Motörhead recently celebrated 35 years together with the release of a live DVD documenting their most recent world tour.

Titled 'The World Is Ours Vol 1 -- Everywhere Further Than Everyplace Else,' the three-DVD set includes an entire concert from Chile's Teatro Caupolican, as well as clips from additional shows on the tour and two audio CDs.

Now on the road as part of Gigantour, a traveling metal fest featuring Megadeth, Volbeat and Lacuna Coil, one-of-a-kind Motörhead founder Lemmy Kilmister took a few minutes recently to catch up with Noisecreep.

Lemmy, are you happy with the new live package?

I'm quite happy with it. It's us. I mean, it's something we hope the fans like a lot, but we do, too. It's us.

What were the first records that caught your attention as a kid? What made you want to get into music?

Buddy Holly and Elvis.

So, classic rock 'n' roll?

Well it wasn't classic back then -- it was just rock 'n' roll [laughs].

Did you enjoy your time playing in the space-rock outfit Hawkwind?

It was a really good band for a awhile, but unfortunately, there was a lot of bulls--- going on. But it all worked out, because without it, we wouldn't have gotten to Motörhead.

'Motörhead' was a song you'd written Hawkwind, right?

Right, a B-side I'd written for them. The last song before I was fired.

Watch Lemmy Talking About His Split With Hawkwind



Lemmy, there are lots of petitions online to try and get Motörhead into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Do you care about all of that?

Not at all. Have you been there? What a monumental waste of space. The biggest room there is the freaking gift shop. Do you know what I mean? It's all politics, that place. All a load of f---king politics.

You're known for your interest in World War II and memorabilia collection, with an emphasis on Nazi artifacts. Is there anything out there you'd love to get your hands on?

There's lot of good stuff. Lots of Hermann Goering stuff I'd really like. He had several knives and swords made that I'd like to get my hands on, some really rare and beautiful stuff.

What do you treasure most in your own collection?

I've got a nice set of swords with Damascus steel blades that's pretty rare. There's only about 10 of them made.