It was dark out by then, Neil explained in his book, and as he rounded a curve leading to a hill, he downshifted. “We were driving along, chatting about this and that, two long-haired guys out on a booze run, me in my customary Hawaiian shirt and shorts, Razzle in his high-tops, leather jeans, and frilly shirt," he wrote. Because the car didn’t have a backseat, Razzle was holding all the alcohol in his lap. So, he and Dingley got into the car and they made it to the liquor store safely where they bought hundreds of dollars’ worth of alcohol before heading back to Neil’s house. “I’d been driving drunk for about as long as I’d been driving. “We’d drive the four blocks to the store, get some supplies, be back home in a flash,” he wrote. He claimed he didn’t see a problem with his state of mind. He had just bought a new car, a bright red vintage ‘72 Ford De Tomaso Pantera, which he was excited to drive. “I could have walked there, but I’d been partying for three straight days, you know - walking there was out of the question, too much reality to deal with, if you know what I mean,” Neil wrote. So, around dusk, Dingley and Neil decided to go for a booze run to the liquor store, located just four blocks away. During the third day, despite the “seemingly never-dwindling pile of coke,” they ran out of alcohol. On December 8, Neil was having a party with some friends in the apartment, a party he wrote lasted for days. In Neil’s 2010 book, “Tattoos & Tequila: To Hell and Back with One of Rock's Most Notorious Frontmen,” he described the incident. He only served 15 days of his 30 day sentence. Two years after the crash, Neil was sentenced to 30 days in jail, 200 hours of community service, and to pay $2.6 million in restitution to the victims of the crash. Neil’s blood alcohol level was 0.17, well above the limit. Vince Neil, Mötley Crüe’s lead vocalist, has been arrested and convicted of multiple crimes, but none as tragic as his manslaughter conviction for killing his friend Nicholas "Razzle" Dingley, drummer of the Finnish band Hanoi Rocks, in a drunk driving accident in 1984. This shocking and sad aspect of Mötley Crüe's story is chronicled in “The Dirt,” the biographical drama film about them which began streaming earlier this year on Netflix. If you're wondering why Mötley Crüe is headlining arenas this summerĪnd not Twisted Sister, here's a good place to remind yourself.Mötley Crüe is one of the most iconic metal bands of all time, but the band's path toward fame wasn't always an easy one - there was some extremely dark moments during their rock days, including when the lead singer accidentally killed someone. Grime and the polish of Girls, Girls Girls. The star-making sheen of new producer Bob Rock brought out an explosive,Ĭinematic sound that nailed the perfect blend of Shout at the Devil's Sex, drugs and cars led by two stolen riffs (Montrose's "Bad Motor Scooter" and Zeppelin's "Whole Lotta Love,") a blazing solo and a shoutalong chorus. "Kickstart My Heart" is probably as close as Mötley Crüe will get to a signature song. You're going to try to not like this song, and it isn't going to work. I'll even give them credit for being more of a metal band than their VH1 contemporaries, like Bon Jovi, Aerosmith or Def Leppard. If you've ever thought that Michael Jackson would sound better with raging guitars and stadium-sized fills, Mötley Crüe is your band. More importantly, they're an excellent pop band. But they're much darker and heavier than the glam metal bands they were marketed with. Mötley Crüe is not a cool band, and it's easy to hear why Metallica and Slayer considered them the enemy. Count on the "Fück the Cöntract" tour coming to your town before 2020. Vince Neil's voice may be almost as dead as the guy from Hanoi Rocks that he killed with his car, but that's not going to stop them. Nobody really believes that this is Mötley Crüe's final tour, do they? Yadda yadda they've signed a contract saying they'll never tour again-these are not guys who are known for being law-abiders, or for their integrity, or for showing any concern for their legacy and reputation.
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