HANOI ROCKS guitarist
Andy McCoy has slammed
MÖTLEY CRÜE over their account of
HANOI drummer
Nicholas "Razzle" Dingley's death and
CRÜE bassist
Nikki Sixx's heroin overdose, as published in
CRÜE's best-selling band autobiography,
"The Dirt: Confessions of the World's Most Notorious Rock Band". Asked by Norway's
Metal Express to comment on the book's description of the events surrounding the tragic car accident caused by
MÖTLEY CRÜE singer
Vince Neil in 1984 that killed his passenger,
HANOI drummer
Razzle,
McCoy said, "Bullshit. Pure lies. I was there. What happened was
Razzle disappeared, and so did
Vince. The rest of us were chilling out, man. And he had a wife who was seven months pregnant. After an hour or so, she started getting worried. So me and
T-Bone,
Tommy Lee [
MÖTLEY CRÜE drummer], took his car and we went looking for him. We drove past this accident. So I was like, 'What color was the car he was driving around?' 'Hey, man, we just passed the fucking scene of an accident with a bright red sports car all smashed up.' I saw
Razzle's hat on the street, I went up, 'What the fuck's happened?' They said, 'You have to go to this and this hospital.' In the hospital, I walk in with
Tommy, and I was asking about
Razzle, and this doctor walks up, 'Anybody here know this guy called
Razzle?' I said, 'Yeah, I do, his family.' 'Sorry, your friend has passed away.' I thought he might have a broken leg or something. I had to call the band, and you don't tell this kind of news over the telephone. I asked them to come to the hospital. And it was a pretty sad scene altogether."
In the same interview,
McCoy was asked if he has spoken to any of the members of
MÖTLEY CRÜE since publicly voicing his displeasure over
CRÜE's decision to title their box set
"Music To Crash Your Car To" (a move that
HANOI ROCKS frontman
Michael Monroe had previously called "beyond disrespectful").
"The only one I talk to nowadays is
Tommy Lee,"
Andy replied. "I don't know…
Nikki Sixx has got something against me. Maybe he doesn't like that I tell the truth about his fucking heroin overdose. He was never beat up with no fucking baseball bats. The only place he got beat was on his heart to keep it going and with my hands, and giving him a breath of life. And he's a lard-ass anyway, so it wasn't easy carrying him around and trying to get him to wake up — fucking dragging him to the shower and shit. And then having to read how he was O.D.ed and beaten up with baseball bats and all this crap. C'mon, wake up. I warned him that the stuff was strong. But he wanted to be a tough boy, but with that kind of shit, you don't wanna be a tough boy, 'cause it might be a very thin line between life and death you're playing with. Is it worth it? No."
Listen to the entire 12-minute interview at
this location.