Airrace were formed in London during September 1982 by the then-teenaged guitarist Laurie Mansworth after his decision to quit the New Wave Of British Heavy Metal band More.
Keen to play a more melodic form of rock music, Mansworth’s formative line-ups briefly featured former Girl singer Philip Lewis, before being joined by singer Keith Murrell, bassist Jim Reid, keyboard player Tony Sadler and drummer Jason Bonham – the latter the son of Led Zeppelin skin-pounder John. Airrace’s ties to Zeppelin were further enhanced when the legendary manager Peter Grant took the young band under his wing, signing them to Atco Records, a subsidiary of the Atlantic Corporation.
Airrace were flown to New York to work with the producer of the moment, Beau Hill, on their debut album. Having manned the faders on Ratt’s ‘Out Of The Cellar’, Hill pushed the band into a lighter direction than they would have wished, but ‘Shaft Of Light’ received rave reviews when released in October 1984. Indeed, its combination of breezy melodies and snappy choruses moved journalist Derek Oliver to pronounce in the pages of Kerrang! that anyone who didn’t like Airrace “ought to be shot”.
Although the band got to play support slots with Queen, AC/DC, Meat Loaf, Ted Nugent and Krokus, they were aggrieved that Atco could have spent more time, money and care promoting them. With Bonham being courted by Roger Taylor to join Virginia Wolf, an act whose album the Queen drummer was producing, the foundations were further undermined, and Airrace crash-landed in the summer of 1985.
It took a 25th anniversary re-issue of ‘Shaft Of Light’ to reunite the band in 2009. To celebrate the record’s expanded re-release, Mansworth, Murrell, Sadler and Bonham recruited two new members – second guitarist Dean Howard (formerly of T’Pau) and bassist Dave Boyce (ex-Samson, among others) – to hit the road, playing gigs with Thunder, Tesla, Winger and more, in addition to headlining their own shows. When Jason Bonham departed, the occupation of his drum stool by The Outfield’s Simon Dawson brought them vital stability.
It was the overwhelmingly positive reaction to an appearance at annual melodic rock all-dayer the Firefest in October 2009 that convinced Airrace to take things more seriously. Describing what the wild scenes of that day, Fireworks magazine proposed the distinct possibility that Airrace were “the best opening band we’ve ever had at a Firefest”.
With Toby Sadler, who resides in Germany, unable to commit to playing more regularly, Airrace hired a new keyboard player called Chris Williams, re-recruiting original bass player Jim Reid as a successor to Dave Boyce.
The above grouping can be heard on ‘Back To The Start’, the long-awaited second album from Airrace. Produced by Mansworth, it’s a notch heavier than ‘Shaft Of Light’ yet continues to offer all of the group’s trademarks, including über-memorable hooks and the exquisite singing of Keith Murrell, recently named at #20 in Classic Rock Presents AOR magazine’s list of the Top 40 AOR Vocalists Of All Time.
In 2018 the band re-signed to the Frontiers label and issued a new album, entitled ‘Untold Stories’.