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"The Day That Never Comes" is a song by heavy metal band Metallica, and the lead single from their ninth studio album, Death Magnetic. The song was released to the radio and for digital download on August 21, 2008. [1] The working title of the song was "Casper", as shown in the Mission: Metallica videos and in Demo Magnetic.
The Videos 1989–2004 is a video album by American heavy metal band Metallica, released on DVD in December 2006. [1] It features all of the band's videos from 1989 to 2004. In its first week of release, the DVD sold 28,000 copies.
"The Day That Never Comes" topped the Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart. [104] The album stayed at #1 for three consecutive weeks on the Billboard 200, and spent 50 consecutive weeks on said chart. [105] Internationally, it peaked at #1 in 34 countries, including Ireland, the UK, Canada and Australia. [106]
Unlike its predecessors, "The Unforgiven III" features as the seventh track on Death Magnetic, due to the band wanting "The Day That Never Comes" to be the fourth track after they returned to writing ballads. However, due to the song being the counterpart of "The Day That Never Comes", it is the fourth song from closing the album.
It begins with an acoustic guitar introduction and becomes progressively heavier as the song goes on, similar to their future songs, "Welcome Home (Sanitarium)", "One", and "The Day That Never Comes". James Hetfield commented on the song in a 1991 interview with Guitar World: That song was a big step for us.
Quebec Magnetic is a live concert video album by Metallica, documenting two shows the band played at the Colisée Pepsi in Quebec City, Canada, on October 31 and November 1, 2009, on their World Magnetic Tour, released on December 11, 2012. [1] [2] The album is the first to be released via Metallica's own label, Blackened Recordings. [3]
S&M2 (stylized as S&M 2; an abbreviation of Symphony and Metallica 2) is a live album by American thrash metal band Metallica and the San Francisco Symphony. It is a follow-up to S&M, a live collaborative album released in 1999. The album was recorded during a live performance in San Francisco at the Chase Center in 2019. [3]
The video contains old footage of Metallica concerts as well as a performance of the song in Metallica's San Francisco headquarters which is included in its entirety on the St. Anger DVD. In some regions, such as the US, the EP was bundled with a T-shirt featuring the artwork.