In May 1995, Metallica entered The Plant Studios in Sausalito, Calif., to document a double album because the follow-up to 1991’s Metallica (aka The Black Album), which catapulted the band from thrash heroes to mainstream rock stars. But by February 1996, Metallica had solely completed about half the songs, so that they scrapped the double-album plan and opted, as an alternative, to launch two data one 12 months aside.
The first, Load, got here out June 4, 1996. Then in July 1997, Metallica returned to the studio to proceed engaged on the 13 songs they didn’t end the primary time. On Nov. 18, 1997, they launched the completed batch as Reload.
“The two records belong together and they should have come out at the same time, but they just weren’t done,” guitarist and vocalist James Hetfield informed me in 1997. “We want these albums to be twins.” “Basically, we just didn’t feel like being in the studio long enough to finish all the songs,” guitarist Kirk Hammett stated.
“We decided it would be wiser if we did two albums and staggered the releases. That way, we’d get more mileage out of them. We’d have a nice break in the middle of the touring cycle to work on Reload, then once it was out, we’d go back out on tour. That made more sense than just putting out a double album. Also, if we did a double album, it would have been a lot more material for people to digest, and some of the songs might have gotten lost in the shuffle.”
Metallica, Live in 1997
While the songs for Reload and Load have been initially meant to be seen beneath the identical microscope, there are variations between the 2 albums. Load was brash and bluesy, however unapologetically simple. Reload, in contrast, was extra experimental, mixing biker steel, southern rock and unconventional preparations right into a bracing batch of songs that have been acquainted, however refreshingly adventurous.
“Having lived with those songs for two years, the four of us came back with very different ideas of what they should evolve into,” Hetfield stated. “The good news was we still liked them, and we wanted to put them out. It’s important to point out that those songs weren’t the rejects from the first session and I think because of the extra time we had to put into them there’s a little more extremeness to them, which I like. It was a little more exciting for us to figure out more fucked up chords, things that grind, dissonant bits, than songs that were just heavy. In a few of the songs there’s helter-skelter tension built in there. We really stretched the limits of what a guitar and amp could do, which was fun.”
“There wasn’t as much of an emphasis on melody,” agreed Hammett. “Also, we grew as musicians since the release of Load, and technology brought us new things to try in the studio. We had just come off a great tour so our chops were up. And we were using the studio more effectively than ever.”
“The Memory Remains,” featured a dusky rhythm, a serpentine riff wild, wah-wah saturated licks and raspy visitor vocals by the legendary Marianne Faithfull. The singer and actress, who additionally appeared within the video, labored completely for the theme of the tune. “It evolved into this ‘Sunset Boulevard’ thing about this twisted movie star who still thinks they’re hot shit,” Hetfield stated. “We needed a real character, been-through-it-all voice, and we were trying to think of someone when [producer] Bob [Rock] suggested Marianne Faithfull. We flew to Dublin on the way to Belgium, got her drunk and put her on the studio and she sang this bit. It was perfect.”
Metallica, “The Memory Remains”
Another shock got here on “Low Man’s Lyric,” which features a hurdy gurdy passage that sounds nearly like a cross between an accordion and bagpipes, and lends a haunting vibe to the world-weary ballad. “That song had been recorded already and it came out like a metal ballad,” Hetfield stated.
“We’ve got so many of those fucking things — big drums and all this — so I finally convinced Lars to ditch the snare and play something else. Tom Waits inspired that. He’s really good at finding music in any little instrument. So we re-recorded it. [Our friend] Jim Martin (ex-Faith No More) has a hurdy-gurdy in his house, and I sat and fucked around with it for a while and I thought, ‘Fuck, this thing is awesome sounding. We’ve got to put it somewhere.’ So we brought it into the song and figured out a melody.”
Metallica gave themselves three months to document Reload, and because the songs have been principally written they figured that was greater than sufficient. But the band spent extra time than it anticipated looking for extra fascinating methods to method the fabric than it had initially give you.
“We re-recorded a lot of the guitars because the new sounds we had were just better,” Hetfield stated. “We also did a lot of re-editing. The songs themselves were good, but they needed to be re-thought. So we’ve got Pro Tools in there twisting songs around. There’s no secret that there are some drum fix-ups that happen on the computer, and that takes time.”
Metallica, “Fuel”
Bob Rock and his employees painstakingly labored with each beat, riff and vocal to verify they’d the proper intonation and the meter was excellent. It was a sticking level for Hetfield and his bandmates, however as an alternative of constructing it a supply of discord, Hetfield did his components the perfect he may after which walked till the album was executed.
“Where they go is a room that I just don’t want to go in,” Hetfield stated. “I don’t really agree fully on what goes on in there so I stay away. I’m not really against Pro Tools, but I just think it takes a lot longer, and I think it could be solved by playing better. But it has become something a little too big in this band. I don’t think it’s that necessary. Some other people in the band do, so I let it be. There are some cool loops and strange sounds you can create through the computer, and you can sit and fuck with that shit all day, but we’re not gonna have some computer sitting with us onstage, that’s for sure.”
Because of the additional time that went into modifying, Metallica had their backs in opposition to the wall when their studio time was nearly up they usually have been nonetheless engaged on Reload.
“No matter what we try to do we always end up spending 60 or 70 percent of our time on the first 20 percent of the album, and then the last 30 percent on the last 80 percent of the album,” Hammett defined. “It felt a bit more like crunch time because we didn’t have a lot of time to begin with. The songs were already written and the drums were already recorded, so on paper it seemed like a total cake walk, but in true Metallica fashion, it didn’t work like that.”
Metallica, “The Unforgiven II”
Like Load, Reload featured cowl artwork by controversial pictures Andreas Serrano, who makes use of urine, sperm and milk in his psychedelic pictures and whose hanging 1987 picture Piss Christ – a crucifix submerged in a bottle of urine – prompted public outrage from conservative and non secular teams.
“I hated the art for Reload, but it had to match Load,” Hetfield stated. “It’s matching hatred. I’m not a big fan of the man and his perversions. There’s art and then there’s just sick motherfuckers, and he’s one of them. The thing is, they belong together because they’re both weird combination of liquids. I don’t care if the guy blows donkeys. The art has got to match.”
Ulrich and Hammett agreed with Hetfield however in contrast to their bandmate they have been thrilled to return to Serrano for one more piece of artwork. “I’m really into Serrano,” Hammett enthused. “I really like his picture of [a man about to have sex with] a [naked female] dwarf [from his History of Sex series]. That’s one sexy dwarf.”
Like Load, Reload entered the Billboard album chart at No. 1, promoting 436,000 in its first week. The album went double platinum on Dec. 12, 1997, and was licensed triple platinum by the RIAA on Nov. 18, 1998.
Loudwire contributor Jon Wiederhorn is the creator of Raising Hell: Backstage Tales From the Lives of Metal Legends, co-author of Louder Than Hell: The Definitive Oral History of Metal, in addition to the co-author of Scott Ian’s autobiography, I’m the Man: The Story of That Guy From Anthrax, and Al Jourgensen’s autobiography, Ministry: The Lost Gospels According to Al Jourgensen and the Agnostic Front e book My Riot! Grit, Guts and Glory.
Every Metallica Song Ranked
Discussion about this post