I don't care what you like, what you play, or what you pursue musically... these guys are incredible. As a cellist, I live in a different world of music, have never heard these guys before, that was AWESOME! Thanks for sharing!
Mustaine's ability to make you feel his rage as well as his pain, anxiety and sorrow has fascinated me ever since Peace Sells...back in 86. This dude is a genius in his craft, no question...so hard not to admire!!!
Couldn't have said it better myself! "They killed my wife and my baby, With hopes to enslave me First mistake... last mistake" always leaves me covered in goosebumps
One of the most impressive points of this song for me is the sheer length of it yet you're not bored for a single second if it. Every part is memorable
@@travis8180lol. Or symphony x. Ok there's that one extreme long song. Longest from the rockish genre I know is X-Japan - Art of life. Gawd I love that song. The musical style and changes are on another level.
That entire album was next level. Especially when it was released. No one had ever released a metal album with such complex and technical music. And Dave’s voice works perfectly with megadeth’s music.
I would argue peace sells was more complex and technical . Especially the drums but also song structures and riffs 🤷 rust in peace was awesome but peace sells is the true goat
@@notexpatjoe definitely, rust was in 1991 I believe and all sorts of metal was already shredding by that time period. And that doesnt even consider things like jazz fusion or funk
The thing I love the most about Megadeth is the simplicity of their stage presence. No unnecessary running around. No massive props. Just lights, musicians, and the ever impressive drum risers each drummer uses.
as a teenager I recognized this album musicianship for what it is, pure greatness. It wasn't until I was in Afghanistan many years later, that the lyrics came back to me and I suddenly realized the heaviness of the lyrics. I truly understood then, the reality of them. Dave was not just signing about humanity's past, but also the present and future. It became a daily anthem for my crew, and we played and sang along while getting the truck ready to go out on patrol.
We used to do the same in Iraq as well as play it from the psyops speakers we had mounted on some of our boats. Along with Metallica Slayer and some others.
The funny story is that he was Chuck Behler's drum tech (the drummer that appeared on the So Far, So Good... So What album.) The band felt that Chuck didn't quite fit the style the band and were thinking about replacing him, when they heard Menza warming up Behler's drums before a gig. Out goes Behler and in comes Menza. The rest is history.
This album changed my life, I just started playing guitar when Rust In Peace came out and I set out to learn every song on the album, it took years but I can finally say proudly I can play every solo from this album. Best metal album ever.
Would love it if you would do some videos. Not tutorials. Just you playing. Marty lays down some goat status solos on this album. I applaud you for having the discipline to learn all that stuff. A lot of people don’t realize, this is the most “guitar” album ever. Lol if u don’t like rust in peace, then you don’t like guitar. 😂
I commend you good sir. I've learned nearly every riff, and learned GOAT by Polyphia, but I'm still far too nervous to attempt the Tornado solo. Seriously, one of, if not the best solos of all time.
9:07 will forever be cemented as one of the greatest metal breakdowns in history! Thank u for realizing this greatness. I thought I was the only one who noticed.
Rust in Peace is an absolute masterpiece. After all these years it's still in my regular rotation, it just never gets old for me. RIP Nick, without you this album simply wouldn't have been possible.
@@A_Final_Hit I like Dawn Patrol; mainly because of the musical contrast it presents running into the last (and my favourite) song on the album. And at barely 2 minutes long, even if one doesn't like the song, it barely has time to detract from the whole album, IMHO.
Amen. You take any one of the four out of the Rust equation and it's an average album. The synergy between the four made it epic and that's something even Dave would agree to.
@@A_Final_Hit Most underrated track is Five Magics. Killer riffs throughout. Marty's final solo is... indescribable! And Dave's outro solo is probably his best.
Dave is just on another level and expects the same out of the other members. To play rhythm like that is incredible. But to play like that AND sing is just mind blowing
Dave is a machine with two separate brains for singing and playing. My favourite Metal artist ever. Huge inspiration in terms of song writing,lyrics,playing you name it. Megadeth changed my life. Also love his voice,hair. Like God create the perfect Metal machine of a human being. Only Dave could have sang these songs with this intensity. All hail King Of thrash Metal or Metal in general.
Regarding the spider chord - it's something totally different. For example, if you had a riff that moved back and forth between a B and G power chord, you would play them at the 2nd and 3rd fret, respectively, and fret them like this: B power chord - 1st and 3rd fingers G power chord - 2nd and 4th fingers This allows you very quick and clean transitions between chords, and your hand ends up looking like a spider. On second thought there's probably a video that demonstrates this better than words do.
I'm turning 50 this year, and I went through my teens with these chaps. I still head bang to Megadeth. Rust in Piece is the best metal album ever., and Tornado of Souls is the best metal song ever. It would be good to see you do i vid on Tornado of Souls, if you have not already.
Tornado of Souls has my favorite solo period of any song I've ever heard. Must have been awesome growing up listening to them. I'm only 31 and found them in highschool.
@@drewkirkhouse Reflections is another cookie monster band. Music might be good but the cookie monster angrily shouting throughout the music makes it too distracting to listen to. If they had an actual singer they would have more broad appeal. I wouldn't compare them to Megadeth at all.
Yes sir. My favorite Megadeth lineup is Mustaine, Friedman, Ellefson and Menza. There was something magical about that lineup and they were all involved with my favorite Megadeth albums. Rust, Symphony, Youthanasia and Cryptic.
he's not strange he's passionate about his politics and world views, daves hardcore and has no time for woke morons, he went through a lot to get where he is now.
@@cassiusdio6048 if he has no time for woke morons why did he act like one then and sack jr? Dave is a brilliant guitarist but as a person he is one of the biggest hypocritical scumbags in metal, up their with sharon Osborne for me
IMO not strange, but unique 🙂. In the past drunk, drugged, hurt & angry but always hilarious & always talented. From what I've observed, Dave in 2021 is: authentic, honest, unique, direct, intelligent, confident, sensitive, hilarious, highly creative, perfectionistic, tough, strong willed, opinionated, amazingly Gifted with both Lead & Rhythm guitar., song writing, both lyrical & musical, with an unmistakably unique voice.
Dude!! I just took my son to his first concert to see Megadeth and LOG and it was so amazing!! My son is only 17 but he totally knew how cool it was to see a legend rockin’ for us!! It was a special moment for me. I totally dig your vids and am going to start your lessons online soon. Keep jammin dude!! 🤘🏻🔥🤘🏻🔥
@@Guitargate IKR!! It was amazing to see his face when the bands got going. Totally fkn awesome!! Cool that you responded to my message. I’ve been playing for forever but never took any lessons. Love your vids!! I show my wifey all the time but some people just don’t get into like we do. Keep it up man. You should totally come to South Carolina and hang out. L8r T8r!! 🤘🏻🤘🏻
I saw Megadeth a few days after 9/11, and they opened with this song. Dave was playing a V with American flag painted on it. Probably the best concert opener I've seen in person.
Didn’t get into MEGADETH until around 2010. When DYSTOPIA came out I seized the moment and was able to have the privilege to see the DYSTOPIA tour. It was an experience. Definitely, one of the best bands of all time.
kiko Loureiro is a Behemot of a player, my fav out all the other leads for me, then its Marty Friedman, another guitar god (although honestly, all Megadeth guitar players are god level, even Mustaine was at some point and still is for some), I feel Mustaine voice is not as good that record, to be fair though, he was never gonna win a singing award anyways xD so doesnt matter much to me, so definetely the sell point for me is the Kiko touch what does it, as a long time Kiko fan, I specially love it cause Megadeth Kiko is an evolved version of Angra Kiko, so much cleaner and accurate than he used to be, composition wise, the record is above ok for me, but I would not put it in my top 3 Megadeth albums, maybe 5th after Youthanasia, first and second for me are Countdown for Extintion and Rust in Peace respectively, still very solid album
Not for nothing but dystopia came out like around 2016 in 2010 I think it was 13 but it really doesn't matter your a megadeth fan and so am I and that's what is all about ✌👊🤘
@@Baka_Oppai Marty Friedman composed many of metal's greatest all-time guitar solos. The type of work he did during his stint playing in the genre of metal is in a league of its own. He's one of the best metal leads ever.
This song is a showcase of what exemplary musicians this lineup is! And Dave is one of, if not the best to sing and play at the same time, great reaction, thanks for sharing. 🤘
The transition from Holy Wars to Punishment Due is the best Metal riff of all time. Nothing else comes close. I get fucking goosebumps every time I hear it.
I remember when I first started on guitar. I was able to master Metallica songs fairly easily. Megadeth was a whole different story. By far my favorite band. And I still haven't been able to add a lot of their songs to my play list.
Same here. I remember going to guitar center in the late 90’s and buying the tab books. I bought rust in peace & and justice for all. I got the Metallica ones… but megadeth felt impossible. Starting that day, I considered Dave to be the best guitar player and still do! 👍
Yesss... I feel same. I am a Metallica fans, though I play bass. Learn Metallica, maybe I have hope to master it, but different when learn Megadeth riffs. Different world, different difficulties, different techniques and different moods...
That's the point. I play keys and even i find metallica's songs to be fairly easy on the ear and to pick on a Synth. But Megadeth songs require lot more strength and speed. Especially this song.
I've said it a million times, Dave Mustaine never gets enough credit for being THE greatest rhythm guitarist of all time. I mean, lead guitarists always get the credit, while rhythm usually gets overlooked and dismissed, like bass (a lot of times). Dave's rhythm playing is just as complex and layered as any lead, and he does it better and in more creative ways than pretty much anybody else. *edit* And yeah, I know Dave does play lead as well. But I believe rhythm is where he shines.
This song is a "2 parter". The first part about the wars fought in Gods name. The second part is an "Ode to the Punisher" (the comic book vigilante). Incredible mesh of two songs so perfectly composed. This song wasnt easy for me to learn at 14 yrs old.
I’ve been listening to megadeth since I was 12 , I’m now 42… I’ve seen them live 10+ times & met the band a few times too.. many metal fans just don’t get megadeth because all they focus on is Dave’s vocals.. the musicianship throughout megadeth’s almost 40 year career has always been executed with precise precision in the studio & live performances.. so much instrumentally is going on & not just in this particular song, once you concentrate fully on the music it’s then you realise how much talent these guys have, past & present. Love the video, can clearly see how passionate you are about guitar & megadeth… 🤘
Wow, I’m also 42 and been listening to megadeth since 12. An Unforgettable experience when my band won a contest playing Lucretia back in 95/96. Warm greetings from Indonesia!
His vocals are awesome. Do you want Michael Buble' to sing Megadeth songs? Get real, when I introduced my girlfriend to Megadeth, she loved his vocals first and then realized how incredible the guitar was.
I'm 38 and I've been listening since I was 8 thanks to my brother that is 42! We snuck downstairs to watch Headbangers Ball. Got copied tapes from friends and even stole a few because our parents didn't let us buy metal albums. Dave sings like he plays, bends every note. I think it fits the music perfectly. This is my favorite Megadeth song by far and perfect showcase for Dave's vocal range. It is their masterpiece.
Inspirations for Holy Wars was an episode of Dave almost causing a riot in Northern Ireland. And The Punishment Due is the backstory of Marvel's The Punisher (Dave's favorite comic book character). He's written 2 songs about The Punisher, first one being Killing Is My Business.. And Business Is Good!
Correct, they played at Antrim Forum where Dave mistakenly decided to voice support for the IRA. Half the crowd where going to kill him and they had to get a police escort to the airport. I was at that show, a lot of Megadeth tee shirts got ripped up that night. He apologized a few years later at a show in Belfast
Dave Mustaine is by far one of the best guitarist of all times. To do what he does takes tremendous skill, to do it without looking is just out of this world. And to do it without looking and while singing, that's just god like!
This version of this band had a totally diff feel than the band today, which I also love. More groovy. Nick Menza was an absolutely amazing drummer with Rust in Peace being a masterpiece across every instrument. Like a metal version of Dave Grohl. They have great precision yet they let things breathe just enough to take away the sterile metronome feel. I’ve tried to explain this to non drummers and it’s just something you have to feel.
I read an interview with Kerry King once where he was saying that same thing. He said every time he has a solo he has to look at his guitar, meanwhile anytime Dave plays way more complex solos he’s looking in the opposite direction. Kerry said it blew him away any time he saw it.
@@Afurthyclays Dave's hair is beautiful. They all had/have great hair. That must have been one of the requirement to be in Dave's band lol, along with having to be instrumental genius's.
I absolutely love seeing people appreciate music Ive been listening to since the 80's. Rust in Peace is one of the great metal masterpieces. This performance speaks for itself. Love it!
Great video of the greatest metal band of all time, not trying to criticize you but you are butchering the amazing lyrics. You are doing an awesome job but read the lyrics
I remember being a care free, pot smokin 17 yr old kid back in 86 & hearing megadeth play wake up dead for the first time: mind blowing The scorn ex Metallica axeman turned his rage into musical masterpieces.
Not sure what the musical inspirations might have been, but the song has 2 main thematic inspirations. The middle slow bit that's super badass is lyrically based on Marvel's The Punisher (this section bears the title "the Punishment Due"). The main part of the song (the actual "Holy Wars" part) was inspired by Dave's experience in Ireland during The Troubles. The story goes that Dave found some guy selling bootleg t-shirts in the parking lot and was angrily ordering him to stop when the dude pleaded that he was selling shirts to support "the cause." Upon hearing this, Dave allowed the guy to continue selling the shirts. Later on Dave (being the ignorant fuck that he is) proclaimed, "this one's for the cause!" before starting up a song. Well a riot broke out and the band had to be escorted away. Dave wrote the lyrics to holy wars as he sat in a bulletproof bus amongst the violence that he had kicked off ignorantly, hence the lyric "fools like me, who cross the sea and come to foreign lands"
I was going to write a very similar comment explaining ‘The Punisher’ part of the song. The lyrics literally tell the Punisher’s story, up to that point. I thought everybody knew this. Dave has stated this many times in interviews. How could such a big Megadeth “fan”, like this dude, not know this?
The second part, after the middle eastern guitar break is actually about the Marvel comics character, The Punisher (the punishment due) - Mustaine was such a big fan. They killed my wife and my baby, some people try to employ me (that’s from an 80s comic “circle of blood”. Either way they die.
100% agree! Definitely the fastest , tightest band I've ever seen live! I remember Nick's drum riser rocking back and forth through the whole show !!!!!
I saw this in June of 91 or 92 at the Starplex in Dallas, Texas.... Clash of the Titans. Alice in Chains on their first tour opening for Slayer, Anthrax, & Megadeth... It was beyond epic, it was a life-changing experience, it was one of the top three greatest concerts I ever saw out of the hundreds I've been to over the years.
I saw this same tour in 1991 in Portland, Maine. I'm not the biggest Slayer fan but I really was into AiC, Anthrax, and Megadeth. I remember being blown away as a teenager and it too was an epic experience. It was like the 3rd concert I'd ever been to and it still sticks with me today.
Simply one of the tightest and most powerful lineups any band has ever put on a stage. Nick Menza was a remarkable player (rip). So strong and what a huge pocket.
The epic track, one of the best-constructed Metal songs of all time period. The compositional structure, chops, and technic displayed are unparallel for that era and every other that followed.
Dude, love megadeth and love your enthusiasm for the music. The way you rock back and forth like your waiting to jump in, that's the same way I watch these old videos. Keep up the good work bro.
I know this video is 5 months old, but I really needed to say this. That moment in Dave's Solo, those few seconds of that lick, is, for me, the most epic and best moment in whole Megadeth's catalog, and that is a big statement 🤘 Greta video Michael !
When you say at the beginning, "the one, the only..." I was so happy that you said "Nick Menza." He is my favorite Heavy Metal drummer (RIP), and I feel like he is sorely underrated. He's the first drummer that I ever heard, when playing for the 'zug' palm muted rhythm guitar, he seemed to follow it with tom fills. Music was really something else at this time. Thanks for covering this song, it's always cool to see you break songs down...
Mustaine is probably the best metal guitarist of all time. I saw them in 89, 90 and 92. Not only crazy rhythm guitar while singing but he also shreds insane solos. He’s a metal god.
He's definitely not the best. But he understand theory fairly well. His main problem is being repetitive. Plays a riff 8 times in a row for no reason, when 4 times would have done just as well. 2 or 4 loops is that magic number, so your audience doesn't get bored. He just doesn't write enough content to allow more changes. Break this song down. How many different parts do you actually think there are? And considering this is two songs FORCED into one. Still only has like 4 parts in the entire song. Think about that next time you praise things you don't understand.
@@adameves5970 It's called minimalism. It builds up the tension to set up the next section. It's architectonic writing, something you don't see often in rock music. In fact, Megadeth would simplify things in their next album, to the detriment of the music.
@@adameves5970 Good sir, there are 3 distinct riff parts before the vocals even kick in. Altogether as far as musical parts, you have the intro riff with the syncopation, the fast riff with the hammer ons and pull offs, the power chord part where it switches to a half time groove on the drums, then the verse riff - which combines part of the intro riff with a bunch of other new parts rhythmically, and has one of the coolest and most musically interesting patterns I’ve heard someone sing clean vocals over, then the Brief “up on my podium” riff. Then for part 2 of the song you have the verse riff, followed by the alternating rhythmic part that goes under Marty’s lead which is cool in and of itself as a rhythm part and is completely different than the rhythm part under the vocals here. Then you have the solo riff which combines the slow down riff from the first minute of the song with palm muting on the bridge, and then back to the fast hammer on pull off riff, leading to a building crescendo which brings back the first guitar melody in the song to a relatively stirring climax of a conclusion with the addition of a totally different vocal part and melody “next thing you know they’ll take my thoughts away.” So there’s at least 7 parts of the song even if you don’t count the rhythm riff under Dave’s solo as it’s own unique part as it combines part of the grooving riff from the first minute of the song - which I would, and would make 8 parts. It’s no April Ethereal by Opeth as far as rhythmic and musical shifts in a song but it’s got its fair share of parts, and manages to feel cohesive and come full circle with the ending vocals making the riff that repeats feel impactful rather than repetitive. Your comment is quite literally the first time I’ve ever seen someone mention the idea of boredom in regards to this song or how it’s constructed. It’s baffling. It’s not just that your opinion differs it’s that you seem genuinely negative toward someone praising this song or Mustaine as a writer. Take a step back and realize how you come off here. Megadeth’s audience doesn’t get bored listening to Holy Wars. You’re the very definition of an outlier in that regard.
Legendary. Hall of Fame. Masterpiece. Holy wars?….Holy Grail of thrash metal! 🤘🏼🤘🏼 long live the king! The entire Rust in Peace album is the greatest album of all time.
I was just a young, angst filled teen when I watched this live footage. One of Megadeths best performance, and solidified me growing out my hair. I know its random, but Mustaine had glorious fucking hair dude
How can one play those intricate guitar lines and sing over it at the same time is incredible. I love his snotty attitude while he sings, you know it's Megadeth. That's the whole point and he nails it.
That’s the best part. People who don’t like them because of his voice just don’t get it. His angsty, aggressive high pitched voice adds everything to the band. They wouldn’t be Megadeth without his voice. I personally didn’t like it too too much when I first got into them but began to realize what I do now years ago. His angry snarls and angry vocals are the finishing touch on their sound. I personally love his voice and they wouldn’t be nearly as unique without him on vocals. Not to mention, he’s an absolute machine playing and singing the riffs he plays. I don’t know how he sings a lot of those insane riffs while singing without ever fucking up. Insane talent.
@@Scottocaster6668 same here brother. Especially on the Countdown to Extinction album and Youthanasia. His vocal performances on those albums were top notch. Especially Youthanasia!
@@samschossig334 I hate how hard it is to find people like you, whenever I see people saying "I love megadeth but that voice is uh..." I'm like what, that's the best part (welp, every part of megadeth is the best part, but still) I think Dread And The Fugitive Mind was the first Deth's song I've ever heard, and it was like some kind of revelation lol, as if I always wanted to hear that kind of voice, it's aggressive (but not just like "oh look at me I'm angry booh", it's not as simple as that) and just he just uses the perfect tone for it, his tone and lyrics fits perfectly
I think Angry Again is the pinnacle of the spider chord composition type with Dave's lyrics and snarling. It just really cuts to the point of what Megadeth is about, and probably why it remains among their most radio popular songs today.
Nick Menza's swung thrash groove is the backbone of this album, non of the drummers who followed him could make Megadeth groove like this. The way at the end of this song he goes back and forth between standard and double-time really intensifies the end. RIP buddy
Menza's grooves were a bit pedantic and stale. He also failed to used fills. His shit was boring and easy. He did a good job with his capability, though.
@@sentientcloroxbottle1557 Two words:.....Enter Sandman.....Only true decent song on it, with the possible exceptions of The Unforgiven and Through the Never. It's nowt to do with the production, IMHO, just the quality (or lack thereof) of the song writing. But, it's all opinions.
@@brandoncrow3741 A more apt comparison would be AJFA--I've always thought Rust was a response to that uber-technical Metallica album, and then Countdown was Megadeth's Black Album, with simpler songs compared to the last album, more radio friendly.
You are the prime example of an exemplary musician. Playing around with melodies with your guitar and having a very keen interest of understanding, not necessarily HOW your inspirations do what they do, but WHY they do what they do. It’s just so great to see people that share intense passion for music that is level to my own. When you play, you’re not trying to stick to a specific rubric or formula, whereas I feel like people get caught up in the “right way” to play or preform. But in reality, you need to find “your way” and refrain from trying to stick to a specific path of growth. Much love brother, thank you for being out here and sharing your love for music.
I saw Megadeth play at Toad's Place in New Haven, CT for this album's tour. Seeing this band, with THIS lineup, in such a small club is still one of the best concerts I have ever been to.
I saw this tour in Seattle 1992, ears still ringing. I was playing in bands around Seattle at the time and was fortunate enough to go backstage and met the enigma known as Dave Mustaine, drank a beer and had some pizza. I was expecting him to be a shithead, but he was incredibly gracious and we had a nice conversation about the Arizona desert. I always thought Megadeth was more dynamic than the others of that day, played smarter yet brutal as well.
Rust in peace is one of the all time greatest albums. I opened for Megadeth at Toads Place in Connecticut when I played drums with Blitzspeer. I had no idea how amazing this album was at that time.
One of the best lineups in Metal history - Dave, Marty, Junior (Dave E.) and Nick. Power, precision, riffs, etc. Rust In Peace is a masterpiece, but I love all the MD albums.
The best time of Megadeath in my opinion! I remember when I was the only one who listened them at a time in college and now i’m 40 and still amazed by this masterpiece they did! True high level metal to its core!
First video I have seen from this channel…I love this guy! Dear god, his energy and excitement for this song is contagious. When he says he loves this song and mustang..does anyone doubt that! I will definitely check out the channels other offerings.
I like how you broke down the different aspects of the song, most Megadeth stuff between 1985-1990 is pretty hard to play because it's very technical with a lot of very intricate parts. It's such a hard call between Chris Poland and Marty Friedman, both amazing players in their own right, so I'd never say one was better than the other. Holy Wars is the pinnacle of their career for me.
@@brettwould I have to agree with you. Poland is great, but Marty Friedman is on his own level. No Megadeth guitarist after him could play that solo right. Close, but not like Marty. 🤘
@@brettwould Yeh that's probably one of mine as well, Marty is probably the more melodic player compared to Chris where you can tell his jazz training heavily influenced the Megadeth sound on the early records.
Imo, they are about equals in technique, but Marty Friedman is more creative, to me, Chris Poland recicles phrasing too much, which btw says A LOT about Marty, cause Chris is the jazz player so it should be the other way around, but Marty found a way to create different phrasing ideas detached from the soundscape of jazz and metal (Marty also does some jazz-ish stuff, although as a jazz fan, I would most definetely not call him a jazz player nor would I think its a fair comparison, obviously real jazz players like Joe Pass, Gambale, etc could eat him for breakfast on a jazz enviroment, Im not a Friedman fanboy so I admit it, it is not fair to compare his jazz playing to real jazz players), in short it means they have different styles and I think Marty has more phrasing tools on his style, which attracts more people, then from the other players, Chris Broderick is probably the more technical proficient guy, personaly I hate his tone though and he sounds souless to me, probably cause of that hideos blunt gray boring ass guitar tone he uses all the time x'D, then we have Kiko, to me the greatest, and closer to how atractive to people as Marty playing can be, Kiko has the huge advantage though that he is an actual jazz player with actual jazz albums on his repertorie, + he is also an actual progressive artist, those of us that know him before he joined Megadeth know he was writing masterpieces already back when he was in Angra, and he has the technique to play whatever he wants, imo, he is in fact better now, although some people think he may be a bit slower now (most of his Angra work is played at power metal speeds) and maybe its true, I think is a fair debatable point, but regardless he is definetely 100% sounding much cleaner today than he ever did in the past, the one thing I havent seen him doing anymore though is 4 fingers tapping or more complex tapping stuff, and most definetelt he reserves some of his rythim powers for his solo work cause there is no place for that in Megadeth, but people interested should check his solo work, there we can find the real genius on his playing, I think conquer or die is a good small sample of his IMPROV phrasing that can be found in Megadeth (IT WAS improvised, he had to relearn it for the playthrough on his channel LOL)
I was(still am)a huge Metallica fan since 88, and heard about Megadeth,but never been too much into it.After l picked up a guitar to play and getting listen to metal more deeper to riffs and solos,and around 2008 when saw Buenos Aires live dvd got hooked,and started to learn on guitar,l realized that this music and Dave,and Friedman is a different league.
So glad you love this as much as I do. Being a kid, 15, about to turn 16 when this album comes out, doing my paper round, headphones on, Rust in Peace playing every... damn.. morning. I know this album backwards. Those nuances you talk about, the structure, they drove me, the lyrical intonations, the solos, this remains one of the greatest metal albums of all time, and my personal favourite.
What to say?! The power, rage, intensity of that track never fades away. Each time I hear it it feels like it’s the first time. A pure marvel from Dave and the band (with the best lineup ever!). The technical mastery is insane, always serving the song. Megadeth rules! 🤘 @Michael, I’ve just subscribed to your channel and it’s fantastic! Keep ‘em coming!
This is hilarious to me. Been on a Megadeth kick last couple days and the algorithm gets something right for once. The smile on your face is what I'm experiencing now. Been a fan since the 80's, and Marty since Hawaii. Pure gold, and still kicking ass. Kiko in present time on a whole nother level too.
Those major thirds are all over this song. The main riff behind the verses switches from the thirds to power chords between vocal phrases. Just killer! 🤘
Fell in love with countdown to extinction when I was in junior high, never gave their other albums a chance. 30 years later my son has fallen in love with rust in peace and he turned me on to it too. Holy wars has become my all time favorite Megadeth song.
Crazy, you were a fan in the 90s and never listened to rust or peace sells? Even to this day when I find a band I like i investigate their back catalogue. Seems to be the natural state of things. When you like something you want more and for me I always want to hear the early stuff. It is often the purest form of an artists original intention. Although, it is often no actualized too well and the second album is where that vision really comes through. Sorry, rambler
One of my absolute favorite songs on the planet ever. Been practicing it for a few years on the guitar. It's a monster song. Seen em live last month with FFDP. Dave still tears it up
Dave’s writing is amazing! I didn’t really notice until I went to learn this, But his nuance and subtle variations within his rhythms are really complex and well crafted writing!
I realized a few months ago that Megadeth is my favorite band of all time. Many have claimed that spot over the years, but Megadeth is the only band that has really stuck with me over the years at the same level.
RIP Nick and everyone else we've lost - most recently Pat Martino. Knowledge preservation and custodianship is important; thanks for being another link in the chain of public trust.
14:55 The fact that Dave can sing over any of the riffs in this song (and most of Rust in Peace) with such clear, strong rhytmical vocal lines is extremely impressive. And the riff at 8:50 might be the single biggest reason to why I started playing guitar. It completely blew my mind away.