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Metallica Biogrpahy
Metallica is widely considered to be the most popular and influential heavy
metal band of the past two decades. During the 1980s the group sold millions of
albums through relentless touring and positive word of mouth, despite virtually
no radio play or publicity. During the 1990s their sound became more complex and
the group embraced radio and MTV to further expand their enormous fan base.
Metallica was formed in Los Angeles in 1981 by vocalist/rhythm guitarist James
Hetfield, Danish-American tennis pro-turned-drummer Lars Ulrich, guitarist Dave
Mustaine, and roommate-turned-bassist Ron McGovney. The quartet recorded four
songs for a 1982 compilation titled Metal Massacre 1 and four more for a widely
circulated demo tape called "No Life 'Til Leather." They soon gained a small
underground following. By 1983 the group had relocated to San Francisco, signed
to the indie label Megaforce Records and brought in local bassist Cliff Burton
and former Exodus guitarist Kirk Hammet to replace McGovney and Mustaine,
respectively. That May the revised quartet recorded their full-length debut
album, Kill 'Em All (originally titled Metal Up Your Ass), a powerful
punk-infused metal album that galvanized the metal underground. After a tour of
Europe with Venom, Metallica returned with 1984's Ride the Lightning, a more
complex work that continued to attract new fans.
Signing to Elektra Records, Metallica made their major-label debut with 1986's
Master of Puppets, a critically acclaimed metal opus supported by a U.S. tour
with Ozzy Osbourne. Later that year the group toured Europe, where tragedy
struck. On September 27, 1986 bassist Burton was killed when the band's tour bus
crashed while traveling to Stockholm. The group returned to the U.S. and
recruited Flotsam and Jetsam bassist Jason Newsted, then entered the studio to
record a limited-edition all-covers EP, titled Garage Days Re-Revisited, as a
warm-up for future work.
Metallica roared back in 1988 with ...And Justice For All, which entered the Top
10 despite receiving virtually no radio play and only limited MTV play of the
group's sole video, "One." Electing to embrace the mainstream, Metallica
returned with an eponymous 1991 release whose all-black cover has led to it
being referred to as the Black Album. More radio friendly and melodic than
earlier works, Metallica entered the charts at No. 1 and went on to sell more
than seven million copies, spawning the radio/MTV hits "Enter Sandman,"
"Wherever I May Roam," "The Unforgiven," and "Nothing Else Matters." While the
group toured the world for several years, Elektra released the acclaimed box set
Live Shit: Binge and Purge in 1993.
Metallica recorded two albums worth of material for their next release, but
ended up releasing some of the material as 1996's Load and the rest as 1997's
Reload, both of which debuted at No. 1 on the album charts.
The double CD Garage Inc., includes the Garage Days Re-Revisted EP as well as
rare B-sides and newly recorded covers. The album was released in late November
1998 on Elektra.
In November 1999, S&M hit record store shelves. The double CD was recorded live
with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra at the Berkeley Community Theatre.
Here are few songs from latest Album
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