Slade drummer Don Powell ‘fired by email’ after 57-year partnership

Drummer claims guitarist Dave Hill, a friend since 1963, fired him with ‘cold’ message

Slade: Noddy Holder, Jim Lea, Dave Hill and Don Powell in 1971. Photograph: Gijsbert Hanekroot/Redferns/Getty
Slade: Noddy Holder, Jim Lea, Dave Hill and Don Powell in 1971. Photograph: Gijsbert Hanekroot/Redferns/Getty

One of pop’s most enduring partnerships has come to an end, not with a bang but an email.

Don Powell, the drummer with the glam-rock band Slade, says he has been fired from a group that has existed in one form or another since 1964, by its guitarist Dave Hill. "It is with great sadness and regret that Don needs to inform his fans that he now is no longer a member of Dave Hill's Slade," reads a statement on Powell's website. "Dave has sent Don a cold email to inform him that his services are no longer required, after working together and being friends since 1963."

Hill disputes Powell's version of events, writing on Facebook: "I am sad to announce that Don and I will no longer be working together. Our parting of the ways has not come out of the blue and his announcement is not accurate. I wish Don every success in his future efforts. I will, of course, carry on and look forward to many future performances and meeting fans."

Slade scored six No 1 singles in Ireland between 1971 and 1973, including Skweeze Me, Pleeze Me, Cum on Feel the Noize and Merry Xmas Everybody

Hill and Powell were originally members of a band called the Vendors, later joining forces as the N Betweens with the singer Noddy Holder and the bassist Jim Lea. After a brief and unfortunate flirtation with a skinhead image, they changed their name to Slade, grew their hair, donned elaborate costumes, and became one of the most successful bands of the glam-rock era. They scored six No 1 singles in Ireland between 1971 and 1973, including Skweeze Me, Pleeze Me, Cum on Feel the Noize and Merry Xmas Everybody, with 16 Top 10 hits in total across their career.

READ SOME MORE

Various members came and went in the years since, but after a very brief split in 1992, when Holder and Lea left the band, Powell and Hill continued with new recruits as Slade II and remained constant fixtures in the group.

Powell had been unable to perform at recent Slade concerts because of a leg injury, saying in November: “I just can’t do the tour in case I have a relapse with my knee/leg problem.” A statement on his website says he is “now fully fit to play drums again”.

Following the new split, Powell has announced a new Slade spinoff, entitled Don Powell’s Slade, also featuring the former Slade II bassist Craig Fenney. Hill will continue to lead Slade, who reverted their name from Slade II in 2002.

The band haven’t released new music since 1994’s Slade II album Keep on Rockin’, although they remain a fixture on the live circuit, with upcoming dates in Denmark, Germany, Switzerland and the UK. – Guardian