Los Angeles Times

Motorhead frontman

IAN FRASER KILMISTER, 1945 - 2015

- By August Brown august.brown@latimes.com

Ian Fraser Kilmister, the raucous musician known as Lemmy who helped pioneer heavy metal, has died.

Ian Fraser Kilmister, the raucous singer and bassist known as Lemmy who helped pioneer hard rock and heavy metal with his band Motörhead, has died. He was 70.

Representa­tives for the band confirmed Kilmister’s death, from what they described as “a short battle with an extremely aggressive cancer,” on Monday evening. In a posting on the official Motörhead Facebook page, the band wrote that “We cannot begin to express our shock and sadness, there aren’t words.”

Kilmister, born Christmas Eve in 1945 in Burslem, England, was one of rock music’s most charismati­c frontmen. Easily recognized by his craggy vocal style, prominent facial warts and bushy sideburns and a devil-may-care personalit­y, he was one of heavy metal’s most beloved and brashest figures.

Ozzy Osbourne, the Black Sabbath frontman and solo artist, lamented Kilmister’s death on Twitter: “Lost one of my best friends, Lemmy, today. He will be sadly missed. He was a warrior and a legend. I will see you on the other side.”

Kilmister, a onetime roadie for Jimi Hendrix, first came to prominence as a member of the band Hawkwind, an early psychedeli­c act in Britain. But after that group kicked him out for a drug possession charge on tour, Kilmister founded Motörhead and would be its only constant member throughout its four-decade career.

“I was fired out of every other band I was ever in, so I had to start my own group. They couldn’t fire me out of that,” he told The Times in 2010.

Known for double-time, heavily distorted singles including “Ace of Spades,” “No Sleep ‘Til Hammersmit­h” and “Overkill,” the band earned an internatio­nal following that reveled in its aims to be, as the band put it on its 1999 live album title, “Everything Louder Than Everyone Else.”

Kilmister was also one of rock’s great libertines, open about his heavy drinking and drug use throughout his life on the road. “It was dumb luck. We all could have gone any time. Especially in the ’60s, when it was, ’If it fits in my hand and my mouth, I’ll take it,” he told The Times in 2011.

He was the subject of a 2010 documentar­y film (with, appropriat­ely, a subtitle unpublisha­ble in a newspaper), and the band performed a well-regarded set at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in 2014. The band’s 2015 album, “Bad Magic,” its 22nd, hit the top 40 in the U.S., and the band was preparing for a February tour.

“Where I live is on the road, on the bus,” Kilmister told The Times in 2011. “It’s fun. Every day is new. I can’t imagine being home all the time. It must be terrible.”

But there had been signs of trouble: Kilmister walked offstage during a September show in Austin, Texas, citing illness, and the group canceled several dates because of what the band described as a lung infection.

Kilmister was an adopted Angeleno, living mere blocks from his favored haunts on the Sunset Strip. For a 2011 profile, Kilmister stopped by the Rainbow Bar & Grill, the beloved base for seasoned L.A. and English ex-pat rockers, where he played video games and recounted his years in the heavy metal trenches. Flashing a wicked grin, he quoted his single “Ace of Spades” when offering wisdom after an unmatched life in rock ’n’ roll.

“You win some, you lose some, it’s all the same to me.”

 ?? Getty Images ??
Getty Images
 ?? Mel Melcon
Los Angeles Times ?? ‘A WARRIOR AND A LEGEND’ Known as Lemmy, Ian Fraser Kilmister, above in 2011, was Motörhead’s only constant member during a four-decade career and one of heavy metal’s most beloved and brashest figures.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ‘A WARRIOR AND A LEGEND’ Known as Lemmy, Ian Fraser Kilmister, above in 2011, was Motörhead’s only constant member during a four-decade career and one of heavy metal’s most beloved and brashest figures.

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