Early years (1979–1983) The band formed in
Worcestershire and initially featured Paul de Mercado on vocals. Their first album demo tape was called ''Bleed 'Em Dry'' and had an album's worth of material. After developing a following in the northwest and Yorkshire they caught the attention of Heavy Metal Records, who added a re-recorded version of
The Reaper to their 1981 compilation
Heavy Metal Heroes from the demo. A positive write-up in the
Kerrang! 'Armed & Ready' section preceded a breakup of the initial lineup, with only Nick Bowcott remaining. He recruited Dave Wanklin on bass, Lee Harris on Drums, and most importantly,
Steve Grimmett on vocals. This lineup won a 1982
Battle of the Bands competition featuring over 100 bands, winning studio time to demo new material. Grimmett was then the unofficial vocalist for
Cheltenham's Chateaux, who were signed to Darryl Johnston's Ebony Records label, so he handed them the Grim Reaper demo tape, and the band was signed. Their debut album was
See You in Hell. The album was released in 1983 and was distributed worldwide through
RCA Records.
Commercial success, legal battles and breakup (1985–1988) Grim Reaper soon became readily identifiable with Bowcott's guitar work and lead vocalist Steve Grimmett's
head voice vocals. Their successful world tour included a support show at
Texxas Jam playing to over 20,000 people. Their 1985 follow-up,
Fear No Evil, showed improvement on the production front and also enjoyed moderate success in both the
United States and
Europe. Legal battles with Ebony Records delayed the release of the band's third album
Rock You to Hell by almost two years. The album was released directly through RCA Records in 1987. However, by this time Grim Reaper's melodic
heavy metal sound had fallen out of favor as much of the metal market moved toward heavier fare like
thrash metal and
speed metal. Even the major label distribution and popular video for the title track could not save the band. With the production of their fourth studio album (reportedly to be called
Nothing Whatsoever to Do with Hell) about to start, another round of legal action from Ebony Records effectively dealt the death blow to Grim Reaper, subsequently disbanding in 1988.
Side projects (1988–2006) Grimmett went on to front
Onslaught and
Lionsheart, as well as perform on several tribute albums. Bowcott became a freelance music writer, and later staff contributor, for publications like
Circus and
Guitar World. Bowcott also worked with
Marshall Amplification's United States division. He also played in the band Barfly who recorded an album with
Jack Ponti producing and
Michael Wagener mixing for RCA records. The band made a successful appearance at the British Steel festival in Bologna, Italy in November 2010 at the Estragon venue on a bill that included other classic bands of the NWoBHM era – Diamond Head, Girlschool, Demon, and Angelwitch. They also played at the Academy Birmingham with the band Jameson Raid. The then-current line-up continued to tour the UK and Europe. They did a short tour of Greece and Cyprus in November 2011 and released the Limited Edition "Live in Europe 2011". Festival appearances in 2012 included Sweden's "Muskelrock" and headlining Germany's Sword Brothers. More European Festivals and US tours followed in the coming years. In 2013, they were co-headliners of Belgium's Heavy Sound Festival in November with Tokyo Blade. In April 2014, Grim Reaper played their first show in the US since 1987, joined by original guitarist Nick Bowcott, and featured several tracks from the forthcoming album,
From Hell. In 2016, Steve Grimmett's Grim Reaper released a new studio album, their first since 1987. On 17 January 2017 Grimmett was hospitalised following a show at Piedrahits & Pedro Moncayo in
Guayaquil,
Ecuador. Surgery followed, which was unsuccessful in defeating an infection in his right leg, so a portion of this leg was amputated on 18 January 2017. The band continued to play, and played an emotional headlining set at Hard Rock Hell's NWOBHM Christmas gig in Sheffield in December that year. On 25 July 2019, it was announced that Grim Reaper would be releasing an album of all-new material. The album titled
At The Gates was released on 11 October 2019 with a special album launch show to follow the next night, 12 October, at London's Boston Music Rooms. As of January 2022, according to Grimmett, a new album from Grim Reaper was in the works. Meanwhile, in March, the band released its first live album,
Reaping the Whirlwind. On 15 August 2022, Grimmett died at the age of 62. == Musical style ==