|
|
|
|
|
|
When he was still a member of Mötley Crüe,
drummer Tommy Lee undoubtedly garnered the most headlines of all four
bandmembers -- due in part to two separate marriages to Hollywood actresses.
Born in Athens, Greece, as Thomas Lee Bass on March 10, 1962, his family
moved to California a year after his birth. Lee received his first drum set
at the ripe old age of four, but didn't receive his first real kit until
reaching his teenage years, upon his discovery of hard rock and heavy metal
(Deep Purple, Kiss, Led Zeppelin, etc.). After drumming for his high-school
marching band, Lee quit high school in his senior year, as he focused
entirely on following his dream of joining a rock band. His first real band
was called Suite 19, and played the Sunset Strip in L.A. during the early
'80s. It was at a Suite 19 show that Lee bumped into his future bandmate,
Nikki Sixx.
Sixx was a bassist looking to form a theatrical band that would specialize
in anthemic heavy metal, and when he saw Lee play, he knew he had found his
drummer. Sixx successfully convinced Lee to leave Suite 19 and form the
nucleus of what would become Mötley Crüe. The drummer changed his name to
Tommy Lee (also earning the nickname "T-Bone" from Sixx), and guitarist Mick
Mars joined the fledgling band shortly afterwards. Lee recommended a singer
from his high-school days, Vince Neil, and after several attempts to get him
to try out for the band, Neil landed the gig during the first jam session.
Mötley Crüe quickly built a fanatical local following, issuing their
debut album, Too Fast for Love, on their own independent Leathur label.
Elektra Records decided to sign the band shortly thereafter, reissuing their
debut, as the band began a string of hit releases throughout the decade --
1983's "Shout at the Devil," 1985's "Theater of Pain," 1987's "Girls, Girls,
Girls," and 1989's "Dr. Feelgood" -- establishing the quartet as one of the
biggest hard rock/metal bands of the '80s. The band took rock theater to a
whole new level, especially Lee, whose drum solo centered around such crowd-pleasing
gimmicks as his entire kit revolving and spinning, while he continuing to
bash on the skins.
Although his achievements with Mötley Crüe are extremely impressive, it was
his celebrity marriages to Heather Locklear in the '80s and Pamela Anderson
in the '90s that made Tommy Lee a household name. One of his most famous
incidents occurred during his torrid relationship with Anderson, when they
were both involved the highly publicized "sex tape scandal" (a videotape
that was stolen from their house was eventually made available to the public).
Lee also spent several months behind bars in 1998 after Anderson accused Lee
of hitting her in front of their children. The pair divorced while the Crüe
drummer was serving his prison sentence, but reconciled and then broke up
again after his release.
Lee also decided to leave Mötley Crüe during his stay in prison, and
stuck to his promise after the completion of the Crüe's Greatest Hits tour
in 1999. With rap metal being all the rage, Lee formed a similarly styled
outfit, Methods of Mayhem, issuing a self-titled album the same year and
touring behind it. Although Lee had little to do with Mötley Crüe after
splitting, he agreed to take part in their 2001 tell-all autobiography, The
Dirt.
In addition to his musical output with the Crüe and M.O.M., Lee has made
guest appearances on albums by other artists (Stuart Hamm -- The Urge, Nine
Inch Nails -- Downward Spiral, Rob Zombie -- Hellbilly Deluxe), contributed
a solo song, "Welcome to Planet Boom," to the soundtrack of then-wife Pamela
Anderson's 1996 movie, Barb Wire, and produced an album for the
pre-Goldfinger project from John Feldmann and Simon Williams, the Electric
Love Hogs. He parted ways with M.O.M. partner Tilo and began recording with
members of Incubus and the Deftones. Through time, he eventually started
recording songs featuring himself almost exclusively, and by the time it
came to release the results, it was released as his first solo album. The
CD, 2002's Never a Dull Moment, reflected his love of rap metal and
electronica and featured little of the Motley Crue swagger he was famous for. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
TOMMY LEE PICTURES |
|
|
Warning: include() [function.include]: URL file-access is disabled in the server configuration in /home/iguazufa/public_html/123celebs.net/t/tommy-lee/tommy-lee-biography.htm on line 112
Warning: include(http://www.123celebs.net/footer.htm) [function.include]: failed to open stream: no suitable wrapper could be found in /home/iguazufa/public_html/123celebs.net/t/tommy-lee/tommy-lee-biography.htm on line 112
Warning: include() [function.include]: Failed opening 'http://www.123celebs.net/footer.htm' for inclusion (include_path='.:/usr/lib/php:/usr/local/lib/php') in /home/iguazufa/public_html/123celebs.net/t/tommy-lee/tommy-lee-biography.htm on line 112
|