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The History of the Four Horsemen


Written by: spiritofvengence
Published: 17.05.2010


At the dawn of the twenty-first century, I knew nothing about metal or even rock for that matter. The only hard bands I was able to get hold of were Linkin Park and Disturbed. Then one day, after watching Mission: Impossible 2 on DVD, I saw a music video for a song "I Disappear" by Metallica. I thought it was "Take A Look Around" by Limp Bizkit (their remixed version of the MI theme song - because I didn't know what it was called), so I clicked it. And what happened?

Well, just the loudest, heaviest, hardest eargasm I'd ever had! It was so loud that I feared I'd get caught because it was so loud (which I wasn't). It was harder and heavier than anything I'd ever heard before, and I was strangely both repelled and drawn towards it.

Little did I know that this was only the beginning...

At first Metallica was just sort of "over there" and my music tastes remained outside the realm of rock or metal. But then, about six or five years ago, I was drastically reintroduced to Metallica. My brother opened the door to a whole new world of music, starting with Metallica. ReLoad, ...And Justice For All and Ride the Lightning came first, with the Black Album, St. Anger, Garage Inc. and S&M later, finished off with Master of Puppets, Load, Kill 'Em All and Death Magnetic. Eventually I was getting hooked on this band. But my fandom did not mature just yet.

Originally, I, like many of you, discarded St. Anger without a second thought - just because everyone else hated it - and liked the old stuff (RTL). However, after hearing songs from the album bit-by-bit, it slowly dawned upon me that there was no real
reason for not-liking it other than the word of the crowd. Therefore I gave the album a second chance and haven't looked back for a moment.

Obviously, I am a new-comer to the world of metal, but it seems that I was also a new-comer to the fandom of Metallica. Apparently I didn't and still don't know all the rules and "hidden curriculum" of Metallica-fandom. For instance, it is apparently a rule to hate them entirely, to rip on all the members save for Cliff Burton and Jason Newsted, to like only their old material (KEA through MOP), and it is also a rule that they must always be called sell-outs no matter what they do.

It's somewhat hypocritical. Other bands have changed their sound (Bathory), or played slower (Motörhead) or gone through numerous line-up changes (Black Sabbath), or have mainstream success (Iron Maiden) and yet are revered and defended without question. So why is it that makes Metallica the scape-goat for your ire?

To start with, let us look at the history of the band...



Metallica: c. 1983. Line-up from l. to r. - James Hetfield, Dave Mustaine, Lars Ulrich, Ron McGovney


Inspired by the new wave of British heavy metal as well as various punk groups, a native Dane named Lars Ulrich contacted Californian James Hetfield about starting a band sometime in the early 80s. Shortly thereafter, they were joined by guitarist Dave Mustaine and bassist Ron McGovney. They played several gigs and recorded several demos and singles, such as the "No Life 'Till Leather" demo and the "Jump In The Fire" and "Whiplash" single. Shortly thereafter, they were given a name - Metallica.

Tensions within the band mounted as Dave constantly bullied Ron about being an incompetent bassist. One of the most infamous incidents involved a drunk Dave pouring beer into the pick-ups of Ron's bass, electrocuting Ron in the process. These and other incidents caused Lars and James to seriously reconsider Dave's place in the band. In interviews, Lars has said that they did not see the band going very far with Dave at that time. It was also during this time that they found a new bassist following McGovney's departure. Clifford Lee Burton filled his shoes and the band then made their way east to begin recording their first album: "Metal Up Your Ass." Upon arrival, Dave was unceremoniously awakened by the other band members and promptly told to gather his things and head back to San Francisco - he was out of the band.

Recording of the first studio album, renamed "Kill 'Em All" took place later that year, with former Exodus guitarist Kirk Hammett as the new lead guitarist: Dave Mustaine was credited for all of the songs which he had a hand in writing during their pre-album years ("The Mechanix" - renamed and rewritten as "The Four Horsemen," "Jump In The Fire" among others). A year later saw the release of "Ride the Lightning" a second album which many saw as a departure from the old "bay area thrash sound" with songs with acoustic, melodic introductions such as "Fight Fire With Fire" and the almost entirely acoustic "Fade to Black." Though he had been gone for almost a year and was beginning work on his own band Megadeth, Dave Mustaine was given credit for the title track and the instrumental "Call of Ktulu." 1986 saw the release of "Master of Puppets," which catapulted Metallica into mainstream success, as well as opening for Ozzy Osbourne during a tour of the US.


Metallica line-up between 1983 and 1986. Cliff Burton far left and Kirk Hammett far right.


Though 1986 was a good year for Metallica-fans in that it saw the release of the ever-popular Master of Puppets album, it was a drastic turning point for the band. September 27th, during the European portion of the Damage Inc. tour, the band's bus slid on "black ice." Cliff Burton was crushed by the bus and died thereby. It would be one of the defining moments of Metallica history.

Feeling that Cliff would not have wanted them to call it quits on his account, the band began taking auditions for the bass role to continue their tour. Jason Newsted of Floatsam and Jetsam, and a big Metallica-fan, was the chosen replacement. Little did he know what he was getting himself into. The band took their grief over the loss of Cliff out on Jason, and he became known derogatorily as "Jason Newkid."

With the release of the "Garage Days Re-Revisted" EP in 1987, Metallica recorded "...And Justice For All" the following year. This has received criticism by most fans because of the low-end production quality and the over-all absence of Jason's bass-line, part of the hazing he endured. Another high/low point of this album is "One," the song based on the novel "Johnny Got His Gun" about an injured war-soldier trapped in living death. This was also the first Metallica song to have a music video made of it, which made many accuse the band of selling out once again.


Metallica c. early 90s. Jason Newsted far left.


Those who thought Metallica sold out with RTL and "One" were not ready for the 90s at all. 1991 saw the release of the aptly named "Black Album," which catapulted the band out of underground thrash metal into the wider, heavy metal/hard rock scene. With music videos of "Enter Sandman," "The Unforgiven," "Nothing Else Matters," mainstream recognition, spots on MTV and a much wider fan-base, many believed the band had sold out.

Two other incidents in the early nineties would leave an indelible mark on the band. James Hetfield broke his voice while recording a cover of "So What" by the Anti-Nowhere League and had to take singing lessons. Many saw this as selling out, since he no longer performed the growling, screamed vocals of the 80s which are considered a thrash-metal standard. Secondly, though more serious, was the incident of August 8th 1992. During the climax of the intro to "Fade to Black", James stepped in front of a twelve-foot-tall pyrotechnics pillar, causing severe burns. He would survive the incident (much to the dismay of those who have hated Metallica).


The Infamous 90s...and short-cuts for all?


1996 saw the release of Load, the beginning of an experimental stage of Metallica's discography. Instead of mind-numbing thrash, more blues/early rock-based songs. Though Load received much mainstream success, the metal community has mostly looked down upon this album and its successor ReLoad as instances of Metallica selling out. In addition to the new sound was the new look, which one magazine entitled as "...And Short-Cuts For All?". Considered low points are "Mama Said" from Load and "The Memory Remains" from ReLoad, mostly because of Marianne Faithfull as a guest vocalist.

Later 90s ventures included the re-re-release of the covers from the Garage Days EP, the Creeping Death EP, various others from the singles of "Harvester of Sorrows," "Enter Sandman," "The Unforgiven" and "Hero of the Day" as well as several new recordings for the "Garage Inc." compilation. This has received mostly negative reception from metal fans who consider it another point of selling out. Another late-90s venture was the live performance in San Francisco with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, entitled "S&M." This was later released on a CD, which has received mixed reception from metal fans.

The darkest times of Metallica were just ahead. With James and Lars starting families of their own which took more time from the band, Jason Newsted began side-project Echobrain. James Hetfield confronted Jason about this, stating that he could not be in Metallica and Echobrain at the same time since he saw it as taking away from the band's energy - even though he had appeared as a guest vocalist on Corossion of Conformity's "Man Or Ash" and on the South Park film's song "Kenny Goes To Hell."

The year 2000 saw the release of "I Disappear" for the film Mission: Impossible 2, as well as a music video for the song. During recording of the song, Lars Ulrich discovered their entire discography available for free file-sharing download on Napster. In an act of narcissistic control similar to James-vs-Jason, Lars joined the campaign against Napster along with many other artists, which resulted in an even greater loss of fans and continued accusations of selling out. But harder blows were in for the band later, as after a live performance of "Fade to Black" in 2001, Jason Newsted abruptly left the band.

With pressure for another studio album, James, Lars and Kirk hired therapist Phil Towle as a consultant while working with former producer Bob Rock on bass, they rented a military barracks at the Presidio Military base to act as a recording studio. After a heated debate over Lars' unorthodox drumming and James' "stock" guitar riffs, an angry James stormed out of the room. He later checked himself into an alcohol rehabilitation group, telling Kirk over the phone that he was technically "not in the band." December 4th saw his return and the completion of the album shortly thereafter. Ozzy Osbourne bassist Robert Trujillo was offered $1 million after auditioning for the role, which he accepted.


Metallica: 2003 onward


The new album, St. Anger, was released in 2003. Though it received some level of critical acclaim, every metal-fan who stuck with them through the 90s abandoned them now after the album featured not Master-of-Puppets-2 but a 70+ minute work filled with strained vocals, long, down-tuned songs with no guitar solos, little or no evidence of bass, low-end production quality, introverted lyrical content and simplistic rhyme structure. The album and its related singles and EPs have been labelled "nu metal" - though it bears no resemblance to early Disturbed, early Linkin Park, KoRn, P.O.D., System Of A Down or early Slipknot - and the band criticized as being "over-the-hill" and "washed up," with the largest drop in popularity since Napster.

Five years later saw the release of Death Magnetic, something that, like Megadeth's "The World Needs A Hero," was a sell-out reaction to the negative fan-reaction of the previous album. Sacrificing uniqueness and experimentation for acceptance, Metallica tried to make a master-of-puppets-2, but instead made something the "fans" still love to hate for being "too loud."

What does the future have in store for the Four Horsemen? Well, hopefully they will release a new album soon (Dave harks only on the same old subject over and over and over again - it gets boring), but if they do, it will be to your hatred. Unfortunately, the inevitability will come and one of them will die. If any of the three original members do, then it will be Jimmy "The Rev" Sullivan all over again (ie. disrespecting the dead just because you hated them in life and show no respect for anyone even after they're gone), and I doubt anyone will miss Trujillo that much (except for Ozzy, but you hate him, too).

God, it feels like it only rains on me.





Guest article disclaimer:
This is a guest article, which means it does not necessarily represent the point of view of the MS Staff.


Comments

Comments: 49   Visited by: 297 users
17.05.2010 - 02:19
corrupt
With a lowercase c
So you rewrote Metallicas Wikipedia article, adding an incountable number of variations of the phrase "and this is when people thought they sold out" and finnished it with the most nonselsical conclusion this page has ever seen? What's your point then? You unconditionally love everything they output and everybody else doesn't? I don't think so. Still this article seems completely pointless. Not to mention redundant. You don't even answer the question you pose in your introduction. What exactly does make Metallica the Scapegoat for all of our ire?

I'm sorry man. I don't want to insult you but this is really just the Wikipedia article with an added bias.
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17.05.2010 - 02:28
Marcel Hubregtse
Grumpy Old Fuck
Jesus a crying butthurt fanboy's so-called article on what he calls the hisroty of Metallica.
Stop crying and just admit they lost the frigging plot after Master Of Puppets, or for my part even And Justice For All and didn't even come near with the mediocre Death Magnetic. That album showing that generally good thrash can only be produced by young bands. Not by bands that have sold millions and have full stomach and can buy big mansions. For a band to produce top-quality thrash they need to be angry, and mean it, they need to scrap by to survive.
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Member of the true crusade against European Flower Metal

Yesterday is dead and gone, tomorrow is out of sight
Dawn Crosby (r.i.p.)
05.04.1963 - 15.12.1996

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17.05.2010 - 02:29
spiritofvengence

@Marcel Hubregste...GO TO HELL BEFORE I SEND YOU THERE MYSELF!!!
----
I'd rather like what I like because I like it, despite if everyone hates me for it, then like what I hate just to be accepted by you.
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17.05.2010 - 03:59
SatyriconChick

I smell a banning for Mr. spiritofvengeance...
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17.05.2010 - 16:39
DayFly

The part where you describe the band's history is completely redundant. Why do you feel offended about how other people think about Metallica? Either because you are a juvenile zealot (lots of those on metal forums, sadly) or because there might be this nagging feeling that you might not enjoy certain albums as much as you believe you ought to.
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17.05.2010 - 17:39
Marcel Hubregtse
Grumpy Old Fuck
Written by SatyriconChick on 17.05.2010 at 03:59

I smell a banning for Mr. spiritofvengeance...


Naaah, I called him a butthurt fanboy first.
----
Member of the true crusade against European Flower Metal

Yesterday is dead and gone, tomorrow is out of sight
Dawn Crosby (r.i.p.)
05.04.1963 - 15.12.1996

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17.05.2010 - 18:50
Winterthrone

Written by spiritofvengence on 17.05.2010 at 02:29

@Marcel Hubregste...GO TO HELL BEFORE I SEND YOU THERE MYSELF!!!

In my country this could be taken as Death Threats punishable by jail-time. Lucky for you, you did this on the internet and not in the streets. Man your article suck balls, thats a fact. and why are you blaming Marcel for saying exactly what other said before him:
1. You just rewrote the wikipedia article in its entiretyadding sentences of your own here and there and a little introduction. You would have had a big ZERO or F (depending on the marking system of your country) for that plagiarism at school.
2. Your introduction could awake interest in the reader's mind with the question you asked, but as the article goes on you got farther away of answering the question never coming to the POINT at the end.
3. Your conclusion is truly unfocused and doesn't answer the question you asked in the first place.

Everybody here knows the history of Metallica as it is the most popular metal band (by record sales) history ever knew, and your on a metal blog. You don't have to tell this story again adding nothing new to it... We all know for a fact that Metallica grew further away from it's original fanbase as it became a big stadium act selling millions of album. They then lost their style and started making music for those who helped them become millionaires: MTV and co. That's why they lost the respect of their original fans, end of the story.
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17.05.2010 - 19:08
Troy Killjoy
perfunctionist
I don't understand this article. It's called The History of the Four Horsemen but the introduction is all about your personal discovery of the band and subsequently the opinions you formed of their music. At times you represent what appears to be a fanboy's perspective during this reminiscing phase, but then you insult the very band you're praising, mentioning the band members' narcissism.

Then you get into their history, which - as previously stated by another user - is basically a re-written Wiki entry with your repeated belief that every step taken by the band is overshadowed by incessant claims of selling out on behalf of their target audience. Then you get upset because whatever Metallica releases in the future, fans of the band and the general metal community will ultimately dislike it by default, and then you mention a deceased Avenged Sevenfold member to conclude your article.

In summation:

Please don't take this insultingly. I'm just not sure what insight your article is supposed to provide...
----
"Wise men talk because they have something to say; fools because they have to say something."
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17.05.2010 - 22:12
Damnated_Soul

Have to agree with the previous comments...
You just don't add nothing new at all.
Not interesting, sorry.
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17.05.2010 - 22:26
Fat & Sassy!

What is this, I don't even... -_-

Oh, and PS
You should probably get a grip on reality. I may be coming off a dick here, but guy... You keep telling other people how and what they think, and honestly, it's really annoying and kind of insulting.

Oh, and why do you just mention Robert Trujillo in relation to playing with Ozzy? He clearly proved himself as a good bassist through many great albums with Suicidal Tendencies and Infectious Grooves. Given that you probably have NO IDEA on what the hell you're talking about, you probably wouldn't know anything about that. :l
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17.05.2010 - 22:51
corrupt
With a lowercase c
Written by Winterthrone on 17.05.2010 at 18:50
and why are you blaming Marcel for saying exactly what other said before him

There was a pretty verbose insult in my direction last night too, even before Marcel posted. But he seems to have deleted it.
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17.05.2010 - 22:59
AyΣm
Abyssal Zebra
I like potatoes
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18.05.2010 - 00:03
Roro

Too long to read :/
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18.05.2010 - 01:15
Doc G.
Full Grown Hoser
Written by Troy Killjoy on 17.05.2010 at 19:08

I don't understand this article. It's called The History of the Four Horsemen but the introduction is all about your personal discovery of the band and subsequently the opinions you formed of their music. At times you represent what appears to be a fanboy's perspective during this reminiscing phase, but then you insult the very band you're praising, mentioning the band members' narcissism.

Then you get into their history, which - as previously stated by another user - is basically a re-written Wiki entry with your repeated belief that every step taken by the band is overshadowed by incessant claims of selling out on behalf of their target audience. Then you get upset because whatever Metallica releases in the future, fans of the band and the general metal community will ultimately dislike it by default, and then you mention a deceased Avenged Sevenfold member to conclude your article.

In summation:

Please don't take this insultingly. I'm just not sure what insight your article is supposed to provide...

Too true, too true. What was that shit about The Rev? It's like he's just using a plagiarized Metallica bio as a vehicle for his bitching and moaning.

You can take this any way you want, insultingly or not - please, please stop writing articles.
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"I got a lot of really good ideas, problem is, most of them suck."
- George Carlin
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18.05.2010 - 01:28
Ellrohir
Heaven Knight
Written by Winterthrone on 17.05.2010 at 18:50

Written by spiritofvengence on 17.05.2010 at 02:29

@Marcel Hubregste...GO TO HELL BEFORE I SEND YOU THERE MYSELF!!!

In my country this could be taken as Death Threats punishable by jail-time. Lucky for you, you did this on the internet and not in the streets.


regardless the circumstances here - your country must be quite sad place to live, if this is punishable act...pity for your nation, man
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My rest seems now calm and deep
Finally I got my dead man sleep


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18.05.2010 - 02:45
Marcel Hubregtse
Grumpy Old Fuck
Written by Ellrohir on 18.05.2010 at 01:28

Written by Winterthrone on 17.05.2010 at 18:50

Written by spiritofvengence on 17.05.2010 at 02:29

@Marcel Hubregste...GO TO HELL BEFORE I SEND YOU THERE MYSELF!!!

In my country this could be taken as Death Threats punishable by jail-time. Lucky for you, you did this on the internet and not in the streets.


regardless the circumstances here - your country must be quite sad place to live, if this is punishable act...pity for your nation, man


I doubt that what Spiritofvengence shouted at me is considered a death threat, or a punishable act, in Canada. Or in any country in the world. If that were the case there wouldn't be any columnists around or many other writers for that matter. Not saying that spiritofvengence is a writer though. I don't what to call his so-called articles... but funny they certainly are.
----
Member of the true crusade against European Flower Metal

Yesterday is dead and gone, tomorrow is out of sight
Dawn Crosby (r.i.p.)
05.04.1963 - 15.12.1996

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18.05.2010 - 04:22
Winterthrone

Written by Marcel Hubregtse on 18.05.2010 at 02:45

Written by Ellrohir on 18.05.2010 at 01:28

Written by Winterthrone on 17.05.2010 at 18:50

Written by spiritofvengence on 17.05.2010 at 02:29

@Marcel Hubregste...GO TO HELL BEFORE I SEND YOU THERE MYSELF!!!

In my country this could be taken as Death Threats punishable by jail-time. Lucky for you, you did this on the internet and not in the streets.


regardless the circumstances here - your country must be quite sad place to live, if this is punishable act...pity for your nation, man


I doubt that what Spiritofvengence shouted at me is considered a death threat, or a punishable act, in Canada. Or in any country in the world. If that were the case there wouldn't be any columnists around or many other writers for that matter. Not saying that spiritofvengence is a writer though. I don't what to call his so-called articles... but funny they certainly are.

Maybe there was a little exageration here...but no Saying your gonna send someone to hell is pretty much saying your gonna kill him...and that's a death threat. And this article sucks balls..again. And I don't know any serious columnist that publishes death threats...When you can't attack the ideas you attack the person...My two cents.
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18.05.2010 - 05:44
skrätte
I Hate You
The reason why people hate St. Anger is because it sucks. If I wanted to hear Metallica take a shit, I'd dress up like a toilet and hide in their tour bus. I certainly wouldn't pay $16 American dollars to buy a CD recording of it. I've downloaded their whole discography because my OCD will not permit me to have an incomplete discography of any band I enjoy (and just to spite Lars). But eventually, my hatred of St. Anger overcame my OCD and I had to delete it, making my discography incomplete.. and thus curing me of my OCD (except for the part where I have to turn door knobs 16 times before I enter a room. Also, none of my food is allowed to touch.). "I Disappear" is also a pretty shitty song. I only read the first few paragraphs of this dikipedia article because by the fourth paragraph, I fell asleep on my keyboard and woke up with an erection on some Avril Lavigne fan site. I took care of business, so to speak, and then returned here to spout nonsense until I am rested enough to return to the Avril Lavigne site for more masturbation mayhem. I won't lie.. I also like her music more than St. Anger which, by the way, sucks horse wang. Go to bed, Spotty.
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18.05.2010 - 07:50
Fat & Sassy!

@skratte: You, sir, are too much. XD
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18.05.2010 - 07:50
BitterCOld
The Ancient One
really wanted to rip into this guy like i did his "brother"... but i'll take the night off.
----
get the fuck off my lawn.

Beer Bug Virus Spotify Playlist crafted by Nikarg and I. Feel free to tune in and add some pertinent metal tunes!
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18.05.2010 - 07:56
Fat & Sassy!

Written by BitterCOld on 18.05.2010 at 07:50

really wanted to rip into this guy like i did his "brother"... but i'll take the night off.


I SAW YOUR ORIGINAL POST. :O

But we'll just keep that a secret.
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18.05.2010 - 11:52
Thryce
Retired Staff
Written by skrätte on 18.05.2010 at 05:44

The reason why people hate St. Anger is because it sucks. If I wanted to hear Metallica take a shit, I'd dress up like a toilet and hide in their tour bus. I certainly wouldn't pay $16 American dollars to buy a CD recording of it. I've downloaded their whole discography because my OCD will not permit me to have an incomplete discography of any band I enjoy (and just to spite Lars). But eventually, my hatred of St. Anger overcame my OCD and I had to delete it, making my discography incomplete.. and thus curing me of my OCD (except for the part where I have to turn door knobs 16 times before I enter a room. Also, none of my food is allowed to touch.). "I Disappear" is also a pretty shitty song. I only read the first few paragraphs of this dikipedia article because by the fourth paragraph, I fell asleep on my keyboard and woke up with an erection on some Avril Lavigne fan site. I took care of business, so to speak, and then returned here to spout nonsense until I am rested enough to return to the Avril Lavigne site for more masturbation mayhem. I won't lie.. I also like her music more than St. Anger which, by the way, sucks horse wang. Go to bed, Spotty.

You just owned the shit out of this thread. Mucho props for that, sir.
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Your favorite band sucks.
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18.05.2010 - 16:09
Roro

Fight ... fight... fight!
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18.05.2010 - 18:54
Acolyt#1

Oh well, let's calm down, even if the article isn't a good piece it's still a pleasure to watch how much passion metal can inspire. The writer is still young about metal and I bet he will have a broader and more sophisticated opinion about metal after discovering the many delicious bands out there.
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18.05.2010 - 23:05
BitterCOld
The Ancient One
The problem is that his "passion" is misguided in assigning bullshit motives to people that may or may not exist.

the problem is that he talks about things he doesn't particularly understand.

the thing is this, i can understand why he, as a newbie, likes Saint Anger and newer Metallica. I still like and adore the first albums I listened to in the genres.

the problem lies in his insinuations into the motives of others.

as a fan who stumbled into Metallica in the past couple years, his experience with the band is vastly different than my own.
the shift they made sonically won't have the same impact it did to those of us who listened to the band beforehand. looking at things solely through the rear-view mirror is a lot different than them unfolding along the road in front of you.

i will call them sell-outs. i witnessed it first hand. they opted to make a drastic shift in their sound at a time when their popularity was growing in order to expand their audience and score radio play. faster/aggressive/complicated songs were stripped down to be as simple as possible (incidentally, i hold Megadeth equally in contempt for following suit). it is what it is. the band can be happy with that decision, that's fine, bully for them, but i don't have to be.

he then goes on to more lame arguments.

the personnel changes are largely immaterial. they've only changed bassists twice... and let's face it, the role of the post-Cliff bassist in the band is basically that of the water boy. I don't think anyone is begrudging Metallica for changing the one musician with the absolute least input in their creative process.

The argument regarding Iron Maiden's commercial appeal is also made by someone clearly unfamiliar with the subject matter. Whereas Metallica changed their sound to a more radio-friendly approach in order to move more units, Iron Maiden, at the height of their popularity, did no such thing. Iron Maiden became as big as they were in the mid-80's for being Iron Maiden. MTV played Iron Maiden on regular rotation not because the band started changing their sound to make more accessible songs, but because Maiden was so big that the fledgling network needed Maiden's fans to tune in in order to survive. (of course, once the network got big, the metal went away. then the music itself...)


ultimately it's yet another whine rant from a Metalli-fanboi who simply cannot fathom why other people's tastes differentiate from their own. we have someone who basically demands you respect his tastes while he is pissing on the tastes of others. sorry, doesn't work that way.

it's yet another fanboi who cannot grasp the very simple fundamental difference between the change in Metallica's approach from that of other bands, and why that might rub metal fans the wrong way. there is a big reason why Bathory's shift was accepted from the metal hordes and Metallica's wasn't, and if you're not smart enough to figure out what it is, you're probably not smart enough to grasp the argument should someone try and explain "Why."


and i'm pretty sure the "darkest times of Metallica" were not in the late 90's ... while i don't know the guys personally, i'm willing to bet if you asked, they'd respond the "darkest times of Metallica" were in late 1986.
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get the fuck off my lawn.

Beer Bug Virus Spotify Playlist crafted by Nikarg and I. Feel free to tune in and add some pertinent metal tunes!
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19.05.2010 - 00:43
corrupt
With a lowercase c
Written by BitterCOld on 18.05.2010 at 23:05

The problem is that his "passion" is misguided in assigning bullshit motives to people that may or may not exist.

the problem is that he talks about things he doesn't particularly understand.

[and all the rest, omitted here for the sake of screen space]

and i'm pretty sure the "darkest times of Metallica" were not in the late 90's ... while i don't know the guys personally, i'm willing to bet if you asked, they'd respond the "darkest times of Metallica" were in late 1986.

If I had a vote, the whole thread could be closed right here. You brought it right to the point in words that I'm afraid my own English is far, far away from, and probably will be for a long while to come. Spiritofvengence, if you still think I meant to insult you, this is what I wanted to say (at least for the most part since I was born the same year Ride The Lightning was released). Spot on!
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19.05.2010 - 02:02
skrätte
I Hate You
Damn it... with a little more meat, this topic could potentially make it into the Drama category for next year's MS Awards.

Let's hope it continues. In the meantime, I hope that you all take the opportunity to plagiarize Wikipedia articles for bands you know nothing about, while simultaneously removing relevant facts and injecting your own opinion. I've been hard at work on my article which is entitled "The History of Sepultura: So, Apparently There Were Albums Before the Black Guy".

This is exciting, no?
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19.05.2010 - 05:16
Winterthrone

Written by skrätte on 19.05.2010 at 02:02

Damn it... with a little more meat, this topic could potentially make it into the Drama category for next year's MS Awards.

Let's hope it continues. In the meantime, I hope that you all take the opportunity to plagiarize Wikipedia articles for bands you know nothing about, while simultaneously removing relevant facts and injecting your own opinion. I've been hard at work on my article which is entitled "The History of Sepultura: So, Apparently There Were Albums Before the Black Guy".

This is exciting, no?

Man you made my day XD. This is hilarious! I still can't understand how someone can publish such a load of garbage.
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19.05.2010 - 12:24
DayFly

Can somebody tell me why this was published?
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19.05.2010 - 16:04
Hermann Langke
Brahmastra Corps
Written by DayFly on 17.05.2010 at 16:39

The part where you describe the band's history is completely redundant. Why do you feel offended about how other people think about Metallica? Either because you are a juvenile zealot (lots of those on metal forums, sadly) or because there might be this nagging feeling that you might not enjoy certain albums as much as you believe you ought to.

I don't really understand why do you have to be so insensitive?It takes a lot of time and effort to write a humongous article like this.It is really lame to just diss it off like this.Even though it maybe an extended version of the Wikipedia.
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