Motley Crue roll call!!!!

washingtonpost.com
Motley Crue's High-Wire Rock
Raunchy Reunion Harks Back to '80s

By Sean Daly
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, March 8, 2005; Page C01

Tommy Lee, the reliably shirtless drummer for Motley Crue, was very unhappy with the women of Washington on Sunday night. Prowling a massive stage made to look like an X-rated big top – think Cirque du Soiled – the endlessly tattooed Lee aimed a video camera into the near-capacity MCI Center crowd and demanded that female fans flash their support for the recently reunited headbangers.

"Dude, that is so sad," Lee scolded when only a few obliged with a show of skin. "I resign."

Bassist Nikki Sixx quickly tried to broker a deal: Maybe if Lee showed his naughty bits first? "It's not like you haven't seen it before," Sixx chuckled to the audience. (The drummer teased but ultimately remained zipped.)

For those expecting a more enriching level of discourse during the two-hour-plus show: Wow, were you in the wrong building. Love 'em or lock 'em up, this is the essence of the Crue: four shameless hair-metal immortals – Lee, Sixx, singer Vince Neil and guitarist Mick Mars – who have spent the past 24 years unapologetically upholding the principles of sex, drugs and rock-and-roll.

This tour, the Crue's first with its original lineup since 1999, has proved a surprise smash across the country, selling out at almost every stop. Plug your ears and lock up the kids: Irony-free metal is back, in a big booming way.

The four forty-something Crue members Sunday unveiled bikini-clad contortionists dangling from ropes, a menacing dwarf, three oversize motorcycles, a porno movie flashing on a massive video screen, evil clown roadies, blinding pyrotechnics – and that was just for one song, "Girls, Girls, Girls," that grinding ode to golden-hearted strippers the world over.

Touring in support of a new double-disc hits collection, "Red, White & Crue," the famously feuding rockers – it's truly a miracle the tour held up long enough to get to us – kept the hits and the sensory overload coming, a silly but utterly satisfying tribute to the hairy days of old.

Let's just say that the classiest moment of the night came when one of the dancers did a poetic interpretive dance – all the while shooting sparks from a most uncomfortable place.

Oh, this show was filthy for sure. From the bombastic opener, "Shout at the Devil," to an encore of the Sex Pistols' "Anarchy in the UK," the Crue proved it is unrivaled when it comes to creatively utilizing the f-word and related vulgarities.

And for what it's worth, the Crue sounded spectacular – or at least sounded as chest-rattlingly loud and utterly nuance-free as it ever did.

Each band member was given a chance to relive past glories. The blond beach boy Neil – whose recent bout of plastic surgery has left him looking thin but also somewhat melted, as if he were left in the microwave too long – can still unleash a wicked shriek, and his rather sweet readings of pole-dancing ballads "Without You" and "Home Sweet Home" had the Bic lighters out and ignited.

The Sasquatchian Sixx, a former heroin addict who has cheated death more times than Indiana Jones, played both his bass and his bass lines low and menacingly, sneering the throngs into a frenzy during classic rumbles "Looks That Kill" and "Wild Side."

Looking like a cross between Mr. Toad and the Grim Reaper, Mars was a power-chording marvel, which is impressive because a degenerative spinal disease has left him hunched and frail. Like any good metalhead, Mars knows that guitar solos are as important to fans as lyrics, so he faithfully hammered out the licks during the band's most frenzied rockers, "Kickstart My Heart" and "Same Ol' Situation (S.O.S.)."

And say what you will about Lee – and Lord knows, most of it has been said (and seen on the Internet) – the former Mr. Pamela Anderson is a phenomenally active drummer. His limbs and sticks flail about as if he's fighting off a swarm of bees. Back in the day, Lee would perform epic solos in a spinning drum kit that would soar across the length of stadiums. He's older now, of course, so these days he performs solos on two stationary setups – each of which is some 50 feet in the air and 20 feet from the other. You could hear a collective holding of breath as a high-wired Lee leapt like Peter Pan from one rig to the other.

At night's end – after the giant inflatable jester and the fire-breathing exotic dancers were brought out, that is – the Motley men came to the front of the stage to receive an obligatory but deserved standing ovation. Was Lee still irked about the gratuitous skin snub from the ladies? Well, he did grab himself below the belt and spit out a giant ball of phlegm. But in Crue-speak, that means all is forgiven.

© 2005 The Washington Post Company
I gotta admit, I'm not a child of the 80s and my only knowledge of this is second-hand (and from "heavy metal parking lot") … but I thought hair-metal bands like the Crue were the complete antithesis of the Sex Pistols … weren't punk kids and metal kids mortal enemies?

If so, why is the Crue covering the "anarchy in the uk"?
Who wants to show their titties to a guy who's going to give them Hepatitis C?
Originally posted by Killer:
I gotta admit, I'm not a child of the 80s and my only knowledge of this is second-hand (and from "heavy metal parking lot") … but I thought hair-metal bands like the Crue were the complete antithesis of the Sex Pistols … weren't punk kids and metal kids mortal enemies?

If so, why is the Crue covering the "anarchy in the uk"?
Yep. 80s Punk and Metal fans converged at Motorhead, Metallica, Misfits, Suicidal, DK, et al, but bands like the Crue were just MTV-ready metal. About as edgy as your 15 year-old neighbor with liberty spikes. Maybe less.
Originally posted by Killer:

If so, why is the Crue covering the "anarchy in the uk"?
not defending why they did it really. but Crue did cover the song on a charity album back in like, 1990 or something. it was a hair-metal cover song album with Scorpions, Bon Jovi, and Skid Row covered "Holiday In The Sun" as well.

they didnt completely pull it out of thin air.

also, i think those hair metal bands and the punk bands had more in common than you think. their fans, maybe not.
Originally posted by sonickteam2:

also, i think those hair metal bands and the punk bands had more in common than you think. their fans, maybe not.
fair enough, i just always had the impression that early (76-77) punk bands like the sex pistols were out to kill glam rock and bombastic metal like queen and zep and had serious beef with big rock stars … i guess the crue didn't come around until a bit later though …
Originally posted by sonickteam2:
i think those hair metal bands and the punk bands had more in common than you think.
Such as…..?
More STD's than IQ points?

Originally posted by ggwâ?¢:
Originally posted by sonickteam2:
i think those hair metal bands and the punk bands had more in common than you think.
Such as…..?
It's not much of a stretch to trace the Crue's roots back to the likes of the NY Dolls. Back when the hair-metal scene was still confined to LA Clubs, I think there was still a bit of a punk connection.
Originally posted by tenfifteen:
About as edgy as your 15 year-old neighbor with liberty spikes. Maybe less.
i had liberty spikes when i was 15!!! so what?
Originally posted by ggwâ?¢:
Originally posted by sonickteam2:
i think those hair metal bands and the punk bands had more in common than you think.
Such as…..?
well, i could be wrong, but (and i think mr chutney just kinda said this) Motley Crue wasnt MTV metal until after a few albums. (Smokin in the boys room started it i think). a lot of metal bands in the early 80s started off in small clubs and worked thier way up. bands like Skid Row, Poison (maybe) and didnt have to because they got to ride on the coattails of the bands that made it big (such as, getting to open for the large arena tours before thier 1st album was released)

i imagine Crue's beginnings were rather humble.
Originally posted by sonickteam2:
i had liberty spikes when i was 15!!! so what?
So in 1984, maybe they were edgy. Today, you're just dressing like your parents. Mellow out.
Originally posted by sonickteam2:
well, i could be wrong, but (and i think mr chutney just kinda said this) Motley Crue wasnt MTV metal until after a few albums.
They were on Headbangers Ball with Rikki Rachtman rather early before MTV's Top 20 Countdown became inidated with hair bands.
I seem to remember Motley Crue being one of the big bands among the loser crowd at my high school.

The same loser crowd who referred to the few people who were punkers or new wavers as "faggots."
Originally posted by tenfifteen:
Originally posted by sonickteam2:
i had liberty spikes when i was 15!!! so what?
So in 1984, maybe they were edgy. Today, you're just dressing like your parents. Mellow out.
I was 15 in 1992 thank you very much ;)
Originally posted by Charlie Nakatestes, Japanese Golfer:
I seem to remember Motley Crue being one of the big bands among the loser crowd at my high school.
Loser!
Originally posted by sonickteam2:
well, i could be wrong, but (and i think mr chutney just kinda said this) Motley Crue wasnt MTV metal until after a few albums. (Smokin in the boys room started it i think). a lot of metal bands in the early 80s started off in small clubs and worked thier way up. bands like Skid Row, Poison (maybe) and didnt have to because they got to ride on the coattails of the bands that made it big (such as, getting to open for the large arena tours before thier 1st album was released)

i imagine Crue's beginnings were rather humble.
Never thought hair-metal would get the serious music-history treatment. I guess a couple of critics take Andrew WK seriously, and all hell breaks loose. :)

Seriously, I was 14 in 1984. I liked their first two discs plenty–anything that made mom and dad upset was okay by me, MTV or no. Still, the Crue's influence extends to Poison and no further.

Anyway, Motley Crue's videos from their second disc (Shout at the Devil) were ALL in heavy rotation on MTV at the time. Can't say the same about Slayer, Metallica, Anthrax, Megadeth… hence the Crue were "MTV-metal."
Originally posted by vansmack:
They were on Headbangers Ball with Rikki Rachtman rather early before MTV's Top 20 Countdown became inidated with hair bands.
but wasnt there a time when MTV wasnt ALL watered down crappy corporate music? being on MTV in the early 80s meant you were a good band! (generally, right?)
Originally posted by Charlie Nakatestes, Japanese Golfer:
I seem to remember Motley Crue being one of the big bands among the loser crowd at my high school.

The same loser crowd who referred to the few people who were punkers or new wavers as "faggots."
Exactly the way I remember it. I liked those first coupla discs, but also had Cramps, DK, Exploited, Husker Du in my album collection. Strange days.
Originally posted by sonickteam2:
Originally posted by vansmack:
They were on Headbangers Ball with Rikki Rachtman rather early before MTV's Top 20 Countdown became inidated with hair bands.
but wasnt there a time when MTV wasnt ALL watered down crappy corporate music? being on MTV in the early 80s meant you were a good band! (generally, right?)
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