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After performing a set with Metallica at Bonnaroo in June 2008, Hammett played one song with My Morning Jacket and a couple songs with the annual Superjam collaboration, which also included Les Claypool and members of Gogol Bordello playing primarily Tom Waits songs. Hammett is one of the main characters in Guitar Hero: Metallica, along with ...
"One" was the first Metallica song for which a music video was created. The music video, directed by Bill Pope and Michael Salomon , debuted on MTV on January 20, 1989. The video, shot in Long Beach, California on December 7, 1988, is almost entirely in black and white , and features the band performing the song in a warehouse.
It is one of the few Metallica songs in which Hetfield plays the guitar solo. Lead guitarist Kirk Hammett does not play on the studio recording, making it one of the few in the whole Metallica repertoire, along with Cliff Burton's "(Anesthesia) Pulling Teeth", in which he does not appear. [5]
Changes were made to the lyrics of some songs, most notably the removal of the second verse and chorus of "The Thing That Should Not Be" and playing the third verse in its place. The "S" in the stylized "S&M" on the album cover is a backwards treble clef, while the "M" is taken from Metallica's logo.
The album features new Metallica covers such as The Four Horsemen and The Unforgiven II, as well as a new recording of One with Metallica vocalist James Hetfield reciting the lyrics and bassist Robert Trujillo. [26] It also includes a cover of The Call of Ktulu featuring the original bass master track recorded by Cliff Burton in 1984. [27]
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.
Metallica contributed a cover of Iron Maiden's "Remember Tomorrow" to the tribute album Maiden Heaven. Ray Davies featured Metallica on a recording of "You Really Got Me" included on See My Friends. The band recorded a cover of "When a Blind Man Cries" for a Deep Purple tribute album released in 2012. "Ronnie Rising Medley" is a medley of ...
Disposable Heroes is featured on Guitar Hero: Metallica, alongside 29 other Metallica songs, including 5 other songs from Master of Puppets. [22] The Swedish extreme metal band Ceremonial Oath recorded a cover for the song on the tribute album Metal Militia: A Tribute to Metallica. [23]