*** Welcome to piglix ***

Motorhead (live)

"Motorhead"
Hawkwind - Kings of Speed Single (1975).jpg
Original single cover
Studio B-side by Hawkwind from the album Warrior on the Edge of Time
Published United Artists
Released 7 March 1975
A-side "Kings of Speed"
Recorded January 1975
Genre Hard rock, space rock
Length 3:02
Writer(s) Ian Kilmister
"Motörhead"
Hawkwind - Motorhead Single (1982).jpg
Reissue single cover
Single by Hawkwind
A-side "Motorhead"
B-side ""Valium Ten"
Released October 1982
Genre Space Rock
"Motörhead"
Motörhead - Beer Drinkers and Hell Rasiers 1.jpg
1977 UK Single
Single by Motörhead
from the album Motörhead
A-side "Motörhead"
B-side "City Kids"
Released June 1977
Recorded 27-29 April 1977
Escape Studios, Kent
Genre Punk Rock
Motörhead singles chronology
"Leaving Here" "Motörhead" "Louie Louie"
"Motörhead"
Motörhead - Motorhead Live Single (1981).jpg
1981 Live Single
Single by Motörhead
from the album No Sleep 'til Hammersmith
A-side "Motörhead" (live)
B-side "Over the Top" (live)
Released 11 July 1981
Recorded Newcastle City Hall - A-Side 29 March & B-Side 30 March 1981
Genre Heavy Metal, Speed Metal
Motörhead singles chronology
"Ace of Spades" "Motörhead" "Iron Fist"

"Motorhead" is a song written by Ian "Lemmy" Kilmister while he was a member of the English space rock band Hawkwind. It was later recorded by (and was the eponym for) Motörhead, as he called it this instead of Bastard on his then managers advice.

"Motorhead" was the last song that Lemmy wrote for Hawkwind before being fired from the band in May 1975. It was originally released as the B-side of the single "Kings of Speed" on United Artists Records in March 1975.

The song was written in the Hyatt Hotel (a.k.a. 'Riot House') in West Hollywood, California. Lemmy explains how it was created:

I was on tour with Hawkwind in 1974, we were staying at the Riot House and Roy Wood and Wizzard were also in town. I got this urge to write a song in the middle of the night. I ran downstairs to the Wizzard room, got Roy's Ovation acoustic guitar, then hurried back to mine. I went on to the balcony and howled away for four hours. Cars were stopping and the drivers were listening then driving off, and there I was yelling away at the top of my voice." - Lemmy.

The title of the song is American slang for a speed freak. The lyrics were explained by Lemmy:

The six thousand miles was a reference to Los Angeles, and the rest is self-explanatory. And yes, I am the only person to fit the word 'parallelogram' into a rock'n'roll number! I'm very proud of that.

The guitars and bass are tuned down a 1/2 step on the Hawkwind version, effectively making the song's key Eb Major, but are described here as if in standard tuning. The bass follows the root note for all the chords, with a riff on the F♯, based on the A string between the tenth and twelfth frets. The introduction is in E, ending with two bars each in D and E♭. The verse is in E with a D/E 'kick' at the end of each lyric line, a pre-chorus follows, in G with two lines ending in D, the last in F♯. The chorus, like the pre-chorus is in G, but with only two lines, ending in D and F♯. The song consists of three verses in total. The solo break, on the verse/pre-chorus/chorus pattern, is after the second chorus.


...
Wikipedia

...