Another Perfect Day is my favorite album, and I got to see this line up live . And it was a great time in my life, my friends were alive back then, don’t take your best friends for granted. Because it don’t last.
Yeah first saw them '84 was Phil's first tour I think as Persian Risk opened tried to get to the front but was only a pup got pushed to the side in front of the speakers didn't hear a thing for 6 days.
Unpopular Opinion: Wurzel is my favorite Motorhead guitarist (technique wise.) The guy's string bends and whammy bar use in his guitar solos was just so unique sounding that it fit so well with Motorhead. Sadly, he doesn't get recognized at all for his contributions. R.I.P Wurzel.
They were the rare metal band that all punk rockers, including me, were totally into. The Ramones were my favorite band, and Motorhead's tribute song to them was on point.
Lemmy & Motorhead was the bridge to the punk generation , intertwining the music . Punk + Metal = Thrash Just as to Slam Dancing (punk) + Moshing /mosh pits = Thrash Motorhead Forever ♠️
Ramones and Motörhead shared the influence of pure rock and roll from the '50s and '60s, all of the starting punk bands were just that. As with all the proto-punk bands as well including an additional influence on Lemmy- the MC5. My search for the first punk rock record has led me to believe that rock and roll and punk rock are synonymous, same structure, gut feeling, the beat, high energy and all-rhythm based music since back when Louis Jordan & His Tympany Five invented it in the '40s. Elvis was a punk with sideburns, long hair, eyeliner, and baggy show bizz clothes in 1956, a drastic step from the tidier Bill Haley who noted the young boy had a great feel for rhythm. And screaming a revved up Hound Dog like it's directed at Steve Allen, who humiliated Elvis in front of 40 million people and a dog on national television the day before recording. With often atonal riveting noise out of Scotty Moores geetar, DJ Fontanas sickest beats, and Bill Black impressively hanging on double bass Little Richard & His Upsetters. Screaming with intensity, his band matched the intensity all the way, how could they not be punk and vice versa
Fast Eddie with that beautiful mane of hair and brass pick guard guitar. He had that total blues sound by playing efficiently without over the top shitting out of notes and use of fret slides are his distinctive sound. The brass pick guard gave his power chords a harshness that's lovely to hear and gets the blood pumping while his solos are really bluesy and tasteful. RIP Fast Eddie Clarke, you were my favorite! (His stories are a delight to listen to. He seemed like a very nice, down to earth regular joe that would befriend you at the local bar with his life stories.)
Same here. Saw Lemmy, Philthy, and Fast Eddie opening for the Blizzard Of Ozz here in Seattle at the Paramount Theater. Standing fifteen feet in front of Randy Rhoades for two+ hours was a mind blower.
Just a few years older, I remember getting Overkill/No Class special order on a 45rpm 10" EP they had out. "No Class" seems underrated but to me that is the purest Möterhead there ever was, no compromise.
Me too, just stepped into my sixth decade, turned sixty this year but feel forever seventeen when I hear them play. Magical era, I would give almost anything to be back there once again, thoroughly depressing to think those days are long gone now…still at least we were actually there as it all happened, how fortunate we were..never thought it would ever end did we..but..here we are RIP🙋🏻♀️🇬🇧
I never understood the crap spoken about Iron Fist. It feels like commercial failure must be related to poor production. In my opinion it is one of the most exciting records ever. Another Perfect Day is another fantastic album with wonderful guitar work. No need to talk shit about them just because the mainstream did not like them!
Gábor Kun Same here! "Iron Fist" is unabashedly over the top, fast and heavy. And the production is lean and mean. Just hear that iron fist bass intro! Holy shit! Definitely my top Mötorhead album!
production on fist is awful the volume if you upload a track to you tube the volume is lower than half standard terrible production but 3 or 4 good songs,bad tour venues bad back drop - yet they still made the song work.
I always felt like if there was still a Motorhead album coming that rock would never die, An era died with the passing of Philthy, Fast Eddie, and Lemmy. True Rock and Rollers...
@@Qwerty-ks8dn I think their best run of albums occurred in the '90s - 2010s. Bastards, Sacrifice, Overnight Sensation, Inferno, Kiss of Death, Motorizer, Aftershock...all fantastic. And the ones I didn't mention (Snake Bite Love, We Are Motorhead, Hammered, The World Is Yours), while maybe a tick down, all still had individual great songs on them. I don't think their output following March Or Die gets nearly enough credit. I'm not saying it's better than the Eddie/Philthy years, but it's REALLY solid.
We all love and miss you Wurzel …. RIP Lemmy, Phil, Eddie. Thankfully we can still listen and watch stuff on UA-cam and such. And we still have Phil Campbell and Mikkey Dee playing and making music we can enjoy now and remember when Motörhead ruled the world.
Thanks Coda Records for sharing this excellent documentary about Motörhead. For me, Motörhead , it's the best band on the planet. Also , I think that "The Bronze Era was" the best period of Motorhead. Motorhead forever in our hearts. Everybody movin'. Good Rockin' Tonight.
So happy I discovered Motorhead in '79. Just a good time band. Enjoyed them every time I saw them until the last one in 2015. We'll keep the faith! Deaf forever!
Thank you for uploading this documentary. I really miss Motorhead. They were outstanding! Great to hear Another Perfect Day getting reviewed. My Favourite album!
Lemmy was for decades so underrated! Just got very late the respect he earned. ...and people who met him by coincidence just talked great about him! R.I.P. my friend.
I met Lemmy once at a club in London in the 80s and he was utterly genuine. Friendly, nice guy. We had a drink and a good chat about when he recorded 'Stand by your man' with Wendy O'Williams.
The black knee, white boots story was so righteous. People not born today will take this music in and it will be a backdrop to parts of their lives, then it will happen again, nobody forgets Motörhead
All I know is when Iron Fist hit the stores in California, everyone was blown away by how fast & heavy it was. The few who were onto the band here at the time were NOT disappointed & obviously not reading British press about it. They DIDNT sell out. Every song: hard, fast & FUCK YOU!!
Fast Eddie didn’t like the production on iron first ..he’s got nothing to worry about it was a feckin good album .and I never thought the production was bad ..it was Motorhead ,Good Enuff.
@@craigpimlott204 Eddie love him was too self critical, it's a motivating thing I think to push yourself to do new stuff. Eddie was pretty new to taking over/running the mixing desk at that point.
I liked Anothe Perfect Day right from the start, and no ammount of sweet talk may wash any of you who disliked it and talked bad about it at the time! Long Live Motorhead!!!!!
First saw Motörhead in 1978 at the age of 14, changed my life forever! Perfect Day became one of Lemmys favorites and I’ve lost count of the time’s I’ve seen them and they played 3-4 tracks off that album. It was from 2006 onwards, Bastards is one hell of a album! and Sacrifice too, every song a winner! Although not on Bronze.
I am proud to say that i am 35 years old, been listening to Motörhead since i was 13 and i managed to see Motörhead twice. Other planned gigs got cancelled
The Amboy Dukes ,Frost ,SRC, The Rationals, Frijid Pink and of course Grand Funk.,and so many others....yea, I would say American heavy rock was invented in your great State.
I know that lemmy hated it that people often didn't really give what he was doing the time it deserved, and he is very right!!! But this era was the one I had as a kid, and I fucking loved it!!! And always will!!! Fucking love you lemmy!! And Eddie......Phil........all of the boys R.IP.
I only ever saw them once, but what a once. Port Vale Football Ground in 1981 with Ozzy playing his first ever UK show after leaving Sabbath who were supposed to play there but pulled out. Riot were awesome too. Hells Angels scrapping, cider, not worrying about how we were getting hone to Swansea after it. Oh to be 17 again and oh to still have Lemmy here.
I was there and twenty yrs old and we had a coach back to Port Talbot. They were in competition with Saxon at that time to be the loudest band in the world & I remember there was a delay because the PA cables burnt out. ps I had already seen Ozzy at Cardiff Sophia Gardens before this concert. Those were the days when you could see big bands at smaller venues and weren't ripped off by ticketmaster.
I got to see the original lineup with Phil, Ed, and LK in 1981... it was louder than Ted Nugent! I was deaf for three days with a ringing in my ears! Rock and Roll baby!!!
Saw Moterhead at Brixton in the late 80''s around xmas time and Girlschool with some Angels sang happy birthday on stage, saw a roadie check the bass rig earlier and that alone was far louder than the support band, my hearing was never the same
Early 1980. I was a fourteen year old guitarist, seventh grade drop out. I was a Jimmy Page, Brian May, Jeff Beck, Frank Marino, Buck Dharma, Joe Perry & Brad Whitford, Tony Iommi and Pete Townsend freak and I'd gotten a ticket to see Ozzy's Blizzard Of Ozz Band with the original three piece Motorhead here in Seattle's Paramount Theater. Young Mind Blown. 👍
As is almost always the case, the original lineup is always the best and the one that is most remembered. I saw the old Guard many times back in the day, and I also saw them when it was just Lemmy and his backing band and, as good as those musicians were (let's be honest, "Fast" Eddie was a very basic player), they were not a patch on the original lineup.
Life changing event: My 1st Motorhead album, (EP) bought at my local record shop in 1979 for $0 .99. Suggested by the shop clerk, brought it home and played it, I was in awe, it was great !! I played it for days constant THEN I noticed it was to be played at 45 RPM not 33 as I had been doing.. OH SHIT !!! WOW !!! Never looked back since. 40 years later, Motorhead is still in my top 10 of favorite bands. Thank you Lemmy & Company.
Nice to see a,fair bit of Wurzel (RIP), you can feel the true emotion in his voice. Great guitarist and a shame he didnt do more with Motorhead. Love his tone...
I went on Another Perfect Tour, a sold out show at the Glasgow Apollo. What I remember from those days was that everyone very quickly dismissed the album as "synthesized guitars" (synthesizers were synonymous to treason among rock fans at the time, although no one ever explained what a synthesized guitar sounded like) and I'm sure that most of the people who dissed the album never even listened to it or only heard I Got Mine on the radio. The same thing happened just over a decade later when people slagged off Blaze Bayley's Iron Maiden albums without hearing them.
my first motorhead song i heard on cassette was overkill. i was so baked i couldn't believe how the drums kept going on and on at the end of the song.... after listenig to the song like twenty times in a row....i knew i was a motorhead fan!!!
@21:00 I understand this. Once I found Lemmy walking out of his hotel in Madrid, I was shocked. Screamed at him, he gave me the horns sing. I felt blessed.
'Overkill' for me was thee defining and best album release ever and took the Rock and Metal scene to a whole new level. I remember when I first bought the album back when I was only a 12 year old nipper and it took my head off! R.I.P. Motorhead. The memories will live forever
Saw Motörhead in Dortmund West Germany at Monsters Of Rock in 1983…. They were sooooooo loud that my beer lost all carbonation…. I had to push my fingers in my ears…… keep my mouth shut because the sound rattled my teeth….. and I was in the upper deck! Great freaking show! Been a fan ever since!
the only thing is I experienced Saxon live at the Boat Club, Nottingham and they were honestly louder than Motörhead, it was like being in a swimming pool. But the loudest I experienced was a Vulcan scramble at RAF Finingly which actually caused my ribs to resonate!!
@@Bernz66 I guess Saxon used all their gear in the club, at a festival you're relying on the PA. When I saw Möterhead it was later, but I just cannot imagine there being any point in playing louder than Saxon did. As said it distorted the music badly, you simply couldn't hear the high end correctly. But when it came to sheer volume the RAF 4xOlympus slayed .. Ubrigens, bald fliege ich wieder nach Deutschland um Urlaub in Bayern machen. Ich hoere gerne Deutsched Metal wie Asenblut. Ich finde das Bier ohne viel Kohlensäure schmekt besser, du solltest was feines wie Hobgoblin oder XXB schmecken um ein gerechtiges Bier erleben ~winkt~
Getting to meet Lemmy in 2003 outside the Worcester Palladium was such an honor. I got there early in the afternoon and could hear them doing soundcheck...the building was rumbling as they ran through Over The Top. The next thing I know, Lemmy strolls out the side door in full regalia, just standing there smoking and waiting for a car (no doubt to take him to a nearby strip club). I was in utter shock but figured "now's my chance". I walked up to him and said hi, and asked if I could get a pic. He gladly obliged, and then me and another fan chatted with him for 5-10 minutes before his car arrived. I also got to meet Mikkey and Phil...Mikkey in particular was super friendly and open to chatting with anyone. What an awesome memory.
Dunno what to say. For one thing, I’m deeply disappointed that I never had the privilege to see them live. Other than that, all I can say right now is: thanks a crazy shitload to everyone involved in doing this documentary. Love and envy you all mates! Special salutes to Krusher the sound engineer, you really know what you’re talking about because you were there mate, all the fucking time! Cheers mate, take care.
I saw them at Bogarts in Cincinnati . Not a big room but always a good room for heavy rock bands. Standing a few feet away from the stacks at a Motorhead show is something you won't forget . Lemmy came out after the gig and got a bourbon and coke and stood there talking to the kids like he would have rather have been doing that than anything else.
Thanks for the upload. Really miss Lemmy, Eddie and Phil. I consider Eddie to be one of the great guitarists and Phil to be one of the greatest drummers
I love Motorhead. The classic lineup. Lemmy, Philthy, Eddie. Especially. But I did see the lineup with Phil and Mickey Dee. At the Vogue theater in Vancouver. They were fukking great. Mickey did a drum solo that was incredible. I was a fan of his from King Diamond, so I knew what expect. Lemmy and Phil were as great as I knew they would be. I only saw Lemmy that one time, but thankfully I got to see him. Lemmy is one of the greats. And that's a huge understatement!! This documentary is excellent!!
one of the best live bands ever. I saw them a whole bunch in the 1980s. Met Lemmy once and he saved my ass at a show in Rhode Island. Amazing performer and awesome human
25:45 Bollocks to that, Malcolm. All of the above can sing. And what's more fun they all do it in a trademark way. Ever tried to sing one of Ozzy's songs? His vocal lines can be quite technical.
No mention of how the speed of their playing on the studio albums didn't catch up to their live sound until Ace of Spades. A Motorhead show in it's purest, finest form was the original three man band opening with Ace of Spades/Iron Fist and closing with Bomber.
The most insane/best Motörhead show I went to was on November 21st, 1988 at First Ave in Minneapolis. Overkill, Motörhead and Slayer. 1500 people going non-stop for four hours.
I saw Motörhead at the providence performing arts center. My seats were like second section almost exact stage height. They had corrosion of conformity open up and I thought they were loud and they were! But when Motörhead came out and lemmy spit out his cigarette. I was assaulted by a tidal wave of angry sound. It was glorious!! My younger sister who got the tickets for my birthday was standing next to me. She was squinting and wincing as if lemmy were stabbing her in the ears. At one point she looked at me and said. I’m going out to the bathroom. I’ve got a headache. Hahahhha I said, that’s the motorheadache! Still the loudest concert I’ve ever been to. The PPAC was never the same for me again🤷♂️😁
Another Perfect Day is fantastic. It was the album that got me into motorhead back in the day when i was a Maiden-melodic-metal fanatic little kid. Die you bastard is one of their top 5 songs. Always gets to me. The album is quite accessible. And that album cover kicks ass!
26:05 That is so, so, so, so, so true. I was first drawn to motorhead because of Lemmys amazing lyrics. He was a real poet as seen with for example I dont believe a word.
hey! i do get the Motorhead-Girlschool thing... but hey, cut Girlschool some slack, c'mon. why do they have to be 'pretty' to 'make it'? plus, they were good looking, imo. but the music counts a lot more, or at least that's what we haevy rockers always say. i think their three first LPs are pretty great- and to my ears, 'Hit and Run' is a classic. long live!
"We are Motorhead and we play Rock'N'Roll"...RIP LEMMY,PHILTHY AND FAST EDDIE. Gone but not forgotten! WURZEL TOO!
Amen
The holy trinity of rock n roll
Rock in Power Wurzel!!!!
And don't forget Wurzell.
Ce trio était la parfaite transition de la colère punk (et même d'avant) au métal.
Another Perfect Day is my favorite album, and I got to see this line up live . And it was a great time in my life, my friends were alive back then, don’t take your best friends for granted. Because it don’t last.
Damn man! That was great !!
Ain’t that the sad truth
who else has an eternal ringing in their ears thanks to Motörhead?
Yeah first saw them '84 was Phil's first tour I think as Persian Risk opened tried to get to the front but was only a pup got pushed to the side in front of the speakers didn't hear a thing for 6 days.
@@paulcrossley1366 beautiful memories
WHAT?!?!
@@tat-2-71 😆
Loudest band ever. My ears got damaged at Rock City on the Rock 'N Roll Tour!!!! It was great!!!!
Motorhead 79-81 was an unbelievable time to be alive.
I was alive but couldn't care less about that fact.... couldn't have if I wanted....been a year to three young at the time
@marko1978st sadly for you then you'll never fully appreciate the impact they had on the scene.
@@dodibenabba525 maybe, but I think I fully get it though ;))
Cheers
@@marko1978st you couldn't
The original three man line up was the best of them. Overkill..the best album.
No one ever mentions Wurzels passing. Lemmy, Eddie and Philth but no RIP for Wurzel.
RIP Wurzel ..You Rocked!!!
He looked like he was a sound bloke...
@@dodibenabba1378 I thought he always did clever solos. He was a real damn good guitarist and comes over as a real nice guy
Unpopular Opinion: Wurzel is my favorite Motorhead guitarist (technique wise.) The guy's string bends and whammy bar use in his guitar solos was just so unique sounding that it fit so well with Motorhead. Sadly, he doesn't get recognized at all for his contributions. R.I.P Wurzel.
It was a relationship that didn't end well. Lemmy said Wurzel thought he was getting robbed of royalties.
Motörhead ist eine meiner Absoluten Lieblingsbands. R.I.P Lemmy 😢. Wir werden dich nie vergessen.
They were the rare metal band that all punk rockers, including me, were totally into. The Ramones were my favorite band, and Motorhead's tribute song to them was on point.
Lemmy & Motorhead was the bridge to the punk generation , intertwining the music . Punk + Metal = Thrash
Just as to Slam Dancing (punk) + Moshing /mosh pits = Thrash
Motorhead Forever ♠️
Ramones and Motörhead I could live the rest of my life with just them, everything you could ever need.
Fast, loud, make your parents mad rock 'n roll
Ramones and Motörhead shared the influence of pure rock and roll from the '50s and '60s, all of the starting punk bands were just that. As with all the proto-punk bands as well including an additional influence on Lemmy- the MC5. My search for the first punk rock record has led me to believe that rock and roll and punk rock are synonymous, same structure, gut feeling, the beat, high energy and all-rhythm based music since back when Louis Jordan & His Tympany Five invented it in the '40s.
Elvis was a punk with sideburns, long hair, eyeliner, and baggy show bizz clothes in 1956, a drastic step from the tidier Bill Haley who noted the young boy had a great feel for rhythm. And screaming a revved up Hound Dog like it's directed at Steve Allen, who humiliated Elvis in front of 40 million people and a dog on national television the day before recording. With often atonal riveting noise out of Scotty Moores geetar, DJ Fontanas sickest beats, and Bill Black impressively hanging on double bass
Little Richard & His Upsetters. Screaming with intensity, his band matched the intensity all the way, how could they not be punk and vice versa
So sad to see Wurzel at the end of his life. The poor man was so ill with his heart problem. So underated as a guitarist.
Looks like he was having serious issues breathing too...COPD? Poor guy.
So sad to remember him,they are more louder with his additional guitar RIP Wurzel.😪😪😪
Wurzel was boss!
NOBODY CAN survive MOTORHEAD!!!
Motörhead and Rory Gallagher - true rockers. Endless respect.
At last somebody who gets it...
That is a fact..so true!
Horst did you ever get the chance to see rory play
Fast Eddie with that beautiful mane of hair and brass pick guard guitar. He had that total blues sound by playing efficiently without over the top shitting out of notes and use of fret slides are his distinctive sound. The brass pick guard gave his power chords a harshness that's lovely to hear and gets the blood pumping while his solos are really bluesy and tasteful. RIP Fast Eddie Clarke, you were my favorite! (His stories are a delight to listen to. He seemed like a very nice, down to earth regular joe that would befriend you at the local bar with his life stories.)
I was 14! Nearly 60…..still in love ♠️❤️
Same. Still feel 20 when I hear this music. Such a lift, bloody magic at work. Keep on keeping on, we can make it
Same here. Saw Lemmy, Philthy, and Fast Eddie opening for the Blizzard Of Ozz here in Seattle at the Paramount Theater. Standing fifteen feet in front of Randy Rhoades for two+ hours was a mind blower.
Just a few years older, I remember getting Overkill/No Class special order on a 45rpm 10" EP they had out.
"No Class" seems underrated but to me that is the purest Möterhead there ever was, no compromise.
Me too, just stepped into my sixth decade, turned sixty this year but feel forever seventeen when I hear them play. Magical era, I would give almost anything to be back there once again, thoroughly depressing to think those days are long gone now…still at least we were actually there as it all happened, how fortunate we were..never thought it would ever end did we..but..here we are RIP🙋🏻♀️🇬🇧
IM 52 AND CRYING WATCHING
I never understood the crap spoken about Iron Fist. It feels like commercial failure must be related to poor production. In my opinion it is one of the most exciting records ever.
Another Perfect Day is another fantastic album with wonderful guitar work.
No need to talk shit about them just because the mainstream did not like them!
Gábor Kun couldn't agree more! One of my all time favourite albums.
Gábor Kun Same here! "Iron Fist" is unabashedly over the top, fast and heavy. And the production is lean and mean. Just hear that iron fist bass intro! Holy shit! Definitely my top Mötorhead album!
production on fist is awful the volume if you upload a track to you tube the volume is lower than half standard terrible production but 3 or 4 good songs,bad tour venues bad back drop - yet they still made the song work.
You're damn right
Absolutely right!!!!Iron Fist was my first Motorhead album on vinyl.Fantastic!!!
I miss Lemmy. The world was so much better with him in it.
amen to that brother
@@duringthemeanwhilst Lemmy the new king of rock 'n' roll
Hell Yeah!
Lemmy is truly missed.
🍻
Amen- from another parishioner of the church of motorhead.
Oh yeah. Lem was God's own madman. A beautiful human being.
Another Perfect Day will always be among my absolute favorite rock albums ever - besides Ace of Spades of course. Loved it from day one.
Seen Motorhead several times. Iron Horse Born to Lose is one of my all time favorites. RIP Phil, Eddie, Wurzel, and Lemmy.
When I put "Another Perfect Day" on the turntable, it generally stays there for nearly a week before I want to listen to anything else.
@Joe Paul Ace of Spades is but APD is 2nd for sure....totally different but both great
Yep...its a great album...still underrated...fack knows why ....but a great album..
My Favourite Motorhead Album . . . .
Brian Robertson made that album iconic despite the chemistry issues that followed
Stevorama agreed man. he brought a certain sound that gave the band such a different vibe on that album
Almost two hours of Motörhead, exactly what I need right now!
I always felt like if there was still a Motorhead album coming that rock would never die, An era died with the passing of Philthy, Fast Eddie, and Lemmy. True Rock and Rollers...
Admittedly Motorhead hadn't recorded a good album for many years.
@@Qwerty-ks8dn
I think their best run of albums occurred in the '90s - 2010s. Bastards, Sacrifice, Overnight Sensation, Inferno, Kiss of Death, Motorizer, Aftershock...all fantastic. And the ones I didn't mention (Snake Bite Love, We Are Motorhead, Hammered, The World Is Yours), while maybe a tick down, all still had individual great songs on them.
I don't think their output following March Or Die gets nearly enough credit. I'm not saying it's better than the Eddie/Philthy years, but it's REALLY solid.
@@keefriff99 I find all of those albums boring. Plus Lemmy's voice was getting weaker.
@@Qwerty-ks8dn
Fair enough...just my opinion.
@@keefriff99 I agreed with you, it probably was Milligan, that's exactly the sort of thing the Goons would say.
We all love and miss you Wurzel …. RIP Lemmy, Phil, Eddie. Thankfully we can still listen and watch stuff on UA-cam and such. And we still have Phil Campbell and Mikkey Dee playing and making music we can enjoy now and remember when Motörhead ruled the world.
And we have Brian Robertson
Amazingly so. How he outlived em is a miracle.
Let's not neglect Brian "Robbo" Robertson from Thin Lizzy, who spent several years with Motorhead.
ACE OF SPADES is such a freaking Classic track. One of the best hard rock/ metal/ punk influencers of all time.
Another Perfect Day is one of my all time fave Motorhead releases...
When I heard "Shine" my head was ready to explode. More than 30 years has passed from this moment and I still remember it.
More than 40
Thanks Coda Records for sharing this excellent documentary about Motörhead. For me, Motörhead , it's the best band on the planet. Also , I think that "The Bronze Era was" the best period of Motorhead. Motorhead forever in our hearts. Everybody movin'. Good Rockin' Tonight.
So happy I discovered Motorhead in '79. Just a good time band. Enjoyed them every time I saw them until the last one in 2015. We'll keep the faith! Deaf forever!
Thank you for uploading this documentary. I really miss Motorhead. They were outstanding!
Great to hear Another Perfect Day getting reviewed. My Favourite album!
You're welcome! Thanks for watching :)
That's correct. AOS is the best one, followed by APD.
My favorite is Orgasmatron, followed by APD. Might be because of the muddy production, i dont know.
Same here man. I saw the video for One Track Mind, that was my intro to Motörhead.
@@russell_szabados ha. Mine too. Bought the album later that week. Best band MTV ever turned me on to. I was 13
Lemmy was for decades so underrated!
Just got very late the respect he earned.
...and people who met him by coincidence just talked great about him!
R.I.P. my friend.
I met Lemmy once at a club in London in the 80s and he was utterly genuine. Friendly, nice guy. We had a drink and a good chat about when he recorded 'Stand by your man' with Wendy O'Williams.
@@aaarrrggghhhh
WOW!
...once in a lifetime you gonna meet a real famous genius! Cool, I`m jelous!
Greatest band in the world. Nuff said. Saw them live in Nottingham when I was 18. Glorious.
The black knee, white boots story was so righteous. People not born today will take this music in and it will be a backdrop to parts of their lives, then it will happen again, nobody forgets Motörhead
All I know is when Iron Fist hit the stores in California, everyone was blown away by how fast & heavy it was.
The few who were onto the band here at the time were NOT disappointed & obviously not reading British press about it.
They DIDNT sell out.
Every song: hard, fast & FUCK YOU!!
Fast Eddie didn’t like the production on iron first ..he’s got nothing to worry about it was a feckin good album .and I never thought the production was bad ..it was Motorhead ,Good Enuff.
@@craigpimlott204 Eddie love him was too self critical, it's a motivating thing I think to push yourself to do new stuff. Eddie was pretty new to taking over/running the mixing desk at that point.
I liked Anothe Perfect Day right from the start, and no ammount of sweet talk may wash any of you who disliked it and talked bad about it at the time! Long Live Motorhead!!!!!
Great Documentary. R.I.P. Lemmie, Eddie and Animal
and Wurzel
As a black American who tries to enjoy rock-n-roll, why not, I still have my hearing, ok? Danke shon
I love Motörhead. My 1st favorite r'n'r band ever. Forever. In particular I love the Bronze era.
Another Perfect Day is an extraordinary album, there is little to say
yea have an artist copy the album cover on my chop tank . .t'was nice
an a brilliant album i thought, one if not, . .. my favourite . . . . .... .
Totally agree. Only good songs on it
Entièrement d'accord . Mon préféré... peut-être .
Lemmy didn't like it, yet I think it's probably my favourite Album 👍
Robbo wasn't probably the right guitarist. But I still love that album with him. Remarkable record.
Thanks for having us! We are Motörhead! And we play Rock `n Roll!!
Lemmys lyrics were SUPERB! RIP Motorhead! Sadly missed indeed.
First saw Motörhead in 1978 at the age of 14, changed my life forever! Perfect Day became one of Lemmys favorites and I’ve lost count of the time’s I’ve seen them and they played 3-4 tracks off that album. It was from 2006 onwards, Bastards is one hell of a album! and Sacrifice too, every song a winner! Although not on Bronze.
Ozzy and Motorhead 1981. Most violent show I ever been to. Fights breaking out everywhere. It was great!
that's really weird, all the heavy rock gigs I went to were very chilled, "we love the music affairs". It was trendy shyte that attracted trouble.
Was that the heavy metal holocaust at port Vale?
This is the band every band wants to be.
Ace of Spades never gets old. I love the intro to Love me Like a Reptile. We are the Road Crew........enuff said
Still fresh when you hear it cranked up
Damn near perfect album
Every song and album is gold to my ears. It's motorhead greatest band of all time
I am proud to say that i am 35 years old, been listening to Motörhead since i was 13 and i managed to see Motörhead twice. Other planned gigs got cancelled
I had to wait until I was 18 before my parents let me go to my first Motörhead concert.
He wanted to be the MC5. Being from Michigan and growing up with the MC5, Stooges, etc. That is an amazing statement.
The Amboy Dukes ,Frost ,SRC, The Rationals, Frijid Pink and of course Grand Funk.,and so many others....yea, I would say American heavy rock was invented in your great State.
I saw Motörhead at the Apollo in Manchester. Changed my life and my hearing. I recall the PA bins pounding my chest. Man, was it ever loud.
Lucky to see them 3 times maybe 4. They were awesome live.
I know that lemmy hated it that people often didn't really give what he was doing the time it deserved, and he is very right!!! But this era was the one I had as a kid, and I fucking loved it!!! And always will!!! Fucking love you lemmy!! And Eddie......Phil........all of the boys R.IP.
First time I saw Motorhead. Was at Glasgow Apollo. All he said was. Hello Glasgow. Thus is Overkill. Blew me away. Best trio ever.
Is this. A. Telegram?. Stop.
These guys created like headbanging energy in my opinion idk how many times I've listen to these guys on a terrible day
Seeing Motorhead live was on my bucket list. Ironically I thought I would die before Lemmy.
My boner dint. Keep typin', imma cum mate..AHHHH
I only ever saw them once, but what a once. Port Vale Football Ground in 1981 with Ozzy playing his first ever UK show after leaving Sabbath who were supposed to play there but pulled out. Riot were awesome too. Hells Angels scrapping, cider, not worrying about how we were getting hone to Swansea after it. Oh to be 17 again and oh to still have Lemmy here.
Nice one 👍
Nice memories!
I was there and twenty yrs old and we had a coach back to Port Talbot. They were in competition with Saxon at that time to be the loudest band in the world & I remember there was a delay because the PA cables burnt out.
ps I had already seen Ozzy at Cardiff Sophia Gardens before this concert. Those were the days when you could see big bands at smaller venues and weren't ripped off by ticketmaster.
@@paulmorgan8254 we might have bummed a ride back on your bus Paul - I remember us getting to PT and ringing my girlfriend's dad from there!
@@duringthemeanwhilst that would be wild, it was a long day out though
I got to see the original lineup with Phil, Ed, and LK in 1981... it was louder than Ted Nugent! I was deaf for three days with a ringing in my ears! Rock and Roll baby!!!
That was not the original line up.
It was the best line up
Badass for decades , and now IMMORTAL . Thank you motorhead, thx for everything , decades of amazing music and style .
Yes, they are immortal.
@@KuriReevel 🙂👍
Saw Moterhead at Brixton in the late 80''s around xmas time and Girlschool with some Angels sang happy birthday on stage, saw a roadie check the bass rig earlier and that alone was far louder than the support band, my hearing was never the same
Early 1980. I was a fourteen year old guitarist, seventh grade drop out. I was a Jimmy Page, Brian May, Jeff Beck, Frank Marino, Buck Dharma, Joe Perry & Brad Whitford, Tony Iommi and Pete Townsend freak and I'd gotten a ticket to see Ozzy's Blizzard Of Ozz Band with the original three piece Motorhead here in Seattle's Paramount Theater. Young Mind Blown. 👍
Frank Marino 🤘 buck dharma 🤘
Some great unsung heroes
I fuckin love motorhead, especially this line up. "We play rock and roll LOUD" They were the best band I saw live EVER!
I seen Motorhead 24 times in Chicago........met Lemmy Mikkey an Phil several times all r great people an R the KINGS of ROCK N RoLL
As is almost always the case, the original lineup is always the best and the one that is most remembered. I saw the old Guard many times back in the day, and I also saw them when it was just Lemmy and his backing band and, as good as those musicians were (let's be honest, "Fast" Eddie was a very basic player), they were not a patch on the original lineup.
The top of the pop's performances are hilarious. Tini boppers just standing there speechless 😂😅😊
Life changing event: My 1st Motorhead album, (EP) bought at my local record shop in 1979 for $0 .99. Suggested by the shop clerk, brought it home and played it, I was in awe, it was great !! I played it for days constant THEN I noticed it was to be played at 45 RPM not 33 as I had been doing.. OH SHIT !!! WOW !!! Never looked back since. 40 years later, Motorhead is still in my top 10 of favorite bands. Thank you Lemmy & Company.
Nice to see a,fair bit of Wurzel (RIP), you can feel the true emotion in his voice. Great guitarist and a shame he didnt do more with Motorhead. Love his tone...
I went on Another Perfect Tour, a sold out show at the Glasgow Apollo. What I remember from those days was that everyone very quickly dismissed the album as "synthesized guitars" (synthesizers were synonymous to treason among rock fans at the time, although no one ever explained what a synthesized guitar sounded like) and I'm sure that most of the people who dissed the album never even listened to it or only heard I Got Mine on the radio. The same thing happened just over a decade later when people slagged off Blaze Bayley's Iron Maiden albums without hearing them.
my first motorhead song i heard on cassette was overkill. i was so baked i couldn't believe how the drums kept going on and on at the end of the song.... after listenig to the song like twenty times in a row....i knew i was a motorhead fan!!!
All this hate for the "Iron Fist" album. I thought it was brilliant!
Me too. It's my favourite MH album. Then it's APD.
Iron fist was the first Motorhead album I ever heard, I loved it
Same. And Speadfreak is my favorite song of theirs.
Loser is one of my favourite tracks.
very good album
So glad ive seen Motorhead a nr of times.
Still one of my favourite bands regardless if im in a punk/death/black rabbit hole
I don't hear any bass critics get on Lemmy for playing with a pick. They know they would lose the argument.
TBH Lemmy didn't as much play bass, as he played down tuned overdriven rhythm guitar on a bass.
@21:00 I understand this. Once I found Lemmy walking out of his hotel in Madrid, I was shocked. Screamed at him, he gave me the horns sing. I felt blessed.
ROBBO! So dope hearin him talk about Another Perfect Day.
Another Perfect Day was my first Motorhead album and still my favourite
Mark Prior it’s one of a kind in their repertoire! My second Fav from em🍄
Best things in life are an accident. Better said than any Oxford professor. What a life he had.
When you think of great hard Rock N Roll singers, you think of Lemmy & Motorhead. They were a force of nature.
@e-mail who are you thinking of?
@@jackfirmin5814He's probably thinking of Barry Manilow. Or maybe Kelly Clarkson.
'Overkill' for me was thee defining and best album release ever and took the Rock and Metal scene to a whole new level. I remember when I first bought the album back when I was only a 12 year old nipper and it took my head off!
R.I.P. Motorhead. The memories will live forever
Saw Motörhead in Dortmund West Germany at Monsters Of Rock in 1983…. They were sooooooo loud that my beer lost all carbonation…. I had to push my fingers in my ears…… keep my mouth shut because the sound rattled my teeth….. and I was in the upper deck! Great freaking show! Been a fan ever since!
the only thing is I experienced Saxon live at the Boat Club, Nottingham and they were honestly louder than Motörhead, it was like being in a swimming pool.
But the loudest I experienced was a Vulcan scramble at RAF Finingly which actually caused my ribs to resonate!!
@@RobBCactive Saxon played the same festival…. Motörhead was way louder than them…. Both played awesome!
@@Bernz66 I guess Saxon used all their gear in the club, at a festival you're relying on the PA. When I saw Möterhead it was later, but I just cannot imagine there being any point in playing louder than Saxon did. As said it distorted the music badly, you simply couldn't hear the high end correctly.
But when it came to sheer volume the RAF 4xOlympus slayed ..
Ubrigens, bald fliege ich wieder nach Deutschland um Urlaub in Bayern machen. Ich hoere gerne Deutsched Metal wie Asenblut.
Ich finde das Bier ohne viel Kohlensäure schmekt besser, du solltest was feines wie Hobgoblin oder XXB schmecken um ein gerechtiges Bier erleben ~winkt~
@@RobBCactive I hear ya
@@Bernz66 Toll, ich habe dir später auf Deutsch geschrieben um zeigen, dass einiger englisch sprechender kann.
Zum Wohl! Gutes Bier braucht kein Gas
Excellent documentary. Would have been nice to get interviews with Eddie Clarke, Phil Campbell and Phil Taylor other than the DVD footage.
And Lemmy for that matter
Getting to meet Lemmy in 2003 outside the Worcester Palladium was such an honor. I got there early in the afternoon and could hear them doing soundcheck...the building was rumbling as they ran through Over The Top. The next thing I know, Lemmy strolls out the side door in full regalia, just standing there smoking and waiting for a car (no doubt to take him to a nearby strip club). I was in utter shock but figured "now's my chance". I walked up to him and said hi, and asked if I could get a pic. He gladly obliged, and then me and another fan chatted with him for 5-10 minutes before his car arrived. I also got to meet Mikkey and Phil...Mikkey in particular was super friendly and open to chatting with anyone. What an awesome memory.
You Lucy dude to meet Lemmy
I love another perfect day
It’s always on my albums I have to listen to
But I love anything Motörhead ever did
What a great noise these 3 guys made R.I.P Lemmy Phil and Fast Eddie forever Motorhead👌👌👌👌👌👌
Another perfect day 10/10!!
Fast Eddie aint done a line in years and he's still spun off his ass. Rock N Roll man.
You do know when you posted this, Eddie had been at least 3 years passed on.
Dunno what to say. For one thing, I’m deeply disappointed that I never had the privilege to see them live. Other than that, all I can say right now is: thanks a crazy shitload to everyone involved in doing this documentary. Love and envy you all mates! Special salutes to Krusher the sound engineer, you really know what you’re talking about because you were there mate, all the fucking time! Cheers mate, take care.
I saw them at Bogarts in Cincinnati . Not a big room but always a good room for heavy rock bands. Standing a few feet away from the stacks at a Motorhead show is something you won't forget . Lemmy came out after the gig and got a bourbon and coke and stood there talking to the kids like he would have rather have been doing that than anything else.
That was a fantastic watch. Thanks.
Only saw them once, the only metal band ALL punks loved! R.I.P. you three.❤🏴
@ManInAmerica I love the original line up but I was a skater and skating and Anthrax went hand in hand!
There were a couple of others, but not many.
Totally someone worth looking up to... We miss you Lemmy... God bless.
Thanks for the upload. Really miss Lemmy, Eddie and Phil. I consider Eddie to be one of the great guitarists and Phil to be one of the greatest drummers
Phil Taylor is in my top five all time favourite drummers
@@andrewkorner2167 Phil Taylor's drumming on 'Overkill' is absolutely mind boggling
First MH show I saw was 1981 at The Old Waldorf in San Francisco. My ears are still ringing.
I love Motorhead. The classic lineup. Lemmy, Philthy, Eddie. Especially. But I did see the lineup with Phil and Mickey Dee. At the Vogue theater in Vancouver. They were fukking great. Mickey did a drum solo that was incredible. I was a fan of his from King Diamond, so I knew what expect. Lemmy and Phil were as great as I knew they would be. I only saw Lemmy that one time, but thankfully I got to see him. Lemmy is one of the greats. And that's a huge understatement!! This documentary is excellent!!
one of the best live bands ever. I saw them a whole bunch in the 1980s. Met Lemmy once and he saved my ass at a show in Rhode Island. Amazing performer and awesome human
"He used to build a lot of these airfix models."
Well he had to do something with all the leftover glue!
The most brutesk form of raw & sheer strength of true art of bein no holds barred personify there is no 2nd motorhead as the music these legends made.
25:45 Bollocks to that, Malcolm. All of the above can sing. And what's more fun they all do it in a trademark way. Ever tried to sing one of Ozzy's songs? His vocal lines can be quite technical.
Can you imagine Malcom hitting the old trusty inhaler immediately after every one of his verbal spouts during this film
Introduced to MH in '81 at start of university and stuck with it ever since. Always destresses me to listen loud.
No mention of how the speed of their playing on the studio albums didn't catch up to their live sound until Ace of Spades. A Motorhead show in it's purest, finest form was the original three man band opening with Ace of Spades/Iron Fist and closing with Bomber.
For me after Eddie left it wasn't the same....
@@dodibenabba1378 Agreed, but they still made some good music.
Pure brilliance, a musical genius 👍👍👍👍
Jim Marshall could get no more of a better reputation for his amps, longevity and volume than Motörhead using them ..
Saw them at L'Amour in Brooklyn. Wenndy O was there, it was extremely loud, and everything was perfect. It was totally another perfect day.
Great documentary. Love Motorhead ♠️
The most insane/best Motörhead show I went to was on November 21st, 1988 at First Ave in Minneapolis. Overkill, Motörhead and Slayer. 1500 people going non-stop for four hours.
I saw that same tour down here in Houston. What a show! Stone dead, forever!
I've heard about how great that tour was before...I was only 10 at the time unfortunately.
I saw Motörhead at the providence performing arts center. My seats were like second section almost exact stage height. They had corrosion of conformity open up and I thought they were loud and they were! But when Motörhead came out and lemmy spit out his cigarette. I was assaulted by a tidal wave of angry sound. It was glorious!! My younger sister who got the tickets for my birthday was standing next to me. She was squinting and wincing as if lemmy were stabbing her in the ears. At one point she looked at me and said. I’m going out to the bathroom. I’ve got a headache. Hahahhha I said, that’s the motorheadache! Still the loudest concert I’ve ever been to. The PPAC was never the same for me again🤷♂️😁
Another Perfect Day is fantastic. It was the album that got me into motorhead back in the day when i was a Maiden-melodic-metal fanatic little kid. Die you bastard is one of their top 5 songs. Always gets to me. The album is quite accessible. And that album cover kicks ass!
Amazing band, loved the orgasmatron album, i know it was a little more tame but still a classic.
I liked it when it came out and still like it. Many great songs.
26:05 That is so, so, so, so, so true. I was first drawn to motorhead because of Lemmys amazing lyrics. He was a real poet as seen with for example I dont believe a word.
hey! i do get the Motorhead-Girlschool thing... but hey, cut Girlschool some slack, c'mon. why do they have to be 'pretty' to 'make it'? plus, they were good looking, imo. but the music counts a lot more, or at least that's what we haevy rockers always say. i think their three first LPs are pretty great- and to my ears, 'Hit and Run' is a classic. long live!