Hetfield meets Acrassicauda
Hetfield meets Acrassicauda Video Clips. Duration : 2.85 Mins.
Rating: 4.9725556
Hetfield meets Acrassicauda
Tags: Hetfield, meets, Acrassicauda, metallica, Iraq
All about Metallica band,..the best of the best!
Hetfield meets Acrassicauda Video Clips. Duration : 2.85 Mins.
Rating: 4.9725556
Tags: Hetfield, meets, Acrassicauda, metallica, Iraq
Metallica – Kill ‘Em All (1982) [Full Album] Tube. Duration : 51.33 Mins.
Rating: 4.949367
Keywords: Metallica, Kill em All, full album
Tags: 1982, album, Album 1982, metallica, Metallica 1982
Metallica w/ Mustaine, Grant and McGovney – Hit the Lights (Live in Frisco, Dec. 10th, 2011) Video Clips. Duration : 6.15 Mins.
Rating: 4.9897957
Keywords: metallica, dave, mustaine, lloyd, grant, ron, mcgovney, original, members, hit, the, lights, no, life, till, leather, kill, em, all, debut, album, 1983, 83, live, birthday, party, 30th, 30, years, concert, fillmore, san, francisco, california, united, states, america, december, 2011, 11, james, hetfield, lars, ulrich, kirk, hammett, robert, rob, trujillo, 720p, hd, San Francisco, Lars Ulrich, Kirk Hammett, Ride The Lightning, megadeth
Tags: Frisco, Lights, McGovney, McGovney Mustaine, metallica, Mustaine, Mustaine Frisco
Metallica – Seek & Destroy live in Korea 2006 Video Clips. Duration : 8.48 Mins.
Rating: 4.9393415
Keywords: Metallica, Live, Metal, Thrash, Korea, seek&destroy, Seoul, theowilson
Tags: Destroy, Destroy Metallica, metallica, Metallica Destroy
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Rust in Peace Details
Megadeth, Rust in Peace
… >> Click here for More Details
Don’t hesitate to check the discounted prices for “Rust in Peace”
Metallica – Disposable Heroes (guitar cover) Video Clips. Duration : 8.38 Mins.
Rating: 5.0
Keywords: metallica, disposable, heroes, guitar, cover, fonekdzorek
Tags: cover, Disposable, Disposable Heroes, guitar, Heroes, Heroes Metallica, metallica
Metallica – Nothing Else Matters: Official Music Video [1080p] Video Clips. Duration : 6.25 Mins.
Rating: 4.9614644
Keywords: metallica, official, music, video, cool, …and, justice, for, all, al, and, …, .., guitar, song, great, ever, metal, death, stoner, thrash, megadeth, james, hetfield, kirk, hammett, lar, ulrich, cliff, burton, jason, newsted, robert, trujillo, the, black, album, nothing, else, matters, studio, version, hammet, lars, heavy, awesome, (studio, version), official video, master puppets, cover, live, fade, destroy, Vesylum
Tags: 1080p, Matters, metallica, Nothing, Nothing Official, Official, Official Nothing
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METALLICA LOAD Details
Japanese exclusive reissue of 1996 album, packaged in a miniature LP gatefold sleeve, features 14 racks. CBS. 2003.… >> Click here for More Details
Don’t hesitate to check the discounted prices for “METALLICA LOAD”
Tags: metallica
The book that is the subject of this review is metallica: This Monster Lives: THe Inside Story of the Hit Film metallica: Some Kind of Monster, written by Joe Berlinger with Greg Milner and published in 2004. The subject of the book should be obvious by its various titles and subtitles, but it is an inside look at the film in question by one of the two directors of the project. Joe Berlinger, along with his partner Bruce Sinofsky, spent nearly two and a half years with the band metallica, documenting their struggle to undergo therapy and repair their broken relationships, record a new album, and face their inner struggles.
Berlinger focuses on three main themes throughout the account: Metallica’s story, the story of the documentary film, and his own personal story . The book is told in a mostly chronological sequence, but many discussions necessitate a simultaneous looking forward and backward for the reader to understand the context. This is, of course, quite logical, as the film came together from Metallica’s story, which was put together by the directors months after the actual scenes were shot. A short look at each theme should give a potential reader a taste for what the book contains.
Metallica’s story in the film Some Kind of Monster, in a nutshell, is the story of an immensely popular rock band being shaken to its core as its bass player of fifteen years leaves, the members realize they have never taken the time to overcome the emotional and psychological walls they have built, and the struggle to “clean house,” all while employing the help of a full-time performance coach/therapist and trying to write and record a new album, and then beginning a world tour in support of said album.
In the book, Berlinger elaborates on many of the most important and moving scenes in the film, including the infamous confrontation between James and Lars soon after James returns from rehab for alcohol and other addictions, in which Lars actually shouts the F-word in James’ face. Other scenes that are examined closer in the book include Lars’ meeting with former guitarist Dave Mustaine, the Ramones cover songs and their context of Dee-Dee Ramone’s death, and the first gigs that Metallica played after getting back together, including the show on the back of a truck in a parking lot at an Oakland Raiders football game.
Many of these scenes were gems of Metallica documentary film making, but they did not fit the context of the movie’s story arc. With thousands of hours of film that the directors had to sift through, many scenes were pared down, intercut with each other, or simply dropped altogether. Berlinger also takes the reader through the “back end” part of the documentary, from its initial concept as a historical commercial piece, to the threat of it appearing as a mini-series on VH1 or Showtime, to its final product as a two hour and twenty minute documentary film. These themes were absent from the film itself, as its subject was Metallica, not the making of a documentary about Metallica, but Berlinger adds more interesting context to the making of the movie.
Berlinger also examines his film-making history and his relationship with his partner Sinofsky throughout the book. At the beginning of filming, the two were not on the best terms, and Berlinger was attempting to overcome the disgrace of being involved in the movie Blair Witch 2: Book of Shadows. As they become involved in watching Metallica sort through their personal and professional relationships, though, the two begin to gel as a team again, just as Metallica come together in the end to complete their album and begin a tour. Sinofsky offers a brief forward to the work, echoing the same problems the two were experiencing, but the very fact that he wrote such an endearing forward should go to prove that the two are on much better terms. They both attribute much of this conciliation to their work with and observance of Metallica.
For Metallica fans, one of the most intriguing aspects of the book is the use of various quotes and transcriptions of conversations among the members of Metallica, producer Bob Rock, and performance coach Phil Towle. Nearly every chapter opens with dialogue that sheds more light on the dynamics within the band culled from the thousands of hours of film that were shot for the movie. The final Appendix also contains snippets from interviews that Berlinger conducted with the band in regards to their feelings on the movie. They provide valuable insight as to their intentions to produce such as personal documentary, and its effect as a mirror that they can always look back to in the future.
Metallica: This Monster Lives provides the reader with a very personal inside account from one of the few people ever to get this close to the biggest heavy metal band in the world. It provides a unique perspective of the band as seen from the eyes of a professional documentary film maker, who focused his attention on the much larger picture of the band’s story through its fracture, near-dissolution, and renewal. For anyone who has ever sought to understand Metallica’s album St. Anger, the film Some Kind of Monster is absolutely essential, and for anyone who has seen the movie, Berlinger’s book is absolutely essential to understanding the structure and making of the film, as well as its context in the history of Metallica.
The Story Behind the Documentary Behind The Album – Metallica’s St. Anger
Metallica – 30th Anniversary Show Recap (December 5, 2011 – Live at the Fillmore) – MetOnTour Tube. Duration : 27.47 Mins.
Rating: 4.9727364
Tags: Metallica, 30th, Anniversary, Shows, The, Fillmore, Carpe, Diem, Baby, Hate, Train, Jason, Newsted, Brian, Tatler, Sean, Harris, TV
Tags: Behind, Behind Behind, documentary, Metallicas
Any kid who was born in the 70’s and 80’s will tell you how awesome the music created during that time frame was. Hell, you don’t have to take their word for it, just order a greatest hits catalog from any of these time frames and be the judge. Yet anyone who takes this challenge will be convinced of it. Ironically, the music era of the 90’s was just as influential.
From Mint Condition, to Jodeci, the 90’s were full of legends. Groups such as Tony Toni Tone made ballads that people use at weddings today, and they inspired more free love than Woodstock. The words were so genuine and sincere, that even today they can make a couple hold hands. Singers bared their souls and strutted their stuff. The competition was so thick that even mediocre groups from that era would’ve been blockbusters today. Sweet Obsession and their hit single, “Being in love ain’t easy,” would’ve blown most of these lip syncing, puppet groups to shame.
Mariah Carey and Janet Jackson were on the radio so much, that new people were copying their style. The sound was so incredible that even contemporary artists were trying to cover their stuff. Everyone was entranced with this new sound and once it hit their ears, they couldn’t turn it off, at least not until the song was over. The airwaves were cluttered with love ballads and it was like this was acceptable. Love is an emotion that has powered every generation. Yes, the 90’s was an unforgettable era.
90s R & B Music – A Legendary Period
Metallica – Fuel (Drum Cover) Video Clips. Duration : 4.50 Mins.
Rating: 4.976684
Keywords: metallica, fuel, drum, cover, drumming, Jimmydrum, 92
Tags: Legendary, Period, Period Legendary