Biography
:
At
the start of the new millennium and exactly 35 years since the foundation
of Germany’s most successful hard rock band of all time, SCORPIONS
Klaus Meine, Rudolf Schenker and Matthias Jabs can look back together
on a spectacular career in the international music business.
Like many youngsters born in post-war Germany, Klaus Meine and Rudolf
Schenker were influenced by the music and other life-enhancing delights
imported into their homeland by American GI’s – Elvis
Presley, chewing gum, blue jeans and leather jackets, but most of
all rock ‘n’ roll. From an early age, both of them had
an irresistible urge to grab a guitar and step into the limelight.
In the early 1960s the Beatles sparked off the beat revolution.
By the mid-1960s Klaus Meine and Rudolf Schenker, both of whom were
blessed with understanding parents, had also taken to the stage
with their beat groups. In 1965 Rudolf Schenker started up the SCORPIONS
in Hanover. Rudolf’s younger brother Michael Schenker was,
like Matthias Jabs, smitten by beat music and the burgeoning rock
culture. Guitarist and songwriter Rudolf Schenker’s earliest
influences were the raw riffs of bands like The Yardbirds, Pretty
Things and Spooky Tooth, who in those days were regarded as the
real hard rockers.
At New Year 1970, the younger Schenker brother Michael, who despite
his youth had already established himself as an outstanding guitarist,
left the Hanover-based group Copernicus, along with singer and composer
Klaus Meine, to join Rudolf Schenker’s SCORPIONS. Rudolf Schenker
and Klaus Meine teamed up to form the accomplished Schenker/Meine
songwriting duo, so laying the foundations for a spectacular success
story.
In 1972, the SCORPIONS released their remarkable début album,
Lonesome Crow, produced by Conny Plank in Hamburg. The vocal and
instrumental ingredients which over the years were to develop into
the typical, unmistakable SCORPIONS sound, were already recognisable:
uncompromising, guitar-orientated hard rock, on the lines of what
Jimmy Hendrix, Cream and Led Zeppelin generated in the mid-1960s.
The distinctive SCORPIONS style came from the combination of two
electric guitars, a fusion of fabulously forceful power riffs with
dazzlingly exuberant guitar solos. Added to which was the instantly
recognisable voice of singer and front man Klaus Meine with his
highly expressive and polished delivery. In one respect, the SCORPIONS
were unique on the German rock scene of the period. Because, right
from the start, the band was aiming for the very top of the international
hard rock business, Klaus Meine wrote all his lyrics in English.
In the creative partnership of Rudolf Schenker and Klaus Meine Germany
had finally found its answer to the famous beat and rock composing
teams of the English-speaking world.
The
first album Lonesome Crow set the band on the path to international
success. The SCORPIONS toured as support band with Rory Gallagher,
Uriah Heep and UFO. Throughout their history Rudolf Schenker has
been the unshakeable driving force behind the SCORPIONS. He adopted
his father’s philosophy of life – nothing is impossible
as long as you believe in it. Right from the foundation of the SCORPIONS,
he had only one declared ambition: "one day the SCORPIONS will
be one of the best heavy rock bands in the world!" It was an
idea to which all the band members were committed. The SCORPIONS
were constantly on the lookout for fresh challenges. Every change
in the line-up was seen as an opportunity to move closer still to
success and the achievement of absolute professionalism.
In 1973, following a joint tour with UFO, Michael Schenker joined
the British rock group. He was replaced as SCORPIONS lead guitarist
by Ulrich Roth. He too was an exceptional guitar player with an
almost mystical talent. With Ulrich Roth, the SCORPIONS continued
unwaveringly to explore the hard rock genre.
In the 1970s, the SCORPIONS undertook tours of Western Europe, playing
countless venues and conquering one country after another. They
would appear wherever there was somewhere to plug in their instruments.
In 1973, they accompanied The Sweet on their first European tour.
The SCORPIONS went on to record their next four studio albums with
Ulrich Roth. Fly to the Rainbow, (1974) features a solid, high-energy
brand of heavy rock never before heard from a German band. The title
track Speedy’s Coming typifies the SCORPIONS style of ultra-hard
rock combined with catchy melodies. Beginning with their third LP
In Trance, (1975), they began their working relationship with well-known
international producer Dieter Dierks. They were firmly launched
on their hard rock career. In Trance was the best-selling RCA album
in Japan, where a regular SCORPION mania broke out.
In 1975 the SCORPIONS toured Europe, sharing top billing with KISS.
In Germany that same year, they were voted best live group. During
their first UK tour in 1975, the SCORPIONS entered what might be
called "the lion’s den", playing at Liverpool’s
legendary Cavern Club. In the birthplace of hard rock, they succeeded
in gaining the acceptance of the most dyed-in-the-wool British fans.
Gigs at the renowned London venue, the Marquee, were further highpoints
of the mid-1970s.
The SCORPIONS achieved their ambition to be the top German hard
rock band, when their fourth album Virgin Killer (1976) won the
"LP of the Year" award in Germany. In Japan, Virgin Killer
gained them their first Gold Disc. Their follow-up album Taken by
Force (1977) was also awarded a Japanese Gold Disc. In 1978 the
SCORPIONS toured Japan, the world’s second largest music market,
where they got a foretaste of what it was like to be superstars.
When they arrived at Tokyo airport, the five heavy metal men were
mobbed by adoring fans. Ulrich Roth left the band after the 1978
Japanese tour. The highpoint and conclusion of the SCORPIONS’
Ulrich Roth period is the double album Tokyo Tapes (1978) which
even now is cherished around the world as a collector’s item.
Michael Schenker filled in briefly (he recorded several songs on
Lovedrive (1979) until Matthias Jabs finally entered the fray.
In 1978 an advertisement appeared in the Melody Maker: the SCORPIONS
were looking for a new lead guitarist. In London, they auditioned
140 hopefuls, before deciding on Hanover-born Matthias Jabs. Thrown
in at the deep end, Matthias Jabs immediately joined the band in
recording Lovedrive (1979) which was then in production. The album
was to be the group’s biggest triumph so far, and is still
one the SCORPIONS’ best-ever albums. The sleeve received a
prize for the best artwork of the year.
In 1979, Michael Schenker rejoined the SCORPIONS for a short spell,
but left the band while on tour. In 1980, he founded MSG, the Michael
Schenker Group. Matthias Jabs once again leapt into the breach and
achieved the amazing feat of learning, literally overnight, the
entire programme for the current tour. His baptism of fire came
when the SCORPIONS played to 55,000 fans as support act for Genesis
on their German tour. In Matthias Jabs, the SCORPIONS had finally
found the lead guitarist whose creativity, virtuosity and enthusiasm
continue to make a decisive contribution to the band’s success.
With him, the band achieved an even more solid sound. Like the missing
piece in the jigsaw, his guitar style fitted to perfection into
the group dynamic, creating the unique SCORPIONS sound. Klaus Meine,
Rudolf Schenker and Matthias Jabs still form the musical backbone
of the band. With bass man Francis Buchholz (who joined the SCORPIONS
in 1973 at the same time as Ulrich Roth) and drummer Herman Rarebell
(who first featured on Taken By Force in 1977), they finally established
the combination that was to continue its victorious progress across
the globe right up until Wind of Change.
Already
hailed as a super group during the 1978 tour of Japan, in 1979 the
band, comprising Klaus Meine, Rudolf Schenker and Matthias Jabs,
set out to conquer the vast US market. Their weapons: a professional
attitude paired with a steely determination to succeed and a philosophy
of friendship, both within the band and towards their fans, as well
as great musicality. As a rock band working on the international
scene, the SCORPIONS had long since created their own musical identity.
In the 1980s, the USA was the biggest market of all for hard and
heavy rock. Since 1974, the SCORPIONS had built up a considerable
following in the States. Van Halen launched their musical career
in the mid-1970s with cover versions of SCORPIONS songs: Speedy’s
Coming (from Fly to the Rainbow) and Catch Your Train (from Virgin
Killer).
In 1979, now professionally managed and boosted by the success of
Lovedrive, the SCORPIONS with their definitive line-up – Klaus
Meine, Rudolf Schenker and Matthias Jabs – embarked on their
first major tour of USA rock arenas as opening act with Aerosmith,
Ted Nugent and AC/DC. In Chicago, the SCORPIONS swapped the headliner
billing with Ted Nugent, since the SCORPIONS had more fans in the
city. On this first American tour, the SCORPIONS quickly learned
the rules of the game in the international rock business.
Their seventh album Lovedrive was released in the USA in 1979, and
was the first SCORPIONS production to receive a Gold Disc there.
Animal Magnetism followed in 1980. With the two albums, the band
finally made their North American breakthrough. On their second
US tour the SCORPIONS were top of the bill. The era of SCORPIONS
monster tours had begun.
After more successful world tours, in 1981, while recording Blackout,
Klaus Meine lost his voice. Not wishing to stand in the way of the
band’s success, Klaus Meine wanted to pull out. But the unshakeable
friendship between Rudolf Schenker and Klaus Meine and the close
and supportive relationship within the band allowed the seemingly
impossible to happen. After lengthy vocal retraining and two operations
on his vocal chords, Klaus Meine overcame the trauma. And that was
not all: in 1982, he re-emerged with a much increased vocal range.
One critic wrote: "They have given Klaus Meine metal vocal
chords." The band’s decision to stand by their lead singer
through this troubled time later proved to be the most crucial the
SCORPIONS ever took in the their entire career. It was Klaus Meine
who in 1989 composed their smash hit Wind of Change.
In 1982, on their second US tour as headliners with Iron Maiden
as support act, the SCORPIONS promoted their groundbreaking album
Blackout, with Helnwein’s stunning sleeve design. The single
No One Like You and the Blackout LP reached the US Top Ten, the
LP was voted Best Hard Rock Album of the year and awarded a Platinum
Disc. One hit followed another, and in the 1980s the SCORPIONS captured
the hearts of hard rock fans around the world.
In 1984 the SCORPIONS became the first German hard rock band to
play three successive gigs in front of 60,000 fans at New York’s
Madison Square Garden. The SCORPIONS had finally scaled the Mount
Olympus of rock. With three albums featuring simultaneously in the
US charts: Animal Magnetism (1980), Blackout, (1982) and Love at
First Sting (1984), the SCORPIONS spent two years on the road playing
as headliner or co-headliner at all the big rock festivals that
sprang up around the world after Woodstock.
The SCORPIONS toured the globe, with a fleet of articulated lorries,
Nightliner buses, helicopters, private jets and the inevitable limos.
Hanover’s heavy metal band played all the main rock venues
in North, Central and South America and Europe. In Asia, they played
in Malaysia, Thailand, the Philippines and Japan. This was the golden
age of heavy rock.
With gigantic stage and light shows and dramatic firework effects,
the SCORPIONS unleashed a pyrotechnic display of sound and light.
Their relentless energy sent the fans wild. To US audiences, the
SCORPIONS, with their polished, hard-edged "melodic rock"
and Klaus Meine’s dramatic power singing with its dizzying
top notes, came to epitomise the best in heavy rock. Groups like
Bon Jovi, Metallica, Iron Maiden and Def Leppard, later to become
mega bands, were support acts on the SCORPIONS’ worldwide
tours, learning what it meant for a band to hold its own in the
rock arena in front of an audience of millions. Love at First Sting
became one of the most successful albums in rock history. It includes
the SCORPIONS’ most electrifying numbers Rock You Like a Hurricane,
Bad Boys Running Wild, and the masterpiece Still Loving You. The
critics struggled for superlatives.
Rolling
Stone called the SCOPRIONS "the heroes of heavy metal".
The SCORPIONS were admitted to the exclusive club of the world’s
30 greatest rock groups. Their ballad Still Loving You became an
international rock anthem. In France alone, the single sold 1.7
million copies. The song unleashed a wave of hysteria among French
fans not seen since the Beatles and became the SCORPIONS’
musical trademark around the globe.
The
SCORPIONS’ most memorable appearances as headliners were at
the 1983 US Festival in California’s San Bernadino Valley
in front of an audience of 325,000 and at the first Rock in Rio
in 1985 where they were cheered by 350,000 enthusisatic South American
SCORPIONS fans. The 1985 double album World Wide Live, a counterpart
to the 1978 Tokyo Tapes, impressively documented the band’s
more recent international triumphs.
In 1986, the SCORPIONS topped the bill at the legendary Monsters
of Rock Festival and played in the Hungarian capital Budapest, their
first-ever appearance in an Eastern Block country. By now the SCORPIONS
were a household name, with hard rock hits like Rock You Like a
Hurricane, No One Like You, Blackout, Big City Nights, Dynamite,
Bad Boys Running Wild, Coast to Coast and The Zoo featuring in the
charts around the world. In the 1980s, the SCORPIONS created a kind
of modern hard rock that is just as popular today.
Their authentic power rock ballads, such as Still Loving You, Holiday
and later Wind of Change, Send Me an Angel, When You Came Into My
Life and You and I, along with acoustic based songs such as Always
Somewhere and When the Smoke is Going Down have managed to win over
even the most unyielding haters of hard rock.
Savage Amusement, the last album co-produced with Dieter Dierks,
was released in 1988. It reached N° 3 in the US chart and N°
1 in Europe. Even after years of touring the USA and the rest of
the world, the SCORPIONS did not rest on their laurels and continued
to seek out fresh challenges.
As a prelude to their 1988 Savage Amusement world tour, they penetrated
the Iron Curtain to give 10 sell-out concerts in Leningrad for 350,000
Soviet fans. They were the first international hard rock band to
play in the former USSR, cradle of Communism. Hard rock, heavy metal
and especially the SCORPIONS’ ballad Still Loving You had
already found their way through the Iron Curtain. The SCORPIONS
are still given a rapturous reception in Russia today.
A year later, in August 1989, 20 years after Woodstock, the Soviet
authorities, encouraged by the success of the SCORPIONS’ 1988
Leningrad concert, gave permission for the legendary Moscow Music
Peace Festival. Here, the SCORPIONS shared the stage with other
international hard rock acts, including Bon Jovi, Mötley Crüe,
Skid Row, Cinderella and Ozzy Osbourne and the Russian band Gorky
Park playing to 260,000 Soviet rock fans in Moscow’s Lenin
Stadium. In September 1989 Klaus Meine drew on his impressions of
the Moscow Music Peace Festival, to create the SCORPIONS’
smash hit Wind of Change.
Then, in November 1989, came a completely unexpected event. The
fall of the Berlin Wall. Throughout the world, Wind of Change became
the hymn to glasnost and perestroika, providing the soundtrack to
the opening of the Iron Curtain, the fall of Communism and the end
of the Cold War. One year later, in 1990, the SCORPIONS played in
Potsdamer Platz where a section of the Wall once stood, in Roger
Waters’s spectacular production, The Wall.
The SCORPIONS recorded a Russian version of Wind of Change. They
also gained a distinguished fan. In 1991, the members of the German
band were invited to the Kremlin to meet Mikhail Gorbachev, the
last Soviet head of state and party leader. It was a unique event
in the history of the USSR and rock music.
For the SCORPIONS too, the wind of change continued to blow. Before
the production and release of their worldwide mega seller the Wind
of Change CD, Crazy World (1990), their long relationship with Dieter
Dierks, the Cologne-based producer of so many successful recordings,
came to an end. The very first album to be produced by the SCORPIONS
themselves, Crazy World, made in Los Angeles, co-produced by Keith
Olsen and featuring the smash hit Wind of Change, immediately became
the most successful CD to date. Not only was Crazy World the most
successful album, Wind of Change was the worldwide top single of
1991, occupying the N° 1 slot in 11 countries. In 1992, they
received the World Music Award as the most successful German rock
act.
Crazy World is impressive testimony to the songwriting talents of
the SCORPIONS’ masterminds: Matthias Jabs’s contribution
is the dynamic title track Tease Me, Please Me, while Rudolf Schenker
once again proves his ability to hit the spot with his classic SCORPIONS
ballad, Send Me an Angel, and Klaus Meine displays his brilliance
as a composer in Wind of Change. At the end of the 1992 Crazy World
tour, the SCORPIONS parted company with their long-time bass player
Francis Buchholz. The 1993 CD Face the Heat (co-producer: Bruce
Fairbairn), featured the band’s new bass man, conservatoire
graduate Ralph Rieckermann.
In 1994 the SCORPIONS again received a World Music Award. Yet another
high point of their career came when, at the invitation of the family
of the "King of Rock ‘n’ Roll", Priscilla
and Lisa Marie Presley, and the "King of Pop", Michael
Jackson, they performed their cover version of His Latest Flame
at the 1994 Elvis Presley Memorial Concert in Memphis, Tennessee.
In the same year the SCORPIONS committed themselves to helping United
Nations efforts on behalf of refugees from the civil war in Rwanda.
In only one week the band produced and released their benefit single
White Dove.
At
the end of 1995, just before completing the Pure Instinct CD, co-produced
by Keith Olsen and Erwin Musper and released in 1996, the SCORPIONS’
veteran drummer and long-time companion Herman "The German"
Rarebell left the band.
During the 1988 Savage Amusement tour, the US heavy metal band Kingdom
Come, whose producer was Keith Olsen, had been a warm up act for
the SCORPIONS. Even then, the Germans were impressed by the style
of the group’s Californian drummer James Kottak. In 1995 the
SCORPIONS engaged former AC/DC manager Stewart Young¸ and
it fell to him to call James Kottak on the phone and hire him as
drummer for the upcoming 1996/97 Pure Instinct Live Tour. James
Kottak became the first American to play in the German rock band.
With the two new members, bass player Ralph Rieckermann and drummer
James Kottak, the SCORPIONS had introduced a new generation of musicians
into the group.
On the Pure Instinct world tour, the SCORPIONS proved that they
were still among the global players on the international rock scene.
Not only did they play in Europe, the USA and South America. In
countries like Malaysia, Thailand and the Philippines, they continued
to notch up well above average record sales and collect gold and
platinum discs. In November 1996, the SCORPIONS were the first international
hard rock band to play to fans in Beirut after the end of the civil
war in Lebanon.
On the 1999 recording of Eye to Eye, produced by Peter Wolf, James
Kottak worked in the studio with the SCORPIONS for the first time.
The cover of Eye to Eye marked a change of image for the SCORPIONS.
Only the founder members of the band, Rudolf Schenker, Klaus Meine
and Matthias Jabs feature on the front cover. The album itself is
a statement of the SCORPIONS’ awesome talents as songwriters
and instrumentalists. Songs like Mysterious, Mind Like a Tree, Eye
to Eye, Yellow Butterfly and A Moment in a Million Years show the
band at the pinnacle of their creativity. With Du Bist So Schmutzig
(You’re So Dirty), the SCORPIONS are heard for the first time
singing a German lyric. As part of their 1999 Eye to Eye world tour,
at the invitation of Michael Jackson, they played at the Michael
Jackson and Friends benefit concert in Munich.
True to their motto "Don’t stop at the top" the
SCORPIONS are starting the new millennium with a new musical challenge:
a crossover project with the internationally renowned classical
orchestra, the Berlin Philharmonic, once conducted by the great
Herbert von Karajan.
In 1995, the Berlin Philharmonic was exploring the possibility of
a crossover project and was on the lookout for a suitable band.
Over the years even this classical orchestra had been aware of the
SCORPIONS' success and international reputation. The two Mercedes
of German music agreed on a joint venture under the direction of
the internationally successful crossover producer, composer, conductor
and arranger, Austria’s Christian Kolonovits. As early as
1995 the SCORPIONS began their preparations. Since then, both groups
of musicians have continued to working on the project, while still
fulfilling current engagements around the world and bearing in mind
the timing of EXPO 2000 in Hanover. After the release of the Eye
to Eye CD in 1999 and the subsequent world tour, the SCORPIONS got
down to serious business in the autumn of the same year.
The
SCORPIONS gave a foretaste of what is to come when, at the invitation
of the German government, they played in front of Berlin’s
Brandenburg Gate on 11 November 1999, the 10th anniversary of German
reunification. Joining them in their performance of Wind of Change
were 166 cellists. The work was conducted by the distinguished cello
virtuoso Mstislav Rostropovich. In January 2000, the SCORPIONS and
Christian Kolonovits began studio recordings in Vienna. The Berlin
Philharmonic recorded the orchestral parts in April 2000. The complete
work was mixed during April and May 2000 at the Galaxy Studios in
Belgium, using the state-of-the-art Surround System Atmos 5.1. |