Standard Dean markley blue steel bass strings if that's any help
No, Lemmy Kilmister did not play bass for the band Wizzard. Lemmy was the founder and frontman of the band Motörhead, where he played bass and provided lead vocals. Wizzard was a British glam rock band formed by Roy Wood, known for hits such as "See My Baby Jive" and "Angel Fingers."
Lemmy Kilmister- Bass and vocals Phil Campbell- Lead guitar and Backup vocals Mikkey Dee- Drums This is only one line-up, and Motorhead have had many. The classic lineup is; Lemmy - bass/vocals (the only consistent member) 'Fast' Eddie Clarke - guitar Phil 'Philthy Animal' Taylor - drums.
Motorhead. Vocals/bass, Lemmy; guitar, Fast Eddie Clark; drums, Philthy Animal.
No, Lemmy is not. He started Motorhead in 1975, at the age of 30. Many other metal bands were formed before then, and many of those bands had members that started at a younger age than Lemmy. Lemmy is also indistinguishable by nature, his voice is not audible. I know that is a lttle hypocritical considering I listen to screamo, but they choose to make their voices like that, Lemmy cannot help it. He always sounds like he is running out of breath, and trying to get as many words in a sentence before he does. .........Actually Lemmy and Motorhead are not Heavy Metal. This is in his own words, He says they are Rock Music. And also Lemmy didn't start out in Motorhead he actually used to be a roadie for a band called Hawkwind before he eventually started to play Bass with Hawkwind. This was several years before Motorhead were formed. Hawkwind were a progressive band with several electronic keyboard players and most of their songs were Space themed. Yes he is. One of them. The others are Ronnie James Dio (Supreme God) Rob Halford Tony Iommi (The First)
Standard Dean markley blue steel bass strings if that's any help
No, Lemmy Kilmister did not play bass for the band Wizzard. Lemmy was the founder and frontman of the band Motörhead, where he played bass and provided lead vocals. Wizzard was a British glam rock band formed by Roy Wood, known for hits such as "See My Baby Jive" and "Angel Fingers."
Lemmy Kilmister- Bass and vocals Phil Campbell- Lead guitar and Backup vocals Mikkey Dee- Drums This is only one line-up, and Motorhead have had many. The classic lineup is; Lemmy - bass/vocals (the only consistent member) 'Fast' Eddie Clarke - guitar Phil 'Philthy Animal' Taylor - drums.
Lemmy Kilmister - Bass & Vocals Phil Cambpell - Guitars Mikkey Dee - Drums
Motorhead. Vocals/bass, Lemmy; guitar, Fast Eddie Clark; drums, Philthy Animal.
because different people have different types of styles of playing and hes playing what hes comfortable in
No, Lemmy is not. He started Motorhead in 1975, at the age of 30. Many other metal bands were formed before then, and many of those bands had members that started at a younger age than Lemmy. Lemmy is also indistinguishable by nature, his voice is not audible. I know that is a lttle hypocritical considering I listen to screamo, but they choose to make their voices like that, Lemmy cannot help it. He always sounds like he is running out of breath, and trying to get as many words in a sentence before he does. .........Actually Lemmy and Motorhead are not Heavy Metal. This is in his own words, He says they are Rock Music. And also Lemmy didn't start out in Motorhead he actually used to be a roadie for a band called Hawkwind before he eventually started to play Bass with Hawkwind. This was several years before Motorhead were formed. Hawkwind were a progressive band with several electronic keyboard players and most of their songs were Space themed. Yes he is. One of them. The others are Ronnie James Dio (Supreme God) Rob Halford Tony Iommi (The First)
Mike Inez has: Played Himself - Bass in "Unplugged" in 1989. Played himself in "Behind the Music" in 1997. Played Himself (Bass) in "Alice in Chains: Music Bank - The Videos" in 1999. Played Himself - Bass Guitar in "Heart: Alive in Seattle" in 2003. Played himself in "The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson" in 2005. Played himself in "Lemmy" in 2010.
Basseffect pedals usually have a B in the little code for the pedal...for example an ordinary guitar pedal is the boss ME - 50,the bass version is the boss ME - 50B....also bassseffect pedals are designed for the tomal range of a bass and not a guitar,but you can still use guitar pedals for effects with your bass rig,eg in the somg the ace of spades lemmy uses a guitar distortion for his bass
Basically it exists (the current line-up for Heaven and Hell), but here's a real supergroup; Tony Iommi - guitar Slash - guitar Lemmy - bass / vocals Ronnie James Dio - lead vocals Nicko McBrain - drums
Most likely RockHead character would be Lemmy (Kilmister), bassist and lead singer of MotorHead. Note the "Head" similarity in the names. Lemmy is documented to have attempted to teach Sid Vicious to play bass. Lemmy is actually considered the Godfather of Heavy Metal, with an assist from Black Sabbath, and started Motorhead in 1975, a year before the Sex Pistols formed. However, he was also considered a genuine punk rocker, but from an earlier generation. He was 10-14 years older than most punks in 1976. Lemmy's favorite drugs were a bottle of Jack Daniels a day and speed (i.e. upper amphetamines, not heroin, the use of which he opposed). I recall the Johnny Rotten actor throwing a bottle of whiskey against a wall when Johnny and Sid visit Rock Head. Surprising that the creators of this movie have not laid this Rock Head intrigue to rest by now.
I'd say it's not absolutely necesary to have a bass player in the band. However, you should know that the overall feel, power and presence of your band's sound lays heavily on the firm, solid base that the bass player creates. Not only does he(she) provide the entire support for the other instruments (along with the drums), they also make the sound a lot fuller and lively. Without the bass, the band is most likely to sound empty. But still, if you can't find a bass player there are other instruments like a piano or syntheziser that can fill in for the bass parts. The important thing is to have a solid base on which the other instruments can rest. There is no one right sound for any band. And as long as there is an instrument that has a tonal range extending into the bass frequencies, you also will not lose the "bottom" in the music. Examples of bass-less bands include Sleater-Kinney (where rhythm guitarist Corin Tucker's guitar tone and style almost serve as a bass), The White Stripes, and Led Zeppelin in certain live situations when bassist John Paul Jones would play keyboards, and employ sounds that have a solid bottom. A band with a piano often doesn't need bass at all, given the piano's powerful low-end sound, percussive clarity, and full sonic spectrum. Conversely, you have a band like Motorhead, which has a bass player (Lemmy Kilmister) who makes his bass tone much higher ("buzz bass"), sounding more like a rhythm guitar than a bass.