Q&A
Michael Schenker
The influential guitarist on immortality, alcoholism and why he’ll never make peace with elder brother Scorpion Rudolf.
Interview: Henry Yates
MATTHIAS RETHMANN/PRESS
For better or worse, Michael Schenker’s reputation precedes him. Born in West Germany in 1955, the wunderkind guitarist joined elder brother Rudolf for the Scorpions’ 1972 debut Lonesome Crow, then split for UFO and a run of de-facto solo projects.
As he rightly points out, his influence is towering: without Schenker’s melodic pyrotechnics on classics like Another Piece Of Meat and Love To Love, heavy-mob acolytes such as Dave Mustaine and Kirk Hammett might never have become the players they are.
Among the rock press, meanwhile, Schenker is infamous for semi-coherent rambles that leave them with not a lot to write about.
Today’s conversation begins inauspiciously, with a shaggy-dog story about his move to Brighton threatening to swallow our entire allotted time. But, with a hard nudge, we finally get him on point.