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Cliff 'Em All

Cliff 'Em All

Cunning Stunts

Cunning Stunts

A Year And A Half In The Life Of Metallica, Part 01 & 02

Wherever I May Roam Sad But True Enter Sandman A Year and a Half in the Life of Metallica-Part 1 AYear and a Half in the Life of Metallica Part 1 & 2 The Unforgiven A Year and a Half in the Life of Metallica-Part 2 Nothing Else Matters

St. Anger

Shoot Me Again Invisible Kid My World Frantic The Unnamed Feeling All Within My Hands St. Anger Sweet Amber Purity Some Kind Of Machine Dirty Window

St. Anger

Purity All Within My Hnads Dirty Window Sweet Amber Frantic My World Some Kind Of Monster Invisible Kid Shoot Me Again The Unnamed Feeling St. Anger

St. Anger

Frantic Shoot Me Again Sweet Amber My World All Within My Hands Some Kind Of Monster Purity St. Anger The Unnamed Feeling Dirty Window Invisible Kid

Live Shit: Binge & Purge DVD

Through The Never Welcome Home One For Whom The Bell Tolls The Unforgiven Battery Harvester Of Sorrow Enter Sandman Am I Evil? Creeping Death Am I Evil? Fade To Black Harvester Of Sorrow The Four Horsemen Last Caress Creeping Death Battery Seek & Destroy Stone Cold Crazy Enter Sandman Whiplash Nothing Else Matters Nothing Else Matters The Unforgiven Sad But True Justice Medley Whiplash Wherever I May Roam The Four Horsemen For Whom The Bell Tolls Solos - Bass/Guitar Solos - Bass/Guitar Of Wolf And Men One Seek & Destroy Of Wolf And Man Stone Cold Crazy Master Of Puppets Justice Medley Last Caress Sad But True Wherever I May Roam Welcome Home Through The Never Motorbreath Fade To Black Master Of Puppets Motorbreath

Live Shit: Binge & Purge DVD - CD style case

Fade To Black Am I Evil? Nothing Else Matters Justice Medley Stone Cold Crazy Justice Medley Seek & Destroy Whiplash Solos - Bass/Guitar Am I Evil? Sad But True Wherever I May Roam The Four Horsemen Whiplash Seek & Destroy Battery Creeping Death Sad But True Through The Never Fade To Black Of Wolf And Man One Welcome Home The Unforgiven Wherever I May Roam Of Wolf And Men Motorbreath Stone Cold Crazy Harvester Of Sorrow Master Of Puppets The Unforgiven Creeping Death Harvester Of Sorrow Battery Welcome Home Enter Sandman Last Caress Solos - Bass/Guitar Through The Never For Whom The Bell Tolls Last Caress One For Whom The Bell Tolls The Four Horsemen Nothing Else Matters Enter Sandman Motorbreath Master Of Puppets

S&M

S & M

S&M

For Whom The Bell Tolls Battery One Bleeding Me Of Wolf And Man Wherever I May Roam Outlaw Torn Fuel The Memory Remains Nothing Else Matters Devil's Dance Hero Of The Day No Leaf Clover Sad But True Enter Sandman The Ecstasy Of Gold Human The Call Of Ktulu The Thing That Should Not Be Until It Sleeps Master Of Puppets

S&M

Wherever I May Roam Outlaw Torn Bleeding Me Enter Sandman Of Wolf And Man One Fuel Devil's Dance Until It Sleeps Sad But True Battery Nothing Else Matters Human The Call Of Ktulu The Thing That Should Not Be The Memory Remains No Leaf Clover Master Of Puppets For Whom The Bell Tolls Hero Of The Day The Ecstasy Of Gold

Cliff 'Em All

Cliff 'Em All

A Year And A Half In The Life Of Metallica, Part 01 & 02

The Unforgiven Nothing Else Matters Wherever I May Roam Sad But True AYear and a Half in the Life of Metallica Part 1 & 2 Enter Sandman A Year and a Half in the Life of Metallica-Part 1 A Year and a Half in the Life of Metallica-Part 2

Cunning Stunts

Cunning Stunts

Garage, Inc.

Sabbra Cadabra Free Speech For The Dumb The More I See The Wait Tuesday's Gone Die, Die My Darling Overkill Am I Evil? Stone Dead Forever Mercyful Faith It's Electric The Small Hours So What Stone Cold Crazy Blitzkrieg Helpless Astronomy Crash Course In Brain Surgery Loverman The Prince Whiskey In The Jar Breadfan Turn The Page Last Caress/Green Hell Damage Case Too Late Too Late Killing Time

Garage, Inc.

Blitzkrieg The Wait Overkill Mercyful Faith Tuesday's Gone Helpless Am I Evil? Stone Dead Forever Breadfan Loverman The Prince Astronomy The More I See Stone Cold Crazy It's Electric Last Caress/Green Hell Die, Die My Darling Turn The Page Sabbra Cadabra Free Speech For The Dumb Whiskey In The Jar Crash Course In Brain Surgery Killing Time So What Too Late Too Late Damage Case The Small Hours

The Unforgiven II/The Thing That Should Not Be

The Thing That Should Not Be The Unforgiven II

Reload

Low Man's Lyric Slither The Memory Remains Better Than You Devil's Dance The Unforgiven II Prince Charming Fuel Bad Seed Where The Wild Things Are Carpe Diem Baby Fixxxer Attitude

The Memory Remains/For Whom The Bell Tolls

For Whom The Bell Tolls The Memory Remains

King Nothing/Ain't My Bitch

King Nothing Ain't My Bitch

Hero Of The Day (Live Medley)

Hero Of The Day Kill Ride Medley

Load

Bleeding Me Ronnie Wasting My Hate Until It Sleeps 2 X 4 Poor Twisted Me Cure The House Jack Built Ain't My Bitch The Outlaw Torn King Nothing Thorn Within Mama Said

Live Shit: Binge & Purge

Seek & Destroy The Unforgiven Sad But True Last Caress Through The Never Fade To Black Solos - Bass/Guitar Enter Sandman Whiplash The Four Horsemen Motorbreath For Whom The Bell Tolls Battery Welcome Home (Sanitarium) Of Wolf And Man Justice Medley Master Of Puppets Creeping Death Wherever I May Roam Am I Evil? Nothing Else Matters Stone Cold Crazy One Harvester Of Sorrow

One/Eye Of The Beholder

Eye Of The Beholder One

Metallica

Wherever I May Roam The Unforgiven The Struggle Within The God That Failed Sad But True Of Wolf And Man Don't Tread On Me Enter Sandman Holier Than Thou Nothing Else Matters My Friend Of Misery Through The Never

...And Justice For All

Eye Of The Beholder Dyers Eve ...And Justice For All The Shortest Straw To Live Is To Live Harvester Of Sorrow The Frayed Ends Of Sanity One Blackened

Master Of Puppets

Master Of Puppets The Thing That Should Not Be Battery Disposable Heroes Leper Messiah Damage, Inc. Orion Welcome Home

Ride The Lightning

The Call Of Ktulu Ride The Lightning Escape Creeping Death For Whom The Bell Tolls Trapped Under Ice Fight Fire With Fire Fade To Black

Kill 'Em All

Seek & Destroy Whiplash Metal Militia Jump In The Fire The Four Horsemen Phantom Lord (Anesthesia)-Pulling Teeth Motorbreath No Remorse Hit The Lights

Check out Metallica's official web site.

Metallica Biography

When you're able to brandish the kind of musical firepower that Metallica has unleashed for more than two decades - 10 uncompromising albums, marking an unprecedented reign as the Greatest hard rock band in history - you learn a thing or two about where to aim. But curiously enough, the making of their first studio album since 1997's Re-Load, the primal, raptorial, St. Anger, found Metallica not behind the turrets this time, but in the firing line itself.

The trials and tribulations leading up to St. Anger are well documented. The fissures in what the band members themselves describe as the well-oiled "Metallica machine" were beginning to show; Bassist Jason Newsted's nebulous exit from the group. James Hetfield's voluntary sojourn into rehab and much-longed-for sobriety. Public squabbles over the illegal downloading quagmire. All of these issues revealed the kind of seismic fault-lines that even the Metallica jauggernaut could not navigate - could not negotiate away.

At stake? Nothing less than the very existence of the band itself. Metallica's three principals, James Hetfield, Lars Ulrich, and Kirk Hammett, along with their frequent producer/collaborator Bob Rock, found themselves at the kind of crossroads worthy of the themes in many a Metallica song. The kind of foreboding scenario Ulrich and Hetfield could write in their sleep.

The irony was, if this was Metallica's oft-predicted meltdown, each member would have to face it in his own way. And from the inside out this time, without the Metallica

heat-shield to fend off all the bullshit that tends to calcify when you're a member of the most exclusive rock club in the world for twenty-odd years. With James on an indefinite hiatus, the group admitted to becoming ‘professional speculators' themselves as to whether Metallica was headed for a rebirth, or withering away on life-support.

"It has been a very interesting three years," Lars Ulrich begins with atypical understatement. "A very different three years for us. Difficult. Awkward. It's been a ride that's taken us to places inside ourselves, inside the band, inside the potential of human beings and the music and everything else that we could not imagine existed. But if you asked me then, I would say for the first time in my life with Metallica, I was starting to prepare myself that maybe the ride was over."

If it sounds like the tenets of a Herculean struggle, who else but Metallica to apply for the job. The result of the ‘ride' Lars refers to can indeed be found in the sweat and blood and grooves of St. Anger. From the album's crushing title song and its burnished heaps of magnified guitar and drums, to the colossal time and tempo changes of "Frantic," to the chugging slabs and staccato exchanges of the exalting confessional "My World," Metallica has once again, in the boldest strokes imaginable, made music its most viable currency.

The three bandmembers, who gingerly refer to themselves as brothers - and mean it - emerged from the other side of their journey with their musical compass intact. St. Anger is an album that invariably will draw comparisons to their best work, to Metallica's halcyon days, most notably their classic 1983 opus Kill ‘Em All, and 1986's Master Of Puppets. Monumental in scope, the new album also recalls - by its sheer willfulness - the group's 15 million selling masterpiece known as the Black Album. But this is clearly a work that couldn't have been made twenty years ago. Not even a decade ago, though it fits the Metallica canon like a glove.

According to producer Rock (the Black album was his first collaboration with Metallica) St. Anger completes the circular creative cycle that only the greatest artists are able to sustain. "It's been my experience that only the big artists know how to achieve a goal in their career, like Metallica did with the Black album. Fewer still could have gone through what they experienced with all their personal journeys, throw away the rulebook and try and capture the soul and truth of Metallica again. I think the real vision was to almost take them back to where they were first getting together when three or four guys get together and say: ‘this is the kind of music we like, let's write some songs.'"

For James, whose own personal quest may have been the tipping point for Metallica's

inspirational sea change, the album was an important step in their evolution not just as bandmembers, but also as friends. "The early days of Metallica were about brotherhood, just survival mode, relying on each other and stuff. As the machine got bigger, you tend to forget about the friendship part and start worrying about where the machine is going. You get a little more protective, a little more isolated. Certain factors ignited the need to look inward again and just get to be friends. Now we're stronger than ever because we know what we're doing and we have experience on our side too."

Part of the familial equation the group had to deal with was the departure of Newsted and the search for a new bassist. Enter Rob Trujillo. A former member of Suicidal Tendencies and one of the masterminds behind the ‘90's cult band Infectious Grooves, the accomplished bassist has also played with none other than Ozzy Osbourne.

All three bandmembers immediately hit it off with the respected Trujillo, and the hole in Metallica's musical armor was filled. Trujillo came aboard too late to appear on St. Anger. The band members did not seem to be in any rush to hire a bass player. Bob Rock, in addition to being the co-producer and co-songwriter on St. Anger, was considered the 4th member of the band. Bob even filled in (quite masterfully) at a few live events with the guys. But, as Metallica guitarist Kirk Hammett says, Trujillo's chemistry with the band is undeniable. "From the first rehearsal Rob was just mind blowing, because he had such a huge sound and he pulled with his fingers which is very reminiscent of Cliff Burton and we really liked that sound. He delivered on all fronts. He had a big sound and on top of that he's really a great, solid guy." Adds James: "He pounds. The power that comes through his fingers. He's a ball of energy and he's so calm and able and balanced. He's got great stuff to offer but his personality is just right. He's on fire, he's ready, he's plugged right into the strength of Metallica and helping it shine."

Another aspect of Metallica's rejuvenated approach on this album was for Hammett to join in on the lyric writing, territory previously exclusive to only James and Lars. "At first I was like I don't want anything to do with this, this is James' job. But Bob was very adamant. I looked at James and I said ‘Well, how do I do this?' James said ‘stream of consciousness.' I would scribble down some lines and James would single out the good ones. It was a great experience and I think it's all in line with the theme of the album, if there is an underlying theme, which is just being true to yourself and how important that is to the overall picture."

Which leads to what is sure to be another topic of discussion among Metallica-watchers when pouring over the epic arrangements and knife-edged nuances of St. Anger. For a band that is in the throes of introspection, and in a larger sense, collective healing, they sure have laid down some motherfucking aggressive music. For hardcore fans who patiently waded through their all-covers release, 1998‘s Garage Inc., a spry homage to the songs that shaped their early career, and the symphonic wanderlust of S&M, a stirring experiment that showcased Metallica with noted producer/writer/arranger Michael Kamen and the San Francisco Symphony, St. Anger is a thirst-quencher. But one that offers nothing but fire this time around.

Lars says there was no conscious effort to make this album louder or longer. "I think the great thing about Metallica is that we can pretty much chart where we want to chart. Playing other people's material (like on Garage Inc.) was something we talked about for years. It was the music the band was basically founded on. With the Symphony stuff we got a call from Michael Kamen who wanted to do it and the band was excited by the challenge - something Metallica has always embraced. "But now that we are back playing the stuff that people think is the purest, it is the most natural, it is the most effortless. The other thing I think we're challenging here is that most people have the perception that in order for things to be really, really, energetic that they can only come from negative energy. Metallica was fueled by negative energy for twenty years. Now we've spent a lot of times working on ourselves and on our relationships and we've turned that around. Now Metallica is fueled by positive energy that has manifested itself so it sounds like the album we've made."

 

 

Case in point: "Some Kind Of Monster," with its bristling, time-bomb refrain, and yet, underneath, a hint of affirmation: ‘this is the voice of silence no more.' You begin to understand the complex dynamics required for a world-renowned construct like Metallica to be even able to conceive of an intensely personal triumph like St. Anger. For James, the process obviously begins in a much quieter place than a recording studio. "It comes from us realizing the world doesn't revolve around Metallica. For me it began with ‘my name is James Hetfield.' St. Anger means to me that now that we've found our serenity we're capable of making this monster of an album going full-throttle all the time. Anger is an energy. It's a feeling. It's gotten a bad reputation but it's what you do with it after that gives it its reputation. I could squeeze out sideways with rage and stuff the shit down, yet it can be such a source of strength. Metallica has always been about invading places where we don't belong. We just took down the barbed-wire, that's all."

 

4/03

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