Ted Nugent

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Guitarist, songwriter, singer

Ted Nugent was born just outside of Detroit, Michigan, in 1949. He received his first musical instrument at the age of nine after his aunt, an airline stewardess, sent him an acoustic guitar that had been left on a flight unclaimed. He took formal lessons for a few years to learn theory and proper technique and by the time he was just thirteen years old his first band, the Lourds, had opened for the Supremes and the Beau Brummels at Cobo Hall. "The Lourds played unbefore-heard-of kick-ass rock and roll," Nugent told Tom Vickers of Rolling Stone. "If you weren’t into it it might send you to nausea city."

Unfortunately the band lasted only until Nugent’s family moved to Chicago when he was sixteen. With a former Army staff sargeant for a father, Nugent was raised in a very strict family structure and wasted little time in forming his next group (The Amboy Dukes, in 1965) and hitting the road after high school. "I went after my success with a vengeance," he told Rolling Stone. In 1967 Nugent moved the group back to Detroit, where they recorded a minor midwest hit, "Baby Please Don’t Go."

That same year they broke the national charts with their psychedelic onslaught, "Journey to the Center of the Mind, "which reached number 8. Amazingly, Nugent received no money from the song and the group spent their entire ten years bouncing between labels (Polydor, Discreet, and Mainstream) and dealing with poor management. They released nearly a dozen albums of pioneering heavy metal: "Listening to Amboy Dukes’ albums was like going into hand-to-hand combat with your speakers," wrote Billy Altman in Rolling Stone.

The group was fueled by Nugent’s high-powered licks that spewed forth from his Gibson Byrdland guitar. Normally used as a jazz instrument, Nugent cranked the hollowbody to maximum volume, which caused a tremendous amount of feedback. Although he uses other guitars today (Les Pauls and Paul Reed Smith solidbodies), he first discovered the Byrdland’s potential when he heard Jim McCarty using one with Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels in 1964. "[McCarty] was so sensational that I was bent on playing it," Nugent told Steve Rosen in Guitar Player. "I was also bent on playing loud. To do that you either have to elimate the feedback characteristics—by buying a different guitar—or learn to control it. I started putting the feedback to good use."

Initially influenced by Wayne Cochran, Duane Eddy, Lonnie Mack, Keith Richards, and Jimi Hendrix, he was soon creating his own unique voice on the guitar by manipulating the toggle switch and volume knobs for effects, playing with his teeth, bending the strings behind the bridge to create vibrato and playing with

more speed and volume (he’s 85% deaf in his left ear) than anyone before him. "[Nugent’s] as fast, raunchy, and unrelentless as any heavy metallic glitterite around," stated Don Menn in Guitar Player. "Some of his blues-rock riffs could have melted a bazooka."

Nugent not only pushed his guitar playing, but his onstage antics as well, to the limit. His outrageous wardrobe and attitude soon earned him the title of "Motor City Madman." An avid hunter (he’s a staunch member of the NRA) and outdoorsman, his stage apparel consists of a loincloth, deerskin, feathers, necklasses made out of animal teeth, headbands, and fringe boots. With his wild hair looking like a lion’s mane, Nugent has been known to jump off huge stacks of amplifiers with bow and arrow in hand, daring anyone to challenge his presence. Another theatric featured excrutiatingly high volumes aimed at breaking glass balls; it sometimes failed and the balls had to be shot out by a roadie with a BB gun.

Nugent labels this entire persona "gonzo," and it embodies just about every aspect of his life. "My philosophy is two eyes for an eye," he declared to Charles M. Young in Rolling Stone. He has abhored drugs ever since he saw what happened to the late Jimi Hendrix (the two used to jam together) and he has even fired band members for drug use. Nugent’s ego has also earned him noteriety in the past for statements like "Sometimes I ask myself—have I the right to be this good?," to Guitar Player’s Tom Wheeler. His obsessions with himself, hunting, and sex have pretty much dominated his song themes and clever titles.

Just prior to the Dukes’ break-up Nugent began staging guitar duels with veteran metalheads like Frank Marino of Mahogany Rush, Wayne Kramer from the MC5, and Mike Pinera of Iron Butterfly and Blues Image. These six-string wars helped further Nugent’s macho image as he usually outplayed or outstaged those who tried to steal the spotlight from him. In 1975 he decided to go solo, signing with Epic and releasing his self-titled debut. Ted Nugent hit its listeners with hard-driving selections, including "Motor City Madhouse," "Just What the Doctor Ordered," and "Stranglehold." Nugent’s live shows were just as merciless, leaving audiences with a serious case of shell shock "roughly akin to pressing a stethoscope to the roaring engine of a trail bike," reported Young in Rolling Stone.

Nugent’s next two albums, Free For All and Cat Scratch Fever (note Jeff Beck’s influence on the bolero "Home-bound"), featured more of the same obnoxious lyrics and blazing fretwork. An in-concert performance was captured on 1977’s Double Live Gonzo and by the next year Nugent fronted the top-grossing band in NorthAmerica. In March of 1978 he headlined the California Jam II gig at the Ontario Motor Speedway in front of 250, 000 screaming fans. With the addition of Weekend Warriors, Nugent’s first five Epic LPs had gone platinum. His formula was simple, according to Wheeler in Guitar Player: "Less chord changes than Alice Cooper; more chord changes than Black Sabbath; sounds best loud."

For the next six years though, Nugent’s popularity began to dwindle. He continued to release four more albums, but the generation that had grown up on his style had done just that; grown up. And the younger crowd was now into a sound, introduced by Eddie Van Halen, that utilized fingerboard tapping and extreme wang-bar tactics to create dive-bombing crashes. But Nugent explained his slump to Steve Gett in Guitar For The Practicing Musician: "Because I’ve got a big mouth; because I’m so exuberant and so easy-going, and I’m having so much fun that it intimidates them."

By 1984, however, Nugent had gotten the hint (and a new label) and joined the club with Penetrator and 1986’s Little Miss Dangerous, which showed he could compete with his contemporaries. He had previously employed singers to cover the vocals while occassionally belting out a song or two himself. But on his 1988 release, If You Can’t Lick ’Em … Lick ’Em, Nugent handled all the lead vocals. Although he has not regained his former position in the heavy metal hierarchy, he is still indeed a dedicated guitarist to be reckoned with. "All I can say is that if I didn’t have the ulterior diversions, with my hunting, my outdoor activities and my family, I would stay on the road 360 days a year," he told Gett. I’ve never felt anything less than outrageous enthusiasm for my music."

Selected discography

Solo LPs
Ted Nugent, Epic, 1975.
Free For All, Epic, 1976.
Cat Scratch Fever, Epic, 1977.
Double Live Gonzo, Epic, 1977.
Weekend Warriors, Epic, 1978.
State of Shock, Epic, 1979
Scream Dream, Epic, 1980.
Great Gonzos/The Best of Ted Nugent, Epic, 1981.
Intensities in Ten Cities, 1981, CBS.
Penetrator, Atlantic, 1984.
Little Miss Dangerous, Atlantic, 1986.
If You Can’t Lick ’Em … Lick ’Em, Atlantic, 1988.

With the Amboy Dukes
Ted Nugent and the Amboy Dukes, Mainstream, 1968.
Journey to the Center of the Mind, Mainstream, 1968.
Marriage on the Rocks—Rock Bottom, Polydor, 1970.
Survival of the Fittest, Polydor, 1974.
Call of the Wild, Discreet, 1974.
Tooth, Fang, and Claw, Discreet, 1975.
Journeys and Migrations (double reissue), Mainstream, 1975.
Dr. Slingshot (compilation), Mainstream, 1975.

Sources
Books
Christgau, Robert, Christgau’s Record Guide, Ticknor & Fields, 1981.
The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Rock, compiled by Nick Logan and Bob Woffinden, Harmony, 1977.
The Rolling Stone Record Guide, edited by Dave Marsh and John Swenson, Random House/Rolling Stone Press, 1979.

Periodicals
Guitar for the Practicing Musician, January, 1986.
Guitar Player, December, 1975; November, 1976; March, 1977; December, 1977; August, 1979; September, 1980; May, 1984; June, 1988.
Guitar World, March, 1987; July, 1988.
Rolling Stone, April 8, 1976; November 18, 1976; July 28, 1977; August 25, 1977; March 23, 1978; January 11, 1979; March 8, 1979; March 19, 1981.
  • Genres: Rock

Biography

Throughout his lengthy career, guitar wildman Ted Nugent has reveled in the controversy and criticism that always seems to follow in his path. While there's no denying his exceptional talent on the six-string, his knack for penning arena rock anthems, or his standing as one of rock's top live acts, it's his non-musical endeavors that have caused the most condemnation from his detractors (his pro-right wing beliefs, pro-gun advocacy, appreciation of hunting animals, etc.). But by the same token, Nugent is a family man and one of the few hard rockers who has admirably stuck by his lifelong anti-drugs and -drink stance throughout his career.

Born on December 13, 1948, in Detroit, MI, Nugent became interested in rock & roll early in the game, picking up the guitar as a youngster, while his disciplinarian father passed his beliefs down to Nugent. In the '60s, Nugent formed his first bands (including Royal High Boys and Lourdes), drawing inspiration from such British blues-rockers as the Rolling Stones and the Yardbirds. But it wasn't until the formation of the Amboy Dukes that the Nuge got his first taste of stardom (it was also around this time that Nugent began playing a Gibson Byrdland guitar, a model which would be instantly associated with him throughout his career). The other members of the group didn't exactly share Nugent's clean-living lifestyle, as proven by their psychedelic hit single "Journey to the Center of the Mind," which Nugent claimed he didn't know at the time was about being "under the influence." The band managed to issue several albums throughout the late '60s -- 1967's self-titled debut, 1968's Journey to the Center of the Mind, and 1969's Migration -- as the group fit in well with such other high-energy rock bands to emerge from the Motor City: MC5 and the Stooges in particular.

With bandmembers coming and going at an alarming rate, Nugent remained the only constant member -- eventually officially changing the band's name to Ted Nugent & the Amboy Dukes by the '70s, and issuing 1971's Survival of the Fittest, 1973's Call of the Wild, and 1974's Tooth, Fang & Claw. While none of these releases exactly stormed the charts, Nugent and his cohorts remained an in-demand concert draw, as he also set up "guitar duels" on-stage around this time (battling with MC5's Wayne Kramer and Mahogany Rush's Frank Marino, among others).

By the mid-'70s, Nugent decided to finally ditch the Amboy Dukes name and set out on his own, assembling a first-rate backing band that included second guitarist/vocalist Derek St. Holmes, bassist Rob Grange, and drummer Cliff Davies. By 1975, the new band was signed to Aerosmith's management company (Leber & Krebs), as well as the same record company, Columbia, resulting in the release of Nugent's self-titled debut in November of the same year. The band immediately struck a chord with the heavy metal/hard rock crowd from coast to coast, due to the band's over-the-top stage show. But the bandmembers' relationship with Nugent was rocky at best -- Nugent wanted complete control of the band, while the others wanted it to be more of a democracy. The end result was St. Holmes leaving the band prior to the sessions of their sophomore effort, 1976's Free-for-All (which saw a then-unknown singer by the name of Meat Loaf filling in for the departed singer).

St. Holmes returned, however, in time for the album's ensuing tour, and by the release of 1977's Cat Scratch Fever (which spawned the hit single title track), Nugent and his band was one of the top rock bands in the U.S. -- storming the charts and selling out arenas coast to coast. By now, Nugent had assumed the stage persona of a caveman -- hitting the stage dressed in nothing but a skimpy loincloth and knee-high boots, and would often begin his show by swinging out on a rope à la Tarzan (!). Like other rock acts of the '70s (Kiss, Cheap Trick, Peter Frampton, etc.), Nugent used a live album to catapult his career to the next level of stardom -- 1978's classic Double Live Gonzo! But despite all the success, the members of his band began deserting him one by one over the course of such albums as 1978's Weekend Warriors, 1979's State of Shock, and 1980's Scream Dream. To add insult to injury, Nugent found himself bankrupt around this time, due to several failed business ventures and poor management.

Nugent continued to tour and crank out albums throughout the '80s (including such forgettable releases as Intensities in 10 Cities, Nugent, Penetrator, Little Miss Dangerous, and If You Can't Lick 'Em...Lick 'Em), but it appeared as through the Nuge was trying to keep pace with the burgeoning pop-metal crowd instead of sticking to the raw and raging rock that brought him success in the first place. Nugent also tried his hand at acting around this time, appearing as a drug dealer in an episode of the hit TV series Miami Vice in 1986. By the end of the decade, Nugent joined the rock supergroup Damn Yankees (joining former Night Ranger bassist/singer Jack Blades, former Styx guitarist/singer Tommy Shaw, and drummer Michael Cartellone) -- resulting in the quartet's self-titled debut in 1990, which became a surprise hit due to their Top Ten power ballad, "High Enough." But ultimately, the union proved to be short-lived; after only one more album (1992's lackluster Don't Tread), the band called it quits.

Nugent returned to his solo career, issuing his best album in over a decade, 1995's back to basics Spirit of the Wild, while several archival releases turned up throughout the '90s: 1993's three-disc box set Out of Control, 1997's Live at Hammersmith '79, as well as his first three albums reissued with added tracks and newly remastered sound in 1999 by the Epic/Legacy label (also issued at the same time was the first truly comprehensive compilation of the Amboy Dukes, the 18-track Loaded for Bear). The Nuge was also the subject of an interesting VH1 Behind the Music episode. He continued to tour well into the 21st century (landing the opening slot on Kiss' Farewell U.S. Tour in 2000), and issued the third live collection of his career, Full Bluntal Nugity, in 2001.

In addition to music, Nugent has gotten involved in politics, hosting a number one morning radio show in Detroit, has run his own hunting camp and issues instructional videotapes (as well as the Ted Nugent Spirit of the Wild PBS video series), owns his own hunting supply store, has been appointed to the Board of Directors of the National Rifle Association, writes columns regularly for a number of different magazines, and even sells his very own beef jerky (called Gonzo Meat Biltong)! In 2001, the Nuge penned his own autobiography, the perfectly titled God, Guns, & Rock n' Roll. He next embraced the digital realm by releasing the two-disc, 30-track MP3 online song bundle Happy Defiance Day Everyday over the 4th of July weekend in 2010. ~ Greg Prato, Rovi
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Ted Nugent

Nugent in concert in Naples, Italy, June 1, 2004
Background information
Also known as The Nuge, Motor City Madman, Uncle Ted
Born (1948-12-13) December 13, 1948 (age 63)
Redford, Michigan, U.S.
Genres Rock, hard rock
Occupations Musician, songwriter, entrepreneur, hunter, activist, actor
Instruments Guitar, vocals, bass guitar
Years active 1958–present
Associated acts The Amboy Dukes, Damn Yankees, Damnocracy
Website www.tednugent.com
Notable instruments
Gibson Byrdland

Theodore Anthony "Ted" Nugent (play /tɛd ˈnɨnt/; born December 13, 1948) is an American guitarist, musician, singer, author, and activist. From Detroit, Michigan, he gained fame as the lead guitarist of The Amboy Dukes before embarking on a solo career. He is noted for his conservative political views and his defense of hunting and gun ownership rights.

Contents

Early life

Nugent was born and raised in Detroit, Michigan, the son of Marion Dorothy (née Johnson) and Warren Henry Nugent.[1][2] Nugent's father was an Army staff sergeant, and he was raised in a very strict household.[3] He moved to Palatine, Illinois, as a teenager, and has two brothers: John and Jeffrey. Raised Catholic, Nugent has mentioned his ties with the Christian faith many times during interviews, and has stated that he regularly attends church. He attended St. Viator High School in Arlington Heights, IL.

Career

Nugent has released more than 34 albums and has sold a career total of 30 million records. He was known throughout his early career in the 1970s for using Fender amps, a large part of his signature sound, and for playing the hollow-body Gibson Byrdland guitar.

Nugent in concert with his signature Gibson Byrdland guitar

Performing since 1958,[4] Nugent has been touring annually since 1967, averaging more than 300 shows per year (1967–73), 200 per year (1974–80), 150 (1981–89), 127 concerts in 1990, 162 concerts in 1991, 150 concerts in 1993, 180 in 1994, 166 in 1995, 81 in 1996, Summer Blitz '97, '98, Rock Never Stops '99, 133 concerts with KISS 2K. Nugent's 2005 plans involved a tour with country music singer-songwriter Toby Keith, whom Nugent met in Iraq while they were both performing in USO-sponsored shows for the coalition troops.[citation needed] Nugent toured with local Detroit musician Alex Winston during the summers of 2007 and 2008.[5]

On July 4, 2008, at the DTE Energy Music Theater in Clarkston, Michigan, Ted Nugent played his 6,000th concert.[4] Derek St. Holmes (original singer for the Ted Nugent band), Johnny Bee Badanjek (drummer for Mitch Ryder and The Detroit Wheels), and Nugent's guitar teacher from 1958 Joe Podorsek all jammed on stage with Nugent for various tunes.

Amboy Dukes

His first edition of The Amboy Dukes played at The Cellar, a teen dance club outside of Chicago in Arlington Heights, Illinois, starting in late 1965, while Nugent was a student at St. Viator High School. The Cellar's "house band" at the time had been the Shadows of Knight, although the Amboy Dukes eventually became a staple until the club's closing.[6]

The Amboy Dukes' second single was "Journey to the Center of the Mind", which featured lyrics written by the Dukes' second guitarist Steve Farmer. Nugent, an ardent anti-drug campaigner, has always claimed that he had no idea that this song was about drug use.[7] The Amboy Dukes (1967), Journey to the Center of the Mind (1968) and Migration (1969) — all recorded on the Mainstream label — sold moderately well. On April 4, 1968, Nugent along with a group of musicians paid tribute to Martin Luther King by having a folk, rock and blues jam session. Joni Mitchell played first, followed by Buddy Guy and Jimi Hendrix. Other musicians who participated were BB King and Al Kooper.[8]

After settling down on a ranch in Michigan in 1973, Nugent signed a record deal with Frank Zappa's DiscReet Records label and recorded Call of the Wild. The following year, Tooth Fang & Claw (which contained the song "Great White Buffalo") established a fan base for Nugent and the other Amboy Dukes. Personnel changes nearly wrecked the band, which became known as Ted Nugent & the Amboy Dukes. Nugent reunited with the other members of the Amboy Dukes at the 2009 Detroit Music Awards, which took place April 17, 2009. The psychedelic band received a distinguished achievement honor at the event. The Dukes also played together at the ceremony, marking their first public performance in more than 30 years.[7] The Amboy Dukes were voted into the Michigan Rock and Roll Legends online Hall of Fame in 2008.[9]

Solo career

Nugent dropped the Amboy Dukes band name for good in 1975, and signed to Epic Records. Derek St. Holmes (guitar, vocals), Rob Grange (bass) and Clifford Davies (drums) were the primary additional band members for his 1970s multi-platinum[10] albums: Ted Nugent (1975), Free-for-All (1976) and Cat Scratch Fever (1977). These albums produced the popular radio anthems "Hey Baby", "Stranglehold", "Dog Eat Dog", and "Cat Scratch Fever". It was during these three years that Nugent emerged as a guitar hero to hard rock fans, many of whom were unaware of his lengthy apprenticeship with the Amboy Dukes.[11] This band lineup toured extensively, also releasing the multi-platinum live album Double Live Gonzo!, until its breakup in 1978 when St. Holmes and Grange departed. St. Holmes was replaced by Charlie Huhn and Grange by Dave Kiswiney. Davies left around 1982 after staying on to record Weekend Warriors (1978), State of Shock (1979), Scream Dream (1980) and Intensities in 10 Cities (1981).

On July 8, 1979, Ted was on the rock radio program King Biscuit Flower Hour. This was the original broadcast of Ted's performance of Live at Hammersmith '79 which had been recorded during the second set of a night at London's Hammersmith Odeon in 1979. An album of this program was released in 1997.

During this era, Nugent was notable for his declarations that he did not drink alcoholic beverages or smoke tobacco or marijuana. In an interview for VH1's Behind The Music, Nugent said this was due to his father's having reprimanded him when he came home smelling of alcohol after a night of drinking. Nugent has been cited as an influence on the straight edge movement, which disavows drinking and recreational drug use.[12]

Influences

Nugent has been praised for his playing style, and is cited as an influence by many other hard rock and heavy metal musicians. Nugent has cited his own musical influences as Vanilla Fudge, Jeff Beck, Chuck Berry, The Kinks, Jimmy Page, The Rolling Stones, The Beatles, The Yardbirds, Bo Diddley, Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix, Steppenwolf, Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels, The Animals, Little Richard, MC5, Frank Zappa, and Muddy Waters.

Damn Yankees

Ted Nugent live in 2007

During the period of 1982-89, Nugent released a series of moderately successful solo albums. In 1989, he formed the supergroup Damn Yankees, with Jack Blades (bass/vocals, formerly of Night Ranger), Tommy Shaw (guitar/vocals, formerly of Styx) and Michael Cartellone (drums). Damn Yankees (1990) was a hit, going multi-platinum in the U.S., thanks in no small part to the smash hit power ballad "High Enough". The video for this song featured Nugent in a priest's collar, and later in a zebra-striped cape during the guitar solo. It also saw the first appearance of his 'WhackMaster' hat.

Back to solo

Returning to a solo career, Nugent released Spirit of the Wild in 1995, his best-reviewed album in quite some time. The album also marked the return of Derek St. Holmes to Nugent's studio band. A series of archival releases also came out in the 1990s, keeping Nugent's name in the national consciousness. He also began hosting a radio show in Detroit on WWBR-FM ("102.7 The Bear, Detroit's Rock Animal") and took ownership in several hunting-related businesses. He created TV shows for several networks; Wanted: Ted or Alive on Versus, Ted Nugent Spirit of the Wild on PBS and The Outdoor Channel, as well as Surviving Nugent and Supergroup-Damnocracy on VH1. In 2006, Nugent was inducted into the Michigan Rock and Roll Legends Hall of Fame as a solo artist.[13]

Ted Nugent appears on David Crowder Band's 2007 release, Remedy, playing guitar on the song "We Won't Be Quiet".[14] He announced his "Trample the Weak, Hurdle the Dead" tour on April 21, 2010.[15]

On March 14, 2011, Nugent released a new song, "I Still Believe", as a free download via his website to subscribers to his news letter. Nugent says of the song: "America is a target-rich environment for an independent man addicted to logic, truth and The American Way. 'I Still Believe' throttles the animal spirit of rugged individualism in pure MotorCity ultra high-energy rhythm and blues and rock and roll."[16][17] In April 2011 Nugent announced that former frontman Derek St. Holmes would be joining his band for Nugent's I Still Believe Tour.[18]

Media appearances

Reality programming

Nugent starred in his own outdoors television show named after his popular song "Spirit of the Wild". The song was the theme music to the TV series in which Nugent took viewers on a variety of wild game hunts using his bow. In the series he teaches and advises hunters and "hands-on" conservationists around the world on the different aspects of hunting and politics, and informs the public on the importance of getting children away from the TV and video games and getting them out beyond the pavement in order to better their lives.[19]

In 2003, he was host of the VH1 reality television program Surviving Nugent in which city dwellers such as model Tila Tequila moved to Nugent's Michigan ranch in order to survive such "backwoods" activities as building an outhouse and skinning a boar. The success of the two-hour show spawned a four-part miniseries in 2004 entitled Surviving Nugent: The Ted Commandments. This time it was filmed on Nugent's ranch in China Spring, Texas. During filming, Nugent injured himself with a chainsaw, requiring 44 stitches and a leg brace.

In 2003, Nugent also guested on the VH1 program Forever Wild, hosted by Sebastian Bach (former lead vocalist for the band Skid Row). They shot some firearms and walked around Nugent's cabin in the woods. Two years later he hosted a reality-type show, Wanted: Ted or Alive on OLN (now the sports channel 'Versus') where contestants competed for money as well as for opportunities to go hunting with "Uncle Ted." The contestants had to kill and clean their own food to survive.

In 2006, he appeared on VH1's reality show SuperGroup, with Scott Ian (Anthrax, guitar), Evan Seinfeld (Biohazard, bass), Sebastian Bach (ex-Skid Row, vocals) and Jason Bonham (Bonham, UFO, Foreigner, drums). The name of the supergroup was originally FIST but later was changed to Damnocracy. Bach had lobbied for the name Savage Animal. Captured on film by VH1 was a rare Nugent duet with guitarist Joe Bonamassa at the Sand Dollar Blues Room for a 45-minute blues jam. He starred in another reality show for CMT in August 2009. The show, entitled Runnin' Wild ... From Ted Nugent, featured Nugent instructing competitors in the art of survival; the competitors had to use those skills in challenges in which they were hunted down by Nugent.[20]

In 2008, Ted Nugent was on the episode Southwest Road Trip Special of Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations, where he spoke against obesity and public health care.[21][22]

Also in 2009, he played guitar at The Alamo for a Tax Day Tea Party hosted by Glenn Beck and Fox News. Most notable in his set was a version of "The Star-Spangled Banner" in which he used alternate picking and whammy bar effects. The clip and sound bite of this is played extensively on Fox News as well as on The Glenn Beck Program.

Acting

In 1976 Nugent was in the documentary Demon Lover Diary, about the making of the John Dods' horror/comedy movie My Demon Lover. He is shown supplying real guns for the making of My Demon Lover, as the crew films at Nugent's house.

In 1986, he guest starred in an episode of the hit television show Miami Vice entitled "Definitely Miami". Nugent played a villain. His song "Angry Young Man" was featured in the episode. His song "Little Miss Dangerous" was also featured on a Miami Vice episode of the same name, although he did not appear in the episode.

In 2001, Nugent appeared as himself in a third season episode of That '70s Show entitled "Backstage Pass". Donna Pinciotti (Laura Prepon), who works for radio station WFPP, obtains tickets to the upcoming Ted Nugent concert for the entire gang. Following the concert, her boss Max (Howard Hesseman) gives Donna a backstage pass to meet Nugent, where he volunteers to sit for an interview. Meanwhile, Steven Hyde (Danny Masterson) and Fez (Wilmer Valderama) try to sell unauthorized concert t-shirts accidentally spelled Tad Nugent.

Also in 2001, Nugent appeared as himself in the second episode of the short-lived university campus FOX comedy series, Undeclared. In the episode "Full Bluntal Nugety", Nugent is a guest at the university, there to speak on his favorite topics, mainly hunting and gun control. This is where new student Steven Karp (Jay Baruchel) takes his love interest Lizzie (Carla Gallo) on their first date. Karp tries to heckle Nugent during his speech in an attempt to impress Lizzie, with disastrous results. FOX didn't like the idea of Nugent and his political views appearing on this show, so the episode was re-shot and re-edited as "Oh, So You Have a Boyfriend?" which aired without any Ted Nugent content whatsoever. The complete "Full Bluntal Nugety (Director's Cut)" episode is available in its entirety, in the Undeclared DVD box set, including some extra Ted Nugent scenes that had been deleted.

He made a guest appearance on the cult television series Aqua Teen Hunger Force, in the episode "Gee Whiz", on Adult Swim. Locals believe to have seen the face of Jesus in a billboard, and they mention how it looks like Ted Nugent. Throughout the episode they think it's Jesus' face, but at the end they discover it was in fact Nugent's. He proceeds to shoot a flaming explosive arrow at Carl (mistaking him for a "varmint"). Ted also appeared on Seth MacFarlane's Cavalcade of Cartoon Comedy when he kills the Ghost of Christmas Past and serves him to guests for dinner.

In 2007, Nugent appeared in the music video for Nickelback's "Rockstar", and in 2008 he played a key role in the Toby Keith movie Beer For My Horses as the quiet deputy named Skunk.

In 2007, Nugent debated The Simpsons producer Sam Simon on the Howard Stern Show about the ethics of hunting animals. Coincidentally, he would later lend his voice to an over-the-phone appearance in the season 19 episode of The Simpsons, "I Don't Wanna Know Why the Caged Bird Sings", where, in a humorous jab at his political stance, inmate Dwight picks up his call for voting no to the fictional Proposition 87, which bans crossbows in public schools. As part of his pre-recorded message, Nugent asks "If we outlaw crossbows in our public schools, who's going to protect our children from charging elk?".[23]

In 2012, Nugent appeared on the January 8th Episode of The Simpsons as himself.

Other media appearances

Attracting attention for his outspoken statements on issues ranging from guns to biodiversity, Nugent has been a regular guest on such programs as Larry King Live, The Howard Stern Show, and Politically Incorrect.

In 1991, he guest-starred on the PBS science show Newton's Apple in a short comedic feature called Science of the Rich and Famous in which he demonstrates and explains the phenomenon of electric guitar feedback. On March 13, 2007, Nugent was interviewed on ABC's Jimmy Kimmel Live and performed the songs "Cat Scratch Fever" and "Rawdogs and Warhogs".

On April 15, 2009, Nugent appeared onstage with his guitar in San Antonio as part of Glenn Beck's coverage of the Tax Day Tea Party protests on the Fox News Channel. He hosted the show with Glenn Beck, and played music for the protestors at the Alamo. He made an appearance in Guitar Hero: World Tour As part of the solo guitar career, the player engages in a guitar duel with Nugent, after which the song "Stranglehold" is unlocked and Dirty Nuge becomes available as a playable character.

Nugent was interviewed on the The Alex Jones Show July 30, 2008 about his new book "Ted, White, and Blue: The Nugent Manifesto" (2008).[24][25] On July 9, 2010 Ted was again interviewed by Alex Jones and he criticized the latest policies issued by the Obama Administration and the Supreme Court concerning gun policy. He claimed that rejecting the idea of the right to self-defense being expressed in the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution, which Nugent called "gun control" policies, are most likely to destroy the American society. Nugent also claimed similar policies were the cause of the downfall of every society in human history.[26]

Nugent appeared on Penn and Teller's BS episode on P.E.T.A

Nugent was portrayed on the January 8, 2012 episode of The Simpsons entitled "Politically Inept, with Homer Simpson."

Personal life

In the late 1990s, Nugent began writing for various magazines. He has written for more than 20 publications and is the author of New York Times Best Seller God, Guns and Rock 'n' Roll (July 2000), Kill It and Grill It (2002) (co-authored with his wife, Shemane), BloodTrails II: The Truth About Bowhunting (2004), and "Ted, White, and Blue: The Nugent Manifesto" (2008).

In 1996 Nugent joined the WWBR-FM air staff. The Ted Nugent Morning Show on 102.7 FM in Detroit was a success. He and co-host Steve Black (now host of the syndicated radio show Chop Shop and Chop Shop Classic) often shocked Detroit with their opinions.

Nugent is a fan of the Detroit Pistons. He wore a Pistons shirt in the Damn Yankees music video for "Come Again". He is also a fan of the Dallas Cowboys and attends many games with his children and grandchildren.

Family

He has had two wives and has eight children, including three out of wedlock in two liaisons almost 30 years apart. In the late 1960s, prior to his first marriage, Nugent fathered a boy, Ted (Mann) and a girl, whom he gave up for adoption in infancy. This did not become public knowledge until 2010. The siblings were adopted separately and had no contact with one another. The son learned the identity of his birth father in 2010 through the daughter's quest to make contact with him and their birth parents. According to a news report, Nugent over the years had discussed the existence of these children with his other children.[27]

In 2005 Nugent was involved in a legal battle for not paying enough child support for a child he had out of wedlock in 1995.[28] It was finally resolved when Nugent was ordered to pay $3,500 in child support.[29]

He was married to his first wife, Sandra Jezowski, from 1970 to 1979. They had three children, son Theodore Tobias "Toby" Nugent, and daughters Sasha and Starr Nugent. Sandra died in a car crash in 1982. His second marriage was to Shemane Deziel, whom he met while a guest on Detroit's WLLZ-FM, where she was a member of the news staff. They married on January 21, 1989. Together they have two children, son Rocco Winchester Nugent, and daughter Chantal Nugent.

In 1978, Nugent began a relationship with seventeen-year-old Hawaii native Pele Massa. Due to the age difference they could not marry so Nugent joined Massa's parents in signing documents to make himself her legal guardian, an arrangement that Spin magazine ranked in October 2000 as #63 on their list of the "100 Sleaziest Moments in Rock".[30][31]

Hearing loss

Nugent also suffers from hearing loss. A November 2005 Rolling Stone article noted Nugent, among others, has publicly acknowledged hearing problems.[32] "The ear's not too good, especially with background noise", he said in a 2007 interview. "[But] that's a small price to pay. Believe me the journey was worth it."[33]

Activism

Drugs and alcohol stances

Since the early 1990s Nugent has become both popular and criticized for his conservative beliefs and his anti-drug and anti-alcohol stances. He is a national spokesman for the Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) program, advocating the "natural highs" to be found in an outdoor lifestyle.

Concealed Carry Weapon (CCW) law

Nugent is a strong advocate of the right to bear arms. When interviewed by Texas Monthly editor Evan Smith in season 5 of TexasMonthlyTalks he said, "I would rather that [a victim of violent crime] in Massachusetts last month who was taking her daughter to soccer when they were carjacked by a recidivist maggot, who had been in the prison system all his life but was let out again because we feel sorry for him, maybe he had a bad childhood. Instead of her being hijacked and murdered, I'd rather she just shot the bastard dead... But in Massachusetts, somebody decided she can't do that. So she's dead. I would rather she was alive and the carjacker was dead."[34]

Nugent currently serves on the Board of Directors of the National Rifle Association (NRA).[35][36]

Conflicts with animal rights groups

Nugent once said in an interview, “I'm stymied to come up with anything funnier than people who think animals have rights. Just stick an arrow through their lungs.”[37] In 2000, Bhaskar Sinha was jailed briefly following an incident outside a department store in San Francisco in which he threatened and physically assaulted Nugent, who in turn took Sinha into custody until San Francisco Police arrived and arrested the protester. However, protesters claim that Nugent started the altercation by spitting in one of the protester's faces when he was offered an anti-fur flyer.[38]

Nugent has reported receiving death threats against him and his family from animal rights activists. On the Penn & Teller's Bullshit! episode about People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), Nugent claimed, "We've got reports and files with law enforcement across America where left-wing animal rights extremists are on record threatening to kill my children on the way to school because we eat pheasant." In 2006 he stated in an interview that "anyone who thinks hunting is terrible can kiss my ass."[39]

In a 1992 radio interview, Nugent referred to Heidi Prescott of the Fund for Animals as a "worthless whore" and a "shallow slut," asking "who needs to club a seal, when you can club Heidi?" He was ordered by a court to pay Prescott $75,000.[40]

Nugent owns a hunting ranch near Jackson, Michigan, called Sunrize Acres. Anti-hunters claim this fenced facility offers "canned" hunts. Nugent has said, "I understand the criticism from those who say canned hunting violates the ethic of fair chase," though he still operates the facility, and refers to it as "high fence hunting". Nugent was interviewed in October 2011 by Field & Stream magazine regarding "canned" hunts.[41] At Sunrize Acres he personally guides customers on a hunt for trophy bull bison ($5,000), Russian boar, or white-tailed deer ($1,000 each).[42]

The band Goldfinger released a song called "FTN", which is critical of Ted Nugent.[43]

Criminal convictions

In September 2009, Nugent embarked on a hunt near Somerset, El Dorado County, California. He was accompanied by a guide and a cameraman, filming for his Outdoor Channel show "Spirit of the Wild." The video taken appeared in an episode of the show first broadcast on February 9, 2010. California Fish and Game wardens who watched the broadcast noticed that it showed Nugent killing a very young buck which had been attracted by commercial bait. Both the killing of such a young deer and the use of bait are crimes under California state law. On August 13, 2010, he pled no contest in Yuba County to two misdemeanors: illegally baiting a deer, and failing to have a deer tag signed by a government official after a kill. He was fined USD $1,750 by the court and is banned from hunting in California until June 2012. In April 2012 Nugent signed a plea bargaining agreement to plead guilty to two misdemeanors for illegally taking a bear after shooting one earlier at a bait station. He will be fined $10,000, banned from hunting in Alaska and on Federal land for one year and must complete two years on federal probation.[44]

Politics

In 2007 and 2008, during a period of years when he publicly speculated about running for governor of Michigan, Nugent singled out prominent Democratic politicians with violent or vulgar rhetoric or gestures. At a concert on August 21, 2007, Nugent made controversial comments about Democratic Party presidential aspirants Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton and California's senators Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein. He complained, "Obama's a piece of shit, and I told him to suck on my machine gun."[45][46] Referring to Michigan governor Jennifer Granholm (in office 2003-11), during performances he would frequently interject "Jennifer Granholm, kiss my ass" into his songs, and shoot an arrow at her likeness. In a 2007 interview, in discussing running for governor of Michigan, he stated that Granholm "is not doing an ugly job, but as the perfect woman, she is scrotumless".[47]

Although Nugent has never run for government office, in the 2000s (decade), he publicly speculated about doing so on several occasions. In May 2005, he announced he was "getting real close to deciding to run" for governor of Michigan in 2006, while in 2007, he talked about running for that office in 2010. During the latter period, he stated, "Michigan was once a great state. Michigan was a state that rewarded the entrepreneur and the most productive, work-ethic families of the state. Now the pimps and the whores and the welfare brats are basically the state's babies."[33] Earlier, Nugent had been rumored to be under consideration by the Illinois Republican Party as its candidate in that state's 2004 Senate race, given his roots in Palatine, Illinois.[48] In July 2008, Nugent declared "I was serious when I threatened to run for office in the past if I cannot find a candidate who respects the U.S. Constitution and our sacred Bill of Rights."[49] When asked by Imagineer magazine in a 2010 interview about what he would do if elected to political office, he responded: "Slash the living hell out of the waste and corruption and the outrageous army of do-nothing bureaucrats. I would fire every government worker whose job I would deem to be redundant and wasteful. No able-bodied human being would ever get a handout again."[50]

Nugent is a fervent supporter of Republican Party politicians.[51] On July 17, 2008, during the presidential election season, shortly before the Republican presidential nominating convention, however, he stated that front-runner John McCain was "catering to a growing segment of soulless Americans who care less what they can do for their country, but whine louder and louder about what their country must do for them. That is both un-American and pathetic".[52] As a longtime resident of Texas,[citation needed] he was a weekly contributor to the newspaper, the Waco Tribune-Herald until 2009.[53] He has been a special deputy sheriff in Lake County, Michigan since 1982 and he also has been a reserve deputy constable in McLennan County, Texas.

At a 2009 West Virginia rally sponsored in part by Massey Energy, Nugent "defended mountaintop removal mining," according to reporters on the scene. "On behalf of the Nugent family, I say, start up the bulldozers and get me some more coal, Massey," Nugent was recorded as saying.[54]

During an interview with Piers Morgan, Nugent denied that he considered himself homophobic, saying "I’m repulsed at the concept of man-on-man sex, I think it’s against nature. I think it’s strange as hell, but if that’s what you are I love you. I’m not going to judge another’s morals. I say live and let live. I have friends that are gay."[55][56] As a reward for entertaining US troops in Iraq in 2004, he visited Saddam Hussein's war room. "It was a glorious moment. It looked like something out of Star Wars. I saw his gold toilet. I shat in his bidet."[57] Nugent also said: "Our failure has been not to Nagasaki them."[57]

Nugent was initially scheduled to speak at Glenn Beck's "Restoring Honor" rally on August 28, 2010, but subsequently cancelled due to a scheduling conflict.[58]

At a Republican event in February, 2012, Nugent said, "The whole world sucks, but America still sucks less," followed by, "But with this administration, we are catching up."[59]

On March 2, 2012, Nugent endorsed Mitt Romney for president.[60]

In a Romney stump speech at the 2012 NRA Convention in St. Louis, Nugent said, "If Barack Obama becomes the president in November, again, I will either be dead or in jail by this time next year." He also compared the Obama administration to coyotes who needed to be shot, and encouraged voters to "chop [Democrats'] heads off in November."[61] Nugent received a visit from the Secret Service for these remarks.[62] Following these comments, commanders at Fort Knox opted not to allow him to perform at a previously scheduled event with REO Speedwagon and Styx. [63]

Military

In 2006, an interviewer from the British newspaper The Independent questioned Nugent about a 1977 interview in High Times magazine in which Nugent admitted taking elaborate steps to avoid the Vietnam draft.[57] In the interview Nugent says, contrary to the story in High Times, that "I had a 1Y [student deferment]. I enrolled at Oakland Community College.". However, the Selective Service classification for student deferment is actually 2-S, and medical deferment is 1-Y. A copy of Nugent's Selective Service record shows that he had at separate times both a 1-Y medical deferment and 2-S student deferment, .[64]

Tours

  • Little Miss Dangerous Tour 1986
  • Summer Blitz Tour 1997
  • 1998 Tour
  • Rock Never Stops Tour 1999
  • Remember The Alamo Tour 2005
  • Unleash The Beast Tour 2006
  • Unleash The Nuge Beast Killer Rock Tour 2007
  • Rolling Thunder Tour 2008
  • Trample The Weak, Hurdle The Dead Tour 2010
  • I Still Believe Tour 2011
  • Great White Buffalo Tour 2012

Discography

Published books

Articles

References

  1. ^ Nugent, Ted (2010). Ted, White, and Blue: The Nugent Manifesto. Regnery Publishing. p. 5. ISBN 1-59698-605-0. 
  2. ^ "TedNugent.com". TedNugent.com. http://www.tednugent.com/news/newsDetails.aspx?PostID=223. Retrieved 2011-10-01. 
  3. ^ "Ted Nugent". Answers.com. http://www.answers.com/topic/ted-nugent. 
  4. ^ a b MccCollum, Brian (3 July 2008). "Brian McCollum's Big Gigs". Detroit Free Press. 
  5. ^ "Music - Interview with Teenaged Rocker Alex Winston". Thedetroiter.com. 2006-08-30. http://www.thedetroiter.com/b_music/blogs/index.php?blog=2&title=interview_with_teenaged_rocker_alex_wins&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1. Retrieved 2010-11-25. 
  6. ^ "Ted, White, and Blue: Nugent Recalls Some Career Milestones." Retrieved 2008-11-30.
  7. ^ a b Graff, Gary. "Ted Nugent reuniting Amboy Dukes for Detroit event"
  8. ^ "Joni Mitchell's Chronology of Appearances, 1968". Jonimitchell.com. http://jonimitchell.com/chronology/byyear.cfm?year=1968. Retrieved 2011-10-01. 
  9. ^ [http://www.michiganrockandrolllegends.com/mrrl-hall-of-fame/96-amboy-dukes
  10. ^ "RIAA Gold and Platinum Search for albums by Ted Nugent". Riaa.com. http://www.riaa.com/goldandplatinumdata.php?table=SEARCH_RESULTS&artist=Ted%20Nugent&format=ALBUM&go=Search&perPage=50. Retrieved 2011-10-01. 
  11. ^ Charlesworth, Chris. A-Z of Rock Guitarists, pg. 65
  12. ^ statements by Henry Rollins and Ian MacKaye in Michael Azerrad's Our Band Could Be Your Life: Scenes from the American Indie Underground 1981–1991. 2002, Back Bay Books. ISBN 0-316-78753-1, p. 121
  13. ^ [http://www.michiganrockandrolllegends.com/mrrl-hall-of-fame/89-ted-nugent
  14. ^ "David Crowder talks about "Remedy"". Hear It First. http://www.hearitfirst.com/newsTour/default.aspx?news_id=540077. Retrieved 2010-11-25. 
  15. ^ "Trample the Weak, Hurdle the Dead Tour 2010". TedNugent.com. http://www.tednugent.com/news/music/newsDetails.aspx?PostID=940937. Retrieved 2010-11-25. 
  16. ^ "Ted Nugent: New Song Available For Free Download, March 14, 2011". Blabbermouth.net. http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=155281. Retrieved 2011-03-19. 
  17. ^ "SIGN UP & GET A FREE MP3 OF I STILL BELIEVE". TedNugent.com. http://www.tednugent.com/mailinglist. Retrieved 2011-03-19. 
  18. ^ "Gibson Lifestyle, 2011". Gibson.com. 2008-06-24. http://www.gibson.com/en-us/Lifestyle/News/Derek-St-Holmes-0404-2011/. Retrieved 2011-10-01. 
  19. ^ Spirit of the Wild. Outdoor Channel.
  20. ^ Runnin Wild From Ted Nugent Series Coming to CMT CMT.com, April 2, 2009
  21. ^ "Tony chews the fat with Ted Nugent". Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations. The Travel Channel L.L.C.. http://www.travelchannel.com/Video/tony-chews-the-fat-with-ted-nugent-11738. Retrieved 22 August 2011. 
  22. ^ "TV: ANTHONY BOURDAIN'S NO RESERVATIONS / TRAVEL CHANNEL". tednugent.com. August 4, 2008. http://www.tednugent.com/news/newsDetails.aspx?PostID=593371#topNav. Retrieved 21 August 2011. 
  23. ^ "I Don't Wanna Know Why the Caged Bird Sings". The Simpsons. season season 19. Event occurs at 12:30. http://www.watchcartoononline.com/the-simpsons-season-19-episode-4-i-don%E2%80%99t-wanna-know-why-the-caged-bird-sings. Retrieved 2011-05-24. "If we outlaw crossbows in our public schools, who's going to protect our children from charging elk?" 
  24. ^ Ted Nugent on the Alex Jones Show:"APATHY" July 30, 2008
  25. ^ Ted Nugent (2008-10-07). "Ted, White, and Blue: The Nugent Manifesto". Tednugent.com. http://www.tednugent.com/Store/Product.aspx?id=SB000004-001. Retrieved 2011-10-01. 
  26. ^ "Ted Nugent: Obama is Waging War on The American Way of Life", July 9, 2010
  27. ^ New York Daily News report on Nugent's children, March 11, 2011
  28. ^ "Ted Nugent's Love Child: Article". E! Online. 200743. http://comcast.eonline.com/uberblog/b46899_ted_nugents_love_child.html. Retrieved 2004-02-24. 
  29. ^ "Ted Nugent To Pay Child Support To New Hampshire Woman: Article". Foster's Online. 2005. http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=38423. Retrieved 2005-06-22. 
  30. ^ Spitz, Marc (October 2000). "Wang Dang Technically Legal Poontang: Whether Hunting or Romancing, the Nuge Likes Fresh Meat". Spin 16 (10): 134. ISSN 0886-3032. http://books.google.com/books?id=HTMuhxamaFEC&pg=PA134. Retrieved August 23, 2010. 
  31. ^ "IMDB: Biography". IMDb. 2006. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0637823/bio. Retrieved 2006-08-18. 
  32. ^ Ringen, Jonathon (November 18, 2005). "Music Making Fans Deaf?". Rolling Stone. http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/8841090/music_making_fans_deaf. Retrieved 2006-08-18. 
  33. ^ a b Tanner, Adam. "Ted Nugent might run for Governor of Michigan." Article at MaconDaily.com, via Reuters, on August 19, 2007.
  34. ^ "Texas Monthly Talks". Texasmonthly.com. http://www.texasmonthly.com/texasmonthlytalks. Retrieved 2010-11-25. 
  35. ^ "NRA 2011 Annual Meetings & Exhibits - Past Meetings". Nraam.org. http://www.nraam.org/pastmeetings/. Retrieved 2011-10-01. 
  36. ^ "Nugent: Gun-free zones are recipe for disaster - CNN.com". CNN. http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/04/19/commentary.nugent/index.html. Retrieved May 25, 2010. 
  37. ^ "INSIDE THE MIND OF TED NUGENT – RF6 Exclusive « Royal Flush Magazine". Royalflushmagazine.com. 2009-12-29. http://royalflushmagazine.com/2009/12/29/inside-the-mind-of-ted-nugent. Retrieved 2011-10-01. 
  38. ^ "San Francisco altercation between Nugent and anti-fur activists". Articles.sfgate.com. 2000-07-31. http://articles.sfgate.com/2000-07-31/news/17655132_1_cat-scratch-fever-san-francisco-police-rock-star-ted-nugent. Retrieved 2011-10-01. 
  39. ^ "Ted Nugent: People Who Think Hunting Is Terrible Can Kiss My A**". Roadrunnerrecords.com. http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=56303. Retrieved 2011-10-01. 
  40. ^ "Know Your Right-Wing Speakers". Campusprogress.org. 2005-04-25. http://www.campusprogress.org/tools/253. Retrieved 2011-10-01. 
  41. ^ "The Official Community of Ted Nugent". Tednugent.com. http://www.tednugent.com/hunting/news/2007/default.aspx?PostID=179134. Retrieved 2011-10-01. 
  42. ^ "Better Environmentalism Through Killing". Outsideonline.com. http://outsideonline.com/outside/magazine/0398/9803nugent.html. Retrieved 2011-10-01. 
  43. ^ "Goldfinger - Ftn Lyrics". Sing365.com. http://www.sing365.com/music/Lyric.nsf/FTN-lyrics-Goldfinger/A22B81740132B19C48256BCF0005E669. Retrieved 2010-11-25. 
  44. ^ Grove, Casey (2012-04-20). "Ted Nugent signs plea agreement in black bear shooting case.". Sacramento Bee. http://www.sacbee.com/2012/04/20/4430923/ted-nugent-signs-plea-agreement.html. Retrieved 2012-04-22. 
  45. ^ Raw Story, August 24, 2007
  46. ^ Rolling Stone, August 24, 2007]
  47. ^ Blabbermouth.net, January 7, 2006]
  48. ^ "Ted Nugent To Run For U.S. Senate?". Roadrun.com. http://www.roadrun.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=24838. Retrieved 2011-10-01. 
  49. ^ "Outspoken Nugent charts life of successful rocker and hunter". Des Moines Register.
  50. ^ "Ted Nugent on what he would if elected to public office". Imagineermagazine.com. http://www.imagineermagazine.com/index.php/issue_archives/spring_2010/ted_nugent. Retrieved 2011-10-01. 
  51. ^ "McCain's Musical Woes Continue" by Andrew Romano. Newsweek (July 28, 2008)
  52. ^ Des Moines Register text of interview with Nugent[dead link]
  53. ^ Ted Nugent: 'Live and let live' foreign idea to left[dead link]
  54. ^ "Friends of America crowd smaller than anticipated" by Jessica Lilly and Scott Finn. West Virginia Public Broadcasting
  55. ^ http://www.nme.com/news/ted-nugent/56779
  56. ^ http://cnn.com/video/?/video/bestoftv/2011/05/18/exp.piers.morgan.nugent.son.cnn
  57. ^ a b c "Ted Nugent: Off his rocker?". London: The Independent. 28 May 2006. Archived from the original on 2009-11-15. http://web.archive.org/web/20091115001316/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/ted-nugent-off-his-rocker-479556.html. Retrieved May 25, 2010. 
  58. ^ "Olbermann Worst Person Ted Nugent Will Not Be At Glenn Beck Rally". http://www.mediaite.com/online/olbermann-worst-person-ted-nugent-will-not-be-at-glenn-beck-rally. 
  59. ^ Schoenburg, Bernard (February 10, 2012). "Nugent blasts Obama administration as 'America haters'". The State Journal-Register. http://www.sj-r.com/top-stories/x962226874/Ted-Nugent-You-people-need-me. Retrieved 16 February 2012. 
  60. ^ "Ted Nugent endorses Mitt Romney". Politico.Com. 2012-03-02. http://www.politico.com/blogs/click/2012/03/ted-nugent-endorses-mitt-romney-116247.html. Retrieved 2012-04-18. 
  61. ^ Posted: 04/16/2012 5:23 pm Updated: 04/17/2012 1:39 pm. "Ted Nugent For Mitt Romney: Rocker Stumps For GOP Candidate At NRA Convention". Huffingtonpost.com. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/04/16/ted-nugent-romney-obama_n_1429698.html. Retrieved 2012-04-18. 
  62. ^ Root, Jay (May 3, 2012). "Bearing Arms and Cranking Up the Controversy". New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/04/us/hard-rocking-ted-nugent-cranks-up-the-controversy.html. 
  63. ^ http://articles.cnn.com/2012-04-22/us/us_kentucky-nugent-canceled-concert_1_ted-nugent-motor-city-madman-nra-convention?_s=PM:US
  64. ^ [1]

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Heavy Metal (198z Music Film)
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On the Edge/Over the Top (2000 Album by Ted Nugent)
Collections (2006 Album by Ted Nugent)