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A Fast Ride Out of Here: Confessions of Rock's Most Dangerous Man

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'I don't think I was ever sober for long enough to get a hangover. I thought it was normal to inject drugs. I saw it as a lifestyle - my job., But it becomes pretty sad when you're in, say, Vienna and spending all your time trying to find a needle exchange.' - Pete Way There are rock memoirs and then there is this one. A Fast Ride Out of Here tells a story that is so shocking, so outrageous, so packed with excess and leading to such uproar and tragic consequences as to be almost beyond compare. Put simply, in terms of jaw-dropping incident, self-destruction and all-round craziness, Pete Way's rock'n'roll life makes even Keith Richards's appear routine and Ozzy Osbourne seem positively mild-mannered in comparison., Not for nothing did Nikki Sixx, bassist with LA shock-rockers Motley Crue and who 'died' for eight minutes following a heroin overdose in 1988, consider that he was a disciple of and apprenticed to Way. During a forty-year career as founding member and bassist of the venerated British hard rock band UFO, and which has also included a stint in his hell-raising buddy Ozzy's band, Pete Way has both scaled giddy heights and plunged to unfathomable lows. A heroin addict for more than ten years, he blew millions on drugs and booze and left behind him a trail of chaos and carnage., The human cost of this runs to six marriages, four divorces, a pair of estranged daughters and two dead ex-wives. Latterly, Way has fought cancer, but has survived it all and is now ready to tell his extraordinary tale. By turns hilarious, heart-rending, mordant, scabrous, self-lacerating, brutally honest and entirely compulsive, A Fast Ride Out of Here will be a monument to rock'n'roll debauchery on an epic, unparalleled scale and also to one man's sheer indestructability., 'They call me a madman but compared to Pete Way, I'm out of my league.' - Ozzy Osbourne

272 pages, Paperback

Published March 13, 2018

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Pete Way

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 59 reviews
Profile Image for Michael.
671 reviews23 followers
October 25, 2025
I was a huge fan of UFO in the 1970's and had seen them a couple times. Great music and they put on quite a show. I guess I never knew just how extreme Pete Way became with the Sex, Drugs, and Rock N' Roll lifestyle. How he lived as long as he did with the number of drugs and alcohol he consumed is amazing. Lots of stories about Pete and other famous musicians. I really liked the comments through the book from his bandmates, family and friends. Things could be very depressing at times, but it was a very good memoir. Worth picking up if you are a fan.
Profile Image for Megan.
82 reviews
October 11, 2017
mildly interesting as I didn't know much about ufo even though they were around with a lot of other classic bands at the time. typical rock star story
Profile Image for Jeff.
220 reviews
August 6, 2018
I enjoyed UFO in it's heyday and was fortunate to see the show recorded at the Amphitheater for Strangers in the Night. So, I wish Pete would have given more about that period of time and what went on in the studios and on the road instead of all the later tales of how much coke and other drugs he did. Seems like he was more depressing than dangerous.
Profile Image for Neil Fulwood.
978 reviews23 followers
February 4, 2022
On page 13 of this memoir, the bassist and founder of UFO notes that he had a passion for model railways as a child, a trait shared with a surprising number of other rock stars. On page 37, he recounts a teenage prank that almost burned down the factory where he was working. On page 138, he details some of the excesses which occurred whilst touring with Ozzy Osbourne. On page 240, he recalls that his nadir as a drug user was having to shoo rip into his groin. Each of these subjects are narrated matter-of-factly. A memory of saving up his pocket money for a model loco is given as much weight as the logistics of taking a needle to one’s scrotum. That’s the kind of autobiography this is. It’s as amenable a tale of debauchery and self-destruction as you’re ever likely to read.
Profile Image for PhattandyPDX.
212 reviews5 followers
March 28, 2024
“We had an even harder time with other bands. REO Speedwagon, for instance, insisted that we should not be allowed backstage at the same time as them. They had their wives and children with them and claimed we were too dangerous for them to be around. In the first instant, I think it was the fact we’d had a water pistol fight that had annoyed them. That and also, perhaps because we would do fistful of Quaaludes after a show, and then stagger around the place like zombies. I didn’t like them or their music anyways; it was like watered down rock. It was the same with Styx, another American band we played with in those early days. They were a dreadful, humorless, bunch, and full of themselves, too. As such, we prefer to keep to ourselves and our drugs“
Profile Image for Carrie.
560 reviews55 followers
March 25, 2021
I felt like this was the typical rock story. I never listened to UFO regularly but was familiar with some of their songs.

A Fast Ride Out of Here is filled with tension among band members, addiction issues, and a lot of sex. Way admits to an excess usage of drugs throughout his career and treating women poorly in his youth. It seems that as he matured his frequent sexual experiences and life on the road became less enthralling and he began to crave normalcy to some extent.

Learning about the band's road to success was interesting and I enjoyed reading snippets from members of other bands, along with those of Pete's brother. I have to say the first half of the book seemed more like Michael Schenker's story than Pete Way's however.

Definitely wouldn't consider Way "Rock's Most Dangerous Man" but I will admit he had some crazy stories to tell.

An okay read. Quick and easy and pretty much what one would expect.
Profile Image for Thomas Schulte.
Author 2 books77 followers
April 26, 2026
Maybe I am missing something or it is just not for me, but while an avid music enthusiast, I never became a UFO fan. I did go to an arena concert in Detroit, Michigan in the 1980s. I was there for someone else (Ozzy? Maiden?) and didn't know for Waysted but distinctly remember "Women In Chains" song being played but no concert setlist matches that... Maybe that song was played over the PA and not performed live?

Way explains his plans with Waysted:
I decided to call the band Waysted. What it boiled down to was that I wanted to make a grittier, harder kind of rock music than I had been doing with UFO and to get out there and play again.


Well, this book didn't clear up that part of my memory while it does underscore the variations of memory as many Way colleagues, family, and contacts offer their own version of event, often contradicting Way's.

Way's extensive drug experiences in the retelling involve some name-dropping
Rick sold coke to Marlon Brandon, a who’s who of other ‘A’ list Hollywood stars and most of the top music executives in the city.

...

Drugs, of course, were a by-product of being on the road, but I also saw first-hand just how detrimental they could be. I came across many people of undoubted talent, but it was obvious they had been fucked up by cocaine, or else heroin. Touring Obsession, we did quite a few shows with Aerosmith, who were the biggest band in America at the time. I expected them to be a devastating live band, but they were so out of it by then that songs would virtually grind to a halt and the crowd would go quiet. That happened at every show.


Way's substance abuse as with other becomes isolating.
I don’t believe I ever wrecked a hotel room myself. But then, you don’t when you’ve got drugs in the room. Hotel security guards were generally off-duty cops, so the last thing I’d want would be to alert them to anything untoward. For the same reason, I kept my music reasonably quiet. Anything so there wouldn’t be a knock on the door in the middle of the night when I’d got half an ounce of coke on the bedside table. Fans would also sleep on the floor outside of our rooms. That started to get a bit daunting – stepping out of the room and having people literally lying in wait for you. After several months of that, there was nothing I craved more than a bit of peace and quiet. By the end of the Lights Out tour, I had also started to use heroin. As I said, I’d tried it when I was thirteen, but I took to it much slower than to cocaine. It was reintroduced to me by a dealer – but it could as well have been by anybody around us at that time – to be used as part of a speedball with cocaine. To be honest, by then I would try anything that was put in front of me. But the way it was explained, it made perfect sense to me to take heroin like that. Coke allowed me to talk all night and appear interesting, but the trouble was that I would be wired for hours at a time. The heroin in a speedball took the edge off the cocaine high and allowed me to come down.


Calling out Joe Elliott of Def Leppard for being a cheapskate is namedropping that is itself contradicted.
Joe Elliott: I’m sure Pete has said that I always forgot my credit card; wouldn’t expect anything less. The truth is that I didn’t have any money when the two of us first got together, and by 1984 when our Pyromania album had taken off, he’d be round at my house emptying the bar. He is a pathological liar, but in the funniest sense. I’ve often told him as much. Ultimately, I’m a huge Pete Way fan, but like most people he’s flawed and massively so.


I didn't know of Way's production work for Twisted Sister and the Cockney Rejects.
I also got a second offer to produce a new album for a London punk band, the Cockney Rejects. It was the Rejects’ fourth record and they wanted to move towards more of a hard-rock sound, which of course was fine by me. However, the title of the album, The Wild Ones, turned out to be all too apt, since the Rejects were like nothing so much as a gang of football hooligans. When the four of them weren’t drinking, they were fine – pussycats, really. But if anyone so much as looked at one or the other of them after they’d sunk a few beers, all hell would break loose. They would all want to start a fight, and the Rejects’ idea of diplomacy was to hit first and ask questions later. I found being around them very testing. If we went to the pub together, there would be a lot of, ‘Here, that geezer over there’s a cunt’, and, ‘Oi, what the fuck is he staring at?’ I could do no wrong in their eyes and we managed to make a decent-enough album, but I spent a ridiculous amount of time trying to stop them from smacking other people at a moment’s notice.


There is the tale of the deterioration of Fastway and brief touring with his party-partner Ozzy
‘Fast’ Eddie Clarke: Next thing I knew, Pete had popped up in Ozzy’s band and Sharon-fucking-Osbourne had poached him from me. She had known Pete was in a right state over the business with Chrysalis and behaved like a total cunt. And then what happened? She and Ozzy went and shat all over Pete. He was supposed to do the whole world tour, but they kicked him into touch after just a handful of British shows. Apparently, Tommy Aldridge told them he wouldn’t play with Pete. It was a crying shame, because Pete and I had a great thing going together, we really did, and I missed him. The trouble with Pete is that he’s his own worst enemy. He never called me after walking out on Fastway, not even once out of courtesy. I know that he’s let other people down and suffered because of it, but he broke my heart. I get torn up from thinking about it even now. Four, five years later, I ran into him again on the road outside his house. It was good to see him after all that time and he invited me in for a cup of tea. I asked him: ‘Now, what the fuck did you do that for, piss off without so much as a by your leave?’ He couldn’t give me an honest answer even then. That’s Pete for you. We were good mates and he pulled a disappearing act like that on me.


There are also personal life details, such as Way's marriages. One was an unfortunately convenient marriage to a doctor with access to drugs.
The other substance we began to use was the anesthetic that Michael Jackson was on when he died – Propofol. It’s a white, creamy, quite thick liquid used in hospitals for surgical operations. Joanna had access to a ready supply of it, because she would use it when she performed liposuction.


A quote to end on a high note pulled from one of those praising way professionally and personally.
Mike Clink: With most of the bands that I work with there’s always one person who makes a big impression on me and ends up being a lifelong friend, not just a business relationship. That’s who Pete is for me. To meet him is to fall in love with him. I love his sense of humour and he’s vulnerable too. The persona that people see is sex, drugs and rock and roll, but there’s more to him than that. There’s a whole other side which is genuinely warm, funny and caring. He’s also extremely talented. Whenever I do a session these days and mention that I’m working with Pete again, I’m still surprised at how many individuals have been influenced by him. Nikki Sixx told me the reason that he plays his particular style of Gibson bass is because of Pete...
Profile Image for David Jennings.
61 reviews
November 13, 2020
This isn't really a great book, but it's a great story, and I find it interesting for its insight into the life of a musician and a band who saw what the premier league looks like, and sampled what it had to offer, but didn't quite have the single-mindedness to keep performing at that level. Yet they didn't give up, or explore second careers, either; just kept doing the only thing they knew how to do.

The structure of the book follows a straightforward and well-trodden path: album, tour, line-up change, better album, great tour, not-so-good album & tour, bust-up, rinse and repeat. Interspersed with this are the six wives - divorced, divorced, died, died, divorced, survived - and anecdotes about Ozzy, Bon Scott and the brothers Young, dentures soaking by their hotel beds. The moments of reflection are brief and quickly left behind (usually of the form, "I should have treated her better, but I never seemed to learn"). The best insights frequently come the family, friends and peers who contribute commentary along the way - my favourite being when Geddy Lee flatly contradicts the account Pete has just given.

Perhaps he and UFO might have sustained their success if it had come slower and harder - the first single went Top 10 in Germany; they hit the magic formula when recruiting Schenker a couple of years later. Thanks to starting when they did, the field for British hard rock bands was much more open than it later became (now it's so respectable that it seems everyone tries being in a band in their gap year).

Why did Pete keep at it, right to the unfortunate end in an accident a few months ago? Was it tireless devotion to rock and to performing, or was it lack of ability to imagine any other way of living - aside from drink and drugs? A bit of both.
Profile Image for Andrea.
1,316 reviews98 followers
December 2, 2023
I was never a UFO fan—don’t remember hearing any of their hits on the radio, but I like music autobiographies so I gave this a shot. Pete Way had quite a story to tell—plenty of sex, drugs, and rock ‘n’ roll. What more can you ask for?
Profile Image for Amanda.
63 reviews2 followers
June 19, 2025
I've been a fan of UFO for a long time, but never knew much about the band. I happened to find this book while browsing on Amazon and decided to buy a copy and read it.

It wasn't the best rock autobiography I've read, though it was far from the worst. Pete Way died a few years after this book came out from complications after a fall he'd had. Most of the book is him remembering times spent doing drugs or cheating on any one of his six wives (although it doesn't mention cheating on his sixth wife, that could very well be because he was unable to due to effects of his cancer treatment or he just didn't include it in the book). Pete Way is far from the only rocker to ruin his life with drugs or to have wild sex with tons of women, so I'm not sure what made him "Rock's most dangerous man." To me, that title belongs to someone like Ozzy or someone who committed serious crimes like Ian Watkins.

There were some interesting anecdotes with other musicians. In one story, Ozzy Osbourne was asked to tone down his language at a restaurant and retaliated by peeing on the table of the two men who had asked him to tone things down. Another time Ozzy jumped out of the vehicle they were in after a fight with Sharon Osbourne, and she made Pete track him down because she was afraid he wouldn't come back otherwise.

I'm not sure of how reliable of a narrator Pete was. Throughout the book, there were parts where he would tell a story in a certain way and then the other person involved in the event would give their side of the story, and it would completely contradict the story Pete had just told. Multiple people described Pete as a liar, including one person who called him a "pathological liar." Also there were things left out of the book, such as the fact that at the time of her death from an overdose, his fourth wife was being investigated by the DEA and had lawsuits against her and Pete had been accused of a domestic violence incident, which was still ongoing at the time of her death.

There were also some odd mistakes in the book. Pete said he accepted a joint but found out it had "THC, a powerful horse tranquilizer" that incapacitated him for 48 hours instead of being a "regular joint." I'm still confused by this, because he had to know that THC is the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana. Maybe he meant ketamine (Special K)? There was also a reference to his coke dealer having "Marlon Brandon" as a client. Since the book was ghostwritten, I assume those were errors made by the ghostwriter and weren't caught during editing.

The book ends with him successfully going through cancer treatment and making plans to tour again for an album he was working on at the time the book was written. I don't know if he went on tour or what happened between the time of the book's release and his death, about three years after the book was published.

Overall an interesting book, but not one I would really recommend for anyone besides UFO fans or those who tend to read every rock star autobiography they can get their hands on.
Profile Image for David.
121 reviews
June 11, 2021
Entertaining— I guess— but so often these types of autobios reveal our heroes to be immature, shallow, self-absorbed, and tragically flawed people. Clapton’s autobio is similarly disappointing in this way. You can admire the musician, but not necessarily regard them highly as a person.

Hey, no one’s perfect. The best thing that can be said about Way and his autobio is that it’s unflinchingly honest about just how selfish addicts like him can be.

Everyone has regrets in life. But Way sure seemed intent on not learning a thing from his mistakes, even to the end. Even the most major problems and stupid life decisions are rationalized with a flippancy that is appalling.

Pete Way was simply out to have a good time. He makes that abundantly and redundantly clear throughout the book. People talk about the wild stories of excess and juicy gossip— but there’s little to no insight on Way’s approach to his music here at all, nor any depth or detail on how all those classic UFO albums were made. The music itself is presented as barely even an afterthought here.

It all comes across as so shallow and simplistic. I assume that Way was just intent on giving his readers all the celebrity juice they wanted to read, but the amount of human wreckage he left in his wake over the course of his irresponsible life is unbelievable. And getting away with so much of the callous, impulsive, and often dangerous behavior by getting the celebrity treatment seemed only to be a point of pride with him.

Hey— he was the bassist for one of the greatest hard rock bands of the 70’s. And no doubt their music has brought lasting joy and inspiration to people all over the world. But maybe I idealized these guys for too long, so in that regard this book was an eye opener.

Overall, I came away from this book with a definite sense of disillusionment and regret over such waste of life. Like Clapton, Way expresses regrets over his more selfish and destructive actions, but absolutely no meaningful, lasting introspection about them.
Profile Image for Steven.
61 reviews1 follower
August 28, 2022
This was the type of book I expected it to be from the title. I've loved the music of UFO and thought it would be interesting to read about the band from an insider's point of view. I don't think anything prepared me for the dark read this turned out to be. What a grim life! I was expecting the start of the story to be the kind of working class kid done good but is then overworked and screwed over by the record company as a familiar tale of seventies rock bands. So I can understand at first the appeal of the lifestyle of sex with groupies, the drink and the drugs. But then, you'd expect some degree of self reflection and as maturity continues a lifestyle decision or two to change that but not in Pete Way's case. And his life seems all the more tragic because he doesn't even seem to be aware his life has any brakes. I read the book with a growing unease for all those around him. Drinking Special Brew at 6am just to get the day started, vomiting infront of a primary school at 9am and excusing himself with his wife at the time from a family meal to shoot drugs into his hardening veins. There is no glamour in this book and I don't think he was fooling anyone. What's the most remarkable thing about it is that he continued to find people around him who cared for him, at their own expense because Pete himself seems utterly self-absorbed and incapable of the ability to care for or have empathy with anyone else. I'd call this a warts and all book, there are considerably more warts in this life tale than I was expecting. It's the story of an adult's decline into alcoholism and drug addiction.
Profile Image for Brittany.
218 reviews
April 8, 2024
I had no idea who Pete Way was when I picked this up, but I still thought this was an interesting read about his many marriages, recording of albums, and the throes of addiction. I give it three stars because I think I'm too young for this book. UFO was a big band in the 70's - my parents know and love them, but as a thirty-something, I am not really familiar, and it made some elements of this book difficult to keep track of. I was hoping for a really gritty drug-addled, angry, violent, insane tale of rock star hijinks, and it wasn't really that for the most part.
My least favourite part: he didn't go into a lot of detail in his storytelling. It was very matter-of-fact - he tells us that he got married, or that they made an album, or that they played a show, but doesn't tell much of a story. Is that because of lazy-writing, or is that all that he can remember?
My favourite part: the last 20% of this book just shoots off like a rocket. We go from a very formulaic tale of the drug-addict-rock-star into a deeper look at his life. We follow him home on his drug binges, through the death of loved ones, and through the horrifying transformation of his body due to his injection of drugs.
Another part I liked a lot was the inclusion of interviews. Every chapter would be interjected by his family members or fellow musicians and friends who popped in to give their version of a story, or fill in the blanks where Pete couldn't remember something.
I only recommend this if you're a fan of UFO or Waysted.
9 reviews
September 13, 2020
As a callow youth UFO were one of the first bands I saw live back in the seventies & Pete Way was one of those larger than life characters that you'd love to emulate.

Hat's off to Pete for the Raw honesty portrayed in this book, he doesn't pull any punches or shy away from waste of his talent after being lured into the world of rock n roll excess.

At times funny, though ultimately depressing to discover someone you looked up to as a hero, was in fact a deeply flawed individual.

No one can ever take away his part in a short period of history where he was at the top of his game and he for sure had more than his fifteen minutes of fame, for that I will always be grateful. Of course there are the salacious tales of excess & shenanigans with some of his contemporaries when he was on tour.

But behind that the lasting impression is of a selfish man, something I think he came to recognise ( & maybe regret) later in life. The drug & alcohol addiction & the selfish actions that affected his health, personal life & that of those who loved him.

Please read this book if for nothing else than to understand the toll fame & fortune can take on an individual, both personally & professionally.

R.I.P Pete Way
Profile Image for Kahn.
590 reviews3 followers
January 15, 2024
Reading A Fast Ride, you'd be forgiven for forgeting that you're reading the memoir of a famous rock musician.
Once UFO have established themselves, and he's fully on board with the lifestyle, music becomes the thing he does to find the drink and drugs rather than the focal point.
And it's the same with the book.
From about a third of the way through, his endless drinking, sniffing, snorting and shagging become all he recalls (either through choice or substances).
For the final third of the book, even the music barely gets a look in.
It's the same with most of his marriages.
He's an entertaining-enough storyteller, although credit should go to journalist Paul Rees who's name is all but absent from the book - but Way is also an idiot.
He's a vegetarian (if you overlook the meat), he's off the spirits (if you gloss over the bloody marys), he does feel slightly responsible for some of his divorces (he slept with a sister-in-law), and apparently plays bass guitar.
If you want insight into life in a rock band, look elsewhere.
If you want insight into the mind of an addict, step right up.
Profile Image for A KERR.
41 reviews
October 7, 2020
I've had this book on my bookshelf for a while but chose to read it after learning of Pete Way's death.

For books of this type, its well written with asides from friends, family and fellow musicians. The comments were not always complimentary so I appreciated the honesty. I saw him once as a guest at a festival and he came across as a wreck. However, he had many long lasting friendships and a long list of people wanting to work with him so he must have been great company and a good musician.

I don't believe that he wrote this himself, its too well written. The writing is concise and the memories are clear (although at odds with some of the added comments). I think that the comments by Jenny, his last wife, are the most telling when he turned up at her home towards the end of the book.
Profile Image for Mike Balsom.
167 reviews
December 27, 2018
In 1980 a young Canadian boy purchased a copy of UFO's album "Obsession", having been familiar with their previous release "Lights Out". Almost 40 years later, that album continues to be an obsession for this now-much-older Canadian man. Over those many years it's clear that too few people are familiar with the band and especially this masterpiece of an album. That's a crying shame. I'm sure that means that very few will also pick up and read bass player Pete Way's memoir, and that, too, is a shame. Though he most definitely comes across as a womanizing, drug-and-alcohol-addicted reprobate at times, his life and the history of his band are interesting stories. Unlike many other rock and roll memoirs, he actually has a "Way" with words, as well.
Profile Image for David.
20 reviews2 followers
June 7, 2019
If one knows the stereotypes of the rock star lifestyle, then the book would not shock anyone, though it is a fascinating read.
It details UFO bassist Pete Way’s career with UFO and his own bands Fastway and Waysted. Other than the stories about groupies and partying, Way talks about his friendship with AC/DC and Ozzy Osborne, as well as the aftermath of the deaths of Bon Scott and Randy Rhoads.
Way is pretty honest with how his extensive drug addiction and alcoholism negatively affected his relationships, and his road to recovery. The book also includes commentary from fellow bandmates, friends and those who toured with Way, giving insight to Way’s naivety and confirming (or correcting) Way’s stories.
Profile Image for Shell.
34 reviews4 followers
November 18, 2018
This was a very interesting read. Not only did it give the great UFO bassist Pete Ways views on the events he described, in many instances the opinion of the other participants in the events was also provided in a different font. This was a great way for the reader to see how events are viewed differently by both participants. Whoever thought of doing this bio this way is a frickin genius.
The book itself was well written and a good solid read. Pete WY led the ultimate rock and roll life which eventually destroyed him. But,like the proverbial Phoenix he eventually did come back. Altered and damaged he certainly was. But he survived, and this book tells that story.
44 reviews
April 27, 2020
While I was never really all that familiar with Pete Way, or UFO, I still realize how influential they were so many of the bands I loved like Maiden, AC/DC, Preist and so on. This was the one book where I actually LOL'd many times throughout. Pete's English wit and the way he phrases things is comic gold. In the end though its really just another sad story of a Rock star who becomes a hopeless addict. Glad he eventually got clean and found happiness.
Profile Image for Jamie Robertson.
180 reviews2 followers
November 17, 2020
Straight away I will admit had not heard of Pete Way until his death. After a little musical research I wished to find out more about the man as so much was mentioned about his lifestyle. He was definitely a victim of his own lifestyle and took the rock n roll life to its full excess.
A really good read and I particularly liked the brief inserts from the people who knew him. Gave the tales a different perspective.
4 reviews
September 7, 2021
Nothing new here.

Could be the drugs, but this book was like one long run-up sentence. Mr Way started at the beginning of his life and yada-yada'd his entire career while waxing rhapsodic about whatever drugs he was taking at the time. Zzzzz. He crossed paths with some of the greatest musicians of the time, yet made them an afterthought. It was all about the drugs, man. And Mr Way did not leave me with the impression that he was interesting enough to care.
Profile Image for James Taylor.
193 reviews4 followers
December 31, 2021
When I finished May's auto-biography I was left with a sense of futility at a life which seemed to have been sacrificed to the consumption of drugs. I remember seeing him play as the bassist of UFO in one of the first concerts that I went to - his frenzied playing set the standard of bassists for me. But the end of this book I was just saddened that he could not break out of the cycle of addition.
7 reviews
December 6, 2025
Been meaning to read this for some time and finally got round to it. Got through it in two days which is quick for me. I've long been a UFO fan having first seen them at Newcastle city hall in 1979.
It's a great read but you do get the impression that Pete's recall is impacted by his drug use, it's good that there are many quotes from others in the book who don't have the same recollection as Pete which gives the book some balance.
I found it very entertaining and also a little sad since Pete is now no longer with us.
1 review
February 19, 2019
UFO

Great insight into a very underrated rock band full of characters that made the read that much better. How Pete made it through and survived this madness to get this book together was no small task. UFO 50th anniversary tour called Last Orders will take place in 2019. Phil Moof has been in fine form long after the original band break up.
119 reviews1 follower
February 18, 2022
Stupidity and selfishness abound!

I doubt the author was nearly as famous as he claims. He doesn't seem to accept responsibility for all the lives he has negatively affected either. I'm amazed that he's still alive and hold him mostly responsible for wives that aren't. He's the kind of guy that gives Rock n Roll a bad name.
15 reviews
December 4, 2022
Real rock n roller

Thoroughly enjoyed Pete Way's book and genuinely didn't want it to end. Open, honest and no punches pulled. He lived life to the max but was a vulnerable and beautiful soul not afraid to admit his shortcomings to his friends , family and band mates. The world is worse off without him.
Profile Image for Johnmcdonald.
31 reviews
April 10, 2023
I could not put this down. Rare that a bassist has a memoir so exciting. Covers his exploits with UFO, Lemmy, Fastway, Waysted, and much more. It is a sex, drugs, and rock and roll book we need every now and then. UFO was an overlooked band for sure. The parts about being in a band with Michael Schenker were eye-opening. RIP Pete!
8 reviews
June 22, 2024
As a huge UFO fan I felt this was a sad tale of rock & roll excess destroying a talented man.
The book seems to concentrate more on the drugs & less on the music.
What I did really enjoy were the paragraphs by the rest of the band (Schenker in particular comes across as far more caring & sensible than he’s often portrayed)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 59 reviews