Mike Saunders

For the football player, see Mike Saunders (Canadian football). For the Jamaican soccer player, see Mike Saunders (soccer).

Mike Saunders (born May 1952),[1] better known as "Metal Mike" Saunders, is a rock critic and the singer of the Californian punk band Angry Samoans. He is credited with coining the music genre label "heavy metal" in a record review for Humble Pie's As Safe As Yesterday Is in the November 12, 1970 issue of Rolling Stone. (The original text is shown in the VH1 Classic documentary Heavy: The Story of Metal [2] from 2007). Six months later in 1971, he used the phrase again while reviewing Sir Lord Baltimore's first album, Kingdom Come, in the pages of Creem magazine.[3]

Biography

Saunders was born and grew up in Little Rock, Arkansas. He graduated from the University of Texas at Austin in 1973 with a degree in statistics; eventually he received another bachelor's degree in accounting from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. Saunders kept his day job as an accountant throughout his years as lead singer and guitarist for the Angry Samoans.

Saunders' political incorrectness and personal attacks in his lyrics earned him (and the Angry Samoans) significant notoriety in the early 1980s, especially due to their song "Get Off the Air", an ad hominem attack upon well-known KROQ-FM DJ Rodney Bingenheimer.

Saunders played drums in these bands:

Saunders also drummed on all the "Metal Mike" CDs usually missing from Angry Samoans discographies.

Although he maintains that "drums are my best instrument," Saunders has written over 1,000 rock songs in his lifetime, all methodically recorded to mono on oldfashioned Sony portable kitchen-table cassette recorders.[4]

Discography

See also: Angry Samoans

As "Metal Mike", he recorded:

References

  1. "Michael (Mike) Earl Saunders (1952–) aka: "Metal Mike"". The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture. Retrieved 7 March 2014.
  2. "Heavy: The Story of Metal | Show Cast, Episodes, Guides, Trailers, Web Exclusives, Previews". VH1.com. 2009-03-16. Retrieved 2012-02-01.
  3. Saunders, Mike, Kingdom Come review, Creem, May 1971. Retrieved 2007-02-14.
  4. Blayk, bonze Anne Rose, "How Angry Was My Samoa...", ANGRY SAMOANS official website, June 1998. Retrieved 2010-09-14.

External links