Archive for Metallica

Lars Ulrich as Dutch documentarian Joris Ivens

Posted in Heavy Metal with tags , , on June 3, 2012 by Patrick Prince

No one would have guessed back in 1981 that Lars Ulrich, a dorky metalhead from Denmark who formed a small band named Metallica, would one day play a significant character in a major cable network movie. In HBO’s biopic Hemingway & Gellhorn, Ulrich gets the opportunity to play Dutch filmmaker Joris Ivens.

It’s no coincidence that girlfriend, Danish beauty/actress Connie Nielsen, had been cast in the movie. She probably got Lars the gig. Nonetheless, the drummer does a pretty good job. At first he doesn’t say much and walks aimlessly through the camera shots. But when the camera does center on Lars, he really does an admirable job.

The movie itself is absolutely horrible — stylistically schizophrenic,  a cartoonish approach to an era of Ernest Hemingway’s life. Nicole Kidman plays Martha Gellhorn opposite Clive Owen’s Hemingway. Not their best work. It’s not their fault that the script turns them into nothing more than caricatures. The truth is, with its sweeping, campy vision centered around the Spanish Civil War, it would have made more sense to turn this work into a Broadway musical, or a Baz Luhrmann film.

Practically the entire cast comes out as a casualty. Ironically, it’s the non-thespian, Lars Ulrich, that comes out okay. Not bad for a kid who survived his first cross-country, Metallica club tour on the likes of nasty bologna sandwiches and substandard beer.

James Hetfield defends Metallica’s role in ‘Lulu’

Posted in Heavy Metal, Rock Music with tags , , , , , on November 1, 2011 by Patrick Prince

Anytime an artist starts coming up with excuses for an album they were a part of … well, it doesn’t hold promise for the reputation of that album.

In a recent interview with The Pulse Of Radio, Metallica’s frontman James Hetfield defended his role in the “Lulu’ project with Lou Reed. In fact, Hetfield claimed that he had no interest in learning the storyline of “Lulu” and simply followed Reed’s lead.

“We saw his vision through him. I didn’t want to look at the play, I didn’t want to read anything, look at the movies, ‘Pandora’s Box’, or read any of the books. I wanted to just feel it through Lou because he basically digested all of that information and it seemed pretty convoluted. There was about three or four different versions of it, and he put together his modern poet version of it.”

That doesn’t exactly sound like a ringing endorsement.

Lou Reed and Metallica

According to Blabbermouth, the two plays that “Lulu” is based on are called “Earth Spirit” and “Pandora’s Box”. The latter was made into a silent movie in 1929.

The collaboration between METALLICA and Reed was sparked by their performance together of Reed’s “Sweet Jane” and “White Light/White Heat” at the 25th anniversary of the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame at Madison Square Garden in October of 2009.

The songs were all written by Reed with extensive arrangement contributions by METALLICA.

Only two songs on the album are under five minutes in length, while two are more than 11 minutes long and the closing cut, “Junior Dad”, clocks in at 19 minutes.

Reed and METALLICA will perform selections from the album on several European TV programs but has yet to announce any live dates or U.S. appearances.

Lulu seems to be losing

Posted in Heavy Metal, Rock Music with tags , , on October 30, 2011 by Patrick Prince

Should it be any surprise that the release of the new Metallica/Lou Reed collaboration is getting bad reviews?

From the first song samples, many cried how awful the team of Metallica and Lou Reed were. The project known as Lulu seems to be a laughing matter.

Here’s Blabbermouth’s recent review of Lulu, 3 out of 10 (with a user rating of 2.5):

It might have sounded good on paper.

That’s the only explanation one can come up with for the genesis of “Lulu”, the surprise collaborative album by METALLICA and Lou Reed that first had fans scratching their heads and now, since the album surfaced online ahead of this week’s release, shaking them in horror. It could have been a fascinating mix: the biggest, most powerful metal act of its generation joining creative forces with one of rock’s dark urban poets and iconoclasts, whose band THE VELVET UNDERGROUND has cast an enormous influence over untold numbers of alternative, punk and avant-garde acts.

And indeed, when METALLICA and Reed jammed together at the New York concerts honoring the 25th anniversary of the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame in 2009, there seemed to be something there. Reed (67 at the time) looked and sounded inspired, while METALLICA seemed to find a loose yet still massive groove as it rumbled behind Reed on “Sweet Jane” and “White Light/White Heat”.

But all that cannot rectify the fact that “Lulu” is a catastrophic failure on almost every level, a project that could quite possibly do irreparable harm to METALLICA‘s career. Reed doesn’t have as much to worry about, since his recent work has gone further and further into obscure, avant-garde reworkings of some of his older material and has become increasingly irrelevant to mainstream pop/rock. For METALLICA — who earned back a lot of good faith with 2008′s “Death Magnetic” after fans turned their noses up at 2003′s “St. Anger” — the damage could be a lot worse, and the band is bizarrely doing everything it can to help that along, as we’ll discuss a little later.

The original idea — which might have worked — was to have Reed re-record a selection of his older songs with METALLICA acting more or less as his backing band. But instead, the singer came up with another venture: he wanted the band to set music to a series of lyrics/poems he’d written for a stage production based on two early 20th century plays by German Expressionist writer Frank Wedekind. The lyrics allegedly tell the story of a seductive, amoral woman who somehow ends up crossing paths with Jack the Ripper.

From the start, the album’s biggest problem is that it sounds like someone took two completely disparate recordings and laid them over each other. Much of the music that METALLICA has recorded for this sounds like either unfinished jams or basic song structures (like the generic thrash of “Mistress Dread”) that are a long way from the final versions that would appear on a METALLICA record (here’s a question: is any of this stuff taken from the semi-legendary, abandoned Presidio sessions of 2001?). There are germs of interesting ideas here, and some earthshaking riffs do emerge from time to time, but it’s hard to imagine METALLICA would put this material out as is on a proper album.

Now, imagine that someone left the tape running of this material (some 95 minutes of it) and an old man wandered in off the street and started recording his own incoherent, cracked-voice ramblings and rantings over it. That, in a nutshell, is what you get on all 10 interminable tracks found on “Lulu”. On nearly every cut, Reed‘s wavering, emotionless, melody-free vocals undermine any potential musical power that the band can muster. With a few exceptions, the vocals and music don’t sound like they belong in the same universe, let alone the same room.

The album actually starts out with a moment where one can glimpse something interesting from METALLICA: as the main riff of “Brandenburg Gate” crashes into existence, the band locks into an easy, bluesy groove as frontman James Hetfield (who delivers counterpoint vocals on several tracks) bellows “small town girl!” over and over. It’s kind of fascinating to hear METALLICA play so loosely — but then Reed comes in and wipes all that away.

The most conventional track on the record, “Iced Honey”, settles into a similar pocket that makes it the closest thing on here to an accessible song. On this one Reed semi-sings to the music and crafts what we suppose passes for a melody line from him these days. But “Iced Honey”, while not a particularly strong song, sounds like pop genius compared to the never-ending drones of “Cheat On Me”, “Pumping Blood”, “Frustration” and most of the others. There are a lot of ambient passages where the fragility of Reed‘s voice comes out in even more stark relief, while the members of METALLICA flounder around behind him and attempt to create some sort of sonic landscape.

As far as the concept of “Lulu” itself goes, Reed‘s lyrics are full of references to “colored man’s dick,” “waste” that he wants to “eat,” and wanting to marry someone who is “spermless like a girl.” He threatens to “cut my legs and tits off/when I think of Boris Karloff and Kinski” in his very first lines on the record, throwing in his trademark references to other aspects of culture, but it is Hetfield himself who comes up with the greatest howler on second track “The View” by inexplicably screaming “I am the table!” (which in the song’s official lyrics is actually written as “the tablet,” as in a block of stone) — a line that will haunt the singer/guitarist for some time to come.

A track-by-track analysis is almost futile when each track delivers more of the same deadening, dull grind, right up to the 19-minute closer “Junior Dad”. While that final exercise begins with a gentle, slowly building and almost poignant guitar theme, by the time one reaches the finish line, there’s nothing but a sense of exhaustion and incredulity.

What’s even more inexplicable about this whole demented affair — and which we alluded to above — is METALLICA and Reed‘s solid, unyielding support for this broken toy they’ve created. Again, we almost can’t fault Reed, since this is the most high-profile project he’s been involved with in years. But for METALLICA to say over and over again in interviews how proud they are, how strong this record is, and — more ominously — how it may point the way musically for the next proper METALLICA record… well, they’re either delusional, feel forced to show solidarity with Reed, or trying to hide their embarrassment behind a wall of bravado.

Did anyone attempt to stop this thing in its tracks at any time? Did every single person involved in this project — from managers to producers to the guy who brings coffee to the studio — praise it enthusiastically to the faces of the members of METALLICA, even if they were hiding their distaste inside? Has no one — not even the shrewd and generally savvy Lars Ulrich — considered the confusion and anger this could cause among fans, or even paused to think, “Gee, this really doesn’t sound very good, does it?”

One can argue that METALLICA is too big, too rich and too established to care what anyone thinks, and that they’re in a phase of their career where they need to stretch themselves and take risks in order to keep themselves interested. All of that is, in one sense, absolutely correct. But putting this record out under the METALLICA name, when it is so clearly driven by the vision of another person entirely, is simply too far a stretch to ask from fans, especially when they’re plunking down good money to buy it.

The ideal solution, perhaps, would have been to put this out as a Reed album, without METALLICA‘s name on it, and let the world virally/organically discover who the singer’s backing band was for the sessions. That might have added a cool “surprise” or “mystery” factor to the project and perhaps even taken the sting out of how poorly conceived it is. Then again, maybe not, because “poorly conceived” may not do justice to how horrendously this has turned out. And we say this as one of the few who vigorously enjoyed and defended “St. Anger”, which we still stand by. The impetus behind that album was at least there to understand; the incentive for this one is MIA.

As we said at the beginning, this might have sounded good on paper. But someone should have crumpled up that paper and thrown it away.

- Don Kaye

 

Ouch!

Lou Reed and Metallica — two great artists. Together, they seem to be a bomb.

Metallica, Offspring, and Thin Lizzy used in the fight against the Taliban

Posted in Heavy Metal, Rock Music with tags , , , , , , , , , on April 7, 2010 by Patrick Prince

“Taliban hate that music,” one US special forces officer explained.

Seems like the US military doesn’t need to smoke ‘em out. Just blast ‘em out. Heavy metal style.

According to the Associated Press, special forces are understood to be using loud music in a bid to filter out insurgents from a desolate Afghan farming community.

They could kick it up a notch. There are a lot heavier bands. Try some death metal, for instance, any death metal.

Thin Lizzy’s great but they won’t exactly put the fear of God in you like a band named Cattle Decapitation.

New Book Release, Full Metal Jackie, Centers on the Metal of the 80s

Posted in 80s Metal, Heavy Metal with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , on November 23, 2009 by Patrick Prince

The intro to the new book  “Full Metal Jackie Certified: The 50 Most Influential Heavy Metal Songs Of The ’80s And The True Stories Behind Their Lyrics” describes the joy of vinyl — in a time before the Internet — with perfect sentiment.

“Listening to a metal album used to be an event. Without the digital availability of information on the Internet, hearing an album for the first time was the single source of make-believe, a direct connection to the imagination. Fans would slit the shrink wrap and carefully slide the vinyl LP from the cardboard cover. The paper sleeve would rest in cross-legged laps while the listener absorbed the lyrics, word for word, studying them and staring at the photographs and artwork to make the songs come alive in their mind’s eye.”

Of course, this could be describing any album. And the experience is just not the same with a new CD.

There is also a foreward by Megadeth’s Dave Mustaine. Who could be a better person to describe those metal times than Dave Mustaine? Maybe Lars Ulrich. But, post-Napster, it comes out better from Dave Mustaine.

One other thing: that’s a fantastic photo by Mark Weiss of Rob Halford and KK Downing on the cover (cropped, of course, just right) of Full Metal Jackie Certified.

Yankee Fans Favorite Song? “Enter Sandman,” Of Course!

Posted in Rock Music with tags , , , , , , , , , , on November 5, 2009 by Patrick Prince

It has to be their favorite pick. When that bullpen door opens and the first notes of the Metallica classic are heard, everything is alright with the world. Yankee fans know that there’s a great certainty that the great closer, Mariano Rivera, will put the opposition to sleep. What could be a more appropriate song to attach to the future Hall-of-Famer?

The former Mets closer Billy Wagner once tried to use “Enter Sandman” as his game entrance, too, to inspire the faithful. It just wasn’t the same. And baseball fans knew it. But you can’t fault him for trying to bottle some of that magic.

Hey, even Lady Gaga likes to use Mariano as an anology when talking about success:

“I get asked, ‘Do you feel pressure? How do you feel when someone says this? Or do you feel like you have to top yourself?’ I say I do feel like I have to top myself. But I feel like I’m Rivera. I’m a closer.”

And when the fans heard the song last night in the 8th inning (as seen and heard above), they knew another game would be closed. They knew another World Championship would be theirs. #27. Since 96, many of those Championships have a great deal to do with Mariano Rivera. The Sandman.

Time to listen to Enter Sandman to celebrate.

Congratulations, New York!

Dave Mustaine Now Refuses to Be Asked ANY Question About Metallica

Posted in Heavy Metal with tags , , , , on November 1, 2009 by Patrick Prince

mustaine_metallica

Even if it’s a soft toss question about a festival tour of the Big Four: Metallica, Megadeth, Anthrax, and Slayer.

It was a question asked in a recent interview with Metal Insider. Mustaine (in a photo, above, in better beer days with Hetfield) wouldn’t bite — well, kind of:

You know, there’s no way to answer any questions about METALLICA for me. If I answer them politely, I get reamed. If I answer them funny, I get reamed. If I say something like when I said I believed my record was better than theirs, and even in that comment I said that they’ve got plenty of records that are better than anything that I’ve done, except this one… And for once it’s nice to be on the opposite side. That was taken apart. “I think my record’s better than theirs.” Well, you didnt finish the sentence, you twat. I have no desire to answer any questions, at all, about METALLICA. If something comes up, you’ll know, but as far as I’m concerned, I can’t say anything about those guys, and I won’t.

Will the Metallica questions keep coming? Should they stop coming, even if Mustaine requests it? Not sure that’s solid music journalism.

Metallica, Axl Rose, and Justin Timberlake Now Share the Same Stalker

Posted in Heavy Metal, Rock Music with tags , , , , , , on October 27, 2009 by Patrick Prince

metallica_stalked

Worse than sharing the same management, I guess.

A Karen Jane McNeil is who they all fear. Yesterday, Metallica filed a restraining order to, according to TMX.com, “stay at least 150 yards away from all of the members of the band, their families and the people who run the Metallica fan club.” (even the fan club people are being stalked?!)

McNeil already did a stint in jail for stalking Axl Rose.
Who will she stalk next? So many celebrities, so little time. As long as it isn’t David Letterman. The poor bastard has had enough of this kind of thing.

Kinks’ Ray Davies to Perform with Metallica

Posted in Heavy Metal, Rock Music with tags , , , , , , , , on October 22, 2009 by Patrick Prince

Ray Davies of the Kinks will perform with Metallica at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 25th anniversary show at Madison Square Garden next friday. Ozzy is also supposed to play with the band. But that’s not as interesting.

Wonder what song will be played? You can almost guarantee it will be a Kinks song. And Metallica is one of the best at making a cover song original-sounding again.

Also curious… why Ray Davies? I can definitely see Metallica being fans of Davies. But maybe Davies is a Metallica fan?

Also like the fact that Metallica will share the same bill as Aretha Franklin. Now that would be an extremely interesting jam. Then again, nothing — nothing — would compare if Metallica performed with Dave Mustaine.

halloffame251

Lars of Metallica Says There Was No Glory on His Position Against Napster

Posted in Heavy Metal with tags , , , on October 10, 2009 by Patrick Prince

Napster

Recently, Lars had plenty to say to Dallas radio station 97.1 The Eagle Rocks when asked about his past battle against Napster and illegal downloading. He was pretty much saying the same thing earlier this year, except back then he said he was “proud” about taking down Napster.

“That was just a bad dream; that never happened. [Laughs] Listen, there’s no glory in any of that. We took a position and a lot of people did not agree with that position that we took. A lot of people are coming now and saying, ‘You were right all along,’ patting me on the shoulder, but it was still a very bizarre summer, and I don’t take any glory away from it.
Lar_Ulrich

“We’ve always stood up for what we believed in, we’ve always stood up for kind of an impulsive need to protect Metallica  from any dissent or any people that kind of go against us — it’s almost like a gang-like mentality; protect what’s yours — and that caught us in some hot waters, as you’re very well aware of, but still, obviously it was the right thing that we did, because we threw ourselves into it. I wish we would have been a little more prepared for what was coming, but listen, it’s 10 years ago now, and I think people have sort of read the writing on the wall here and people get it.

“Contrary to popular belief, the issue was never with the Internet, the issue was never about downloading… The issue was about… Well, I’ll say it a little more P.C. It was about whose decision it was. What we were standing up for was, I’ve got no problem giving anything away, I’ve got no problem with the Internet. Whose decision is it whether you wanna give it away? We feel that it should be our decision, and another company made that decision for us, and we felt that that was kind of out of line, so we went out there to seek some sort of retribution or something [Laughs] — ‘C’mon, do ten push-ups for doing that.’ So the whole thing got a little crazy. But we’ve always been totally pro… I’m like an Internet whore — I’m on the Internet way too much every day — and I have 13 iPods and whatever else. So that’s not the issue. It’s just about who makes the decisions. If you wanna give your stuff away, then I’ll give my stuff away, but it’s my decision.”

Lars can you explain your philosophy of “giving” again?

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