• Einfach ihr bestes Album läuft auch heute noch bei mir hoch und runter nicht das die nachfolge Alben schlecht waren aber an die Power von Ride the Lightning kommen sie nicht ran.Nicht mal Master of Puppets was zwar nicht schlecht war aber nicht den Druck von Lightning hat.
    Meine Wertung: Ride The Lightning
    And Justice For All
    Kill em All
    Master of Puppets
    Black Album
    Death Magnetic
    Garage.Inc und dann kommen die anderen.

  • Ich wollt nich nen extra Thread dafür machen, deswegen hier rein:


    Death Metal Cover des Songs Creeping Death von der Band THE ORDER OF APOLLYON


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  • [quote]Fighting Fire With Fire: Metallica Look Back on 'Ride the Lightning'


    Three decades after its release, Kirk Hammett and Lars Ulrich remember the freezing, beer-fueled nights that produced their defining LP


    By Kory Grow | July 28, 2014


    "We were really broke," drummer Lars Ulrich says, reflecting the state of Metallica as they were making their second album, Ride the Lightning. "We had to live day to day. A friend literally gave us his apartment to stay in while we recording. James and I slept in the bedroom, Kirk and Cliff shared his couch."


    It was the spring of 1984, and the Bay Area thrash-metal quartet was holed up in Copenhagen, Denmark – Ulrich's home country – recording at a studio they had picked for two reasons: hard rockers Rainbow had recorded their Difficult to Cure album there, and more urgently, it was cheap. At the time, Ulrich and vocalist-guitarist James Hetfield were both 20, guitarist Kirk Hammett was 21 and bassist Cliff Burton was the old man of the group at 22. Less than a year earlier, they had kicked out guitarist Dave Mustaine, who went on to form Megadeth, recruited Hammett and released their speed-limit-breaking debut, Kill 'Em All, the record that defined thrash metal. Now they were working on the album that defined Metallica.


    Thirty years later, Ride the Lightning stands out in the group's catalog as the album that introduced melody to its arsenal. Songs like the heavy ballad "Fade to Black" and the crushing "For Whom the Bell Tolls" would serve as blueprints for later Metallica hits like "Nothing Else Matters" and "Sad But True," and the eerie, nine-minute instrumental "The Call of Ktulu" demonstrated their range. The single "Creeping Death," has become a concert staple, thanks to the way it can get 10s of thousands of metalheads at a time to chant "Die! Die! Die!" along with its outro.


    The record has since gone on to be certified six times platinum. But when Metallica were making it, they were poor, young headbangers, trying to stretch their dollars. On the eve of the 30th anniversary of Ride the Lightning, Rolling Stone caught up with Ulrich, Hammett and production assistant Flemming Rasmussen, who recorded the group in Copenhagen's Sweet Silence Studio, to find out how the album was made and what it means to them now.


    Where did the title Ride the Lightning come from?
    Kirk Hammett: I was reading The Stand by Stephen King, and there was this one passage where this guy was on death row said he was waiting to "ride the lightning." I remember thinking, "Wow, what a great song title." I told James, and it ended up being a song and the album title.


    Was recording in Copenhagen fun at that stage in your life?
    Hammett: It was great when we started there, but we were homesick after three or four weeks [laughs]. It was three American guys and a Danish guy. It was easy for the Danish guy to fit in, but it wasn't so easy for the three American guys to fit in. We were experiencing culture shock a little bit.


    How did you handle your homesickness?
    Hammett: We didn't really have anything else to do besides work on music and drink Carlsberg beer. We collected absolutely every single beer bottle in our friend's apartment, because you were able to take in four six packs of empty beer bottles and get one six pack of full beer bottles back. Once we figured that out, that was a little thing that we did. Being homesick gave us the right amount of, I don't want to say "depression," but a little bit of longing that I think made its way into the recording process.


    Were you good houseguests?
    Hammett: We totally destroyed our friend's house where we were staying. We plugged up the tub in his bathroom. He had a huge videotape collection of all these bands, live on video. And part of our thing is we would wake up in the morning, pick out a music video to watch. Go to the studio. Come back from the studio. Put on some more music videos. And drink beer. That's what we did.


    Flemming, what were your first impressions of Metallica?
    Flemming Rasmussen: I had never heard of them, but I really liked them as people. The studio I worked at, Sweet Silence, was renowned in Denmark. My mentor was really into jazz, and he pulled me aside one day and said, "What's going on with these guys? They can't play." And I'm like, "Who cares? Listen to the energy."


    Lars Ulrich: Flemming was completely in tune to what we were doing. He was recording us with lots of ambiance, and we wanted heavy sounds and big drums.


    Hammett: We recorded Kill 'Em All, at this local studio in Rochester, New York, and I think the biggest artist that might have used that place was the singer of Foreigner for some demos or something. I don't know. But we were really excited to be at Sweet Silence Studios because that's where Rainbow did Difficult to Cure. We were excited because we liked the sound of that album, and we were looking to get a similar sound for our album, using that studio and the same engineer, Flemming.


    How complete were the songs when you began recording?
    Hammett: Three or four months prior to recording Ride the Lightning, we would do these small, theater shows where we would play were "Creeping Death," "Ride the Lightning," "Fight Fire With Fire" and "The Call of Ktulu." Those songs were about 90 percent complete, in terms of arrangement and the guitar solos were already written.


    Ulrich: We were hovering in New York in December and January of '83 and '84, and we wrote quite a bit of "Fade to Black" in New Jersey in the basement of our friend Metal Joe [Chimienti].


    Songs like "Fade to Black," "For Whom the Bell Tolls" and "Escape" were more melodic and slower than the songs on Kill 'Em All. Were you trying to do something different, musically?
    Ulrich: It was the first time that the four of us wrote together and we got a chance to broaden our horizons. I don't think it was a conscious effort to break away from anything musically. Obviously, listening to songs like "Fight Fire" and "Trapped Under Ice," we were obviously still into the thrash type of stuff. But we were realizing you had to be careful that it didn't become too limiting or one-dimensional.


    All four of us were so into so many different things. And Kill 'Em All was primarily written with James and I and Mustaine; so Kirk and Cliff didn't really contribute to any of the songs on Kill 'Em All. Ride the Lightning was the first time that both Cliff and Kirk got a chance to add what they were doing. They just came from a different school, especially Cliff, who came from a much more melodic approach.


    Did you just jump right into recording right when you got to Copenhagen?
    Hammett: All our equipment got stolen in Boston, right before we were going to leave for Europe. The only things that we had were our guitars.


    Rasmussen: James had this special Marshall amp that had been modified when he recorded Kill 'Em All.We had to get all the Marshall amps from some of the metal bands that were in Denmark at that time, so like nine Marshall amps, and spent the first day testing them. We actually recreated James' guitar sound on Kill 'Em All, but just beefed it up. He was really pleased with that.


    Hammett: It wasn't a particularly fun or happy time. But we were glad to be at a great studio in good working conditions. Everything else outside the studio was a struggle.


    How did Cliff come up with the descending bass riff in the intro of "For Whom the Bell Tolls"?
    Hammett: He would play that riff a lot in the hotel room, when him and I were hanging out. He used to carry around an acoustic classical guitar that he detuned so that he could bend the strings. Anyway, when he would play that riff, I would think, "That's such a weird, atonal riff that isn't really heavy at all." I remember him playing it for James, and James adding that accent to it and all of a sudden, it changed. It's such a crazy riff. To this day, I think, "How did he write that?" Whenever I hear nowadays, it's like, "OK, Cliff's in the house."


    Where did the bell sound at the beginning of that song come from?
    Rasmussen: We had an anvil in the studio, and Lars had to bang that; it could've been that or from a record of sound effects. But there was a really heavy, cast-iron anvil and a metal hammer, and we stuck them in an all-concrete room. He'd just go wang.


    You were recording in February. Wasn't it cold?
    Rasmussen: We were recording at night and it was freezing sometimes. We had big gas heaters heating up the drum room so Lars wouldn't catch a cold. That studio is now somebody's apartment, by the way. Somebody's living room is where Lars actually sat and recorded Ride the Lightning. That's kind of amazing [laughs]. I think I should move there.

  • Part II:




    Quelle: http://www.rollingstone.com/mu…de-the-lightning-20140728

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