The stars bringing the metal (and hard rock) to the pedals

10 min read

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Rock and heavy metal music has soundtracked many a bike edit, and we know a lot of mountain bikers listen to it to get hyped up to ride – us among them! It turns out it goes the other way, too, with some big names from the harder end of the musical spectrum enjoying a spot of MTB action. But why? The relationship between bikes and music goes back to 1970s legends such as Bob Weir, of hippy favourites the Grateful Dead. Back in the day, the Californian guitarist used to go mountain biking with his friend, MTB pioneer and Dead ‘Party Krew’ member Gary Fisher. As they rode the trails of Marin County, Bob kept a cassette recorder taped to the handlebar of his Cannondale, in case musical inspiration should come to him.

More recently, Pearl Jam vocalist Eddie Vedder has spoken of going on rides with the late Chris Cornell (Soundgarden, Temple of the Dog, Audioslave), Nine Inch Nails mainman Trent Reznor and his family have a fleet of bikes including both electric and regular MTBs, and Justin Chancellor, bass player with epic prog-metallers TOOL, can often be spotted on his hardtail in-between shows. Guns N’ Roses bassist Duff McKagan has also been papped in the saddle (but apparently doesn’t go mountain biking on a regular basis), and Dutch symphonic metal star Mark Jansen (Epica, After Forever, MaYaN) has been known to enjoy the odd MTB ride despite being a roadie at heart.

Veering away from rock a bit, the late Keith Flint of The Prodigy was a fan of blinged-out hardtails, and Simon Gallup from goth icons The Cure has also professed to a passion for MTBing. Sadly-missed Beastie Boy MCA (Adam Yauch) reportedly had a stake in legendary New York mountain bike brand Brooklyn Machine Works, which he sold to Pharrell Williams (Pharrell, NERD, The Neptunes). We also have it on good authority that American singer Curtis Stigers (who had a UK top 10 hit with I Wonder Why back in the ’90s) is an avid MTBer!

Dust ’n’ (collar)bones

Riding gives these stars a break from their busy lives, providing them with a way to keep fit and get out into nature, while also enjoying some welcome anonymity. Mixing music with bikes can have its downsides, of

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