Monsters of Rock
This article needs additional citations for verification. (June 2014) |
Monsters of Rock | |
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Genre | Hard rock, heavy metal |
Location(s) | Castle Donington, England (1980–1996) |
Years active |
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Founders | Paul Loasby and Maurice Jones |
Website | www |
Monsters of Rock was a hard rock and heavy metal music festival. It was originally held annually in Castle Donington, England, from 1980 to 1996, taking place every year except 1989 and 1993. It later branched into other locations such as the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Italy, Germany, France, Sweden, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, the United States, and Russia.
History
[edit]In 1980, promoter Paul Loasby, along with Maurice Jones, planned a one-day festival dedicated specifically for bands within the hard rock and heavy metal genre. Loasby was an established and successful promoter working that year on the Rainbow UK tour and penned the festival as the final show of the tour for the band to headline. Jones knew the owner of the Donington Park race track, Tom Wheatcroft, located next to the village of Castle Donington in Leicestershire, England, and the site was chosen to host the event.[1]
(A year earlier, promoter Bill Graham’s July 1979 Day on the Green Festival at Oakland Coliseum in California was also dubbed "The Monsters of Rock" show. This concert featured Aerosmith, Ted Nugent and AC/DC.)
Donington Park was unknown as a major location but its location in the East Midlands next to the M1 and A42 allowed for better transportation to the site from around the country. Additionally, the site ground level sloped which allowed for a better viewing for the audience throughout the site.
The first Monsters of Rock line-up consisted of a mix of British and international bands. The event was a success with 35,000 heavy metal fans attending. Although only conceived as a one-off event, it was mentioned on the day the idea that the festival will return the following year and the first edition birthed what would become a regular festival for the next 15 years, becoming synonymous as a Mecca for fans of the genre and further establishing the Midlands as the home of heavy metal.[2]
Over the years, the attendance continued to grow, reaching 107,000 in 1988–where two fans died during the Guns N' Roses set. The blame was initially accounted to the large size of the crowd and a rush forward during the band's set. But it was officially declared that the cause was laid on the weather, causing muddy and wet conditions on the sloping ground. As a result, the festival did not take place in 1989, and it was replaced that year by a two-day festival similar to Monsters of Rock, the Moscow Music Peace Festival in Soviet Union, which included performances by several Monsters of Rock veterans Bon Jovi, Ozzy Osbourne, Mötley Crüe and Scorpions.[3] Monsters of Rock returned the year after with a limitation to the crowd of 75,000.[4]
The festival had been held in parallel in West Germany from 1983 to 1991. In 1984 and 1986 the festival branched into Sweden. In 1988, the festival occurred for the first time in France, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands. It was held as a one-time event in 1991 in Russia (one of the largest concerts of all time, with an estimated audience of over 1.6 million[citation needed]), Poland, Belgium, Hungary. In 1994, the festival was exported overseas to Chile, Argentina and Brazil.
In 1993 the Monsters of Rock radio show debuted in the United States with host Harlan Hendrickson. Guests on the show include everyone from AC/DC, KISS, Van Halen, Judas Priest, Motörhead, Cinderella, Ozzy Osbourne, Bon Jovi, Cheap Trick, Mötley Crüe, Ratt, Dio, Y&T, Guns N' Roses, Slayer and Poison.
The Monsters of Rock festival continued on as the premier hard rock and heavy metal event in Great Britain in the 1990s but started to fall upon hard times as heavy metal became less popular, with another cancellation in 1993 due to being unable to find a strong enough headliner. In 1995 the festival found itself in a similar situation until Metallica agreed to play with the condition of the band having control over the event and naming it "Escape from the Studio". In 1996 Ozzy Osbourne and KISS co-headlined the festival and although there were plans to extend the festival into a two-day event in 1997, the promoters once again found themselves in a struggle for headliners and the event was cancelled and discontinued.
Donington Park remained event-less until 2001 when the Rock and Blues Festival and Stereophonics held events at the site. In 2002 the Ozzfest tour returned to the UK using Donington Park as their only British event and the following year Live Nation picked up the reins as Monsters of Rock's successor in the name of Download Festival. An outstanding success from the offset, the festival continues to this day having increased to a three-day event with five stages, though as of 2008 the event has been relegated outside of the track.
In 2006, the Monsters of Rock name was revived and held at the National Bowl in Milton Keynes, England, for a one-off event headlined by Deep Purple and with Alice Cooper as a special guest.
In 2012 Harlan Hendrickson & Monsters of Rock Worldwide partnered with Larry Morand and Mike London to launch the inaugural Monsters Of Rock Cruise.
Line-ups
[edit](Note: Line-ups in this section are for the events held in the United Kingdom. They are listed with the headlining band first, followed by the reverse order of appearance by the other bands.)
1980
[edit]16 August 1980 (attendance: 35,000)
- Rainbow
- Judas Priest
- Scorpions
- April Wine
- Saxon (released as the semi-official live album Donington: The Live Tracks [sic]. "I still meet people," noted Biff Byford, "that come up and tell me about their own little twist on the day: 'Just as you started 747 (Strangers In The Night), a plane came over.' Of course, we wrote a song about [the event]: And the Bands Played On."[5])
- Riot
- Touch
- Neal Kay (DJ)
1981
[edit]22 August 1981 (attendance: 65,000)
1982
[edit]21 August 1982 (attendance: 35,000)
- Status Quo
- Gillan
- Saxon (the first band to appear twice)
- Hawkwind (bottled heavily)
- Uriah Heep
- Anvil
- Tommy Vance (DJ)
1983
[edit]20 August 1983 (attendance: 35,000)
- Whitesnake
- Meat Loaf
- ZZ Top
- Twisted Sister (Police asked Dee Snider to limit his F-word usage to sixteen. Asked subsequently why he exceeded that limit, he explained he "hadn't realised that 'motherfuckers' would be included".)[7]
- Dio
- Diamond Head
- Tommy Vance (DJ)
1984
[edit]18 August 1984 (attendance: 65,000)
- AC/DC (first band to headline twice)
- Van Halen (David Lee Roth's final appearance with Van Halen in the UK)
- Ozzy Osbourne
- Gary Moore
- Y&T (not at Karlsruhe)
- Accept
- Mötley Crüe
- Tommy Vance (DJ)
1985
[edit]17 August 1985 (attendance: 50,000)
1986
[edit]16 August 1986 (attendance: 40,000)
- Ozzy Osbourne
- Scorpions
- Def Leppard (drummer Rick Allen's first major concert appearance after the 1984 car accident that resulted in the loss of his arm.)
- Motörhead
- Bad News
- Warlock (first time a woman performed at the festival)
1987
[edit]22 August 1987 (attendance: 65,000)
1988
[edit]20 August 1988 (attendance: 97,800)
- Iron Maiden (Released as part of Eddie's Archive, this was the loudest set in the festival's history.)[11]
- KISS ("It wasn't Kiss at its very best," recalled Paul Stanley. "We were on during the day, and we didn't even have our standard show at that point when we were out of makeup. But, in some ways, Donington is a great type of boot camp, because you can't depend upon anything other than guts and glory to make something work."[12])
- David Lee Roth
- Megadeth
- Guns N' Roses
- Helloween
1990
[edit]18 August 1990 (attendance: 72,000) The entire 1990 festival was simultaneously broadcast live on BBC Radio 1, which had previously recorded festivals for later broadcast.
- Whitesnake (recorded as Live at Donington 1990)
- Aerosmith
- Poison
- Quireboys
- Thunder
1991
[edit]17 August 1991 (attendance: 65,000)
- AC/DC (their portion released as Live at Donington)
- Metallica
- Mötley Crüe
- Queensrÿche
- The Black Crowes
[14] Attendance: 65,000
1992
[edit]22 August 1992 (this was also broadcast live on Radio 1) (attendance: 56,000)
- Iron Maiden (recorded as Live at Donington)
- Skid Row
- Thunder
- Slayer
- W.A.S.P.
- The Almighty (recorded as a bonus disk on Powertrippin')
1994
[edit]4 June 1994 (another festival broadcast live; highlights were transmitted in 1995 and 1996) (attendance: 56,000). This was the first year that two stages were used. Readers of Kerrang! magazine were invited to vote on bands to appear at the festival. Extreme easily won their place on the bill but were bottled for much of their set.
Main stage: |
Second Stage:
|
1995
[edit]26 August 1995 (attendance: 60,000) 1995 was not billed as 'Monsters of Rock' but as 'Escape from the Studio', owing to Metallica headlining on a break from recording the Load album – making them the first band to play the festival four times (while Therapy? became the first to play in consecutive years). Prior to the show, reverend Brian Whitehead held a special service at the Castle Donington village's St Edward church, to combat the "occult forces" that he feared would be unleashed by the event, especially White Zombie.[15]
- Metallica (Their fourth appearance and only appearance as headliner)
- Therapy?
- Skid Row
- Slayer
- Slash's Snakepit
- White Zombie
- Machine Head
- Warrior Soul
- Corrosion of Conformity
1996
[edit]17 August 1996. Ozzy Osbourne and Kiss co-headlined, with Kiss being the final band on stage. (attendance: 50,000)
Main stage:
|
Kerrang! Stage:
|
2006
[edit]3 June 2006 – Milton Keynes Bowl[16]
International events
[edit]1983 West Germany Tour
[edit]West Germany: Dortmund, Westfalenhallen – 2 September 1983 Kaiserslautern, Waldstadion am Erbsenberg – 3 September 1983 Nürnberg, Zeppelinfeld – 4 September 1983
1984 North European Tour
[edit]Sweden: Stockholm, Råsunda Stadium – 25 August 1984
West Germany: Karlsruhe, Wildparkstadion – 1 September 1984
West Germany: Nuremberg, Zeppelinfeld – 2 September 1984
1986 North European Tour
[edit]Sweden Stockholm, Råsunda Stadium – 23 August 1986
- Scorpions
- Ozzy Osbourne
- Def Leppard
- Zero Nine
West Germany: Nuremberg, Zeppelinfeld – 30 August 1986
West Germany: Mannheim, Maimarktgelände – 31 August 1986
1987 European Tour
[edit]Italy: Reggio Emilia, Aeroporto di Reggio Emilia – 26 August 1987
West Germany: Nuremberg, Messegelände – 29 August 1987
West Germany: Pforzheim, Stadion im Brötzinger Tal – 30 August 1987
- Deep Purple
- Dio
- Metallica
- Ratt
- Cinderella
- Helloween
- Pretty Maids (Due to technical reasons, their show in Pforzheim was cancelled)
1988 USA & Europe Tour
[edit]USA: 23 May – 30 July
West Germany: Schweinfurt, Mainwiesen Gelände – 27 August 1988
West Germany: Bochum, Ruhrland Stadion – 28 August 1988
- Iron Maiden
- KISS
- David Lee Roth
- Anthrax
- Testament (Megadeth cancelled)
- Great White
- Treat (did not play in Bochum)
Netherlands: Tilburg, Willem II Stadion – 4 September 1988
Italy: Modena, Festa de l'Unità – 10 September 1988
Spain: Pamplona, Plaza de Toros – 17 September 1988
Spain: Madrid, Casa de Campo – 18 September 1988
Spain: Barcelona, Plaza de Toros – 22 September 1988
- Iron Maiden
- Metallica
- Anthrax
- Helloween
- Manzano
France: Paris, Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy – 24 & 25 September 1988
- Iron Maiden
- Trust – The live album Paris by night was recorded on 25 September
- Anthrax
- Helloween
1990 European Tour
[edit]Sweden: Stockholm, Stockholm Globe Arena – 21 August 1990
West Germany: West Berlin, Waldbühne – 23 August 1990
West Germany: Dortmund, Westfalenhallen – 25 August 1990
Netherlands: Utrecht, Stadion Galgenwaard – 26 August 1990
Italy: Bologna, Arena Parco Nord – 30 August 1990
West Germany: Mannheim, Maimarktgelände – 1 September 1990
Note: This particular show was promoted as "Super Rock 1990".[17]
France: Paris, Hippodrome de Vincennes – 3 September 1990
- Whitesnake
- Aerosmith
- Poison
- The Front
- Faith No More
- Face to Face
- Quireboys
Note: Face to Face was a French band related to Trust. Faith No More was not on the ticket list but was present to the show.[18]
1991 European Tour
[edit]Denmark: Copenhagen, Gentofte Stadion – 10 August 1991
Poland: Chorzów, Śląski Stadion – 13 August 1991
Hungary: Budapest, Népstadion – 22 August 1991
Germany: München, Galopprennbahn München Riem, 24 August 1991
Switzerland: Basel, St. Jakobs Stadium, 25 August 1991
Belgium: Hasselt, Belgium, Domein Kiewit – 30 August 1991
Netherlands: Nijmegen, Goffert Stadion – 1 September 1991
Germany: Mainz, Finthen Army Airfield – 7 September 1991
Austria: Graz, Liebenauer Stadion – 11 September 1991
Italy: Modena, Festa dell'Unità – 14 September 1991
France: Paris, Hippodrome de Vincennes – 21 September 1991[19][20]
Spain: Barcelona, Estadio Olímpico Lluís Companys – 25 September 1991
Soviet Union: Moscow, Tushino Airfield – 28 September 1991
- AC/DC
- Metallica
- Pantera
- The Black Crowes
- E.S.T. (Russian heavy metal band)
Partially released as For Those About to Rock, Monsters in Moscow. The versions of "Whole Lotta Rosie" and "The Jack" that AC/DC performed at this concert, were released on two of AC/DC's live albums, AC/DC Live and AC/DC Live: 2 CD Collector's Edition. Metallica's performances of "Harvester of Sorrow" and "Creeping Death" from this show were used as B-sides for the "Sad but True" single in different regional editions. Pantera's "Cowboys from Hell" performance is featured as a playable song in the video games Guitar Hero Smash Hits and Rock Band 4. Tushino Airfield was recreated as a virtual venue in Guitar Hero Metallica.
1992 South European tour
[edit]Italy: Reggio Emilia, Arena Festa Nazionale Dell'Unita' – 12 September 1992
- Iron Maiden – the song "Heaven Can Wait" of A Real Live One album was recorded there
- Black Sabbath
- Megadeth
- Pantera
- Testament
- Warrant
- Pino Scotto
The bands Danzig and Gun both canceled their appearances at the festival. They are featured on the poster for the event.
Spain: Barcelona, Plaza de Toros – 14 September 1992
Spain: San Sebastián, Velódromo de Anoeta – 17 September 1992
Spain: Madrid, Las Arenas Plaza de Toros – 18 September 1992
Spain: Zaragoza, Municipal Tent – 19 September 1992
1994 South American Tour
[edit]Brazil: São Paulo, Estádio do Pacaembu – 27 August 1994
- KISS
- Slayer
- Black Sabbath (with Tony Martin on vocals)
- Suicidal Tendencies
- Angra
- Viper
- Raimundos
- Dr. Sin
Chile: Santiago, Estación Mapocho – 1 September 1994
- Kiss
- Black Sabbath (with Tony Martin on vocals)
- Slayer
- Tumulto
Argentina: Buenos Aires, River Plate Stadium – 3 September 1994
- KISS (Headliner)
- Black Sabbath (with Tony Martin on vocals)
- Slayer
- Hermética (Manowar was announced but never got to play)
- Gatos Sucios
1995 South American Tour
[edit]Brazil: São Paulo, Estádio do Pacaembu – September 1995
2nd
|
Chile: Santiago, Teatro Caupolicán – September 1995
Argentina: Buenos Aires, Ferro Carril Oeste Stadium – September 1995
9th |
10th
|
1996 Brazil
[edit]Brazil: São Paulo, Estádio do Pacaembu – 24 August 1996
- Iron Maiden
- Skid Row
- Motörhead
- Biohazard
- Raimundos
- Helloween
- King Diamond
- Mercyful Fate
- Héroes del Silencio
This event marked the last performance of the original lineup of Skid Row, before parting with singer Sebastian Bach and drummer Rob Affuso.
1997 Argentina
[edit]Argentina: Buenos Aires, Ferro Carril Oeste Stadium – 13 December 1997
- Whitesnake (Headliner)
- Megadeth
- Pantera
- Queensrÿche
- Riff (Argentine band)
- Halógena
1998 South American Tour
[edit]Brazil: São Paulo - Estádio Ícaro de Castro Melo - near Ibirapuera Park – 26 September 1998
Van Halen was supposed to be the headliner, but it never became official or happened.
Chile: Santiago, Velódromo Estadio Nacional – 10 December 1998
Iron Maiden was going to appear at the festival as a headliner, but they were forced to cancel due to the arrest of Augusto Pinochet in London.
Argentina: Buenos Aires, Vélez Sársfield Stadium – 12 December 1998
1999 Argentina
[edit]Argentina: Buenos Aires, River Plate Stadium – 14 May 1999
Marilyn Manson was going to appear at the festival, but they were forced to cancel due to the Columbine High School massacre
2004 Italy
[edit]Italy: Como, Stadio Sinigaglia – 13 July 2004
- Deep Purple
- Status Quo
- Cheap Trick
- Settevite
2005 South American Tour
[edit]Argentina: Buenos Aires, Ferro Carril Oeste Stadium – 11 September 2005
- Judas Priest
- Whitesnake
- Rata Blanca
- Tristemente Celebres
- Lörihen
Chile: Santiago, Pista Atlética Estadio Nacional – 13 September 2005
2006 Spain
[edit]Spain: Zaragoza, Feria de Zaragoza – 18 June 2006
2007 Spain
[edit]Spain: Zaragoza, Feria de Zaragoza – June 2007
22nd |
23rd
|
2008 Chile & Spain
[edit]Chile: Santiago, Pista Atlética Estadio Nacional – 1 April 2008
- Ozzy Osbourne (Headliner)
- Korn
- Black Label Society
Spain: Zaragoza, Feria de Zaragoza – July 2008
11th
|
12th (Cancelled due to rain)
|
2013 Brazil
[edit]Brazil: São Paulo, Anhembi Convention Center – October 2013
19th
|
20th
|
2015 South American Tour
[edit]Brazil: São Paulo, Anhembi Convention Center – April 2015
25th
|
26th
|
- Attend/Capacity/Gross Sales: 72,337 / 76,428 / $6,365,540 (1 sellout)
Brazil: Curitiba, Pedreira Paulo Leminski – 28 April 2015
- Attend/Capacity/Gross Sales: 12,820 / 20,000 / $1,038,600
Brazil: Porto Alegre, Estádio Passo d'Areia – 30 April 2015
- Ozzy Osbourne
- Judas Priest
- Motörhead
- Zerodoze
- Attend/Capacity/Gross Sales: 14,199 / 19,600 / $997,006
Argentina: Buenos Aires, Ciudad del Rock – 2 May 2015
- Ozzy Osbourne
- Judas Priest
- Motörhead
- Carajo
- Malón
- Plan 4
- El Buen Salvaje
- Attend/Capacity/Gross Sales: 26,354 / 35,000 / $1,304,240
2016 Germany
[edit]Germany: Sankt Goarshausen, Loreley Freilichtbühne – 17 June 2016; Bietigheim-Bissingen, Festplatz am Viadukt - 18 June 2016
2017 Argentina
[edit]Argentina: Buenos Aires, Tecnopolis – 4 November 2017
2023 Colombia
[edit]Colombia: Bogotá, Estadio El Campín – 15 April 2023
2023 Brazil
[edit]Brazil: São Paulo, Allianz Parque – 22 April 2023
2025 Brazil
[edit]Brazil: São Paulo, Allianz Parque – 19 April 2025
2025 Colombia
[edit]Colombia: Bogotá, Coliseo MedPlus – 30 April 2025
In popular culture
[edit]Saxon wrote the song "And the Bands Played On" about their appearance at the 1980 festival.
The 1986 appearance by Bad News was featured in the TV mockumentary More Bad News.
In 1993, the Monsters of Rock radio show debuted. Harlan Hendrickson, host and creator of the Monsters of Rock, broadcasts from the rock radio station WRIF in Detroit. The Monsters of Rock is currently syndicated nationally/internationally through United Stations Radio Networks where it currently airs in over 60 markets in the United States alone. The program currently holds the number-one or number-two slots among males 25–54 on the majority of stations that carry it. Guests on the show have included of AC/DC, Kiss, Van Halen, Motörhead, Cinderella, Ozzy Osbourne, Bon Jovi, Cheap Trick, Mötley Crüe, Ratt, Slayer and Poison.
In 1994, Beavis and Butt-Head episode "Take a Number", Beavis and Butt-Head attempt to get tickets to Creatures of Rock which is a parody of Monsters of Rock
In the 2005 Half Man Half Biscuit song "Mate of the Bloke" on their album Achtung Bono, the protagonist sings of legal action taken against him by More O'Ferrall for spraying the legend "in church hall if wet" onto a billboard for Monsters of Rock.
In 2012, Harlan Hendrickson teamed up with Larry Morand and Mike London to launch the "Monsters of Rock Cruise",[21] which is a multi day music cruise celebrating the Castle Donington festival. Artists such as Saxon, UFO, Cinderella, Tesla, The Quireboys and others from the original festival have been featured on the cruise.[citation needed]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Plaque in honour of Monsters of Rock co-founder presented at Download | NME.COM". NME. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
- ^ "Monsters of Rock: A personal history". Archived from the original on 22 July 2015. Retrieved 13 July 2012.
- ^ "When Heavy Metal Thunder Rumbled in Moscow". Ozy.com. June 2018.
- ^ "Monsters of Rock: A personal history". Archived from the original on 16 July 2015. Retrieved 13 July 2012.
- ^ Elliott, Paul (August 2015). "Biff Byford's Top 10 Festival Moments". Classic Rock #213. p. 123.
- ^ "The Monsters of Rock". Ukrockfestivals.com. June 2021. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
- ^ from a fax sent by concert promoters MCP to Guinness Publishing on 18 April 1997, providing background information for the publisher's book Rockopedia
- ^ "Monsters of Rock . Castle Donington 1984". Ukrockfestivals.com.
- ^ "Monsters of Rock . Castle Donington 1985". Ukrockfestivals.com.
- ^ "Monsters of Rock .Castle Donington 1987". Ukrockfestivals.com.
- ^ from a fax sent by concert promoters MCP to Guinness Publishing on 18 April 1997, providing background information for the publisher's book Rockopedia
- ^ Brannigan, Paul (July 2015). "Live! – Kiss". Classic Rock. No. 211. p. 112.
- ^ "The Monsters of Rock". Ukrockfestivals.com. June 2021. Retrieved 26 July 2021.
- ^ "The Monsters of Rock". Ukrockfestivals.com. October 2013. Retrieved 29 June 2021.
- ^ from a fax sent by concert promoters MCP to Guinness Publishing on 18 April 1997, providing background information for the publisher's book Rockopedia
- ^ "Monsters of Rock 2006". Archived from the original on 14 October 2013. Retrieved 13 July 2012.
- ^ "Superrock". Frank-hameister.com. 2 February 2016. Retrieved 2 March 2016.
- ^ "Mes concerts: Monsters of Rock, le 03 septembre 1990..." Riff-n-kiff.over-blog.com. Retrieved 7 December 2021.
- ^ "AC/DC tour history". AC-DC.net. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
- ^ "Paris, France - Hippodrome De Vincennes / September 21, 1991". Metallica.com. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
- ^ "Monsters Of Rock Cruise 2016 (East) Shredders From The Deep | February 22, 2016". 10 October 2017. Archived from the original on 10 October 2017. Retrieved 7 December 2021.