Slade guitarist Dave Hill teams up with Noddy Holder's son to make first ever solo album

Slade guitarist Dave Hill has teamed up with music producer Django Holder - the son of his former bandmate Noddy Holder - to record his first ever solo album, which will be released in 2026.

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Slade guitarist Dave Hill is releasing his first ever solo album next year - which he has recorded with the son of his former bandmate Noddy Holder.

The 79-year-old glam rock legend is putting the finishing touches to the LP which will be called Dirtyfoot Lane - which is a real place in his hometown of Wolverhampton.

Dave's best friend Noddy - who left Slade in 1992 after 26 years fronting the band - recommended he use his son Django Holder as the LP's producer and Dave says the autobiographical record is sounding fantastic and acts like the story of his life.

The flamboyant guitarist has even written a song dedicated to his original Slade bandmates; singer Noddy, 79, bassist Jim Lea, 76, and drummer Don Powell, 79.

In an interview with Contact Music, Dave spilled: "I’ve done a solo album, a very important solo album.

“It’s true stories, slightly country, not Slade, but it has rock in there. There’s songs written about my mother, I’ve written a song for Slade. It’s a thank you to Noddy, Jim and Don, it’s called Thanks For The Good Times, it’s a great song.

“Noddy Holder’s son, Django Holder, produces the album. He’s 30 years of age, he’s a fantastic guy, very calm, very talented. Noddy recommended him, so I thought, ‘I’m going to try him.’ He was just great to be with.

“The album is called Dirtyfoot Lane. That’s a real place, I use to take my kids down and they used to play in haystacks. I’ve also written a song called Dirtyfoot Lane, it has a chorus like Paul McCartney's Mull of Kintyre.

“The songs I’ve been writing for quite some time, the influences are more now. Django is brilliant at making spaces in music, he’s very clever of making the song sound interesting.

"I’m really happy with it, I feel there’s only one person you’ve got to please now and that’s me. My kids have heard one or two songs. It’s quite an original album. It’s almost like you’re reading a book in music. You hear little shades in it. My guitar is very prominent on it, Noddy said it must be. Nod said, ‘People can debate your clothes but they need to hear your guitar playing now.’ Noddy really encouraged me to do this album because it’s time for me to prove something to myself, which is that I can write songs. I feel I’m good at it. It took some time.

“It’s an album of memories, but I feel this album will appeal to a lot of people – not just Slade fans but a lot of others. There’s one song which is about a troubled person, a suicide, I don’t mention the name. I tell that story and it’s got an eerie sound to it. It’s even a bit like a James Bond theme – it’s like nothing you would imagine me doing.

“It will be a surprise because nobody knows my voice, it’s not like I’m great singer, but there are a lot of singers who are not great but they are interpreters and they can deliver a song. There’s a lot of that in country music, people like Johnny Cash. Sometimes it’s not all about a great voice, it’s about what you’re talking about.

“There are two or three rock songs and I got my bass player to sing them because he’s singing the Slade songs anyway. He can handle them."

Dave is grateful to Noddy for introducing him to Django as the working relationship has been very natural and is also thankful to the Cum On Feel the Noize singer for encouraging his songwriting.

The original Slade line-up performing in the 1970s


He said: "Noddy is one of my all-time best friends, and remains to be so. It was like that from day one when I asked him to join me. We have such a good relationship.

"I feel that Noddy is a really decent, good man, who encourages me to not rely on anybody but myself. He’s right about that. When he left the band he had to make a life for himself outside the band and he did a good job of that. It took him some time.

"I'm approaching 80, it’s not like you’ve got loads of years ahead of you. In my mind I’m pleased with myself and I won’t be embarrassed to play the album to anybody."

Dave Hill’s Slade are currently on a UK tour playing all of the band's biggest hits, including festive smash Merry Christmas Everybody which was released back in 1973.

Although the run of concerts has been billed as The Final Tour, Dave has assured fans that he is not retiring from performing live, he just wants to scale back the volume of dates.

Dave Hill's Slade performing / Credit: Adam Kennedy


Dave - who is joined in the group by John Berry on lead vocals and bass, Russell Keefe on keyboard and vocals and Alex Bines on drums - said: "Things get interpreted differently ... I’m not going to do a back-to-back tour in the UK at Christmas. What I’m going to do is a couple of special gigs, slightly bigger.

“I tell the audience I’m not retiring, big claps!

"I’m just changing how I do the Christmas shows. I did three shows at the beginning of this tour and I was really knackered at the end of the first show, it was a fantastic gig in Wales."

For more information and to buy tickets for Dave Hill's Slade shows click here

Slade Live Dates:

DECEMBER:

10 – Picturedrome, Holmfirth

12 – O2 Academy, Liverpool

14 – O2 Academy, Bournemouth

16 – O2 Academy, Oxford

17 – O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire, London

19 – O2 City Hall, Newcastle

20 – O2 Academy2, Birmingham

22 – O2 Ritz, Manchester