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Part 5 of our Photo Highlights from 2008 presents two giants of music, Jay-Z and Lars Ulrich. Click on the images below to access the collections.
Jay-Z at the Palladium

Lars Ulrich

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L ars Ulrich says old Metallica albums and fancy cheese inspired Death Magnetic.
Where did the magic happen? We recorded the basics at Sound City in Van Nuys. Rick Rubin wanted us to get out of HQ—our place in San Francisco—and closer to his.
On a scale of 1 to 10, how difficult was it to record this record? Three. There was no nine-person documentary-film crew, no psychiatrist.
The money spent recording this album could buy … A year’s subscription to Blender. Trust me, all the flights we took to L.A. were on Southwest. They have the best on-time record. There’s no first class. Who gives a shit? I’d rather be on time than sit in a seat that’s two and a half inches wider.
Studio demands include? Electricity.
You guys didn’t have some vanilla-scented candles? I think you can answer that yourself.
Most frequently ordered takeout dish? Strange fruits and imported cheese.
Why should someone buy your album? Because even people who are not on the payroll say it’s really good.
Casualties during production? Brain cells? Sanity? You’ve heard all that before. We didn’t lose any band members, and we didn’t have to do a midnight move-all-the-equipment-when-nobody’s-watching dine and dash.
Album you unabashedly ripped off? … And Justice for All.
The haters will say? The same thing they’ve been saying since 1984: that Metallica is over. They hated us since the beginning, and they still hate us 25 years later, even though they have every record and go to every show. We have the No. 1 haters in the world. I’ll put our haters up against any band’s. Fuck you and your fucking entry-level haters! Ours fucking rule!
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Thousands of Metallica fans have taken to the Internet to complain that the band's brutally awesome new album Death Magnetic is just too damn loud for its own good. Their main beef, which has been gaining some mainstream news attention as of late, is that the CD sounds tinny and sacrifices dynamic range - the difference between the soft and loud parts of songs - in favor of pumped-up volume.
(For some analysis of the issue, go here and here).
But Metallica co-manager Cliff Burnstein has claimed that 98 percent of listeners dig what they hear. "There's something exciting about the sound of this record that people are responding to," he added.
So far, more than 12,000 people have signed an online petition requesting that the band release a newly remixed or remastered version of the album. Not going to happen, says drummer Lars Ulrich, the first member of Metallica to comment publicly on the controversy. Here, in his own words, is the talkative drummer's take on the issue: "Listen, there's nothing up with the audio quality. It's 2008, and that's how we make records. [Producer] Rick Rubin's whole thing is to try and get it to sound lively, to get it to sound loud, to get it to sound exciting, to get it to jump out of the speakers. Of course, I've heard that there are a few people complaining. But I've been listening to it the last couple of days in my car, and it sounds fuckin' smokin'. "Somebody told me about [people complaining that the Guitar Hero version of Death Magnetic sounds better]. Listen, what are you going to do? A lot of people say [the CD] sounds great, and a few people say it doesn't, and that's OK. You gotta remember, when we put out ...And Justice for All, people were going, 'What happened to these guys, this record? There's no bass on it. It sounds like it was recorded in a fuckin' garage on an eight-track.' And now ...And Justice for All is sort of the seminal Metallica record that supposedly influenced a whole generation of death-metal bands. The difference between back then and now is the Internet.
"The Internet gives everybody a voice, and the Internet has a tendency to give the complainers a louder voice. Listen, I can't keep up with this shit. Part of being in Metallica is that there's always somebody who's got a problem with something that you're doing: 'James Hetfield had something for breakfast that I don't like.' That's part of the ride. "I will say that the overwhelming response to this new record has exceeded even our expectations as far as how positive it is. So I'm not gonna sit here and get caught up in whether [the sound] 'clips' or it doesn't 'clip.' I don't know what kind of stereos these people listen on. Me and James [Hetfield] made a deal that we would hang back a little and not get in the way of whatever Rick's vision was. That's not to put it on him - it's our record, I'll take the hit, but we wanted to roll with Rick's vision of how Metallica would sound."
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Metallica Death Magnetic
 Warner Brothers Righteous Kill - Rock's big-game hunters rediscover their barbaric taste for speed and death. By Ben Sisario
>> Read the full review here.
BONUS: Curious about what went down during Metallica's studio time? We've got you covered - read about studio demands and production casualties here.
EXTRA BONUS: Wish you could ask Lars Ulrich any question under the sun? Guess it's your lucky day. Submit your questions for Ulrich here and maybe it'll appear in an upcoming issue of Blender.
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As part of our ongoing awesomeness we are giving you the people the chance to submit questions for Metallica founder/drummer Lars Ulrich. Mr. Ulrich's answer to your question may appear in a future issue of Blender, so what are you waiting for, Submit Now! |
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