They’re one of the biggest names in heavy metal, have been around for over three decades, and they still going strong. Global rockstars Metallica’s latest album proves that they haven’t lose their edge
Photo Credits: PG3. LEAD
Back with its first album in eight years, Metallica has returned to its thrash metal roots, making it clear the band hasn't lost its anger. "Hardwired... to Self-Destruct," will release soon, is the 10th album by a group determined to preserve its reign as one of the defining acts in heavy metal. "We're four angry guys," said lead guitarist Kirk Hammett, now 53 with a touch of grey in his long curly hair. "These songs have been written with a lot of anger, a lot of aggression, with a real sort of vision to do that," the California native stated.
The first track, "Hardwired," sets the tone for the 12-track album -- uncompromising and ultra-fast with enraged, nihilistic lyrics that recall Metallica's first opus, 1983's "Kill 'Em All." The title of the latest album is "a statement on the human condition and how we all kind of do things that we know are bad for us but we do it anyway," Hammett said. "We are hardwired to be a little naughty, a little bad, and on the extreme end of that, some people just self-destruct because they just can't get enough of that bad stuff." The second song -- "Atlas Rise!" -- recalls "Master of Puppets," the title track of Metallica's 1986 album that was groundbreaking for the musical depth of a heavy metal song.
While not as epic as the earlier music, "Atlas Rise!" runs for more than six minutes, shifting between vocal and instrumental passages and Hammett's celebrated guitar solos, free-flowing and true to form with a wah-wah pedal. Hammett, who said he first turned to music to release his anger, says he plays so ferociously on the guitar that he breaks more strings than he replaces. "I always play very, very aggressively, and in a very angry way," he said. "It makes me feel better." His relationship with his instrument is still evolving, he added, saying he has "reconnected" with his guitar in recent years. Hammett is especially fond of jazz and bossa nova and has tried to deconstruct the genres' sounds and techniques. "I learn stuff in those worlds and play it and I go, 'Yes, I totally can use it in heavy metal,'" he said.
On its latest album, Metallica slows down on "Halo on Fire," with frontman James Hetfield taking on a more airy, nuanced voice, if not quite to the extent of "Nothing Else Matters," the ballad from Metallica's top-selling work, 1991's "Black Album." "We wanted to create something with the simplicity and aggression of 'Kill 'Em All,' but what ended up happening is the songs sound like the first five albums," Hammett said, adding that the new work was not a "carbon copy."
But Metallica is not looking for early retirement. "We always want to be the best," Hammett said, describing his attention to his music as obsessive-compulsive. "We just want to go out and conquer." After the quiet spell in recent years, the quartet plans a world tour next year starting on January 11 in Seoul. "My goal is to live to 100 years old and be able to stand there with a guitar on and play 'Seek and Destroy,'" Hammett said, referring to the band's first recorded song. However, other songs might be more difficult for a centenarian metalhead, he added. "I don't know if I'll be able to do 'Fight Fire with Fire.' I might break in half," he said. "But I know I can do 'Seek and Destroy.'"
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The originals
• Of the original founding members, only Lars Ulrich and James Hetfield remain. Guitarist Dave Mustaine, but he was kicked out for being an alcoholic prior to recording Kill ‘Em All in 1983 (a bit rich, seeing as how the band would later be dubbed “Alcoholica” on account of their own excessive drinking). Mustaine, who went on to form Megadeth, was replaced by Kirk Hammett.
• Cliff Burton was the preternaturally talented bassist who died in a tragic tour bus crash in 1986 at the age of 24, having already performed with Metallica on three of metal’s all-time classic albums. Burton was replaced by Jason Newsted, who was later replaced by Robert Trujillo
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5 albums to listen to
• Ride The Lightning
• Kill Em All
• Master of Puppets
• And Justice For All
• The Black Album
10 best songs
• The Four Horsemen
• One
• For Whom The Bell Tolls
• Seek and Destroy
• Master of Puppets
• Welcome Home (Sanitarium)
• Sad But True
• Wherever I May Roam
• Fade to Black
• Enter Sandman