December 28, 2015, still stings, the day Ian ‘Lemmy’ Kilmister left the world, just four days after turning 70, taking a chunk of rock and roll’s soul with him.
Motörhead were untouchable, but Lemmy existed on a different level entirely, he was more than just a frontman. He was a historian, philosopher, war nerd, speed freak, gentleman, and walking contradiction, usually with a Jack and Coke glued to one hand and a cigarette burning down in the other.
Nearly a decade on, Lemmy’s absence still echoes, to mark the loss of one of rock’s most singular figures, Paul Levesque, better known as Triple H, caught up with Revolver and reflected on their friendship and the unlikely crossover between Motörhead and WWE.
Three Intro themes
Motörhead famously wrote three entrance themes for Levesque, ‘The Game’, ‘King Of Kings’, and ‘Line In The Sand’, even performing live for his WrestleMania entrances.
The connection ran deeper than licensing deals, Lemmy and Triple H were genuine mates.
Asked how Motörhead first hit him, Levesque pointed to their lack of artifice.
“I just loved the sound and the raw energy of it. There was no gimmick to it… It was guys that looked like you might not wanna meet them.”
That authenticity was exactly what he wanted when WWE pushed him to reinvent his entrance music.
“I kept saying I wanted something raw and guttural… Then they asked me for an example and I said, ‘I want it to sound like Motörhead.’”
Lemmy wasn’t a wrestling fan and didn’t initially know who Triple H was, but that changed fast.
“They sent him some video of me and he said, ‘I can do that.’”
Their friendship properly formed during the recording of Motörhead’s ‘Serial Killer’, when a chaotic studio day turned into hours of conversation.
“Lemmy was a deep guy… [Life] was simple for Lem, in a way. He didn’t [care] about what anybody thought.”
That simplicity carried through to Lemmy’s final days, Triple H recalls Lemmy quietly acknowledging the end was near during their last meeting at the Rainbow.
Perhaps the most telling moment came when Lemmy credited Triple H with helping introduce Motörhead to a younger generation.
“All these kids and young people here — that’s because of you.”
Coming from Lemmy, that meant everything, because behind the volume, the vices, and the mythology, Lemmy Kilmister was exactly what rock and roll pretends to be.
