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An influential songwriter and proto-metal guitar virtuoso,
Michael Schenker played with hard rock legends
Scorpions and
UFO before finding success as a solo artist in the late 1970s with the
Michael Schenker Group. With his signature half-black, half-white Gibson Flying V,
Schenker spent the next four decades at the fore of the melodic hard rock scene, releasing a string of acclaimed solo albums while occasionally rejoining
UFO both as a player and a producer. In 2021 he celebrated his 50th anniversary as a working musician with the release of the star-studded
MSG effort
Immortal. The like-minded Rock Shock appeared just one year later.
Schenker was born on January 10, 1955 in Sarstedt, West Germany, and it was his older brother, Rudolf, who sparked the youngster's interest in guitar at an early age. Entirely self-taught,
Michael picked up a thing or two from such hard-rocking acts as
Wishbone Ash and
Mountain, as well as his older brother, who would offer the youngster money if he would transcribe certain songs for him while he was at work. As a result of constant playing, it wasn't long before
Schenker showed immense talent with the instrument and, by the early '70s, joined Rudolf's group,
the Scorpions.
Michael appeared on the group's 1972 full-length debut, Lonesome Crow, and toured with the outfit (all at the age of 17). But it was during the album's supporting tour that another up-and-coming outfit,
UFO, took a keen interest in the young
Schenker and managed to pry the guitarist away from
the Scorpions.
Although a language barrier existed between
Schenker and his new bandmates (he barely knew any English at the time), the guitarist let his playing do the talking, especially on his first recording with the group, 1974's Phenomenon, which spawned such metal classics/
Schenker showcases as "Doctor Doctor" and "Rock Bottom" (also of note was the instrumental "Lipstick Traces," a tune that
Schenker played entirely with his feet). It was also around this time that
Schenker began playing an instrument that he would become synonymous with for the rest of his career, a Gibson Flying V (which would eventually be decorated with a half-white/half-black paint job). Heavy-duty touring and a pair of further releases, 1975's
Force It and 1976's
No Heavy Petting, perfectly set the stage for what
UFO hoped would be a global commercial breakthrough.
The late '70s saw the band issue a trio of classic hard rock albums -- 1977's
Lights Out, 1978's
Obsession, and especially 1979's outstanding live set,
Strangers in the Night -- all of which made strong showings on the U.S. charts. But
UFO's time in the limelight would be fleeting, as alcohol/substance overindulgence and erratic behavior drew a wedge between
Schenker and the rest of
UFO (the guitarist also became famous for disappearing from the group without any notice, leaving them high and dry mid-tour). The year 1979 saw
Schenker's exit from
UFO (who were never the same afterward) and reentry into
the Scorpions. But, as with his first go-round with the group,
Schenker's tenure was a fleeting one, only lasting for a single album, 1979's
Lovedrive, before he exited once more.
The same year,
Schenker was invited to take the place of the just-departed
Joe Perry in
Aerosmith. Despite a few jam sessions between
Schenker and the others, nothing ever materialized of the
Schenker-
Aerosmith union (the interesting meeting was discussed by the group in their 1999 autobiography Walk This Way). Now free of any other obligations,
Schenker set his sights on a solo career, forming
the Michael Schenker Group immediately thereafter. While the group got off to a promising start with such strong releases as 1980's
Michael Schenker Group, 1981's MSG, plus 1982's Assault Attack and
One Night at Budokan, interest eventually evaporated, as it became obvious with each subsequent release that
Schenker had set his sights at the top of the charts rather than sticking to good old-fashioned hard rock/heavy metal. Constant lineup fluctuation didn't help, either.
Schenker got an invite from
Ozzy Osbourne to join his group immediately after
Randy Rhoads' tragic death in 1982, but like the
Aerosmith bid several years earlier, it didn't pan out. Despite failing to issue a big commercial breakthrough on his own (although 1989's pop-metal outing Save Yourself, credited to
the McAuley-Schenker Group, came close), the guitarists in such renowned groups as
Metallica and
Def Leppard were quick to voice
Schenker's influence. The early '90s saw
Schenker appear with
Ratt on a best-forgotten episode of MTV's popular Unplugged series, in addition to participating in a one-off pop-metal "supergroup," Contraband (which included members of such groups as
Shark Island,
Vixen,
Ratt, and
L.A. Guns), who issued a lone self-titled debut in 1991.
Throughout the '90s,
Schenker continued to issue solo albums, including 1993's acoustic-based Thank You and 1999's more rock-based Unforgiven, but the real story of the '90s for
Schenker was his re-enlistment in
UFO in 1993. Predictably,
Schenker's second go-around with
UFO was short-lived, yet it did spawn a world tour as well as an all-new studio effort, 1995's Walk on Water.
Schenker's pace of issuing solo albums only increased during the early 21st century, as such titles as 2000's all-instrumental
Adventures of the Imagination, plus a staggering three albums in 2001 alone (MS 2000: Dreams and Expressions, Odd Trio, and Be Aware of Scorpions) saw the light of day. In 2002,
Schenker signed on with
UFO once more for a new album,
Sharks. The reunion was short-lived, however, and after his exit from the group, rumors began to circulate about his health. The doubters were quickly silenced by the eighth release of
the Michael Schenker Group,
Arachnophobiac, in 2003. He also managed to complete yet another solo album in the same year, Thank You 4, as well as a collaborative album with Amy Schugar entitled Under Construction.
The Michael Schenker Group returned in 2005, if only in name, for
Heavy Hitters, which featured a revolving cast of guest musicians accompanying
Schenker playing covers. To celebrate the group's 25th year of activity, 2006 saw the release of
Tales of Rock'n'Roll, which featured a new vocalist, Jari Tiura. Many of the group's past singers also contributed lyrics and vocals to the album. The band would return in 2008 for
In the Midst of Beauty, their tenth album, which boasted the return of their original vocalist
Gary Barden. A new
Schenker project,
Michael Schenker's Temple of Rock, would surface in 2011 with a self-titled debut album. The band would go on to release a live album the following year, and then return to the studio for 2013's Bridge the Gap, co-written with former
Rainbow frontman
Doogie White. The band would release another studio album in 2015, Spirit on a Mission.
This was followed by the audio-video concert package
On a Mission: Live in Madrid in 2016, recorded the previous November at the historic Joy Eslava Theatre. The concert not only included tracks from the charting Spirit on a Mission, but also proved to be a career retrospective, including songs from
MSG,
the Scorpions, and
UFO. Upon release, the deluxe package immediately hit the hard rock and metal charts.
Schenker got his 2016 touring musicians together under the name
Michael Schenker Fest for 2018's
Resurrection.
Revelation, a second effort from the same group, was released a year later, and in 2021,
Immortal came out and featured
Joe Lynn Turner,
Ronnie Romero, and
Derek Sherinian, under the
MSG banner. Rock Shock, featuring
Pete Way (ex-
UFO),
Chris Slade (ex-
AC/DC) and
Herman Rarebell (ex-
Scorpions), arrived the following year. ~ Greg Prato