Tag Archive for 'Lemmy Kilminster'

Lemmy The Movie Release

Lemmy The Movie

According to RollingStone.com, ‘Lemmy’, a documentary that follows Motorhead’s frontman Ian ‘Lemmy’ Kilmister on the road and into his home, will premiere at the 2010 South By Southwest (SXSW) festival in Austin, Texas this March.

The film promises fans more access than ever before to Kilmister’s life, and includes interviews with past and present bandmates and such peers/admirers as Slash, Dave Grohl, Metallica, Alice Cooper, Ozzy Osbourne and wrestling superstar Triple H.

Directors/producers Greg Olliver and Wes Orshoski, spent three years with Lemmy to capture the life and history of the legendary rocker, traveling from Kilmister’s Hollywood home to concerts in Scandinavia and Russia.

The film was reportedly shot on a combination of HD video and super 16 mm film.

“Lemmy never ceases to surprise me,” Orshoski told Billboard.com in a 2008 interview. “You think you know who Lemmy is, but you have no idea. If you think you have Lemmy all figured out, trust me. You don’t!”

“Shooting Lemmy is like filming dangerous wildlife. He never does what you expect him to do, and he never does anything you want him to do,” Olliver added. “A lot of the coolest shots are shots we had to wait for four or five shows to go by before we could get them.”

Check out the teaser trailer here.

The Vampire Of The Sunset Strip

The Vampire Of The Sunset Strip

Lemmy Kilmister may be the most indestructible rocker alive. At 63 years old, he still spends nearly every day he’s not on tour swilling bourbon at West Hollywood’s legendary rocker hangout the Rainbow Bar & Grill — and his band still plays about 150 shows a year. Rolling Stone’s Mark Binelli put in some quality time at the Rainbow (and Kilmister’s nearby apartment, stocked with a mind-blowing array of WWII and Nazi memorabilia) for a profile of Motörhead’s singer/bassist in Rolling Stone’s new issue.

“The first time I ever saw Motörhead was on the Blizzard of Ozz tour,” Slash tells RS. “I swear to God, it was the loudest thing I ever heard. They EQ’d it in a way to rip the top of your fucking head off.” Ozzy Osbourne recalls that tour too: “[Lemmy] had a plaid bag with three books an a notepad. No change of clothes. His fucking rider was seven bottles of bourbon, eight bottles of vodka, two bottles of orange juice, and that’s fucking it!””

Unsurprisingly, Lemmy has taken a path that’s very unlike other rockers. Acknowledging his unusual journey, Kilmister tells RS, “I mean, I missed out on human relationships. But looking at relationships that I’ve seen along the way, I don’t think I’ve missed much.” Kilmister has let rock & roll be his guide since he was a kid learning Buddy Holly records in Wales, and in our profile Kilmister recounts joining (and leaving) legendary psych-rock band Hawkwind, attempting to teach Sid Vicious how to play the bass and the beginnings of Motörhead, which he conceived as a blend of Hawkwind, the MC5 and Little Richard.

Lemmy Under Investigation For Displaying Nazi Insignia

Lemmy Under Investigation For Displaying Nazi Insignia

An investigation has reportedly been launched into whether Motorhead frontman Ian “Lemmy” Kilmister committed a crime under German law by wearing what appears to be a Nazi cap in a recently published photo. The picture in question, which can be seen below, appeared in a German newspaper prior to the band’s July 5, 2008 ‘Wacken Rocks Seaside’ concert in Aurich, Germany with Machine Head and Saxon.

All “anti-constitutional propaganda” – and specifically any attempt to propagate Nazism – is illegal under article 86 of the German Penal Code. Article 86a also prohibits all “anti-constitutional” symbols, including all Nazi insignia, flags, slogans and salutes.

Speaking to the New York Waste web site, Lemmy stated about his Nazi collection, “I don’t only collect Nazi stuff, I collect objects from all the ‘axis countries.’ Also from countries who aren’t even mentioned anymore as former part of the axis. Like Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Finland, Hungary. OK, in the end, they all said, ‘We’re no Nazis’ when they saw that the Germans were losing it. But five years before that, they went, ‘Yeah!’”

When asked where he gets the objects he collects, Lemmy replied, “The USA is a great place for collecting that shit, ’cause the GIs took everything back to America. They took fucking warehouses full of uniforms, Mercedes staff cars. One guy shipped a Focke Wulf 190 fighter home in pieces and rebuilt it in America. Now he owns the only fucking FW 190 in the world. I used to buy a couple of things in Germany, but now you can’t take anymore knifes or things back home in a plane. And it’s become more relaxed to buy stuff like that [in Germany]. There’s five or six stores in Hamburg especially. They’re advertising it. What’s the point, anyway? It’s not a nationalistic kind of thing, I mean, what the fuck you’re gonna do? Pretend it never happened? There’s airplane model kits of Messerschmidt 109 fighters. Shouldn’t you touch them?”

On the subject of whether people should wear uniforms, Lemmy stated, “I’ll tell you something about history. From the beginning of time, the bad guys always had the best uniforms. Napoleon, the Confederates, the Nazis. They all had killer uniforms. I mean, the SS uniform is fucking brilliant! (Hell yeah – JR!) They were the rock stars of that time. What you’re gonna do? They just look good. Don’t tell me, I’m a Nazi ’cause I have uniforms. In 1967 I had my first black girlfriend and a lot of more ever since then. I just don’t understand racism, I never thought it was an option.”

See also: Lemmy’s Nazi Fascination

Lemmy The Movie

Rock Giants Pay Tribute To Lemmy In Documentary

The life and career of Motorhead frontman Lemmy Kilmister is being celebrated in a new documentary, tentatively titled “Lemmy” and slated for release in 2009.

The film promises fans more access than ever before to Kilmister’s life, and includes interviews with past and present bandmates and such peers/admirers as Slash, Dave Grohl, the Clash’s Mick Jones, Alice Cooper, Steve Vai and wrestling superstar Triple H.

Directors/producers Greg Olliver and Wes Orshoski (both of whom have contributed to Billboard) are shooting the film on a combination of HD video and super 16 mm film. Other giants from the world of metal and hard rock will appear in the film as well, with details to be announced. “We haven’t heard the word ‘no’ yet after any interview request,” Olliver says.

“Lemmy never ceases to surprise me,” Orshoski says. “You think you know who Lemmy is, but you have no idea. If you think you have Lemmy all figured out, trust me. You don’t!”

“Shooting Lemmy is like filming dangerous wildlife. He never does what you expect him to do, and he never does anything you want him to do,” Olliver says with a laugh. “A lot of the coolest shots are shots we had to wait for four or five shows to go by before we could get them.”

A distribution deal hasn’t yet been inked, but the teaser clip, featuring on-stage footage and such amusing backstage segments as Kilmister testing out a bass amp at deafening volume and telling dirty jokes, is available at Lemmymovie.com.

Motorhead’s Lemmy Kilmister Pitches Crisps

Motorhead’s Lemmy Kilmister pitches Walkers potato chips, er, crisps. Try our delicious new Marmite, sausage and tomato ketchup flavours!

Better The Devil You Know

Lemmy to play the Devil

The Welsh nutters, Dirty Sanchez are making a movie: The concept of the film is that the Devil has heard about the dare-devil nature of the Sanchez boys so he’s set them the ultimate challenge, to complete stunts based on the 7 Deadly Sins or be damned to the gutter forever.

In order to regain their status as hard-asses and crawl out of the gutter – the 7 deadly sins they must complete in seven exotic locations are:

Sloth – UK >> Anger – Moscow Russia >> Lust – Bangkok Thailand >> Envy – Ko Phi Phi Thailand >> Pride – Tokyo Japan >> Gluttony – Mexico >> Greed – Dominican Republic

And most interesting of all the film-makers have secured Lemmy to play the Devil and do the music.

Lemmy: “If they (Dirty Sanchez boys) think they’re tough… Wait till they meet me.”

LINKS: Dirty Sanchez, Motorhead

Lemmy Action Figure

Motorhead's Lemmy Action Figure

SEG has entered into an agreement with Bravado International for figural and statue rights to the infamous band Motorhead. For the past 30 years, Lemmy Kilmister and his band Motorhead have seen and done it all and lived to tell about it. And what’s more amazing is that they’re still going strong. Not only did Motorhead pick up a Grammy in 2005, but they’re still out on the road playing to sold out crowds around the world. Viewed by his peers and the masses as the “Godfather” of hard rock music, Lemmy has become an indisputable icon that has etched his place in history as one of the best.

SEG is proud to announce it will be releasing a highly detailed figure of Lemmy Kilmister in the Spring of 2006 with a statue of the iconic Warpig logo in the Fall of 2006.

Lemmy’s Nazi Fascination

Lemmy's Nazi Fascination

Ian Kilmister, a.k.a. Lemmy, the frontman for Grammy-winning English rock trio Motorhead, could have made a stimulating history professor, sharing his begrudging admiration for Goering and disdain for “bastards” like Hitler and Roosevelt with eager students.

Instead, the 59-year-old achieved cult fame with generations of headbangers by singing and writing furious anthems like “Killed By Death” and “Orgasmatron.”

But he remains fascinated by World War II and he spends his money collecting Nazi memorabilia, which is piled high in his two-bedroom apartment off the Sunset Strip.

“I was born in ‘45, the year it all ended,” Kilmister said in a recent interview over Jack Daniels and Cokes at his local watering hole, the Rainbow Bar and Grill. “It’s not ancient history to me, and I don’t see it as all the good English and Americans and all the bad Germans.”

While his views have drawn controversy, Kilmister has in the past maintained he is anarchist.

His most prized possession is a rare Damascus Luftwaffe sword, which could be worth at least $10,000, according to a dealer.

“OLD-AGE PENSION”

Kilmister’s friend, rocker Ozzy Osbourne, who lives up the road in considerably more luxurious surroundings, gave him an SS dagger and some huge banners after deciding he did not need so much darkness in his life.

“It’s my old-age pension,” Kilmister said of his collection.

Coincidentally Motorhead, which Kilmister founded 30 years ago, is biggest in Germany, and he never misses an opportunity to tour historic sites across Europe — though not the concentration camps.

“You’ve got to draw the line between what you like to collect and what they actually did,” he said.

Hermann Goering is “the only one I admire at all,” in part because the portly Luftwaffe chief set up the Gestapo, the Nazis’ secret police, and took the blame when he went on trial at Nuremberg after the war. His suicide, hours before he was due to be hanged, was “fantastic,” Kilmister said.

But he lumps Adolf Hitler, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Neville Chamberlain and Josef Stalin all in the same category “as lying, thieving, groveling bastards.” Current U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair also annoys him. “Anybody that smiles that much, there must be something wrong with him.”

He says his interest in history and current events has taught him about hypocrisy and people’s refusal to learn from the past, and that it also inspires his songwriting.

“Sex, war, murder and death,” he said. “And injustice, and there’s plenty of that around. I don’t foresee being short of subject matter in the foreseeable future.”

Yet, many of the songs are laced with humor, such as 1984’s “Killed By Death,” and the band somehow landed a song on the soundtrack for the children’s movie “SpongeBob SquarePants.”

METALLICA’S FAVES

Kilmister is the sole original member in Motorhead, playing bass and singing alongside guitarist Phil Campbell and drummer Mikkey Dee. The band tours for about eight months each year.

It has released 21 albums in 30 years, most recently 2004’s “Inferno,” none of them selling particularly strongly. He said the best-selling release is 1981’s “No Sleep ‘Til Hammersmith” with worldwide sales of about 500,000 copies.

But the band’s influence is inestimable. Metallica, for one, was hugely influenced by Motorhead, and they repaid the favor by covering four Motorhead tunes on their 1998 album “Garage Inc.” Motorhead, in turn, covered the song “Whiplash” for a Metallica tribute record, winning its first Grammy in the process last month.

Kilmister also wrote lyrics for a few of Osbourne’s hit songs, including the ballad “Mama, I’m Coming Home.”

The royalty checks are much appreciated, but the great wealth amassed by Osbourne and Metallica has eluded Kilmister.

“I couldn’t have done anything different, could I? Because I’m not cute, you see,” he said, acknowledging the giant warts on his face. “I was always too old, or too young for whichever thing we were doing. It’s just the way things work out.”

But don’t shed too many tears. Never married, he has a Hugh Hefner-style coterie of about five women in the 18-to-25 demographic that he can call on. In the past, he has even shared a few girlfriends with his son. “But I never had his wife. I had to draw the line somewhere.”



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