Motörhead - Overkill

Talk about being productive! In 1979, Motörhead put out Bomber and Overkill, which turns 30 today. Bomber had better artwork, but Overkill had better songs. It was the first major statement by Motörhead’s classic lineup: Lemmy, “Fast” Eddie Clarke, Phil “Philthy Animal” Taylor. Their eponymous 1977 record was a punky rush job. Bouncy and bluesy, Overkill worked through hard rock influences; “No Class” is suspiciously similar to ZZ Top’s “Tush,” released four years earlier. In vehicular terms, Motörhead operated on two and three wheels. Only on the following year’s Ace of Spades did the four-wheeled “Motörhead sound” emerge.

(I Won’t) Pay Your Price
No Class
Tush (ZZ Top)

Still, Lemmy was already kicking ass. “(I Won’t) Pay Your Price”: “I’m gonna count to three and if you’re still here / I’ll get a gun and blow away your knees.” “Capricorn”: “I always knew / The only way / Is never live / Beyond today.” But the tough guy could dispense tough love, on the anti-drug “Stay Clean.” “Metropolis” was meandering and strangely disconnected: “Metropolis is something new / Ain’t nobody got their eye on you / I don’t care, I don’t care.” Many have copped Motörhead’s style, but few have gotten the substance right. Beneath the warts, white boots, and low end fuzz lay a whole lotta soul.

– Cosmo Lee

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