Vince Neil – vocals
Nikki Sixx – bass
Mick Mars – guitar
Tommy Lee – drums
Be warned! The story of the world’s most infamous rock band isn’t a pretty one. With the possible exception of Ozzy Osbourne, no band consumed as many drugs and downed as much booze without dying as the L.A. quartet M tley Cr e. And now, the band you never thought you’d see live again is back. All the way back…
The story of their career, which the band elected to tell in graphic detail and with complete honesty in their NY Times best-selling 2001 autobiography, The Dirt (soon to be a major motion picture) is one of dirty needles, damaged minds, music industry battles and sex lots of sex. And the miraculous thing about the Cr e is not that they lived to tell the tale (although that is, in a way, a kind of unholy miracle), it’s that all of their wildly uncontrollable habits are clearly audible in their music. Just listen to these albums, more than 40 million of which have sold worldwide. If you concentrate hard enough, you can hear the sound of the coke coming off the tables, the squeak of the bed springs, and the sheer sleazy grind of California rock over the last two decades.
In 1981 bassist Nikki Sixx left his glam-rock band London and met up with drummer Tommy Lee. Both were strung-out adolescents in search of good times and a record deal (in that order) and had a knack for creating fists-in-the-air anthems that parlayed their ability to play loud. Responding to an add in LA’s Recycler for a loud, rude and aggressive guitarist seeking a band placed by Mick Mars (who reminded Sixx of Cousin Itt from The Addams Family ) and singer Vince Neil (who Mars referred to, perhaps unwisely, as a blonde bitch at their first meeting), the band named themselves M tley Cr e (the umlauts were intended to make them look tough. Of course, as Vince Neil tells it, the idea came from a bottle of L wenbr u) and recorded an album, Too Fast for Love, which was released in November 1981 on their own Leath r Records label. An insanely catchy, riff-driven record, TFFL turned rock fans expectations upside-down and ultimately led to the formation of an entire glam-metal movement based in Los Angeles. Without Too Fast for Love, there would have been no Bon Jovi and no Guns n Roses.
Picked up by Elektra, the Cr e released a string of classic albums in the 80s, beginning with Shout at the Devil (1983), controversial for its satanic reference, and Theatre Of Pain (1985), a slightly darker, more introverted record (perhaps stemming from Vince Neil’s car crash with Hanoi Rocks drummer Razzle, who was killed in the incident). However, Girls, Girls, Girls (1987) was as rock n roll as anything they’d done before and, together with 1989’s enormous Dr. Feelgood (which also marked the Cr e’s wake-up call into rehab, after Sixx ’died from a heroin overdose and was revived with adrenaline), catapulted the band into the mainstream.
By the 1990s M tley Cr e was a full-blown stadium act, with all the freedom (big production budgets, a string of models and porn stars) and hindrances (censorship issues, management and intra-band strife) that this entails. Neil left the band in 1992 and it was Scream singer John Corabi that provided vocals for the 1994 album M tley Cr e, which attempted to match up to the angst and power of newer metal bands. However, by 1997’s Generation Swine, Vince was back and the Cr e’s fortunes revived, leading them to issue Greatest Hits (1998), Live: Entertainment Or Death (1999) and a rarities collection, Supersonic and Demonic Relics (also 1999). All offered a unique perspective into the life and work of the Cr e, with remixes, live and demo recordings, and unissued tracks all part of the package. By 2000’s New Tattoo, the band was working at full steam again, despite the departure of Tommy Lee, by then a tabloid star, thanks to his infamous home video high-jinx with his then-wife, Pamela Anderson.
M tley Cr e is also one of the only bands in history to successfully acquire ownership of all their master recordings. In 2003 their wholly owned label, Motley Records, licensed their catalog to Universal Music and saw reissues of all of their albums as well as the first installment in their box set, Music To Crash Your Car To Vol. 1, a four-CD set that is the first of three volumes chronicling the band’s storied career. Music To Crash Your Car To Vol. 2 came out in the spring of 2004 – Vol. 3 is forthcoming. The first-ever greatest hits DVD on the band was also released in 2003, entitled M tley Cr e: Greatest Video Hits.
As the band prepares to mount their first reunion tour in six years VH1 & VH1 Classic Present M tley Cr e: Red, White & Cr e Tour 2005… Better Live Than Dead the milestone comes at a time of personal growth for all its members:
Vince Neil has actively cultivated a solo musical career since the breakup of M tley Cr e with tours each year, primarily in North America and Japan, from huge arenas to more intimate clubs. Along with a new solo single ( Promise Me ) to be released this January, Neil has also entered the arena of television. He appeared on several network sitcoms including CBS Still Standing and the WB’s Greetings from Tucson, and most recently brought rock star clout to the WB reality show The Surreal Life. In his own private life, Neil plans to marry his longtime fianc e Leah in the coming months.
Nikki Sixx has been seen worldwide with his band Brides of Destruction, from European metal fests to headline gigs in Japan, also releasing an album, Here Come the Brides. Appearing with Brides on MTV’s Headbanger’s Ball, he supplied several songs to The Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde Rock n Roll Musical and recently co-wrote hit songs for Meatloaf, Saliva, and several new artists. In January, VH1 will publish The Heroin Diaries, compiled by Sixx from 1986-87 during the height of his addiction. The father of five, Sixx is happily married for eight years to actress/model Donna D Errico.
Tommy Lee, having toured with his band Methods of Mayhem and DJ’d at clubs across Southern California, Tommy has leapt into an author’s spotlight with the October release of his biography Tommyland. Recently landing on the New York Times best-seller list, the candid and often shocking memoir of his life tells much of the tale that’s never been told. Working on a solo album to debut next year, he is also the subject of an NBC reality show to premiere in early 2005, which finds him attending the University of Nebraska.
Mick Mars is currently recovering from hip replacement surgery, a result of his lifelong struggle with ankylosing spondylitis, a severely degenerative rheumatoid disease. Since its onset in his teen years, Mars has fought the debilitating effects of the rare disease, a form of arthritis that inflames the body’s ligaments and tendons, cutting off the blood supply to the bones and causing stiffness and chronic pain. Although anticipating additional surgery in his shoulder and other hip, Mars hasn’t let the illness sap his creative spirit: during his downtime, he has been actively writing a diverse body of music for use in film, television and recordings.
All four members of M tley Cr e came together recently to record three new songs, which will be featured on the new anthology album, Red White & Cr e, to be released by Universal Music Enterprises on February 1, 2005. The band’s autobiography The Dirt: Confessions of the World’s Most Notorious Rock Band, New York Times best-seller, is also being made into a major film, to be released next year by MTV Films/Paramount. Preparing to shoot the first-ever M tley Cr e concert DVD with all four original members, the band will put most of its energy into its 2005 world tour, which begins in February in 30 U.S. arenas. Segueing to Latin America and festivals and arenas in Europe, they return to North America in August for an ambitious 43-city amphitheater tour before wrapping up the year in Asia, Australia and New Zealand.
How important is M tley Cr e? Let’s just say that they made rock n roll what it is today. Without the Cr e, stadium rock in the 1990s might have been all about Journey, Foreigner, Kansas and REO Speedwagon. Think about that for a second, will you?
: : : : :
Motley Crue Red White and Crue Tour
Official Motley Crue Merchandise
Skylar Neil Memorial Fund T-Shirts
listen to Motley Crue free samples / download from iTunes
Buy Motley Crue now from Amazon
Motley crue is a good band i still listen to them alot than i heard led zeppelin than the beatles ended up listening to alot of older bands such as cream beatles oasis good bands i think they should be casted on zrock =P 😀 – said Tyler1337 on Jun 06, 2007
Leave a Reply