I feel for James Hatfield, I understand what it's like to have anxiety. Alcohol was his escape. Being a rock star is like throwing a huge party. Learning to throw that party sober takes tremendous courage and strength. The longevity of Metallica has a lot to do with James Hetfield looking in the mirror. I write this because he's been a tremendous inspiration in my life.
When I saw them in chicago a while back with a7x I think in 2018. Right after that tour he relapsed. Hes an inspiration to how hard it can be but also how you can bounce back. The documentary they filmed a long time ago around the st. Anger/monster inside me highlights it. James is a great man; just troubled.
@@CrazyCooter-ld6sz money can’t buy you a good past…but it can help buy a better future. Privilege means nothing if you can’t get out of your own head. I can’t make the dark thoughts go away.
80s concerts were the best. Everyone was in the moment. No stupid cell phones. All the posers knew they weren't welcome and it was like one giant arena of best friends for 2/3 hrs of non stop fun and just being ecstatic. There were no chairs on the floor. If you were in the front, you were right next to the stage being squished, sweaty, screaming and having the time of your life. Those concerts will never happen again. Glad i was there for many of those shows back in the day.
It`s not the first time I hear song "it's a long way to the top" from AC/DC before the live band taking the stage. Perfect choice of those metal bands it gives me goosebumps. God, how much I love these guys.
Nice that you posted this video with pre show footage. I was sitting on row 1, but this adds a new layer of this concert experience. Second night was even better than first night. 🤘🏻
That would be really cool, rotating the instrumentals as openers , ,i'll be seeing them in st Louis, it'll be my 5th and 6th shows, and I have yet to hear my favorite song "memory remains" live, so I hope that changes lol
@@gagelewis6264 they played that at Wembley Stadium, London, England the day after Live 8. Crowd went on for ages after “Naa na na naa….” The band just stood and watched, made us get louder. Totally and utterly unforgettable. Indeed, the memory of it remains ha!
Saw them in 1989 and 1990. It was a completely different time and I'm so glad I got to witness it. Before everyone had their damn cell phone in the air and other people in the crowd looking bored.
Yea IKR i really wanna go to their concert but I grew up watching '89 Seattle and '92 San Diego DVDs, the shit that I'm seeing now just seems so boring...and it's NOT Metallica's fault...people are just dead man
That is beautiful have a great time.i saw Metallica 2 times on their and justice tour with Queensryche and the cult.Amazing energy but nothing beat seeing pantera in 1999 on the sabbath reunion tour.greatest show
Yeah, for sure :) - but it almost killed James, as he's said in the past. You feel like a god and that you can do whatever you want.. It's as dangerous as any drug.. Hence the song Moth Into Flame
@@gagelewis6264 actually no, I haven’t. They even build a smaller museum or something of that nature. But no. It’d would be historic to pay my respects.
Anyone please tell me if there is an official video recording of this gig or is it early days? The cameras are flying about everywhere. All I’ve seen, but thank you, is clips like this from peoples mobile phones. The gig looks epic, and I’ve only just into the band!
You're right... Ross Halfin was backstage on this european tour, but it's not him on that video... You can see Ross Halfin with Rob from the Hamburg show here at 1:12 : ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-yowuRCDiNn0.html