Metal memories
Ten years of close encounters with Metallica
by Ted Drozdowski
The Monsters of Rock Tour in '87 was my wake-up call. Even if waking up in
Akron is like rising with a hangover.
I'd heard Metallica's albums Kill 'Em All, Ride the Lightning,
and Master of Puppets many times and been drilled through by their
sound: bigger and heavier than anything else around, paced so intensely they
made hardcore seem tame and a tad traditional. Metallica were the nexus of
punk, metal, and the avant-garde -- the music that rocked my world. But it
wasn't until I set foot in Akron's Rubber Bowl arena that I began to understand
what they would become.
In a way, it was a miracle that Metallica even made it to Akron. The guys are
so stubborn about doing things their own way. They wanted to call their first
album Metal Up Your Ass, even after its distributors balked at the name.
Had they not relented with Kill 'Em All -- a title expressing their
feelings about those distributors -- that indie-label debut might not have sold
20,000 copies in its first two weeks and Metallica might not have grown to be
Metallica.
Certainly not the Metallica we know: the Lollapalooza-headlining,
16-million-selling (of 1991's Metallica), industrial-music pioneering,
metal-redefining outfit who are putting out their ninth album, Re-Load
(Elektra), this Tuesday.
I'm sure Akron has its virtues, if a rust-belt industrial wasteland that zips
itself into a body bag after 5 p.m. can have virtues. But the worst
place to be in record-breaking summer heat is the concrete Rubber Bowl. Fate
and some big-time booking agency had placed Van Halen, the Scorpions,
Metallica, Dokken, and Kingdom Come in this unholy place for two days.
What got me there was my own big mouth. I grew up on loud guitar players --
especially the proto-metal/blues sound of outfits like Cream, Led Zeppelin, and
Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow -- and I got sucked into the '70s punk scene as it
began. So when I became a junior editor at Musician, I felt bound to pry
the pages of that magazine open for punk and metal players. My editor relented
to my badgering about a serious Monsters of Rock story after Van Halen agreed
to an interview.
Rubber Bowl security staff sprayed water on the crowd to keep them from
vomiting or passing out. Those who'd downed multiple beers and maybe pills
before the concert -- which started at noon, when the sun focused like a laser
beam -- were red-eyed and staggering and harvested like floating mackerel by
the first-aid crew.
Blistering as it was in the arena, the thermometer pegged at 117 on stage.
During the Scorpion's first-day set, Rudolph Schenker's sweat-soaked guitar
slipped from his hands as he swung it over his head to produce swirling
feedback; it flew 20 feet and split in half.
Backstage it was a more temperate 90 or so. Gatorade was the beverage du jour.
And as I worked through my interviews and observations -- moving between
dressing rooms like a desperate groupie -- I learned some things. Lenny Wolf,
the ersatz Robert Plant of Kingdom Come, had an ego fat enough to fill the
Bowl. The Scorpions were some of the nicest guys around, a blast to hang with.
Music aside, Van Halen were the dumbest band I've ever encountered. Sammy Hagar
was the brains of the operation. No shit. Dokken guitarist George Lynch was a
very serious musician, even if his band sucked. And Metallica were a house
divided -- at least emotionally.
Kirk Hammett, the speedy lead guitarist, was an easygoing guy with wit as fast
as his licks. But he seemed distanced from founders James Hetfield and Lars
Ulrich. Jason Newsted, who'd replaced the late Clif Burton a year earlier,
seemed absolutely isolated -- as if serving a sentence as the new guy. Lars was
a talkative, pleasant creative sparkplug with a real vision for Metallica. Hell
of a drummer, too. But that vision was something that Lars and James seemed to
hoard between themselves. James was tight-lipped and sullen, with an abrasive
edge. Obviously there was a lot inside his impenetrable armor, since
Metallica's lyrics about mind control and ostracism (let's overlook the early
netherworld mythology, since it was abandoned by '88's
. . . And Justice for All) were smart as their sound --
and as plugged into their culture as Bob Dylan's early recordings were to his.
Nonetheless, Metallica seemed glad to be on tour with flag bearers of the
old-school metal they were making obsolete. They got on especially well with
the fun-loving Scorpions.
Metallica also had an edge -- a sense of drive and focus that was more than
greed (Kingdom Come) or blind momentum (Van Halen). And when they got on stage,
they came together like the muscles in God's right arm. Their live sound was
gnarlier and harder than the records; they played even faster, which somehow
hadn't seemed possible. And the crowd was theirs. Not just the 10,000 or so
kids who sang every song with James, but the fans who'd come to see Van Halen
and the Scorpions only to be drawn from the bleacher seats, as if the Pied
Piper had been reincarnated as the loudest and heaviest goddamned thing since
Vesuvius blew up. Following Metallica, those bands seemed like shells that the
spirit of rock and roll had abandoned like a hermit crab. I bought a T-shirt.
When I was dispatched to Amsterdam to reconvene with Metallica after
. . . And Justice for All started blowing out of stores,
it was two years after Burton's death. Jason seemed more relaxed -- and
accepted -- in his role as bassist, though he was still tight-lipped. Kirk was,
as always, comfortable and glad to talk about the growth he'd been enjoying as
a guitarist. But he still seemed frustrated by the way the band worked in the
studio. Tracks were built from the ground up by James and Lars -- in that
order. The drums on Metallica's first half-dozen albums essentially follow
James's powerful, down-stroked guitar rhythms. Kirk's only job was to come in
and play some leads when . . . And Justice for All was
nearly finished. At that, James played a number of the solos too.
Lars was so stricken with flu he kept his head under a warm towel and above a
steaming teapot as we spoke, but he was buzzed by the creative leap the album
represented. Songs like . . . And Justice for All's
"One," inspired by Dalton Trumbo's anti-war novel Johnny Got His Gun,
brought Metallica into new tempos and textures, and even sharper lyric terrain.
James was still a bit surly and reserved -- reticent to speak freely about his
creative inspirations. Nonetheless, we decided I'd ride with him to what was to
be the final date of Metallica's European headlining tour, which would be
played in a cattle market in nearby Leiden.
The potent Dutch weed I'd puffed with Kirk that morning started to kick in as
we rode past fields of sheep, giving the interview and the scenery (which
included dikes and windmills) a surreal edge. But after easing into our
discussion by talking about the relationship between James's rhythm playing and
that of Black Sabbath's Tony Iommi, he stopped sidestepping and spoke freely
about how his songs were in part a product of his fundamentalist upbringing.
He'd broken those intellectual and spiritual shackles alone, the same way he
continued to do just about everything in his life except for his collaboration
with Lars and the time he spent on stage. In the matter of a half-hour, he
morphed from a spiked battlement into a relaxed and complex man with a
clear-eyed genius for expressing his worldview in song.
A few hours later he also became a drinking buddy. This was in the days when
Metallica earned the nickname Alcoholica. They consumed a prodigious amount of
beer, vodka, and especially Jaegermeister before the show. And convinced me
that I needed to do the same. For the previous two years I'd been ripped by
undiagnosable stomach trouble, so I was reluctant. But I figured you only die
once. So . . . to this day I remain grateful to Metallica for
restoring my ability to consume alcohol.
The concert was a spectacle. The hall was literally a big cow barn; they
shoved the piles of shit outside on Friday nights for shows. Kirk got lifted
off his feet when he stood too close to a pyro charge. And the Dutch fans were
fevered. If any of the 20,000 there didn't know every lyric, I didn't see 'em.
The afterparty was a pleasant haze of smoke, liquor, and accented conversation.
Metallica were beautiful with the fans who came. Lars hugged and comforted one
young woman who wept as she left, saying, "Hey, don't be upset. It's only a
band. It's only Metallica."
"Only Metallica" seems inadequate now. After the success of 1991's so-called
"Black Album," Metallica, the band seem more like an industry -- an
import/export manufacturer on an grand scale. They have a lucrative contract
with Elektra that essentially makes them and the label 50/50 partners in the
costs and rewards of Metallica's endeavors -- save for those the band don't
want the label involved in. Metallica have never relinquished creative control.
When you hear an album like '96's Load or its new sequel, you're hearing
pure Metallica. Which today is the sound of metal's best band ever, working at
a creative high.
If Metallica are an industry, it's driven by a human heart. When I
joined them in Milan for a few days last fall to research a Musician
cover story, I found the guys more relaxed and happier then ever -- even if
they must now travel with bodyguards.
Lars is still Lars, a plainly gregarious man. But today James has shed all the
traces of his old reserve. Perhaps his uneasiness has finally been put to rest
by a global embrace. Better yet, Kirk and Jason are enjoying creative peaks now
that Lars and James have kicked open the recording-studio doors. Kirk and Jason
were both involved with Load and Re-Load from day one, and they
brought an array of fresh ideas to both CDs. But best of all is an infectious
camaraderie they've never enjoyed before. More than a decade of being Metallica
has finally erased any distances among them. Now Metallica aren't just making
great music; they're having fun.