of Spades" sound, I recommend listening to their cover of David Bowie's "Heroes"... it might just change your mind about Motorhead.
Best song on this album. One of my favs. Part of the distortion in Lemmy's voice, at least on studio tracks, was due to him recording the track twice and playing them both at the same time on the studio tracks. That's how he got that sound on the album songs.
Motörhead predates trash metal quite a lot, and while they were often classified as metal due to their rough soundscape, especially in the early 1980s, it was more about people wanting to put labels on something that did not really fit any of them very well. Lemmy insisted Motörhead was rock'n'roll, and I'm not gonna argue with that.
Ace of Spades, non stop for 6 weeks, i see no problem with this!!!! 🤘🤘🤘
Right!! Its the screaming kids that would take me out. 🤣
@@llusk6375surely Ace of Spades is enough incentive to start clubbing the little brats with their back to school shoes? That would be hilarious!
Motorhead weren't Thrash, but they inspired many musicians who then created Thrash - amazing band, my all time favourite 🤘
Motorhead are Masters. Rock n' Roll Masters. Enough said.
Lemmy considered Motorhead's influences to be 50s and 60s rock and roll - Little Richard, The Beatles ect. He formed Motorhead after being kicked out of space rockers Hawkwind (his vocals were on 'Silver Machine' which was pretty high in the charts) and wanted this new band to be faster, dirtier, angrier and louder. Essentially it's still old school rock and roll.
Also there's a superb mash up of Overkill with James Brown's Super bad somewhere on YT
Hawkwind didn’t just kick him out , they flew home , leaving him in a jail cell in somewhere like Morocco to face drug charges IIRC.
@@stoicsceptic8420 He was stopped near the US/Canada border, which led to him to be kicked out of the band (after they got him back for one gig, according to Lemmy, as his replacement couldn't make it in time)
@@ZoahLord thanks , it was a long time ago , used to listen them about 45 years ago 😳
Lemmy always said it was music to piss your parents off. This song was the genesis of thrash metal. Phil the drummer set up his kit with a double kick one day and was just messing around at rehearsal and it turned into this song. How you felt at the end of the video is how a lot of us metalheads feel every day, a lot of us are angry or frustrated people and this music helps us get some of that out
Great comment. Thanks for watching 😊
Nothing about Motorhead was ordinary loved by rockers punks and shoe retailers. They toured religiously so you could set your calendar by them and played both the east and west coast of Scotland (unlike the one date in Scotland makes it a UK tour brigade) Live on stage was the best way to experience them
I imagine Scotland is same boat as us here in Canada lol. They'll announce a "North America tour" and it'll be 20+ American dates and a Toronto show maybe Vancouver if they remember western Canada exists but that's rare
There's nothing to debate or discuss. They're a rock & roll band. Nothing more, nothing less. If you don't like it, they weren't playing it for you in the first place.
Motorhead is one of My favorites! They self described as rock music. Still one of the loudest shows I ever saw, was Motorhead! You probably like the song Hellraiser by Motorhead. It was in the Hellraiser 3 movie, and Pinhead is in the music video with Lemmy! Keep up the great work My Fine Scottish Lady ❤!
You had me at horror movies and music 😂 thanks Scott 💜💜💜
You gotta love Lemmy playing the lead bass!!!...🤘🤘🤘🤘
Ace of Spades is a great song ... but on repeat for weeks is torment!
It's hard to imagine that Lemmy went from the marvellous weirdness of Hawkwind to the stripped down rock 'n' roll that was Motorhead :D. I confess I was never a big fan of the tunes on the whole but Lemmy had that working class, down-to-earth, honesty that meant I always had time for him.
Motorhead, Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, all part of the "New Wave of British Heavy Metal", they were just before thrash and heavily influenced all the later thrash bands that would soon follow.
Not quite, sure Iron Maiden was but not Judas priest or Motörhead.
Judas released their debut album 1973 and Motörhead 1975.
Qualifying as just heavy metal.
Al though they got a second coming with the nwobhm.
@@bullfidde Thank you. I hate when people get that wrong. NWOBHM to me is bands like Tank, Satan, Tyger of Pan Tang, Raven, early maiden, etc.
The drummer is bloody amazing, love the drums in this.
I saw them live when I was 7 years old I'm 21 now still the best concert I've ever been to
Being a Motorhead fan since the late 70's I can confirm that Motorhead were a pivotal influence on everykind of fast paced derivative of 'Heavy Metal'. A suggestion is to go to a metal club (say Solids just near Central Station) and ask to hear a Motorhead song. Then drink in the vibe in the room. It will be both cathartic and therapeautic. 'The ONLY way to feel the noise is when it's good and loud' as the song says.
"Anywhere on Earth with electricity has Motorhead fans....."
I used Ace of spades after a frustrating day at work to get my blood pressure to an acceptable level again
by playing it several times on war level volume, and it helped.
Motörhead - it's real source of heavy metal itself, without it this genre was never be what it is. You should try Motörhead ballads, like "Dead And Gone", "One More Fuкing Time", "Till The End" etc. :)
Without Lemmy there would be no Anthrax, Slayer, Metallica, or Megadeth
There are some songs in motorhead huge catalogue that would surprise you. "God was never on your side" and "1916" and a few others that will surprise
This track always reminds me of a drunken house party where we all tried to play this on drums Expert+ on Guitar Hero Metallica edition. No one could make it through. Bunch of unfit blokes. Then my brothers mate, April, who'd so far sat in the corner, stepped up, smashed it, and went on to learn drums... proper drums 👏🏻
"killed by death" is a fabulous Motorhead song that is a different vibe and is to be played at my funeral. Lemmy was influenced by 60`s rocker Eddie Cochrane.
Melissa, I was really surprised by Lemmy's vocals in "I don't believe a word." He had range!
Yup. He wrote the song Silver Machine for Hawkwind. But because he was just the lowly base player they didn't want him to sing it. But apparently no one in the band had the range to sing it, including the lead singer Dave Brock. So they eventually allowed him to do it, as he was the only one in the band who could.
It’s absolutely Rock and Roll. Crossover . Not metal or trash . I saw them in 1980 at Reading . Or about then. I was not sober , That I can tell. Ramones is their Twins
i can guarantee you that there is at least 1 song from Motorhead that you will absolutely like ; and that song is called _1916_ .
it is a sharp departure from anything else they ever did ; and you'll be thanking me once you hear it -- and that's a promise 🙏.
for me, the deeper i deconstruct the song/production, the better it gets.
Sabaton did a cover/tribute to it a couple of years ago ; and while the 2 versions are completely different (in terms of sound/production), they are each as close to perfect in their delivery/presentation as can be done.
(speaking of which .... perhaps we could get a double-feature?)
and yes, while Lemmy calls it just simply "rock 'n' roll" , they are deffo pioneers of speed metal / thrash, with a bit of a punk-ish sound thrown it.
Ace Of Spades Tour , front row in front of speakers. Could not hear a thing in school next day
Aye 1979 they're memories now but happy days. Motorhead at the time where bringing us a brand new sound
Even though it's not necessarily my jam I respect the innovation. Thanks for watching my dude :)
Lemmy smoked two packs of Reds a day and drank a fifth of Jack a day. That's where he gets his voice. That, and they were ridiculously loud. Motorhead falls in the pioneer movement along with Black Sabbath, Deep Purple and Led Zepplin. They were just a tad later. They double kick of the drummer was an attempt to recreate the fast foot of John Bonham from Zepplin. It's a cheat code. Say what you want about Motorhead, but they forged bridges between the metal and punk crowd. They started genres. They were rock and roll at it's grossest and hardest. And you are bobbing your head.
Just love Philtys’ drumwork here🤘🏻😎♠️
Lemmy and the boys never saw themselves as anything other than a Rock & Roll band. I totally agree with that. But, interestingly enough most older Metal bands including Trash cites them as a huge influence on them. Their drummer, the late Phil Taylor was one of the first one to play double-bass drums that way and that fast. It was unknown for the time And yeah, a lot of their songs sound the same and that's why I love them 🤘👍
my first Live Rock Concert in Germany, November 29, 1992 (i was 15): Opening act: DIO, second: MOTÖRHEAD, Headliner : RAMONES, and ii have only good memories!!
THE ROCKING VICKERS and HAWKWIND were instrumental in the creation of MOTORHEAD.
Oh heck yeah...that's my girl!!!! So glad you did this song....perfect!!! Cheers from Southern California
As a Sabbath fan since 71, the big 4 are Sabbath, Priest, Motorhead, Saxon. Check out Black Sabbath to see where IT all began.
Just straight ahead rock and roll
The song Motörhead was created during Lemmy's Hawkwind years. I like and have their first albums. A little Lemmy story: a friend of mine knew the drummer of the Band Kingdom Come from Altona, Hamburg, Germany. He told him this story: he was sitting at the Hamburg airport, when a guy showed up and sat down next to him. Introducing himself: "Hello. My name is Lemmy Kilmister. And I want us both to have a good time." And pulled out a bottle of vodka, which they shared :-)
Motorhead played industrial strength rock n' roll.
I first got into Motorhead back in 1988. Lemmy was inspired by Little Richard and the MC5. High energy, rough and raw. He does a cover of Stand By Me, that you should check out.
Oh, sorry for your extreme exposure to Ace of Spades, one of my favourite Mh songs:)
Also, it’s lovely to see intelligent people like you on Yt, thank you!
I had a similar traumatic experience working at circuit city way back when Britney Spears came out with hit me baby one more time. Brutal. I feel for you.
Lemmy always classed Mötorhead as Rock n Roll. They were the one band that was able to unite rockers, metalheads and punks.
Now, many of their songs reflect their hedonistic fast living, but Lemmy could have his very emotional and sombre moments. Two that I would highly recommend are "1916" which Sabaton did a good cover of, but does lack the raw emotion that Lemmy put across. The second is "Don't Let Daddy Kiss Me", a brutally emotional song Lemmy wrote as he felt that people didn't get the message in Aerosmith's "Janie's Got a Gun"
Motorhead 70's their beginning (1976 if I remember right with Motorhead then Beer Drinkers)
He was a roadie for Jimmy Hendrix. Enough said
Lemme says rock and roll. But we consider Motorhead metal. And understand that with metal the music is as important than the singing/lyrics. Sometimes even more.
You gotta listen to Deaf Forever. Clearly the best Motor Head song of all time.
I discovered Motorhead in 1981 with their No Sleep Till Hammersmith live album.
Saw them live in 1984 at the Tower Theater in Philadelphia. LOUDEST concert I had ever seen.
Lemmy was funny and Motorhead played Rock and Roll the way it was supposed to be, loud fast, and filthy.
Overkill was a very early Motorhead, their later stuff was better produced and they even came out with a few tear jerkers like 1916.
Fun reaction.
Thanks for watching my dude 😊
And, of course, there are tracks like 'Bomber' and 'Motörhead'.
This might get noisy.
One of the best lyricists you will find, lemmy was a true poet, check out orgasmatron if you don't believe me, and its alot gentler than this. Or queensryche and silent lucidity, one of the best songs ever recorded.
Overkill and Ace Of Spades are the archetypal fast Motorhead songs but they have loads of mid-tempo songs, check out Born To Raise Hell or their cover of Louie Louie, they even have a few slow songs such as Metropolis, and 1916 is almost a ballad. Their first album pre-dated NWOBHM by a couple of years but they came to be regarded as one of the leading lights of the movement. Also check out Silver Machine by Hawkwind to hear Lemmy's clean vocals before he developed his trademark growl.
A lot of people have arguements in the comments...........thats the understatement of the year!!!! I burst out laughing when you said that, briliant. try 1916 and Hellraiser 2 totally different styles from this. Motorhead influenced a huge ammounts of bands over the years, I guess you could say they were pioneers, but they were so generally admired for just being Motorhead throughout their career
Motörhead is one of the biggest influences of all Big 4 Bands. It is not wrong to say without Motörhead metal would be not what it is today and most metal musicians acknowledge this fact.
It's a pitty that you experienced that in your youth. That's one of Lemmy's best songs, too. I hate when someone gets a good song ruined by external influences. I've had several that I've had the same kind of thing with other band/songs, so I feel you, lass.
You need to listen to either “1916” or Motörheads version of the old Bowie hit “Heroes”.
They’re both amazing and to be honest, just fantastic songs.
Its not the big 4 of metal, only of thrash, and all 4 deserve their place based on sales, tours and influence. Motorhead are a 70's band who were very much a big influencer on thrash metal. They played "rock'n'roll" but was a fusion of punk, metal and a hard blues. Their songs cover a lot of tempo ranges but driving fast tunes were their staple.
Motorhead saw themselves as rock & roll, never heavy metal, but they heavily influenced early thrash metal with their speed & intensity.
They were also aggy enough that early punks, who hated bands with long hair, were into them!
I used to play Motörhead albums to keep the weeds down in the garden .
I have PTSD with Queen. Bohemian Rhapsody is pure torture for me. It was played so much on the radio back in the day and i hated it from the start.
Motorhead’s sound was in part a reaction to Lemmy’s time in Hawkwind, stripping out the space rock keyboards and synth-stacks in favour of a more aggressive, punchy sound (though Hawkwind can do aggressive when they want to - Brainstorm on the Space Ritual album ❤). It’s also Rock’n’Roll’s answer to punk, every bit as rebellious as the Pistols but with real tight musicianship and no nonsense.
Lemmy’s voice wasn’t musical and his playing style owes more to rhythm guitar than conventional bass, but it’s that combo along with the driving drums and high-octane guitars that really makes Motorhead’s sound special.
You should check out Girlschool. Their sound is similarly pummelling and they did collaborations with Motorhead as Head Girl.
Lol ripping Ace of Spades at school for 6 weeks would've been heaven for me.
Keys to the kindom. Mellow Motörhead.
Check out Silver Machine by Hawkwind and you'll hear Lemmy sing on a UK chart top 3 song!
The very BEST versions of all these early 'Head tracks are on the blistering live album 'No Sleep til Hammersmith', they go several levels beyond the studio versions.....
I’ll check some of them out, thank you ☺️
@@SoulSingerDiscovers do, it’s still one of the absolute greatest live albums ever. Let me know what you think.
Love to see ya again! As a Motörhead fan I have tro be a litle picky now... you missed a part of the song when your camera went off. The song is restarted twice and your break is in the first restart, but your last part of the video starts from the second and last restart of the song. I think the guitar solo in the first restart is the best in the whole song. However, Motörhead witj their including of the rawness and speed from punk rock was a great influncer of what to became the more extreme metal to come, as thrash metal, speed metal, death metal and black metal (also summarized in the term "extreme metal"). This way to almost refuse to stop playing with very long outros or even restart the song to do several endings is something that most probably inspired Manowar to do similar in many of their songs and even more when playing live.
About Lemmy and he's voice; he's well known for smoking and drinking alot, also using amphetamine and sometimes coke. So he had this distorted/hars voice from the early days. But it also went worse by the years and at the last decade or decades of his life it was hard to even hear what he was sayning in interwievs.
oh no..... I love Motorhead, and Ace of spades... but, i am pretty much positive you heard it more in that time period than I have in my entire life!! (46yrs btw) that's horrible.. That amount of Ace of Spades would be nothing short of........................OVERKILL!!! :D :D :D :D
I see what you did there sir 😂😂
Been a long time! Great to see you!
Thanks! You too!l my dude! 💜😊
Yep , Motorhead were the pioneers of Thrash metal. Bridging punk + metal .
It’s cool to see the origin stories 😂
@@SoulSingerDiscovers > His previous band, Hawkwind he sang very differently Sort of psychedelic hard rock !
Those kids were so lucky and dinnae realise it. YOU were so lucky and dinnae realise it either. Motörhead fir live 🤘🏻🇬🇧🏴🖤
Those kids got what they got! Noisy buggers 😂💜
@@SoulSingerDiscovers bet you wanted to play whack-a-mole with them 🤪🤣
Would love to see you react to the (vastly superior) live versions of this from either the literally legendary 'No Sleep 'Til Hammersmith' or 'Stage Fright' live albums...both of those absolutely crush the studio version you have here.
Yeah, it always bothers me a bit when people react to studio versions of Motorhead, although it's usually Ace of Spades so a plus point for choosing a better track!
Don't underestimate how dedicated motorhead fans are.
Lemme would always tell interviewers who asked about playing metal, "We're not a heavy metal band. We play rock n' roll." He swore to his death that they didn't play metal, despite the MASSIVE influence they had on countless metal bands.
I saw them a couple of times, and it was always a great show. Lemme was a unique individual
It’s the same as Pete Murphy always denying Bauhaus were goth. It’s true. Kinda. But it’s also an epic troll.
@@EleanorMcHughthe funny part about Peter Murphy denying Bauhaus being goth is that he and the band played up the goth esthetic in their outfits, as well as their music.
@@Wolfsblood1138 only true goths deny being goth ;)
I love you!!!! Greatings from Brazil!! :)
Thank you so much!! ☺️
I think Lemmy built Motorhead just because he wanted to do something that had NEVER been finr, kind of like when KISS fused goal withbhorror, science fiction and theatricality, or when the Beatles wrote Shelter Shelter and created heavy metal before it existed. Queen did something similar when they write stone Cold Crazy.
You never know where new ideas will come from :)
This is from back in the early days, when that microphone stand had only just started to outgrow Lemmy
I can feel your pain regarding the repeated commercial musical abuse. I worked in a video store around the time Disney rereleased Little Mermaid, and we were required to play it on repeat-so I got to hear it 4 times per day. Needless to say, I am still not a fan of that movie. I am, however, a big fan of Motorhead, thrashy/bashy and Soul Singer Discovers! Kudos for facing your trauma :D
Lemmy would growl at you that Motorhead were a rock and roll band Not thrash Not metal. Rock and Roll.
Lemmy said everything he did came from Elvis.
But they were definitely pioneers of speed metal and had a huge influence on early thrash. Motorhead were accepted by both punks and metalheads.
Their repertoire was actually very diverse, from speed metal to 1950's rock n roll, through power ballads to 1916, which is just a snare and a voice, and will make you cry.
When it comes to Motörhead and punk, I see where you are coming from. Lemmy himself said their aim was to take rock'n'roll and drop all the superficial and fancy stuff built over it over the years and embrace the very core. Which has similar anti-prog vibes than punk; make rock'n'roll rough, loud and unsophisticated again.
Oh shit 😍🥰😍😍 and an amazing song 😊
If you want to hear the bass drums getting machine-gunned, might I suggest "The Serpentine Offering", by Dimmu Borgir (preferably the 2012 performance at Wacken Open Air, with the full orchestra and choir)
Dave Lombardo
I do love Motorhead. Hey for your second foray into Unleash the Archers, you should try Tonight We Ride.
also being a HUGE Motorhead fan that i am i would not listen to Ace of Spades for a Week LOL!!!
Google “big four overkill”: they tributed this as a quartet! Philthy invented this double-bass technique in metal…