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Jason stepped up at the very end of 86 and wasn’t necessarily shunned. But he was the new guy taking place of their best friend who died. It was tough but I feel cliff dying allowed James and Kirk to evolve into the masterpieces they are today. More mature and more independent feeling more confident to blend music together because for And Justice For All cliff actually started to think about of some of the songs on their and just like me in school. I can see them looking at the chicken scratch for some of AJFA, making sense of it, then repeating it putting their own spin on it and maybe doing something off balance like Blackened. Black album was all them and I think they did great on it though some of them could’ve been better like “holyier” than thou, and Don’t Tread on Me sounding similar and Nothing Else Matters feeling like metal and country had a baby. But it was good and Load is Meh and ReLoad is underated but it is different from traditional metal and seems to blend with Rock.
Gojiras bassist always goes crazy on stage aswell. But respect where its due, Cliff is by far one of, if not the most legendary bassist of all time imo \m/
@@geraldlz5827 He should just do some full album reactions to Master of Puppets and And Justice.. then go back to Kill Em' All and Ride the Lightning. He'd appreciate them so much more \m/
My 19 year old son listens to old Metallica and other bands from the 70s and 80s and not all metal either. He loves it. He also listens to new stuff too. Well rounded child musically.
Why should that surprise anyone? Growing up in the 80s I listened to a lot of my parents music and as a teen and young adult in the 90s, it was a healthy mix of old and modern
@@louisrobertson9215 true, but just because you may have heard your parents music growing up doesnt mean you enjoyed e.g. my sister and i grew up listening to Slayer, she hates it but i love it, shes a mumble rap and i hate that bollocks hehe
@@buckbumbleboomstein4375 There's no definites when it comes to what I said. Everyone's different...but true lovers of music would look past that. For gods sake, Phil Collins has a lot of music I enjoy that I got from my mother. In my adult life I've come to appreciate large varieties of music because of my early parental influences.
This is one of three Metallica songs about Cthulhu. The first is the call of ktulu, which is an instrumental. This is the second, and the third is dream no more, which is the first of the three to actually mention Cthulhu’s name.
Yes, youre right, but the book call of cthulhu doesnt venture far into the topic of hybrids, still all of the cuthulhu books are topically connected. I just wanted to express that for myself I was more reminded of some of HPLs other books wich are centered around the hybrid beings.@@ImThe5thKing
That comparison of Metallica to a symphony is interesting, since they actually have done 2 live albums with the San Francisco Symphony. If you ever feel like you need a twist on some Metallica songs, those albums are a go-to place.
I only listen to that version and the '99 S&M version of this song - James' voice is absolutely brutal and, I can't believe I am typing this..., but better than the studio version and I think MOP is the Holy Grail of albums.
Yeah, quite a lot of people dislike ACDC because they never change their music too much And quite a lot of people dislike Metallica cause they changed too much
That’s a deep cut. Meaning it’s a song that only hard-core Metallica fans discover and love. The fact you enjoyed it right off the bat is a credit to your enate musical taste. I say well done sir.
I told my wife the other day that listening to Metallica actually calms me down. (Except for songs like this which make me want to run through seven brick walls.) She nodded, smiled, and said “I know.”
Sir, listen to this album front to back. Literally all Metallica albums but this cemented their legacy as greatest metal band of all time. The gooch don’t lie.🤘
Ya got me at Gooch. GJ. This came out when I was entering grade 7 and I've been a metalhead ever since. Also love old school rap, back when it was street music.
"Cliff Burton" the God of thrash metal Bass players (Fuck I miss him) was a classicly trained musician. And is to me, responsible for the best of Metallica's song writing output. There are no heavy Metallica songs out there that were better written after his death ( In my humble opinion)! You really need to check out their first album "Kill' em All". The production is not as good as their later releases but every song on that album is a blinder. My favourite quote regarding it comes from "Hornsuproscks.com", "If Kill'em All is not on your all-time top 10 list of favourite albums, Something might be wrong with your eardrums".
You nailed it as a newcomer to metal…”it sounds like their instruments spit out fire”…that’s so perceptive. Well done Just smashed the like button. I’ll try a few more of your videos and if you continue down the path I’ll subscribe. Keep it up, well done young blood. If you enjoy Metallica please Try either “Bleeding Me” or “Outlaw Torn” from the LOAD Album
It’s quickly risen the ranks for me over the last year. The guitar solo is filthy; the “weeee-oooow” whammy towards the end gets me every time. And the punctuation from Lars seals the deal.
In case you’re curious, this song is about the horror author H.P Lovecraft and his books. One of the verses is actually paraphrased from the stories. “Not dead which can eternal lie, stranger aeons death may die”.
Welcome to the Metallica family man ❤ and I have been a fan of theirs since I was 7 I’m 35 and also I’m one of those fans that welcomes new members to the family and don’t get mad at people who say they like the music but don’t know what the songs are about or whatever no man welcome and now if you like them enough do you own research about what song or them on your terms. Welcome to the fam
It is true that there is a big difference in writing the music and actually playing the instruments, where as rap is poetry based, and just running the already made music through a mix machine, without really playing the instruments to make the sound. I think that's the biggest difference.
Most Metallica songs - the music itself tells a story. The words and the music each tell the story. The music is the action of the story. "Hunter of the shadows is rising" and then the music is the hunter rising. Master of Puppets is a 9-part epic (IMHO).
I'm 46, I was in the 6'th grade when this came out. My bus ride to school was like a 35 minute trip and these high school kids would play this whole cassette tape on their jam boxes for like 3 months straight. Then when I got to the 8th grade I had all 4 records by them and they are forever imbeaded in my brain.
You are absolutely correct. Metal and classical music are identical in terms of structure. I've played guitar for 26 years (I know this song, for instance) and from a musician's point of view, I can literally hear the similar structures. Metal uses practically always scales and loves tempo changes - just like classical music. There are other similarities, but these are a few. Great, great observation.
The reason I said Rap on that poll is because it was the latest addition that, if removed, would not affect the other genres on the list. Folk is easily the oldest and most important genre on the list as it is what originated the idea of Popular Music, which is really just an umbrella terms for almost all genres on the charts or has ever been on the charts, including Pop, Rock, Hip Hop, R&B, Jazz, Metal, et cetera. Country is the second oldest, originating from the 1800s and is heavily responsible for much of the Blues music that formed around the latter half of the century. Blues would then give birth to Jazz, R&B, Rock N Roll, Hip Hop, and more. Rock, while much younger in comparison, has existed since the 1950s and is easily the most experimental and progressive of the four. It forwarded music to such amazing lengths from the 12-bar blues standards of the 1950s to the complex, experimental, futuristic, and innovative sounds of the 1960s and 1970s. For the first time ever, music seemed to be ahead of its time. Rock is responsible for the progress of thousands of other genres and subgenres and furthered technology and innovation to support everyone. Rap is the latest entree, originating in the late 1970s from Disco, and really, the only credit Rap has to the music scene is Hip Hop and EDM, the latter of which still would exist, just without the Hip Hop feel. So taking away Rap wouldn't really affect most other genres, as opposed to the other three. ... As for the argument that Rap technically isn't music, there is truth to that. However, a Rap Song, as in a track on an album or single that has a beat with Rapping in it is indeed music. Using non-musical elements in music contributes to the song in a musical way. However, Rap itself is not music simply because it lacks the core element of music, that being Melody. The difference between singing and rapping is that a singer follows a certain melody when singing, fast or slow, high or low, et cetera. They hit specific notes or are skilled enough to improvise what notes they play. Rap doesn't follow a melody, but rather a rhythm. While some can argue that rhythm can make something musical alone, it should also be recognised that rhythm isn't subject to sound alone. Technically, it isn't even sound, but a measurement of intervals (the time between sounds or events). For example, a wheel turning at a constant rate has a rhythm, but you don't hear the rhythm. It's just the fact that one part of the wheel returns to the same position every few seconds or however long it takes. With that being said, Rap alone is simply rhythmic poetry. If you took away the beat, then the only difference between it and poetry would be that one has a rhythm to it. But as proven with that wheel synopsys, a rhythm alone isn't musical either. It is musical when applied to a song, but along, it is silent, as is a turning wheel. And since I know that it's coming, the argument that Drums don't follow melody but are still considered music is simply wrong because, though we don't necessarily hear it perfectly, drums do have notes and, when played, form drum melodies that we use to make a Beat. If you hit a tom with a tuner, it will give a key. If you hit another tom, it will likely give a different key, and that is intended. Same with cymbals and stick clicks. If it had no melody, then there would be no difference in the sound when someone played different sounds. And lastly, people will point to things like ambience and experimental. To that, I refer to the earlier point that, if contributing to a song, is musical. If simply found in nature, is not. Frequencies ring all the time in nature, often quietly, but it is still present. Ambience simply reflects those frequencies and, when put into a song, can contribute musically. However, just putting the frequency alone with no melodic qualities is not musical, even if pressed onto an album. Why? Because albums like that exist and they aren't supposed to be music. Some are used for scientific or engineering work, others are used for biological work with nature. Others are meant to otherwise sooth the ear in a way that isn't meant to be artful, but to aid a medical condition. And no matter how much a pretentious artist will try and say it, breaking glass alone is not music. Being used for accents in a song is musical, but just smashing a bottle on the ground and recording it is not music.
Haha teenager who requested probably got to learn this song from a parent....I'm 52 and I still love it and know my kids....although little older know it because of me
I recommend listening to and justice for all, a long song, but a banger nonetheless. The first lines are “halls of justice painted green, money talkin” Meaning that the halls of justice, AKA court, often have people bribing judges to win court cases. There is also a movie titled and justice for all, about how a lawyer realises that court is full of corruption
that's a thing about 80s metal, they have that quality about them... Metallica, Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, Manowar... also with metal, usually, there's a neat aspect about it where they make songs out of anything like books, myths and legends, movies, history...
On the side check out this song live from S&M. It's Metallica with the San Francisco Orcasta. They did a whole album with them. Imagine Metal meets orcasta.
Also... this song is a sequel of sorts to their Call of Ktulu instrumental. This song is about HP Lovecraft’s Call of Cuthulu rising from the ocean.(reason that they spell Ktulu like THIS in their song titles is to purposely pronounce it wrong to avoid summoning him)
The late Cliff Burton had taken Classical Music classes while in college, and was an enormous influence in the band's songwriting. The band members of Metallica followed his songwriting model in the years after Burton's untimely death in a tour bus accident in Sweden.
Really glad to see you continue the journey of discovering rock and metal music! It's funny you said that Metallica sounds like they are writing classical music, because they eventually do play along side of an Orchestra. You should definitely check out Megadeth Peace sells but whos buying? I can't wait to see that video, it's terrific, No Cap lol
@3:00 That GRR you hear from their music... its the Way they use the Instruments mixed with their emotion while playing, plus a little sound tweaking in the end process...
You should listen to this next: Soul Stripper- AC/DC Life Eternal- Mayhem Sonne- Rammstein Aerials- System of a down Another man's woman- Supertramp Ain't talking bout love- Van Halen Money- Pink Floyd Epitaph- King Crimson (please, listen to the last one, but other are suggestion.)
The big 4 metal bands probably started different genres. Instead of all Heavy Metal, others were different, Speed Metal, Thrash Metal, Death Metal. Megadeth has some crazy changes like these ones you like, Slayer is like Speed/Death. Anthrax is the first one to add the combo of rap" to it. Have you heard the song "Bring The Noise" with Anthrax and Public Enemy? Before that in 1987 they did a song called "I'm The Man". It's them alone and a rap song... just remembered, when The Beastie Boys had their song, "Fight For Your Right to Party" Slayer did the guitar for it...
we need more metallica videos also do you still listen to songs after reacting to them? because i really hope that you keep listening after these videos
Rap isn't poetry. Its music. People don't realize that to make a great rap song you have to design the hook based on the beat (it goes even deeper if you make the beats yourself) and the verses too. Old heads just don't understand. I do. I love underground Texas rap, metal, classic rock, and basically anything. I can recognize talent anywhere. You should react to some Z-ro.. one of Houston Texas Finest.
Thank you for appreciating my all time favorite band!!& Sanitarium is a great Metallica song... Oooohh &Master of Puppets if u listen to lyrics,good political point😄😈