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Sammy Hagar Talks Montrose History, Formation – Says Ronnie Montrose Didn’t Trust Anyone – Denny Carmassi – Bill Church – Interview NEWS – 2021

full in bloom: In a recent interview with Lipps Service, Sammy Hagar offered some great insight into the band Montrose, Ronnie Montrose, Denny Carmassi, and Bill Church. You can watch the video news clip immediately below or you can view it on YouTube.

VIDEO NEWS CLIP – SAMMY HAGAR TALKS MONTROSE

LIPPS SERVICE INTERVIEW – You can listen to the entire interview below:

Montrose ‘Bad Motor Scooter’

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Today We Celebrate 46 Years Of “Montrose,” The Self-Titled Album – VIDEO “Bad Motor Scooter”

Sammy Hagar (Official):  Today we celebrate 46 years of “Montrose,” the album that introduced Sammy and his powerful vocals to the world!

Released October 17, 1973

With hard rocking anthems such as “Rock the Nation,” “Bad Motor Scooter,” and “Rock Candy,” this self-titled album is widely recognized as the “iconic” Montrose sound, and cited as a big influence by a wide range of other famous rockers for decades.

Watch young Sammy perform “Bad Motor Scooter” with Ronnie Montrose, Bill “Electric” Church and Denny Carmassi in 1974.

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Sammy Hagar on First Van Halen Rehearsal, “They’d been up all night waiting for me” + Ronnie Montrose

Classic Rock recently interviewed Sammy Hagar. An excerpt from the interview can be found below.

What did you make of Ronnie (Montrose) the first time you met him?

Sammy Hagar:  I thought he was the coolest guy on the frickin’ planet. And he was. I saw the last show he played with the Edgar Winter Band at Winterland in San Francisco. This was after those other guys told me they didn’t want to play the songs I’d written. I said: “That’s the kind of guitar player I want to have.” I got his number, and drove five miles in my battered truck and knocked on his door.

The first songs you wrote were Make It Last and Bad Motor Scooter, and the first album you made was Montrose’s debut. That’s a hell of a start.

Sammy:  Man, I know! When I look back, I think it was a miracle. I had an astrologer do my chart just before, and he goes: “Something happened to set you on your path, and it’ll carry on for eighty-one years.” I was twenty-four, twenty-five then, so I guess I’ll carry on doing this until I’m a hundred and five.

What was your relationship with Ronnie like? Did you actually get on with him? I tried.

Sammy:  I tried so hard to bring him close, but he was a distant person. He had four or five marriages, he changed band members the second he started getting the tiniest bit of success… It’s like he was afraid of getting close, even when he was hurting. The second you got serious he’d start talking about sex or something to throw it off. He would never let you find out who he really was.

So when he committed suicide it was the horriblest thing. I couldn’t believe it. But at the same time, we knew it was just a matter of time. He would not let anyone help him. He would not.

You left Montrose in 1975. What happened?

Sammy:  We were in Paris, headlining two nights at the Olympic Auditorium. We were in a station wagon – Ronnie sitting shotgun, me sitting behind him. I was sick as a dog – the flu or food poisoning or something. He turned round and said: “I’m quitting the band after this show.” We parked the car in the back of the venue, and he said: “What are you gonna do?” I said: “You motherfucker. What do you think I’m gonna do? I’m gonna start a new band, that’s what.”

Karma’s such a weird thing, because something got me out of that band and it’s the best thing that ever happened. It must have hurt, though. I was devastated, man. I came home, my phone was shut off, I was back two months rent on the house I was living in, I had a wife and child. I immediately went on unemployment and welfare, and I started calling friends saying: “I’m starting a band.”

I reached out to the people around me who were just as desperate as me. I couldn’t afford to hire anyone, I just asked them if they wanted to start a band. It was tough, but I was never, ever helpless and crying. I was fucking getting up in the morning and going to work. Man, no one’s ever gonna outwork me, I can tell you that.

In 1985 you joined Van Halen. Day one in the rehearsal room with those guys – what was it like?

Sammy:  Oh, I can tell you exactly what it was like. At that stage I had a good career going, I was wealthy, I was eating in the finest restaurants and wearing the finest fucking clothes, I was driving Ferraris. I was becoming a little too sophisticated – it was killing my music. Whereas those guys were living a completely different lifestyle.

Long story short, I walked in that room and these guys had cigarette butts and empty beer cans and whiskey bottles everywhere, multi-thousand-dollar guitars lying upside-down on the ground. And it stunk like shit because of the smoke. Eddie comes walking out with a pair of sunglasses, jeans with holes in them, just outta bed, cracking a beer and smoking a cigarette. Alex was still drunk. Mike hadn’t even been home.

They’d been up all night waiting for me. I’m looking at these guys, then I’m looking at myself in a suit, and I go: “I look like a fucking idiot. This is a real rock’n’roll band.”

You were in Van Halen for ten years first time around. During that period did the good outweigh the bad?

Sammy:  Of course. The good was a million times better than the bad. The bad was such a short, one-year thing that when it went bad, it was just, like, [baffled]: “What just happened?” What did happen? Well, our manager, Ed Leffler, God rest his soul, died. And the music started suffering because we were arguing.

It was like: “Fuck, this is way too hard.” I told my wife: “I want out of this band, but I can’t quit because I love it too much, it’s too important.” And I hung on until they threw me out.

You can read the entire interview @ this location.

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Ronnie Montrose “Color Blind” w/ Sammy Hagar, Steve Lukather Lyric Video Released

“Color Blind,” the new song from Ronnie Montrose’s posthumous 10×10 album, can be heard below. The track features vocals by Sammy Hagar and Toto guitarist Steve Lukather. Prior to a successful solo career and his stint fronting Van Halen, Hagar got his start singing with Montrose. Between 1973-75, he recorded two influential albums, the self-titled debut and Paper Money. “It’s valuable to have 10X10 be seen as Ronnie’s last work, rather than going and digging up some stuff from his past. This was something he truly had a vision for,” says Hagar.

PURCHASE/STREAMING OPTIONS

The legendary guitarist’s final album features a different guitarist and vocalist on every song, with additional performances by Joe Bonamassa, Phil Collen, Rick Derringer, Glenn Hughes, Brad Whitford, Edgar Winter, and more.

Ronnie Montrose began recording an ambitious passion project with bassist Ricky Phillips (Styx, Bad English) and drummer Eric Singer (Kiss, Alice Cooper). The idea was to record 10 songs with 10 different singers and call the album 10X10. Sadly, Montrose was unable to see the album through, due to his death on March 3, 2012. Instead, Phillips made it his mission to finish the songs by enlisting a small army of Ronnie’s musician friends to record the vocals and the guitar solos for each song, completing the album in recent years.

Phillips says the songs represent some of Montrose’s best work. “His songs still have the fire and angst of a young rebel, but with some added wisdom and foresight voiced in his own unique language of ‘guitar-speak.’ On 10X10, we hear Ronnie at the top of his game, from the opening crunch guitar of “Heavy Traffic,” all the way to the closing song, “I’m Not Lying,” which was Ronnie’s tip of the hat to his friend Robin Trower.”

On September 29th, Rhino Records released 10X10. The album features inspired pairings, like Glenn Hughes with Def Leppard guitarist Phil Collen (“Still Singin’ With The Band”). Legendary blues guitarist Joe Bonamassa also showcases his guitar talents on the track “The Kingdom’s Come Undone” with Ricky Phillips on vocals. A few artists both sing and play, like Edgar Winter (“Love Is An Art”) and Tommy Shaw (“Strong Enough”).

Tracklisting:

“Heavy Traffic” Feat. Eric Martin & Dave Meniketti
“Love Is An Art” Feat. Edgar Winter & Rick Derringer
“Color Blind” Feat. Sammy Hagar & Steve Lukather
“Still Singin’ With The Band” Feat. Glenn Hughes, Phil Collen & Jimmy “Z” Zavala
“Strong Enough” Feat. Tommy Shaw
“Any Minute” Feat. Mark Farner & Ricky Phillips
“The Kingdom’s Come Undone” Feat. Ricky Phillips & Joe Bonamassa
“One Good Reason” Feat. Bruce Turgon & Brad Whitford
“Head On Straight” Feat. Davey Pattison & Marc Bonilla
“I’m Not Lying” Feat. Gregg Rolie, Tom Gimbel & Lawrence Gowan

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VIDEO: Sammy Hagar Fractured Rock & Roll Photos – Montrose Charlton Festival w/ Bad Company

Lineup: The Who, Humble Pie, Lou Reed, Bad Company (1st show ever), Lindisfarne, Maggie Bell, Montrose

SUMMER OF ’74

Charlton Athletic FC

5-18-74