Ex-SCORPIONS drummer HERMAN RAREBELL: “for me, the band has been over since 1996”

26-03-2025
In a new interview with Talking The Talk With Don, former SCORPIONS drummer Herman Rarebell, who wrote the lyrics for some of the group’s most classic songs, spoke about a possible reunion with his longtime bandmates. He said: “The last drummer they had was James Kottak. He passed away. I’m very sad about this because he was a good guy. And then I wrote an e-mail to them. I said, ‘Why don’t we do something together again?’ And you know what? I didn’t even get an answer. After 20 years being with those fuckers, not even an answer. I said, ‘Okay, fuck you. Fine.’ Because I can do my own thing — no problem. They can’t. Because the chemistry we had was unique. And if you fuck that up, it’s gonna be hard to replace. And the people out there, the fans, they’re not stupid. They can hear it immediately. They wrote me so many e-mails: ‘What happened?’ I don’t wanna explain all the time. Everybody can do in life what they want. That’s why we have a free will. And so I respect this.
“For me, the band has been over since 1996,” Herman explained. “There was nothing which they released after I left which knocked me out, where I said, ‘Wow, this is amazing.’ Even the last album, Rudolf (Schenker, SCORPIONS guitarist) told me, ‘It’s gonna be like the ‘Blackout’ album.’ I said, ‘It has nothing to do with ‘Blackout’. You should have got Dieter Dierks, (SCORPIONS‘ longtime) producer, back with the band and me writing some lyrics for you. And then we’d have a great album. But otherwise, what is this? Why you do this?’ No answer.”
Asked at which point he felt SCORPIONS were starting to “lose the plot” with their musical direction, Herman said: “Really after (the ballad) ‘Wind Of Change’ (from the 1990 ‘Crazy World’ album), you could see the direction. Klaus (Meine, SCORPIONS singer) obviously was all for it to go in this direction, but in my heart, I’m still a hard rock guy. So for me, I wanted to rock more, not go in ballad land. For me, there was nothing to do anymore from the creativity point. So, I said to myself, ‘Well, you have to do something else.’ And that’s exactly what I did.
“When I look back on it, there’s nothing to regret,” Rarebell added. “Look at the band now. As (former SCORPIONS guitarist) Michael Schenker says in every interview, ‘What have they done after Herman left?’ There’s no more hits. The fans write me many e-mails: ‘Why don’t you do something that you did before on (1980’s) ‘Animal Magnetism’, (1982’s) ‘Blackout’, (1979’s) ‘Lovedrive’ and this kind of albums?, which were pure rock albums. And this is where my heart is, and that’s what I wanted to do.”
In January, now SCORPIONS drummer Mikkey DEE, who was previously a member of MOTÖRHEAD for 23 years, revealed that he was recovering after spending most of the holiday season battling a “very serious blood infection (Sepsis).”
In a post on social media, Dee said he spent three weeks in a hospital in his hometown of Gothenburg, Sweden, during which he underwent “several operations.” He thanked his doctors and nurses for their “excellent care” and said he was back “home fighting this bastard bacteria” and that his “numbers are all going in the right direction.” Dee added he had a lot of “recovery and rehab” ahead and was aiming to be “back on the drum stool” for SCORPIONS‘ upcoming residency.
Dee offered more details about his health setback in an interview with the Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet, saying the medical emergency began with a sprained foot that quickly swelled and became infected.
“It was surgery right away, the first of three,” Dee said. “They cut away what was dead and infected and badly infested. It was not a good journey I was on… Another day and I’d be playing drums with [late MOTÖRHEAD frontman] Lemmy in heaven. I can say that.”

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