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The
most consistently innovative metal band of the late 80s and 90s was
formed in 1981 in California, USA, by Lars Ulrich (b. 26 December 1963,
Copenhagen, Denmark; drums) and James Alan Hetfield (b. 3 August 1963,
USA; guitar/vocals) after each separately advertised for fellow
musicians in the classified section of American publication The
Recycler. They recorded their first demo, No Life Til' Leather, with
Lloyd Grand (guitar), who was replaced in January 1982 by David Mustaine
(b. 13 September 1961, La Mesa, California, USA), whose relationship
with Ulrich and Hetfield proved unsatisfactory. Jef Warner (guitar) and
Ron McGovney (bass) each had a brief tenure with the band. At the end of
1982 Clifford Lee Burton (b. 10 February 1962, USA, d. 27 September
1986; bass, ex-Trauma) joined the band, playing his first live
performance on 5 March 1983. Mustaine departed to form Megadeth and was
replaced by Kirk Hammett (b. 18 November 1962, San Francisco,
California, USA; guitar). Hammett, who came to the attention of Ulrich
and Hetfield while playing with rock band Exodus, played his first
concert with Metallica on 16 April 1983.
The Ulrich, Hetfield, Burton and Hammett combination endured until
disaster struck the band in the small hours of 27 September 1986, when
Metallica's tour bus overturned in Sweden, killing Cliff Burton. During
those four years, the band put thrash metal on the map with the
aggression and exuberance of their debut, Kill 'Em All, the album sleeve
of which bore the legend "Bang that head that doesn't bang". This served
as a template for a whole new breed of metal, though the originators
themselves were quick to dispense with their own rule book. Touring with
New Wave Of British Heavy Metal bands Raven and Venom followed, while
Music For Nations signed them for European distribution. Although Ride
The Lightning was not without distinction, notably on "For Whom The Bell
Tolls', it was 1986"s Master Of Puppets that offered further evidence of
Metallica's appetite for the epic. Their first album for Elektra Records
in the USA (who had also re-released its predecessor), this was a taut,
multi-faceted collection that both raged and lamented with equal
conviction.
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After the death of Burton, the band elected to continue, the remaining
three members recruiting Jason Newsted (b. 4 March 1963; bass) of
Flotsam And Jetsam. Newsted played his first concert with the band on 8
November 1986. The original partnership of Ulrich and Hetfield, however,
remained responsible for Metallica's lyrics and musical direction. The
new line-up's first recording together was The $5.98 EP - Garage Days
Re-Revisited - a collection of cover versions including material from
Budgie, Diamond Head, Killing Joke and the Misfits, which also served as
a neat summation of the band's influences to date. Sessions for And
Justice For All initially began with Guns N'Roses producer Mike Clink at
the helm. A long and densely constructed effort, this 1988 opus included
an appropriately singular spectacular moment in "One' (a US Top 40/UK
Top 20 single), while elsewhere the barrage of riffs somewhat obscured
the usual Metallica artistry. The songs on 1991"s US/UK chart-topper
Metallica continued to deal with large themes - justice and retribution,
insanity, war, religion and relationships. Compared to Kill 'Em All
nearly a decade previously, however, the band had grown from
iconoclastic chaos to thoughtful harmony, hallmarked by sudden and
unexpected changes of mood and tempo. The MTV-friendly "Enter Sandman"
broke the band on a stadium level and entered the US Top 20. The single
also reached the UK Top 10, as did another album track, "Nothing Else
Matters".
Constant touring in the wake of the album ensued, along with a regular
itinerary of awards ceremonies. There could surely be no more deserving
recipients, Metallica having dragged mainstream metal, not so much
kicking and screaming as whining and complaining, into a bright new dawn
when artistic redundancy seemed inevitable (the album was certified as
having sold thirteen million copies in the USA alone by June 2001).
The follow-up Load entered the US charts at number 1. The album marked a
change in image for the band, who began to court the alternative rock
audience. The following year's Reload collected together more tracks
recorded at the Load sessions, and featured 60s icon Marianne Faithfull
on the first single to be released from the album, "The Memory Remains".
Garage Inc. collected assorted cover versions, and broke the band's run
of US number 1 albums when it debuted at number 2 in December 1998. The
following year's S&M, recorded live with the San Francisco Symphony
Orchestra, evoked the worst excesses of heavy rock icons Deep Purple. In
January 2001, Newsted announced he was leaving after almost 15 years
service with the band. |