METALLICA a candid
conversation with the heavy metal giants abouth their war with napster,
their wars with each other and the joy of finding 10 naked girls in the
shower.
Even when Metallica's quiet, they
manage to make noise. On a mid-January morning, in the middle of the longest
respite from touring and recording the band had ever taken, Metallica
issued a terse but emotional press release, in which bassist Jason Newsted
announced his departure from the group because of "private and personal
reasons and the physical damage I have done to myself over the years."
A few hours later; a source close to Metallica told PLAYBOY that Newsted's
decision had capped a nine-and-a-half-hour band meeting the day before
at the Ritz Carlton Hotel in San Francisco, the sequel to a similar marathon
caucus a week earlier. Newsted's resignation, the source said, had been
"very well discussed" by the band. In some ways, it was just
the usual tumult for Metallica, who spent much of last year waging an
assault-or, they might say, a counteroffensive-against Napster. The website
drew an estimated 38 million users in its first 18 months by allowing
fans to trade sound files without paying any tariff; in short, by providing
free music. Metallica sued for alleged copyright infringement and racketeering,
and on July 11, drummer Lars Ulrich - whose press campaign against Napster
was full of typical bravado-testified against the website before the U.S.
Senate. Between politicking and press conferences, Metallica played music,
too. I Disappear,a new song on the Mission Impossible: 2 soundtrack, was
nominated for five MTV Video Music Awards. The band released S&M,
a two-disc concert album recorded with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra.
They toured during the summer with Kid Rock, who handled some lead vocals
when singer James Hetfield missed three shows because of a Jet Ski accident.
Even VH1 embraced these one-time scourges, profiling the band in a particularly
bloody Behind the Music. The year 2000, says bassist Jason Newsted, "was
possibly the highest-profile year for Metallica ever." Of the thousands
of bands that have crawled out of rehearsel garages into recording
studios, only seven have sold more albums in the U.S. than Metallica has.
Of those, two are long-gone legends (the Beatles and Led Zeppelin), and
the others - Pink Floyd, the Eagles, Aerosmith, the Rolling Stones and
Van Halen-are nostalgia acts, grandpas past their expiration dates or
culturally inconsequential. Among rock's most epic groups, only one-Metallica-is
still touring, still vital and still not in need of Rogaine. When Hetfield
and Ulrich met in Los Angeles in the spring of 1981, united by an ad in
a local rock magazine, they had little in common except a shared fanaticism
for the most extreme mutations of rock. Lars's father; Torben Ulrich,
was a great Danish tennis player; a bohemian and a jazz fan; Lars' godfather
was jazz great Dexter Gordon. Lars had a privileged, expansive childhood,
full of travel and freedom.Hetfield, a product of a broken home headed
by a father who followed the restrictive Christian Science religion, was
working dead-end day jobs and had seen little outside of suburban LA.
Ulrich and Hetfield relocated an early version of the band to San Francisco
to secure the services of bass overlord Cliff Burton, and added guitarist
Kirk Hammett, a Bay Area native who, like Hetfield, embraced loud rock
as a refuge from teen misery. The bands that inspired Metallica are pretty
obscure, unless you know European thrash pioneers like Diamond Head and
Blitzkrieg. But Metallica spread pure metal to the mainstream. They did
it by touring with an almost demented determination, earning the nickname
Alcohollica as they floated from town to town like marauding vodka Vikings.
They did it by avoiding metal cliches (after discarding their spandex
tights, that is) such as singing about chicks and sex, instead giving
voice to raging, almost biblical parables about warfare and brutality.
And they did it, beginning with 1991's Metallica (also known as the Black
Album, for its unadorned cover), by working with Bon Jovi producer Bob
Rock to add expermentation and melodic appeal. Where he once vowed "volume
higher than anything today" (on the band's ear-blasting Kill 'Em
All debut), Hetfield began to expose the vulnerability that always lies
under anger. On Enter Sandman, he sang about a child's nighttime terrors,
an allusion to his own convulsive youth. "Now I see the sun",
he sang hopefully on Unforgiven II. And Nothing Else Matters, a ballad,
brought Metallica into territory they'd never explored: love and satisfaction.
We sent freelance writer Rob Tannenbaum to interview the last of the big
rock bands. He found that although the band members were out of touch
with one another during the hiactus, they were not out of one another's
minds. His report: "I wasn't surprised that Jason Newsted quit Metallica.
Just two months earlier, I'd spent a day with each of the four, and I've
never seen a band so quarrelsome and fractious.
Most of the barbs were cloaked in humor - Newsted mocked Hetfield's singing,
Hetfield mocked Urlich's drumming, and Ulrich, whom I interviewed last,
responded to several of Hetfield's quotes with scorn. "But genuine
tension was evident in these interviews- the last ever to be conducted
with this Metallica lineup- because they shared one trait: Each talked
about his need for solitude. Paradoxically, this is a band of loners,
and the conflict between unity and individuality was pretty clear. Because
they weren't speaking, I became a conduit of information.
"How were Jason's spirits?" Kirk Hammett, 38, asked anxiously
when we met at his home in the Pacific Heights section of San Francisco,
an haute Gothic masion full of dark wood and crucifixes, with a stuffed
two-headed sheep in the parlor."And how was James?"
Hetfield,37,invited me to his house, behind a secured gate in a town less
than an hour north of San Francisco. It seemed odd that he lived in notoriously
mellow Marin Country, but Hetfield set me straight about the neighborhood."This
is more a kind of Losertown,"he said with a deep chuckle. "I'm
more up for that vibe." The den where we talked felt like a rurual
lodge-abouve a fireplace, the walls were decorated with the heads of nine
animals he'd killed, including a boar, an antelope and a 1600-pound buffalo
he took with four shots of a rifle. Hetfield, who earned the nickname
Dr. No for his control of the band, often talks in animal metaphors, which
shape his decidedly Dawinian perspective. "It's a pretty difficult
time for us right now," Hetfield said in a rare somber moment. But
when his wife, Francesca, and three-year-old daughter; Cali, came into
the room, the author of 'Seek and Destroy' jumped up and yelled, "Big
hug!"
When I met Lars Ulrich, 37, he was separated for his wife Skylar and their
child, and was living in a downtown New York hotel suite while mixing
an
album by Systematic for his label, TMC. Ulrich is the band's bustling
businessman-as he ranted and scoffed, his cell phone rang constantly-as
well as its emissary to nonmetal worlds: He's friends with Matt Damon
and Courtney Love and plays tennis with John McEnroe. Affectionately referred
to as 'The Danish Midget' by some in the band's circle, Ulrich somehow
manages to be friendly and disputative at the same time, as though arguing
were just another way of saying hello.
The most unhappy Metallican was Newsted, 38, whom I met at a Marin County
recording studio. Newsted, who joined the band after Cliff Burton died
in a bus accident while the band toured Sweden in September 1986, was
straining at Hetfield's restrictions which kept him from releasing a solo
album. He jokingly dismissed Hetfield's singing, saying, "At least
we call him a singer now, instead of a screamer or a shouter. Five or
six years ago, they would have called him a shouter." Newsted gradually
admitted that he felt 'almost stifled' in Metallica. But when I asked
if he was unhappy enough to quit the band, he turned grave: "I would
not leave Metallica for another band. If I ever happened to choose that
path, I would do it to live my life, not depart to play in another band."
A source within the Metallica camp told me Newsted is 'not 100 percent
healthy, and has been playing in pain' - the bassist also told Playboy
he would quit 'when the day comes that I cannot perform' with his accustomed
ferocity. According the source, Newsted (who declined further comment)
said he might move to Montana and not touch a bass for two years, although
that's hard to imagine such inactivity from a guy who suffers anxiety
attacks 'if I even try to go six days without playing music with somebody.'
Newsted may have retired purely for health reasons, though the source
admits that the bassist's clash with Hetfield was 'precipitating factor.'
Soon, Metallica will end their hiatus and return to the studio as a trio
to record a new album. Metal bands aren't supposed to evolve: AC/DC, Black
Sabbath and MotorHead sounded basically the same on their first record
as on their lastest. But Metallica is motivated by 'a fear of repetition,'
Ulrich told me, so it'll be interesting to hear their next move. Then
they'll hire a new bassist and go back on the road, as loud as ever."
PLAYBOY: You spent much of last year fighting Napster.
Now it's gone into business with BMG and is changing from a free service
to a pay service. Is the therat over? Or will a similar site pop up?
ULRICH: There are all sorts of mini-Napsters out there. But Napster is
successful because it's Computer 101-with some of the other companies,
the software becomes really complicated. And they're not going to get
out of the gate in the same way Napster did. Now everybody has their guard
up. With every new technology some 19-year-old kid can come up with, somebody
five minutes behind can come up with a way of blocking it. It's never
going to go away. But I think it can get to a point where it becomes sort
of nuisance,comparalbe to,say,bootlegging and piracy.
PLAYBOY: What did you accomplish by going after
Napster?
ULRICH: What we've accomplished most is to bring an awareness to the American
public. It turned into the first big issue of the 21st century. People
seemed to be more passionate about it than the presidential thing. Obviously,
this has been the fucking wake-up-call of the millennium to everybody
who has anything to do with intellectual property. There's this whole
circle of older ladies who create sewing patterns. All of a sudden, these
sewing patterns are being stolen and traded on the Internet. And these
litlle old ladies aren't getting their royalties.
PLAYBOY: So now Metallica is allied with a bunch
of old ladies.
ULRICH:[Rolls his eyes]There's your sound bite.
PLAYBOY: Some of your fans took Napster's side,
instead of Metallica's.
HETFIELD:[Grins]Because they're lazy bastards and they want everthing
for free. I think Napster won the press war. It hurt the fans' perception
of us - they see Metallica as some big bad guys who wanted to take their
free stuff away. I like playing music because it's a good living and I
get satisfaction from it. But I can't feed my family with satisfaction.
PLAYBOY: So Napster damaged Metallica?
HETFIELD: I don't want it to read "Napster has damaged Metallica".
It's pretty difficult to hurt us. They did damage to how Metallica fans
perceive us.
ULRICH: I don't agree. We've taken hits from day one: between haircuts
and using Motley Crue-Bon Jovi producer Bob Rock, to headlining Lollapalooza
to writing ballads to making records with a symphony orchestra. That's
part of being an instigator and a forerunner.
PLAYBOY: Aside from his natural garrulousness, why
did Lars become the band's spokesman against Napster?
HETFIELD: My wife and I were giving birth to a second child [son Castor,
born May 2000]. And family is number one. So Lars had to run with the
torch, and there were a few bad moves. You know, Lars can get really mouthy
and be a snotty-nosed kid at times. I cringed at certain interview: "Oh
dude, don't say that."
ULRICH: I said some things that were borderline silly. When Limp Bizkit
embrazed Napster and took $2 million to play this "free tour"-it
is possible to play free shows without taking sponsership money, because
we do that - I said it was total bullshit. I know a lot of people hate
Fred Durst, but I think he's really fucking talented. Me and Fred kissed
and made up. When I open my mouth, most of the time something somewhat
eloquent comes out, and once in a while I talk a bunch of fucking bullshit.
I'm aware of that.
PLAYBOY: What sort of things did the fans say to
your face?
HETFIELD: Some fans said, "Leave Napster alone, dude"-if they
were suicidal[laughs].But that was after
"Metallica rocks,dude". So you would turn your "thanks"
into a "fuck you". I've gotten in plenty of arguments with fans
who just wanted to 'discuss' it. This poor girl in Atlanta, I made her
cry. She felt money was evil. Why don't you go live in Canada or some
socialist country?
ULRICH: If you'd stop being a Metallica fan because I won't give you my
music for free, then fuck you. I don't want you to be a Metallica fan.
HAMMETT:I'm still shocked at the reaction people have. I thought it was
so obvious: People are taking our music when they're not supposed to,
and we want to stop them. Computers make it seem like you're not stealing,
because all you're doing is pressing a button. The bottom line is, stealing
is not right.
PLAYBOY: You guys pissed off a lot of people. On
the Metallica Usenet group, there's an ongoing thread called "Kirk
and Lars are gay."
HAMMETT: That just shows a total lack of creative juices. That's like
calling someone "fatso."
PLAYBOY: Maybe you were right on the merits. But
it's hard for people to sympathize with the rich.
ULRICH: Yeah, it is. So it becomes about "these greedy rock stars."
But understand, 80 million records later, I don't know what the fuck to
do with all the money I have. So now we can talk about what the real issue
is? The real issue, for me, is choice. I want to choose what happens to
my music. It's pretty clear that the future is selling your music online.
But common sense will tell you that you cannot do that if the guy next
door is giving it away for free.
PLAYBOY: When you stated the campaign against Napster,
did you know it would drag on so long?
ULRICH: Didn't have the foggiest fucking idea, no. This whole Lars Ulrich-poster-boy-for-intellectual
property isn't something I sought out.
PLAYBOY: Were you surprised when you got booed onstage
last September at the MTV Video Music Awards?
ULRICH: I was unaware of it while I was up there. I got offstage, and
people were like, "Wow, you handled the booing really well."
I was like, "What booing?"
PLAYBOY:That's surprising, because you looked really
uncomfortable.
ULRICH: I was kind of drunk. It was the worst awards show, hands down,
that I've ever been to. I left, I went out to dinner with some friends
and had some cocktails.
PLAYBOY: When Napster creator Shawn Fanning came
out in a Metallica T-shirt, they cut to you in the audience, and you looked
aghast.
ULRICH: You have to understand, the whole thing was planned. They asked
me to present an award to Shawn Fanning. The day before the show, Napster's
lawyers pulled him out of it. They thought I would do something rude or
obnoxious to him. MTV asked, "Do you have any problem with him walking
out in a Metallica T-shirt?". I was like,"Go for it." I
knew about all that - I was just pretending to be sleeping, .I had my
hand over my face, nodding off. It was sort of contrived.
PLAYBOY: What would it take for you to drop your
suit against Napster?
ULRICH: They have been inquistitive about trying to settle. The only thing
we were after was getting our lawyers fees paid. And we believe they have
the ability to block access to whatever band wants it blocked.
HAMMETT: Criticism is something we've always dealt with, since day one.
When Kill 'Em All came out, there was nothing like it. When the second
album came out, we had slow songs, for God's sake! Even our fans fucking
criticize us. We have bulletproof vests on when it comes to criticism.
To tell the truth, we feed off it.
HETFIELD: Metallica loves to be hated.
HAMMETT: Love to be hated, absolutely. Even before we were in the band,
we wew outsiders-so that mentality sits really fine with us.
PLAYBOY: Now that you're superstars-not only on
MTV but also on VH1-it's easy to forget how unpopular you were at first.
HETFIELD: When Lars and I hooked up, we liked a kind of music that was
not acceppted, especially in Los Angeles. We were fast and heavy. Everything
about LAS was short, catchy songs: Motley Crue, Ratt, Van Halen. And you
had to have the look. The only look we had was ugly.
PLAYBOY: Hey, but you were not immune to dressing
LA style.
HETFIELD: We had our battles with spandex, that's for sure. You could
show off your package. "Wear spandex, dude. It gets you chicks!".
On the first tour through America, my spandex - I fucking hate saying,
"my spandex". It's a pretty evil phrase. They were wet from
the night before, and I was drying them by the heater. A big hole melted
right in the crotch. It was like, "They're like pantyhose."I
just opted to keep my jeans on, and that was the best thing that ever
happened. Lars wore spandex up through the Black Album tour; though he
might tell you different.
ULRICH: We were very much the outcasts in Los Angeles. The first year
or so, it was pretty lonely.
HETFIELD: We did some shows where if our girlfriends weren't there, there'd
be no one in the audience besides the bartender. Then a few diehard fans
would follow us around, and they became crew members. "Maybe that
guy wants to lug some gear around so I don't have to."
PLAYBOY: Where did the medieval, Dungeons-and-Dragons
theme on the early records come from?
HETFIELD: Judas Priest was a band we all dug."Oh, he writes about
that. OK, then. That's what you do to be metal." Then it got into
more, "Let's write about what we do": Whiplash, Hit the Lights
and Seek And Destroy, which was just about smashing shit up. We worked
at day jobs. After that, we'd throw parties, take the furniture out of
the house and smash the joint. We smashed dressing rooms just because
you were supposed to. Then you'd get the bill and go, "Whoa! I didn't
know Pete Townshend paid for his lamp!" Come back off the tour and
you hadn't made any money. You bought furniture for a bunch of promoters.
HAMMETT: We would drink day in and day out and hardly come up for air.
People would be dropping like flies all around us, but we had the tolerance
built up. Our reputation started to precede us. I can't remember the Kill
'Em All tour-we used to start drinking at three or four in the afternoon.
HETFIELD: Smashing dressing rooms was all booze related. The worst was
A Day on the Green. A buddy and I, completely ripped on Jagermeister,
got it into our heads that the deli tray and the fruit had to go through
a little vent. "The vent is not big enough. Let's make a hole!"
The trailer was ruined. Bill Graham - R.I.P. - was the promoter. I was
summoned to his office. Like, "I have to go see the principal now."
He said, "This attitude you have, I've had the same conversation
with Sid Vicious and Keith Moon". It was like, "Cool! Oh, wait-they're
dead. Not so cool. Maybe I should get my shit together". I realized
at that point there was more to being in a band than pissing people off
and smashing shit up.
PLAYBOY: James, what did you think of Lars after
that first jam session?
HETFIELD: Lars had a pretty crappy drum kit, with one cymbal. It kept
falling over, and we'd have to stop, and he'd pick the fucking thing up.
He really was not a good drummer. To this day, he is not Drummer of the
Year. We all know that. When we were done jamming, it was, "What
the fuck was that??" We stiffed him on the bill for the studio, too[laughs].
There were so many different things about him. His mannerisms, his looks,
his accent, his attitude, his smell. He smelled - he smelled like Denmark,
I guess. They have a different view on bathing. We use soap in America.
ULRICH: American kids, there was this sort of compulsive thing about four
showers a day.
PLAYBOY: Well, did you wash?
ULRICH: Often enough for me. OK?
HETFIELD: We ate McDonald's - he ate herring. He was from a different
world. His father was famous. He was very well off. A rich, only child.
Spoiled-that's why he's got his mouth. He knows what he wants, he goes
for it and he's gotten it his whole life.
ULRICH: I'm an only child. I come from about as liberal an upbringing
as you can imagine. I traveled all over the world with my father. So,
yes, James Hetfield and I come from incredibly different backgrounds.
And as we grow older, we probably become more different.
HETFIELD: He introduced me to a lot of different music. I spent a lot
of my time at his house, listening to stuff. I couldn't believe the size
of his record collection - I could afford maybe one record a week, and
he would come back from the store with 20. He bought Styx and REO Speedwagon,
bands he'd heard of in Denmark. I would go, "What the fuck? Why did
you buy Styx?"
ULRICH: I have an obsessive personality. When I become interested in something,
I have to learn everything about it, whether it's Danish chairs from the
great modern era between 1950 and 1956, or Jean-Michel Basquiat, or Oasis.
When I was nine years old,it was all about Deep Purple. I would spend
all my time sitting outside their hotel in Copenhagen, waiting for Ritchie
Blackmore to come out so I could follow him down the street.
PLAYBOY: Since you love Denmark so much, why were
you in LA?
ULRICH: I finished school in Denmark and moved to America to pursue a
tennis career. We ended up in Newport Beach, which is like the snottiest
fucking area of LA apart from Beverly Hills. There's all these kids in
their fucking pink Lacoste shirts, and I'm in my Iron Maiden T-shirts.
I guess there was a hatred for all that, a bit of an alienation. James
Hetfield was the king of alienation. So there was a bit of a brotherly
thing that brought us together.
PLAYBOY: How alienated was James when you met him?
ULRICH: I'd never met anyboday that shy. He was really withdrawn, almost
afraid of social contact. He also had a bad acne problem.
HETFIELD: There wasn't much to say, I guess. When I met Lars, my mother
had just passed away. Everyone was the enemy back then. I wasn't the best
at talking - that came just from growing up in the environment I was in,
kind of alienated. I was tired of explaining my religious situation. Once
the band formed, I thought, I don't have to talk anymore. Lars can say
it all. The no one really understood what the hell songs were about[laughs].
PLAYBOY: So, what was you religious situation?
HETFIELD: I was raised as a Christian Scientist, which is a strange religion.
The main rule is, God will fix everything. Your body is just a shell,
you don't need doctors. It was alienating and hard to understand. I couldn't
get a physical to play football. It was weird having to leave health class
during school, and all the kids saying, "Why do you have to leave?
Are you some kind of freak?". As a kid, you want to be part of the
team. They're always whispering about you and thinking you're weird. That
was very upsetting. My dad taught Sunday school - he was into it. It was
pretty much forced upon me. We had these little testimonials, and there
was a girl that had her arm broken. She stood up and said, "I broke
my arm but now, look, it's al better." But it was just, like, mangled.
Now that I think about it, it was pretty disturbing.
PLAYBOY: Did you ever run away from home?
HETFIELD: Once, me and my sister split. Our parents caught us about four
blocks away. They spanked the shit out of us, pretty much.
PLAYBOY: So do you believe in spanking your kids?
HETFIELD: Spanking my friends, and their wives. Yeah, as a last resort.
But with the spanking comes a huge explanation why.
PLAYBOY: What was your parents' relationship like?
HETFIELD: It was my mom's second marriage - I have two older half brothers.
I didn't really see any turmoil. They didn't argue in front of the kids.
Then Dad went on a "businness trip" - for more than a few years,
you know? I was beginning junior high. It was hidden, that he was gone.
Finally, my mom said, "Dad is not coming back." And that was
pretty difficult. There were some bad times-my mom needed to be home when
we kids were home, or I'd have killed my sister. We beat the living hell
out of each other. I remember burning her with hot oil, and that was,
"Wow, it went too far". My mom worried a lot, and that made
her sick. She hid it from us. All of a sudden, she's in the hospital.
Then all of a sudden, she's gone. Cancer got here. We went and lived with
my stepbrohter Dave, who's 10 years older. My sister was being unruly,
and she got thrown out of the house. I finished high school, then, "See
ya, everybody."
HAMMETT: James comes from a broken home, and I come from a broken home,
and when I joined the band, we kind of bonded over that. I was abused
as a child. My dad drank a lot. He beat the shit out of me and my mom
quite a bit. I got ahold of a guitar, and from the time I was 15, I rarely
left my room. I remember having to pull my dad off my mom when he attacked
her one time, during my 16th birthday - he turned on me and started slapping
me around. Then my dad just left one day. My mom was struggling to support
me and my sister. I've definitely channeled a lot of anger into the music.I
was also abused by my neighbour when I was like nine or 10. The guy was
a sick fuck. He had sex with my dog, Tippy. I can laugh about it now-hell,
I was laughing about it then.
PLAYBOY: It does seem that heavy metal attracts
a disproportionate number of people who've been abused.
HAMMETT: I think heavy metal is therapeutic - it's music that blows the
tension away. I think that's why people who have had really bad childhoods
are attracted to heavy metal. It allows people to release aggression and
tension in a nonviolent way. Also, heavy metal has a community feeling
- it brings outsiders together. Heavy metal seems to attract all sorts
of scruffy,lost animals, strays no one wants.
ULRICH: I've always had issues with that, because I don't feel I had major
psychological damage in my life. Why is that limited to metal? If you
go to an Elton John concert, people have the same emotional baggage. If
you lined 10 Metallica fans up against the wall, you would get 10 different
stories.
PLAYBOY: And three of them would piss on the wall.
ULRICH: And one of them would knock his head against the wall, yeah. I'm
not so comfortable embracing those types of cliches.
PLAYBOY: At the beginning, did you consider any names other than Metallica?
ULRICH: We had a list of 20 possible names: Nixon, Helldriver, Blitzer.
I was really keen on Thunderfuck.
PLAYBOY: When did you start to draw female fans?
HAMMETT: Girls were always at the shows. It's just that they didn't look
much different from the guys.
ULRICH: Girls would come on the bus and just blow the whole bus. Like,
"OK, here's two girls, everybody get in line." People would
say, "Eww, she just blew that other guy..."So? You don't have
to put your tongue down her throat.
HETFIELD: They enjoyed what they did. And, heh-heh, they were good at
it. Back then, we all shared stuff. "I did her. Dude, here! Have
my chick." Lars would charm them, talk his way into their pants.
Kirk had a baby face that was appealing to the girls. And Cliff - he had
a big dick. Word got around about that, I guess.
ULRICH: We used to have this thing called tough tarts - it was fucking
great. We'd come offstage and there's be like 10 naked girls in the showers.
HAMMETT: I couldn't figure out why all of a sudden I was handsome. Did
I wake up looking different? A fat bank account will make you look like
handsome. No one had ever treated me like that before in my life.
PLAYBOY: Who was the biggest slut in the band?
ULRICH: We all had some pretty slutty moments. I don't think there's anybody
in this band who hasn't had crabs a couple of times, or the occasional
drip-dick.
PLAYBOY: What do you remember about the night Cliff
Burton died?
HETFIELD: I remember getting awakened with shit flying all over the place.
I busted out the emergency window in my underwear, 20 degrees, and Cliff
was missing. I remember seeing his legs sticking out from under the bus.
He had the whitest, skinniest legs. I knew he was gone then. The bus was
right on him. We were all in the hospital, and our tour manager said,
"Let's get the band together and go." When he said the word
band - it wasn't the right word. "Shit, we're not a band anymore".
We went to the bottle and started drinking.
HAMMETT: Cliff was a very smart guy, a reader, very eloquent. I just don't
understand why he went, and not one of us.
NEWSTED: Cliff Burton was my God. He was the guru. I mean, no one before
him and no one since him has played like that. People have copied him,
but nobody ever had his feel of his prowess.
PLAYBOY: So you were a big fan back in Arizona?
NEWSTED: Metallica was the hugest influence for my band, Flotsam and Jetsam.
We played mostly around Arizona, at clubs and for desert parties.
PLAYBOY: What is a desert party?
NEWSTED: You borrow from your parents, put together 80 or 120 bucks, and
rent a generator for the day. Get some tables from the high school to
make a stage, and you rent a fog machine. You get some dudes to buy a
keg, and you say, "Once people come, you're going to give us 40 bucks."
You get the U-Haul stuck in the ditch, pull out some of the tables, put
them under the tires and smash 'em up to get the truck out. The dudes
that are buying the keg are already drinking. It's one o'clock in the
afternoon. They've got .44 magnums on their sides. In Arizona, if you
have your gun showing, you can wear what you want. Drunk as fuck already,
and you find out that they robbed a Safeway last night. "Oh yeah,
we're going to get money out of these guys." Then set up and play
for an hour or two and the Scottsdale cops come out and bust everything
up and that's the end of it. I didn't make any money playing until I joined
Metallica. The most I remember making - for what we tought was a huge
gig - was $26 between five of us.
PLAYBOY: Do you ever miss that?
NEWSTED: I miss being grimy. I miss the hunger. I miss the excitement
of taking off work early to set up the gear at the club. And seven people
show up but you still play like there are 700. There was a Burger King
rigt across from the main club we played - we took down a mountain of
29-cent burgers. Happy about it! "I'm going to get a Coke."
"No, man, that's two more burgers! Fuck that! We'll steal beer from
a back room, dude." Because otherwise it'd be boiled potatoes with
ketchup stolen from Burger King.
PLAYBOY: Had you seen Metallica while Cliff was
alive?
NEWSTED: Yes. In Phoenix, with Wasp, before Master Of Puppets came out.
Front row. Right in front of Cliff Burton, worshiping. Drooling. Banging
madly. Fourteen bucks for a shirt, which was all the money in the world
at that time. We only went to see Metallica. As soon as Metallica was
done, we walked out. They just crushed it, and we knew everything they
did by heart.
PLAYBOY: How did you hear he'd died?
NEWSTED: A friend woke me up at six in the morning. He said, "You've
got to get the paper, dude."I remember tears hitting the paper and
watching them soak into the print. We wore black armbands when we played
our next gigs.
PLAYBOY: After you heard Cliff was dead, how long
before you started to think, Hmm, Metallica is going to need a new bass
player?
NEWSTED: I daydreamed that day. Just like, What if, what if, what if?
PLAYBOY: The brought you to San Francisco for an
audition. Were you nervous?
NEWSTED: That whole week, I didn't sleep. I might have lain down a couple
of times. For five days I stayed up and played as long as I could. Blisters
on blisters broke. When I could feel the nerve inside as I played the
string, I stopped for a little while. A couple of my friends got together
some money to pay for a $140 plane ticket to go do my audition.
PLAYBOY: Pretty cheap that they didn't pay your
airfaire. Where they tough on the people who were auditioning?
NEWSTED: One guy comes in, he's got his bass signed by the guy from Quiet
Riot or something. And James just goes, "Next!" Like that, before
the guy even got to plug in. Guys were, like, crushed.
PLAYBOY: Tell me about the first year with them.
NEWSTED: Hazing. And a lot of emotional tests.
HETFIELD: We were mourning through anger. "You're here instead of
Cliff, so here's what you get."It was therapy for us.
NEWSTED: One time, it's four in the morning, they're hammered and knocking
on my hotel door when we were in New York. "Get up, fucker! It's
time to drink Pussy!" You know? "You're in Metallica now! You
better open that fucking door!" They kept pounding. Kaboom! The door
frame shreds, and the door comes flying in. And they go, "You should
have answered the door, bitch!" They grab the mattress and flip it
over with me on it. They put the chairs, the desk, the TV stand - everything
in the room - on top of the mattress. They threw my clothes, my cassette
tapes, my shoes out the window. Shaving cream all over the mirrors, toothpaste
everywhere. Just devastation. They go running out the door, "Welcome
to the band, dude!"
PLAYBOY: Did you know they were telling people you
were gay?
NEWSTED: No. I mean, dude, there was so much, that's like a minor detail.
PLAYBOY: Why did they do that and why did you put
up with it?
NEWSTED: Because it was Metallica, it was my dream come true, man. I was
defintely frustrated, fed up and kind of feeling unliked. They did it
so see if I could handle it. If you're going to fill the shoes of Cliff
Burton, you have to be resilient.
PLAYBOY: OK, guys,who was the biggest drinker in Alcohollica?
HAMMETT: James. He would drink half a bottle of Jagermeister by himself,
as well as drinking Vodka.
ULRICH: James Hetfield. If me and James started drinking at the same time,
six hours of hard liquor later, I would be passed out. For quite a while,
he was embracing alcohol at a different level from the rest of us.
HETFIELD: I was. I had to have a bottle of Vodka just for fun. I'm surprised
I'm still alive.
NEWSTED: That's a tough call. Fist for fist, I think Lars. He can take
it to a different place, because he's Danish. They get conditioned real
early.
ULRICH: [LAUGHS] I had much more of the binge mentality; I'd go every
night for three days, then I wouldn't touch a drop for the next four.
NEWSTED: James is the only one that ever drank so much he couldn't show
up for a rehearsal or for photos. He is the only one who ever actually
poisoned himself.
HAMMETT: Jason's not so much of a drinker as the rest of us are. He likes
to smoke pot.
PLAYBOY: People who like fast music usually like
fast drugs. Did the band get into speed?
HAMMETT: Speed is a bad word in our camp. But speed freaks love us.
ULRICH: James is the only one who never really engaged in any kind of
drug abuse. Me, Jason, Kirk and Cliff were always experimenting with different
things to a higher degree.
HAMMETT: Cocaine has definitely been in our lives. You hang out with other
musicians, and next thing you know, you have five guys crammed into a
bathroom stall. I had a bad coke problem on the And Justice For All tour,
but I pulled out of that, because it makes me depressed, basically. I
tried smack once. I was so thankfull that I hated it.
ULRICH: I tried acid once; I was shit-fucking scared. The only drug I've
ever really engaged in is cocaine. It gave me another couple of hours
of drinking. A lot of people use it as a way to get closer to you, and
you fall for that. I go through cycles where I say, "OK,I'm going
to pull away for a while." And then I take six months away.
PLAYBOY: Jason, as time went on, did the band stop
hazing you?
NEWSTED: They actually got tougher as time went on. The second and third
years were the most brutal. Instead of fraternity pranks, there were things
that cut deep and were based on disrespect.
PLAYBOY: What did they do that was disrespectful?
NEWSTED: Turning the bass down on And Justice For All. Not listening to
my ideas, musically.
PLAYBOY: Is Jason even on And Justice For All?
HETFIELD: His picture is on it [big laugh]. Someone sent me a joke CD,
with a sticker on the outside that says, "And Justice For All - now
with bass!"
ULRICH: It's the only record of ours that I'm not entirely comfortable
with. It became about ability and almost athletics, rahter than music.
PLAYBOY: Bands are usually like families, and it
sounds like this familiy fights a whole lot.
HAMMETT: There are a lot of soap operas and petty dramas that come with
being in this band. I find myself playing referee. I've been the buffer
between James and Lars, I've been the buffer between Lars and Jason.
HETFIELD: Lars' name keeps getting brought up, doesn't it? [laughs] He's
usually the instigator, with his mouth. He can be a real ass at times,
and pull attitudes. I punched him onstage once - probably our third gig
ever. We agreed we were going to play Let It Loose for our encore, and
he went up there and started a different song, Killing Time, because it
started with drums. I turned back: "You motherfucker!" I couldn't
remember the lyrics, it was a complete failure.
ULRICH: I started the song I wanted to play. I don't remember why - maybe
I felt it was a more suitable encore. And then he punched me.
HETFIELD: I remember throwing him into his drum kit a couple of times,
throwing some cymbals, cutting his head open.
ULRICH: I've gotten into a couple of fights with Jason.
HAMMETT: I've never hit anyone in the band. I practice a lot of yoga now,
and read a lot of Eastern philosophy. I'm a huge believer in karma: no
meat, no beef, no swine, no fowl.
HETFIELD: I'm definitely not the smartest guy in the band, so winning
an intellectual argument is not going to happen. Resorting to violence
used to work. And intimidation.
HAMMETT: When James comes at you screaming, he can be intimidating.
PLAYBOY: A lot of things have happened to Metallica.
Does that mean the band has bad karma?
HAMMETT: Quite possibly. Goddamn it, we've been through a lot of things.
It has to be karma. I don't know if it's the energy our songs release.
People channel the energy of our music - 90 percent of the time it's good,
but maybe 10 percent of the time it's bad. I've heard stories of skinheads
listening to our music and fucking tattooing song titles on their arms
with big swastikas underneath. Maybe it's just personal karma. Maybe the
reason James has had so many accidents is because of his own personal
karma, and it affects the band.
PLAYBOY: How would you describe the change that
came after And Justice for All, starting with the Black Album?
ULRICH: The earlier records were about bre force, stuff like that. As
James became more comfortable, elements of vulnerability and confusion
came across, with less banging-on-the-chest type of stuff. Instead of
"It's fucked up and I'm going to kill everything in my wake",
it was more like, "It's fucked up and I'm really suffering from it."
HETFIELD: On the Black Album, when I went to write lyrics, I didn't know
what the fuck to write about. I was trying to write lyrics that the band
could stand behind - but we are four completely different individuals.
So the only way to go was in.
PLAYBOY: Of all the stuff you wrote James, what
was the song you most hesitated ove recording?
HETFIELD: Nothing Else Matters. That was a huge turning point. It was
sensitive.
PLAYBOY: In theme, Nothing Else Matters is kind
of like the Styx song Babe.
HETFIELD: Fuck you. Fuck you very much [smiles]. I didn't think the band
would like it. But they were really supportive about it.
HAMMETT: All I could think of at the time was, James wrote a fucking love
song to his girlfriend? That's just weird.
NEWSTED: At first, it didn't sound very much like Metallica to me. I like
the fast heavy stuff. I don't think Metallica should do country. We came
pretty close to it on Mama Said (from Load). I don't think that tasted
very good to me.
HAMMETT: James always wants to be perveived as this guy who is very confident
and strong. And for him to write lyrics like that - showing a sensitive
side - took a lot of balls.Lars, Jason and I were going through divorces.
I was an emotional wreck. I was trying to take those feeling of guilt
and failure and channel them into the music, to get something positive
out of it. Jason and Lars were too, and I think that has a lot to do with
why the Black Album sounds the way it does.
PLAYBOY: Before, you had been one of the more popular heavy metal bands.
But with the Black Album, you became mainstream.
NEWSTED: Once we hit MTV, better-looking girls started coming to the shows.
Just overnight.
HAMMETT: It sounds like a cliche, but girls like melody, they like soft,
pretty songs. And if that's what it took to bring them into our little
trap, more power to it.
PLAYBOY: Do you think...
HETFIELD: No. I like to not think.
PLAYBOY: Only a few albums have sold more than 10
million copies. Do you think the Black Album is the band's best record?
HETFIELD: There are some songs on there I don't like. Through The Never
was a little wacky. Don't Tread on Me, probably not one of my favorite
songs musically. Holier Than Thou was one of the sillier songs, more the
old style of writing.
PLAYBOY: When Load came out next, you guys had short
hair and were wearing makeup and trendy clothes. It was quite a change
from the denim and mullets.
HAMMETT: It was just a phase. It was the zeitgeist of the moment. Who
knows? We might do something even more complex in the future.
PLAYBOY: Like Hetfield in a dress?
HAMMETT: I think that would be extreme [laughs].
HETFIELD: I let Lars and Kirk take over a little on the image front. I
really don't like looking at it now. Our fans go, "What happened
to Metallica, the rebel, longhair, greasy biker, fuck-you band?"
Now it was U2 or Stone Temple Pilots, or some band relying on an image.
What the fuck did we need that for? That was just stupid. Jason and I
were really not into it - Kirk and Lars were gung ho. You either laugh
about it or you get wound up. I'm doing both, actually.
PLAYBOY: You guys were kind of handsome without
the mullets.
HETFIELD: Come on! Mullets rule. Dude, I wanted to have long hair and
short hair at the same time.
HAMMETT: I never had a mullet, OK?
NEWSTED: I'm not going to fess to the mullet for more than like three
months in 1987.
ULRICH: It was probably only James who had a mullet.
PLAYBOY: Well, it sure looks like a mullett you're
wearing on the inner sleeve of Garage INC., Lars. What if James grew back
his mullet?
HAMMETT: If he does, I'm going to dye my hair pink. "You can have
a funny haircut? So can I!"
PLAYBOY: James, you're progun and proenvironment.
Did you vote for Al Gore?
HETFIELD: No. I'm afraid of someone taking my guns away.
PLAYBOY: Then did you vote for Bush?
HETFIELD: No. You have to go into the city to vote. So I'm not going to
vote.
PLAYBOY: You describe drinking and performing as
therapeutic. Have you ever been in real therapy?
HETFIELD: [Nods] Around the time of Load, I felt I wanted to stop drinking.
"Maybe I'm missing out on something. Everyone else seems so happy
all the time. I want to get happy." I'd plan my life around a hangover:
"The Misfits are playing in town Friday night, so Saturdayis hangover
day." I lost a lot of days in my life. Going to therapy for a year,I
learned a lot about myself. There's a lot of things that scar you when
you're growing up, you don't know why. The song Bleeding Me is about that:
I was trying to bleed out all bad, get the evil out. While I was going
through therapy, I discodfvered some ugly stuff in there. A dark spot.
PLAYBOY: So did the biggest drinker in Alcohollica
stop drinking?
HETFIELD: I took more than a year off from drinking - and the skies didn't
part. It was just life, but less fun. The evil didn't come out. I wasn't
laughing, wasn't having a good time. I realized, drinking is a part of
me. Now I know how far to go. You can't be hungover when you got kids,
man. "Dad, get the fuck off the couch!" Well, they don't say
that - yet.
PLAYBOY: Did you ever go to AA?
HETFIELD: I wouldn't say I'm an alcoholic - but then, you know, alcoholics
say they're not alcoholics.
PLAYBOY: By then, you were spending more time with
your father. How did that go?
HETFIELD: It started off really bad. Very mad at him for making the family
the way it was. It was never a real father-son kind of thing again.
HAMMETT: James used to be a raging, out-of-control drunk, alway fighting,
always getting into trouble. He's a lot more patient now. I think a lot
of that had to do with the passing of his father [in 1996, during the
Load tour]. After that, he was just a lot more appreciative, thoughtful
and compassionate.
PLAYBOY: James strikes us as kind of an enlightened
redneck.
HAMMETT: I'll agree with that 100 percent. He lives a certain lifestyle
that's easy to poke fun at: He lives out in the country, drinks a lot
of beer, has a bunch of guns, goes hunting.
HETFIELD: I eat vegetables, too, man. They're just too easy to kill. Carrots
don't get a chance to run. I think animals are there for us. We're on
top of the food chain.
PLAYBOY: Maybe you should have a hunting trip with
one of the bands that supports PETA, like the Indigo Girls.
HETFIELD: Which one should I kill first? Oh, them hunting with me?
PLAYBOY: Are you uncomfortable with the degree of
homophobia in metal?
ULRICH: Totally. Ultimately, why do me and Kirk stick our tongues down
each other's throat once in a while in front of the camera? The metal
world needs to be fucked with as much as possbile. When the band started,
everybody would sit around proving their heterosexuality by gay-bashing
and stuff like that. Like, "Oh, fucking faggot." Does that elevate
you to some greater he-man status? I never understood that.
PLAYBOY: We've heard James use the word fag jokingly.
Does that mean he's homophobic?
HAMMETT: Um, probably. James hasn't had a lot of experience with gay people,
and that's a large reason for being homophobic. He needs to be enlightened
in that area.
ULRICH: I know he's homophobic. Let there be no question about that. I
think homophobia is questioning your sexuality and not being comfortable
with it.
PLAYBOY: For the first time in years, there are
a lot of metal bands on top of the charts. Most of them are pretty bad,
aren't they?
HAMMETT: There's a lot of fucking crap. A lot of regurgitated stuff, too.
That Papa Roach song (Last Resort), the main riff is from a fucking Iron
Maiden song called HAllowed By Thy Name.
HETFIELD: Limp Bizkit seems a little cartoony to me. I don't like some
guy just yelling. Like Rage Against the Machine - it wasn't singing, it
was just some guy kind of pissed off, telling you his opinion.
HAMMETT: To me, Limp Bizkit sounds like a second-rate Korn. Korn has a
much better vocalist who is somewhat intelligent. A lot of these bands
get the right ingredidents, the right formula, and - voila - they have
a metal band. A band like Godsmack is just a cross between Metallica and
Alice in Chains, with a bit of Korn thrown in.
HETFIELD: Queens of the Stone Age is unique. This band Rocket From the
Crypy makes me feel good.
PLAYBOY: Three of you are married, two of you have
kids. What has changed?
NEWSTED: Five years ago, the band took priority over all other things.
Now, families comes first. I understand that. A family is more important.
I'm the only one who's not married, and music still plays the biggest
part in my life. I mean, Black Sabbath is my number one band of all time,
but Metallica has done more for metal. Metallica is the biggest heavy
metal band there has ever been. I want to keep that strong. But Metallica
is only one part of my musical life, OK? Those guys will be happy taking
six months away from the music. They have other things on their minds.
If I even try to go six days without playing with somebody, I have anxiety-type
things happen.
PLAYBOY: It sounds like this sabbatical is frustrating
to you.
NEWSTED: Yes. James and Lars started this thing together. They came through
all of the hardshpis. And they have serious, written-in-stone feelings
about the band, about how it needs to be run. That's very, very hard to
swallow sometimes. I guess our understanding is that we don't want to
be like other bands, where people go off and do side projects. I have
made some incredibly wonderful music with other musicians. It would just
floor people - it has floored people. But I just can't release it.
PLAYBOY: James and Lars won't let you?
NEWSTED: It's not Lars.
HETFIELD: We just disagree about side projects. Fans have always viewed
Metallica as something they can rely on: We're always there, always strong.
We've been the same guys since day one, essentially. The only way you
can get out of this band is if you die. When you say Metallica, you know
who that is: Lars, James, Kirk and - uh, what's that guy? Jason [laughs].
When someone does a side project it takes away from the strength of Metallica.
So there is a little ugliness lately. And it shouldn't be discussed in
the press.
NEWSTED: James Hetfield is the heart and soul and pride of Metallica,
the protector of the name. I'm not out to disrespect him.
PLAYBOY: But he could respect you by letting you
release the album?
NEWSTED: We're getting really close to some things we shouldn't be talking
about. I would like him to see that this music is truly a part of me,
like his child is a part of him.
PLAYBOY: What did James say when you told him that
you wanted to release the album?
NEWSTED: I won't go there. We have to change the subject.
HETFIELD: Where would it end? Does he start touring with it? Does he sell
t-shirts? Is it his band? Thats the part I don't like. It's like cheating
on your wife in a way. Married to each other.
PLAYBOY: So what is Jason supposed to do during
the hiatus?
HETFIELD: I don't fucking know. I'm not his travel agent.
HAMMETT: I just hope we can survive this in one piece without tearing
each other's fucking throats out.
PLAYBOY: Lars, do you think that Jason should be
able to release his album?
ULRICH: I wouldn't be able to look him in the eye and go, "You can't
put that record out." That's not who I am as a person. That's pretty
much all I have to say. I just can't get caught up in these meltdowns.
I've got some issues in my family life, with my wife, that are a little
more weighty than, like, whatever James Hetfield and Jason Newsted are
bickering over.
PLAYBOY: What if Jason were to put it out anyway?
HETFIELD: I don't know. I would disappoint me a lot.
PLAYBOY: How is the record?
HAMMETT: It's a great album.
ULRICH: It's a nice record, very bluesy, like a poppier version of Stevie
Ray Vaughan's stuff.
HETFIELD: It's respectable.
HAMMETT: I've spoken with Jason for hours on end. I'm upset for him. James
demands loyalty and unity, and I respect that, but I don't think he realizes
the sequence of events he's putting into play. Jason eats, sleeps and
breathes music. I think it's morally wrong to keep someone away from what
keeps him happy. That album will always be available in some format -
whether it's on Napster or in stores, people are going to hear it.
PLAYBOY: Wouldn't it be funny if Jason released
his album on Napster?
HAMMETT: It would be fucking ironic as shit.
HETFIELD: I don't mind being looked at as the asshole in the band. Well,
within the band. As long as the fans think Lars is the asshole, that's
fine [laughs].
NEWSTED: James is on quite a few records: In the South Park movie, when
Kenney goes to hell, James is singing, and he's on just about every Corrosion
of Conformity album. That's a shot at him, but I'm going to keep it. I
can't play my shit, but he can go play with other people.
HETFIELD: My name isn't on those records. And I'm not out trying to sell
them.
PLAYBOY: You want loyalty and unity in the band,
but if you're too much of a dictator, you can end up losing band members.
We've got three words for you: Guns n' Roses.
HETFIELD: Those are three ugly words[laughs].They were a prime example
of egos out of hand. We're definitely not in a Guns n' Roses situation.
It would never get like that. I'd kill us all before that happened.
PLAYBOY: It's three against one here: You're the
only one against letting Jason release his record. Can this conflict be
worked out?
HETFIELD: Some of us are just going to have to bend a little.
PLAYBOY: Or bend over.
HETFIELD: My back hurts, so it won't be me.
PLAYBOY: Do all these conflicts actually help the
band?
ULRICH: You've used the word conflict a lot in the last 15 minutes. Ultimately,
we have a love and respect for each other that supersedes the bickering.
The key thing is, we're fucking still here. And we're the only ones that
are still here. For whatever conflicts you keep talking about, we still
find a way to exist as a working unit, and pretty much at the drop of
a dime go onstage and kick everybody else's ass.
PLAYBOY: Is this just the usual tension within Metallica,
or is it worse now?
ULRICH: That's a great question. It's an interesting time to interview
the four of us separately. You're hearing people get things off their
chest - almost using you as the middleman. Like, James and Jason won't
call each other, so they're having a conversation through you.
PLAYBOY: You and James haven't talked, either.
ULRICH: I haven't spoken to him for a while, that's true.
HETFIELD: He hasn't called me. I'm sure he'll say I haven't called him.
ULRICH: It's a little bit of the rock star stubbornness. Like, "He's
not calling, so I'm not going to call him. Fuck him."
HETFIELD: We both need time away; me and that fucking guy have been togheter
for 20 years, man. It's an extreme love-hate thing, you know?
ULRICH: We've been in this scenario a hundred times before. On the road
sometimes, we don't speak to each other for a week. Me and James Hetfield
are the two most opposite people on this planet.
PLAYBOY: Your wife, Skylar, used to date Matt Damon,
and he made her the model for the female lead in Good Will Hunting. A
few years ago, Matt described you as "a fucking rock star who's got
$80 million and his own jet - a bad rock star, too."
ULRICH: He said that before we met. And he's apologized about a hundred
times. The first five times I saw him, he would spend 10 minutes apologizing
profusely. He really is a sweetheart.
PLAYBOY: And you're an art collector, which is an
unusual hobby for a metal drummer. What schools do you collect?
ULRICH: Abstract expressionism, the Cobra movement, art brut. I own a
lot of Basquiat, a lot of Dubuffret, a lot of de Kooning. I have the best
collection of Asger Jorn on this planet. I have what is universally considered
as one of the two greatest Basquiat paintings; I spent a year and a half
chasing it down. Hanging out backstage with Kid Rock is an amazing turn-on,
no less so than sitting and staring at my Dubuffet for an hour with a
fucking gin and tonic.
PLAYBOY: Tell us about the summer 1992 tour with
Guns n' Roses, when a pyrotechnic explosion set you on fire during a show
in Montreal. How bad were the burns?
HETFIELD: It was down to the bone. My hand looked like hamburger. No matter
how much water you poured on it, the pain came back instantly. The most
painful part was the physical therapy - they would scrape off the skin
with a tongue depressor. It was brutal. I was on pills, too, and it still
hurt like a motherfucker.
PLAYBOY: Speaking of pain, do you ever get headaches?
HETFIELD: Are you saying it's too loud? It's got to be loud. You're supposed
to feel it all over.
PLAYBOY: Metallica toured a lot less than usual
last year.
NEWSTED: We did maybe 30 or 40 shows, and that's probably the least we
have ever done. Metallica usually does from 150 to 250 shows in a year.
HAMMETT: I have no qualms about not doing yearlong tours anymore.
ULRICH: Ten years ago, we wanted to play as many gigs as possible and
have as much debaucherous fun as possible. Now, playing 200 shows in North
Dakota is not as stimulating as it used to be. Sometimes it's great being
onstage, and other times the show themselves become totally mediocre and
you're just sort of floating through them. The older we get, and the shorter
we tour, the better we are.
PLAYBOY: How much longer can the band go on, given
how physical the music is?
NEWSTED: It's limited. People won't ever see me weak, won't ever see me
just standing there onstage. When the day comes that I cannot perform,
I will bow out. That's it.
HETFIELD: A gray mullet would look all right.
PLAYBOY: Are there any tricks to writing a Metallica
song?
NEWSTED: About 90 percent of Metallica songs are in E minor, because of
James' vocal range is limited - although he's developed by leaps and bounds.
PLAYBOY: Any chance Metallica will follow the rap-metal
direction?
NEWSTED: No. No rap in Metallica.
ULRICH: The chances of James Hetfield going in a rap direction are probably
between zero and minus one.
PLAYBOY: From your perspective as a Metallica fan,
Jason, it must be interesting to see James continue to evolve since Nothing
Else Matters.
NEWSTED: Where there was darkness before, now theres's a lot of light,
since James' children entered the picture. The darkness will always be
there, because of the damage done, but there's a big bright spot now.
HAMMETT: We can't sing about flowers and happy shiny days, you know?
PLAYBOY: So, James, will the next batch of songs
be happy?
HETFIELD: Yeah, I'll start writing about my house and family and dog.
Look, there's always got to be some turmoil to write, and now, within
the band, there might be some pretty good fuel.
PLAYBOY: On the next record, we can expect a song
called -
HETFIELD: Side Project [laughs]. There's always something that's going
to piss you off. Something you'd like to change. Something that confuses
you. All I have to do is go to San Francisco for one day - I get pissed
off enough for a week.
PLAYBOY: You're happily married, the father of two,
you've been to therapy. You even wrote a love song. Can you still find
the dark spot?
HETFIELD: I know it's there, and how it got there. I can visit it and
leave again. It's a dark spot you can't wash off.
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