List of Scorpions members

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(left to right) Mikkey Dee, Matthias Jabs, Klaus Meine, Rudolf Schenker and Pawel Maciwoda.
Two lineups of Scorpions in 2010 (top) and 2016 (bottom).

Scorpions are a German rock band from Hanover, formed in 1965. The band went through numerous changes in personnel in its early years. Founding by rhythm/lead guitarist Rudolf Schenker and drummer Wolfgang Dziony; both at that point shared lead vocals. In addition to them, the band also included lead/rhythm guitarist Karl-Heinz Vollmer and bassist Achim Kirchhoff.

1960s

By 1967, Schenker, realizing that he could not sing and play the guitar at the same time, invited the 15-year-old Werner Hoyer to take the place of the vocalist.[1]

At the end of that year, Hoyer and Vollmer left, and their places were soon taken by Bernd Hegner and Ulrich Worobiec.

In the spring of 1968, bass guitarist Achim Kirchhoff was replaced by Lothar Heimberg.

In late, 1969 Hegner and Worobiec also left. After that, the group settled on a lineup which included lead vocalist Klaus Meine, lead guitarist Michael Schenker (Rudolf's younger brother), bass-guitarist Lothar Heimberg and drummer Wolfgang Dziony. It is in this composition that they recorded their debut album Lonesome Crow, released in 1972.[2][3]

1970s and 1980s

Dziony left after the album's release, and was briefly replaced by Werner Löhr. In late 1972 the drummer was Israeli born American Joe Wyman and when he left in December, Dziony came back to complete a tour. For the January 1973 tour with Rory Gallagher they had Helmut Eisenhut on drums.[4] When Eisenhut died and Heimberg left in the summer of 1973, they briefly played with the rhythm section Ewi (bass) and Hal Fingerhood (drums).

When Michael Schenker left to join UFO in July 1973,[5] Rudolf Schenker and Meine briefly disbanded the group and joined Dawn Road, featuring guitarist Uli Jon Roth (who had already replaced Schenker at a festival show in June with Eisenhut back on drums[6]), bass-guitarist Francis Buchholz, drummer Jürgen Rosenthal (later in Eloy) and keyboardist Achim Kirschning; the six-piece later opted to adopt the Scorpions moniker, and in 1974 released Fly to the Rainbow.[7]

Rosenthal left after the recording of Fly to the Rainbow, being replaced first by Jürgen Fechter and later by Rudy Lenners, who performed on In Trance and Virgin Killer.[8][9] In 1977, Lenners was replaced by Herman Rarebell, whose first recording with the band was Taken by Force.[10] Roth left Scorpions the following year,[11] which he has since explained was because he "began getting dissatisfied with the direction of the music" the band were making.[12] Michael Schenker briefly returned to the band after being fired from UFO in late 1978, performing on four tracks for the album Lovedrive, although he was replaced the following year by Matthias Jabs who had joined around the same time.[13] The Scorpions lineup of Meine, Rudolf Schenker, Jabs, Buchholz and Rarebell remained constant from 1978 and through the 1980s.[2]

1990s

After 19 years with the band, bassist Francis Buchholz left Scorpions in 1992. He was replaced by Ralph Rieckermann later in the year.[14] Drummer Rarebell also left four years later, claiming that he was unsatisfied with the band's changing musical direction, and the lack of songwriting input he was able to have in the band.[15] He was replaced in 1996 by James Kottak,[16] after Curt Cress performed on Pure Instinct.[17]

21st century

Rieckermann left Scorpions in 2003, with Paweł Mąciwoda taking his place early the following year.[18] Former Motörhead drummer Mikkey Dee replaced Kottak in the band in September 2016.[19]

Image=Scorpions -

Members

Current

Image Name Years active Instruments Release contributions
Rudolf Schenker 1965–present
  • rhythm, lead and slide guitars
  • backing vocals
  • lead vocals (1965–1967 and occasionally after)
all Scorpions releases
Klaus Meine 1969–present
  • lead and backing vocals
  • live rhythm guitar and tambourine
Matthias Jabs 1978–present
  • lead and rhythm guitars
  • backing vocals
all Scorpions releases from Lovedrive (1979) onwards
Paweł Mąciwoda 2004–present
  • bass
  • backing vocals
all Scorpions releases from Unbreakable (2004) onwards
Mikkey Dee 2016–present drums

Former

Image Name Years active Instruments Release contributions
Wolfgang Dziony
  • 1965–1972
  • 1972
  • drums
  • backing vocals
  • lead vocals (1965–1967)
Lonesome Crow (1972)
Achim Kirchhoff 1965–1968 (died 1977) bass none
Karl-Heinz Vollmer 1965–1967 lead and rhythm guitar
Werner Hoyer 1967 lead vocals
Bernd Hegner 1967–1969
Gerd Andre[20] lead vocals
Ulrich Worobiec lead and slide guitar
Lothar Heimberg 1968–1973
  • bass
  • backing vocals
Lonesome Crow (1972)
Michael Schenker
  • 1969–1973
  • 1978–1979 (session)
  • 2006 (guest)
  • lead and slide guitar
  • backing vocals
Werner Löhr 1972 drums none
Joe Wyman
Helmut Eisenhut 1973 (until his death)
Hal Fingerhood 1973 drums none
"Ewi" 1973 bass none
Francis Buchholz 1973–1992 (died 2026)
  • bass
  • backing vocals
  • keyboards (1983–1984)
Uli Jon Roth
  • 1973–1978
  • 2006 (guest)
  • lead and slide guitar
  • backing and lead vocals
  • all Scorpions releases from Fly to the Rainbow (1974) to Tokyo Tapes (1978)
  • Live at Wacken Open Air 2006 (2007)
Achim Kirschning
  • 1973–1974 (1974–1977 session/touring)
  • keyboards
  • synthesizers
  • Mellotron
Jürgen Rosenthal 1973–1974 drums Fly to the Rainbow (1974)
Jürgen Fechter 1974–1975 none
Rudy Lenners 1975–1977
  • In Trance (1975)
  • Virgin Killer (1976)
Herman Rarebell
  • 1977–1996
  • 2006 (guest)
  • drums
  • percussion
  • backing vocals
  • keyboards (1991)
Ralph Rieckermann 1993–2003
  • bass
  • backing vocals
all Scorpions releases from Face the Heat (1993) to Bad for Good (2002) – two new tracks
James Kottak 1996–2016 (died 2024)
  • drums
  • backing vocals
all Scorpions releases from Eye II Eye (1999) to Forever and a Day (2016)

Session

Image Name Years active Instruments Release contributions
Allan Macmillan 1979–1980
  • strings and horns arrangements
  • conductor
Animal Magnetism (1980)
Adele Arman violins
Victoria Richard
Paul Arman viola
Richard Arman cello
Charles Elliot double bass
Melvin Berman 1979–1980 (died 2008) oboe
George Stimpson 1979–1980 French horns
Brad Wamaar
Tom Croucier 1981–1982 bass Blackout (1982)
Don Dokken backing vocals
Lee Aaron 1987–1988 Savage Amusement (1988)
Peter Baltes vocals
Koen van Baal
  • 1990
  • 1996
  • keyboards
  • arrangements
Jim Vallance 1990 keyboards Crazy World (1990)
Roy Tesse "gang" vocals
Dries van der Schuyt
Ria Makker
Gerard v.d. Pot
Louis Spillman
Wolfgang Praetz
Inka Esser
Claudia Frohling
Cliff Roles
Peter Angmeer
Rusty Powell
Tony Ioannoua
Jim Lewis
Erwin Musper
  • "gang" vocals
  • "bang" vocals
Keith Olsen
Marcel Gelderblom "bang" vocals
Mirjam Erftemeijer
Henk Horden
Patrick Ulenberg
John Webster 1993 keyboards Face the Heat (1993)
Luke Herzog
  • keyboards
  • arrangements
Helen Donath opera voice
Rhian Gittins girl's voice
Paul Laine backing vocals
Mark LaFrance
Bruce Fairbairn 1993 (died 1999)
Mark Hudson 1993
Curt Cress 1996
  • drums
  • percussion
Pure Instinct (1996)
Pitti Hecht percussion
Luke Herzog keyboards
David Foster
Claude Gaudette
Peter Wolf 1998–1999 keyboards and piano Eye II Eye (1999)
Mick Jones acoustic guitar
Michelle Wolf backing vocals
Siedah Garrett
Lynn Davis
James Ingram 1998–1999 (died 2019)
Phil Perry 1998–1999
Kevin Dorsey
Lyn Liechty 2000 vocals Moment of Glory (2000)
Ray Wilson
Zucchero
Guenther Becker sitar
Stefan Schrupp drum and computer programming
Gumpoldtskirchener Spatzen, Vienna children's choir
Vince Pirillo choir
Kai Petersen
Michael Perfler
Susie Webb backing vocals
Zoë Nicholas
Rita Campbell
Melanie Marshall
Ken Taylor bass
Barry Sparks 2003–2004 Unbreakable (2004)
Ingo Powitzer
Ralph de Jongh backing vocals
Joss Mennen
Alex Jansen
Jody's Kids Choir additional vocals
Billy Corgan 2006–2017 vocals Humanity: Hour I (2007)
Eric Bazilian guitar
John 5
Russ Irwin piano
Harry Sommerdahl programming
Jason Paige backing vocals
Jeanette Olsson
Desmond Child
James Michael
Angela Whittaker voice-overs
Roman Shaw Child
David Campbell orchestra conductor
Tarja Turunen 2009 vocals Sting in the Tail (2010)
Mikael Nord Andersson gang vocals
Ingo Powitzer 2020–2021
  • additional guitars and bass
  • guitar solo
  • additional background vocals
  • claps
  • guitar arrangements
Rock Believer (2022)
Jakob Himmelein
  • additional background vocals
  • claps
Alex Malek
Hans-Martin Buff
Pitti Hecht percussion

Timeline

Lineups

References

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