Although more exploratory and ambitious than his eponymous first band, incendiary guitar genius
debut. In the early '70s,
. He then rose to fame as
.
Wanting to call his own shots,
Ronnie Montrose turned down an invitation from
Mott the Hoople and brought together
Montrose. The self-titled debut remains a metal masterpiece, featuring a young
Sammy Hagar belting out sizzlers like "Bad Motor Scooter," "Space Station No. 5," and "Rock the Nation." Hardly an overnight success,
Montrose subtly set a standard that many hard rock bands, particularly
Van Halen, would strive to achieve. But
Hagar was fired after the disjointed sophomore effort,
Paper Money, and the band slowly disintegrated while still squeezing out two more meandering LPs.
Open Fire was credited solely to
Ronnie Montrose, and the guitarist became a hired gun again (playing the "agony of defeat" solo in the Wide World of Sports theme).
He then formed
Gamma in 1979, reuniting with latter-
Montrose personnel
Jim Alcivar (keyboards) and pre-
Night Ranger Alan Fitzgerald (bass), plus
Davey Pattison on vocals and
Skip Gillette on drums. Numerous lineup changes began immediately with the first record, the imaginatively titled
Gamma 1, as another old bandmate,
Denny Carmassi, replaced
Gillette and
Glenn Letsch took over bass duties. "Voyager" off
Gamma 2 made some waves, and the band toured America and Europe.
Mitchell Froom (late of
Bruzer) replaced
Alcivar for the keyboard-focused
Gamma 3, another intriguing record, with "No Destination" and especially "Right the First Time" garnering some FM airtime.
Ronnie Montrose abruptly ditched the band mid-tour with
Foreigner. Fed up with label pressures, the guitarist now keeps a low profile, periodically recording or producing, though he reunited the original
Montrose briefly.
Carmassi joined
Heart in time for the
Wilson sisters' '80s revival, and also drummed for Coverdale/Page.
–
Whitney Z. Gomes, Rovi