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Lemmy statue to be unveiled in hometown

Gavin Kermack

BBC News, West Midlands

Laura May McMullan

BBC Midlands Today

BBC A statue of a man holding a guitar, viewed from below and looking straight up to his chin. The fingers he is using to play the guitar have rings on them, including one of a skull.BBC

A statue paying tribute to one of rock music’s most enduring and flamboyant frontmen is due to be unveiled in his hometown of Stoke-on-Trent this week.

The memorial to Motörhead lead singer and bassist Lemmy, which has been given the backing of his estate and management company, will also mark 10 years since the musician’s death at the age of 70 – and 50 since the band was formed.

Local sculptor Andy Edwards has been working on the statue for the past three years.

“It’s probably the most meaningful statue that I’ll ever do,” he said.

Born Ian Fraser Kilmister in Burslem in 1945, Lemmy first found fame as a member of rock band Hawkwind.

Following his sacking after being arrested for drug possession, he became in 1975 a founding member of Motörhead, which he led for four decades until his death.

A man with a blonde soul patch and glasses, wearing a black baseball cap, a black t-shirt under a black jacket and black jeans, sits with his hand resting on a statue which is lying on its back.

Mr Edwards, who has created sculptures of people including The Beatles, Bob Marley, Sir Alex Ferguson, Muhammed Ali and the Bee Gees, said Lemmy was his hero when he was growing up.

“Lemmy’s such a big part of my life,” he explained. “He deserves a statue in his birthplace. So it’s really meaningful to me.

“It’s really the pinnacle in a lot of ways.”

IFK Legacy CIC A black and white photograph of Motörhead frontman Lemmy, a man with long dark hair and a dark moustache, holding his arms out like a plane underneath a sign reading IFK Legacy CIC

His statue, funded by the Kilmister estate, is inspired by Lemmy’s performance with Motörhead at the Heavy Metal Holocaust festival at Vale Park in 1981.

It depicts him striking an iconic pose, singing up towards the microphone.

Mr Edwards began by modelling it in clay, before a wax cast was made at Castle Fine Arts Foundry in Wales.

“It’s made in, I think, 14 sections. And it’s quite a feat to get it back to how I had it originally modelled in clay,” he said. “But I’ve been working with these guys for 25 years now and I couldn’t be more pleased.”

The two-metre tall bronze figure will stand opposite the Queen’s Theatre. A community interest group (CIC) with which Mr Edwards is working hopes to help reopen the site as a music venue and arts centre.

PA Media Motörhead frontman Lemmy, holding a bass guitar and holding his hand up pointing at something. He is wearing sunglasses, a black hat and a black shirt. He has a dark muttonchop-style beard. Behind him is a drum kit - the bass drum has a Motörhead logo on it.PA Media
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