Voir les messages sans réponses | Voir les sujets actifs Nous sommes le 06 Mai 2025 22:25



Répondre au sujet  [ 1848 messages ]  Aller à la page Précédente  1 ... 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 ... 93  Suivante
 Metallica - Death Magnetic 

Votre note pour Death Magnetic
0/5 3%  3%  [ 2 ]
1/5 5%  5%  [ 3 ]
2/5 33%  33%  [ 19 ]
3/5 24%  24%  [ 14 ]
4/5 31%  31%  [ 18 ]
5/5 3%  3%  [ 2 ]
Nombre total de votes : 58

 Metallica - Death Magnetic 
Auteur Message
Long Distance Runner
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 17 Mar 2005 19:47
Messages: 3975
Localisation: Toloose
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
Tu me rassures :)
Quand à Breaking The Law à la palce d'un solo y a des bruitages bien sympa, ça remplit l'espace lol Non mais sérieusement j'aime les 2 versions, bruitages ou solo ça TUE tout simplement.

_________________
Image


10 Fév 2007 23:18
Profil Site Internet
Ce mec a floodé, je l'ai vu !
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 14 Mar 2004 20:49
Messages: 25655
Localisation: Cambrai
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
Sortie pas avant 2008 :

METALLICA To Record 14 New Songs Starting Next Week; 2008 Release Expected - Mar. 5, 2007

METALLICA drummer Lars Ulrich spoke to Eddie Trunk of the "Friday Night Rocks" radio show on New York's Q104.3 FM Friday night (March 2) about the group's upcoming studio album and their future touring plans. A BLABBERMOUTH.NET partial transcript of the chat follows:

Q: So many people wanna get an update and are jonesin' for new music from METALLICA. So what can you tell us about what's going on in the studio?

Lars: Well, we're just finishing pre-production right now and we're gonna start recording next Monday. So we've got another week of pre-production next week and then tapes should start rolling for real on Monday, [March] 12th, [which] is D-Day, as it says on my calendar upstairs. We're pretty psyched about that. It's been about a year of writing and getting ideas together and the whole thing — going through a couple of years' worth of riffs and all this stuff. We started out about six months ago with about 25 songs and now we've narrowed those down to 14, and we're gonna start recording 14 songs next Monday. So we're all pretty stoked.

Q: Everybody knows what exactly went on with the recording of the last album, because, of course, it was documented in a movie. So this time around I imagine things are pretty different than what went on with "Some Kind of Monster", right?

Lars: It's very, very… I mean, it's about as opposite of that… It's very chilled out and there's no movie crews or psychiatrists or any of that stuff — it's four guys in a rock band, hanging out, having fun, making music and doing their thing. It's pretty chilled. There's not any dramas or any kind of stuff. [Laughs] I think a lot of people would actually be… I don't know if they'd be disappointed, but they'd probably find it fairly uneventful. [Laughs] It's just kind of us doing our thing and after all the bullshit that we went through in 2001 and 2003 and all the stuff you were talking about with the movie, this whole go-around has been really chilled out. Everybody's kind of getting along and having fun. The spirit is a lot like back in the day. Like I said, when people would ask me about the new record in the last few months, "St. Anger", I think increasingly when I look back, was kind of like an isolated experiment, about trying to write and record and do all that in the studio, kind of in the moment, not bringing in ideas and kind of getting away from everything we had done for the previous 20 years. And this record, this go-around, is more like what we used to do, with kind of getting together, going through ideas, writing songs together, doing demos, doing pre-production. Rick's [Rubin, producer] big thing is to kind of have all these songs completely embedded in our bodies and basically next Monday, on D-Day, just go in and execute them — basically, just play them instead of... so you leave the creative element of the process out of the recording, so you go in and basically just record a bunch of songs that you know inside out and upside down and you don't have to spend too much of your energy in the recording studio creating and thinking and analyzing and doing all that stuff. His whole analogy is, the recording process becomes more like a gig — just going in and playing and leaving all the thinking at the door.

Q: Obviously you are aware that there was, let's just say, mixed fan reaction to "St. Anger". There were a lot of longtime METALLICA fans that weren't happy with it. What's your thoughts, looking back on it now that it's been a few years, when you listen to it? What do you think of that album?

Lars: I think it kind of set out to do what it wanted it to do, which was to be, like, a moment and to have this incredible, raw energy and to go in after the "Black" album, the "Load" records and the symphony experience and all that, which were projects that a lot of thought went into, a lot of time went into and a lot of… you know, analyzing and sort of micro-managing every moment, we really wanted to go in and try and capture something completely different than that, which was just like a burst of energy. I think "St. Anger" has an incredible amount of raw energy and kind of just nutty… I don't know, like, guttural kind of… you know, "throwing the whole thing to the wind" kind of stuff. I'm really proud of the fact that we actually had the balls to not only try it but to pull it off. I know that there were obviously some people that were disappointed with snare sounds or lack of guitar solos and all that, but after what we'd been through for those couple of years after Newsted left and so on, it was really what we had to do, if not for anybody else then for ourselves. I'm really proud of the fact that we had the balls and the guts to stick with it, but now we're, once again, in a very different headspace and I'm glad we got that experiment out of our systems.

Q: I remember when "…And Justice for All" came out and people were a little bit thrown by the sound of that record at the time, and now I talk to METALLICA fans and that's grown on them to become one of their favorite records.

Lars: Yeah, for a lot of people that's the blueprint for a lot of the stuff that's happening now. Listen, it's difficult for me, too, because I have such a personal relationship with each one of these records that's mostly based on the experience of making the record and living all the moments that not only went into the record but the moments that came in the wake of the record, you know what I mean?! I'm not the best one to probably sit and give neutral opinions about it. I've always said that all our records are in some way like your children — it's difficult to sit there and kind of pick favorites or kind of put one on a pedestal over the other. I mean, the one thing that at least all the hardcore METALLICA fans know that every time we make a record, for better or for worse, they know that it's always a totally true and pure reflection of whatever headspace we're in at the moment, so I don't feel that I ever have to either apologize or defend it too much. I know that when you are fortunate enough to have a career as long as we've had and with as many different nuances and dynamics to it, you're always gonna have people that really like a particular thing or dislike something else or yearn for something of this, or do this, or more old school, or more new school, or more bluesy, or more aggro… Like I've said a million times, the minute you start absorbing too much of that stuff, your head's gonna start spinning. But one thing that I'm fiercely proud of and can look back on on every moment of METALLICA's career is that we've always been true to ourselves and as honest to ourselves and to the music and to the fans to give them whatever extension of ourselves and whatever headspace that we were in at whatever particular moment.

Q: Is it fair to say that the experience that you guys went through in making "St. Anger" and documenting it and the film and everything that went on, all that drama with the band — is it fair to say that the positive effects of all the therapy and the things that went on are gonna show themselves more on this record, which also is the recording debut for your new bassist, Rob Trujillo?

Lars: I think that's pretty fair. The one thing that Phil [Towle] — the psychiatrist or whatever you call him [laughs] — said back in the day was that everything that we were going through with the experiences of the "St. Anger" record, that that stuff was really gonna come to fruition on the next record in terms of the relationships and in terms of everybody getting along and so on. The last year that we've been fiddling around in the studio, I mean, it's been amazing. We're having fun again, which we didn't for many, many years in the Nineties, and in some way, it feels to me like it's kind of come full circle in that all the external crap and all the extra-curricular stuff has kind of subsided and now it's just a bunch of guys hanging out in a rehearsal space/studio, having a lot of fun together and sweating and laughing and making music, and kind of… to me, doing what this band has always been about, and I think probably more so than certainly for some time bringing it back to its kind of point of origin, you know what I mean?

Q: You mentioned him and I've gotta ask you, are you still in touch with that guy Phil?

Lars: Yeah, he lives in the 415 [San Francisco telephone area code] up here… I see him once in a while in social functions, but we haven't worked with him since the "St. Anger" record. And listen… one thing about the movie, which was that... We were fortunate enough that, as the movie and the experience was unfolding that there was kind of a, what you call in the film world, like a dramatic art that started kind of intertwining itself into the movie part of it, and obviously in some way he kind of became the villain, like the Belushi character in the "Saturday Night Live" skit, you know, the thing that wouldn't leave?! But it's all good. He lives up here and he's doing a bunch of work with mostly sports people and a few other people up here, and I see him around town… San Francisco is a pretty small place, you know, so I see him around town and so on. But the one thing… the way he kind of got put in a position of being the villain, I'd like to defend that somewhat and say that I truly do believe in my heart that he saved the band and all the work that he put into it certainly has made the band what we are today. It's a little odd when you do interviews — I've done probably about a dozen interviews in the last year — and people are still talking to me about the movie and "St. Anger" and stuff, which is four or five years ago. The bottom line is that I am obviously fiercely proud of the fact that we had the balls to kind of see it through and stick with it. I think we made a decision pretty early on in our career that the relationship that we wanted to have with our fans was to be as accessible as possible. Growing up on rock in the Seventies and so on, the whole thing about your ZEPPELINs and your PURPLEs and your KISSes and so on was that whole kind of larger-than-life element — the mystery and not knowing what was going on. But we came from… Our roots, at least in terms of attitude, came from the punk movement, about being as accessible as possible and kind of letting everybody into what we were doing, so in some way I think that film, for better or for worse, was sort of the ulimate in letting people in and seeing what was going on and not having barriers between you and the fans and having as much of an open door as possible and feeling that there was nothing that was hidden away. And that's something that we've always believed in. I think that that's been certainly a big part of the awesome relationship that we've been fortunate enough to have with most of our fans.

Q: Speaking of landmark METALLICA albums, last year was the 20th anniversary of "Master of Puppets". I know you guys played in Europe and you did the album start to finish, right?

Lars: Yes, we did. We did three weeks' worth of gigs last summer. There's no place better than to visit Europe in the month of June, and we got invited to do a couple of festivals and then it kind of turned into a three-week thing. Kerrang! magazine out of England had done a tribute to the "Puppets" album by having all these awesome up-and-coming bands, like TRIVIUM and BULLET FOR MY VALENTINE, and MACHINE HEAD and a few other guys who've been around for a while, doing these, basically covering every song on "Puppets", and we were kind of sitting there getting caught up in all that misty-eyed emotion of the whole thing as we were sitting there planning the tour and the dates and so on. We were also inspired by my friend Mike [Portnoy] from DREAM THEATER, who was telling me that they used to, back in the day, go out and play all of "Master of Puppets" as an encore. He was definitely part of the inspiration, too. And we went out and played over the course of three weeks the "Puppets" album from start to finish more or less note for note. What happens with us a lot with the older songs is we go through the years, we have a tendency to continue to edit them and re-edit them and put different bits in and kind of take them different places. But we kind of went back and played the album note for note and it was a lot of fun, and in some way I think it kind of set the bar for the record that we're making now in terms of the level that we know we're capable of writing and recording and it was an awesome experience to play that every night for 50, 60, 70 thousand people and feel that kind of love and respect and appreciation. I mean, playing it for 75,000 people at Donington (England), it was unbelievable.

Q: Did you document any of that? Did you shoot it or record it at all?

Lars: You know what? These days you can never get too far from a film camera or a tape recorder. [Laughs] There's a always a couple of guys around with a camera in case somebody gets desperate for some content, as they call it. That stuff is there. And listen, I'm not saying that we're gonna do it again, but I'm not sayng that we're not gonna do it again. I mean, that's an experience that you can always come back to. You know us — we're saracastic enough and self-deprecating enough to… maybe this year we'll go out and celebrate the 21st anniversary of "Master of Puppets" and in a couple of years celebrate the 23rd. You know what I mean?! That's something we can always come back to because it was so much fun.

Q: I know that was the big thing in America. Everyone was like, "Damn, I wish they'd be doing that here."

Lars: You know what? I know that it's difficult for the American fans. This year again we're going over to do a couple, two-three weeks in Europe, different countries than we were at than last year. I know that a couple of the American fans, rightfully so, are obviously moaning about why we spend so much time in Europe every summer, but I'm telling you, there's no better place to go on vacation in the month of June — throw on a few gigs and have some fun. But all our American fans out there must rest assured that there will be no end to the love coming everybody's way in the next couple of years with the new record and so on. And I'm sure in my heart that we'll do the "Puppets" thing again. If not, next year we'll do the "…And Justice for All" version of that. Who knows? The great thing about being in a band like is that obviously nobody tells us what to do, or there's no particular sort of formula or any of that crap that we have to follow. I would like to get into, and that's kind of what we're trying to do now with… We went to South Africa last year, we went to Japan, we played a couple of weeks in Europe, and like I said, this year we're doing three weeks… I'd like to get into more of a thing where it's not that you only tour on the back of your records and you have to promote your latest, quote, product and the singles and all that crap, you know what I mean?! Where it just becomes more like you go on tour when you want, you go into the studio and record when you want and everything doesn't become so segregated about "Here's a new record" and "Now here's 18 months of touring featuring 75 percent of that material" and all that kind of stuff.

Q: I would think it would be cool, too, for you guys being locked down in the studio and then in the middle of that to maybe get a jolt of a live performance. That may actually give you another kick in the ass when you get back in the studio.

Lars: That's obviously the whole point. And also we get kind of restless when the status quo thing is going on for too long at the time. So I think it's great for the creative process to get out of the studio once in a while and go and play some gigs, harness some energy from the fans, and feel the love, and give some love, and get some perspective, listen to some of the stuff you're doing in the studio while you're driving to the gig and whatever, and come back to the studio recharged again after another six weeks. So that's kind of the plan this year. We're gonna record up through early June and then hit Europe for about three weeks in, I guess, it's late June to early July, and then come back and finish recording in August.

Q: And you want the record out this year or you're looking at next year for the record?

Lars: [Laughs] Every time we put a record out, we always paint these perfect scenarios about [how] it's gonna come out and nobody's gonna stress and there's not gonna be any deadlines and everything's gonna cool and chilled out and nobody's gonna get any hernias or stomach ulcers or whatever, but it never quite seems to work out that way. We obviously wanna get it out as quickly as we can after we're done recording, to share it with everybody, but at the same time, these days, with what's going on with the music business and all the declines and all the crap, the managers are sitting there barking in one ear, going, "We need more setup time? We need this…" I'd like to try and get it out this year, I hope we can get it out this year. If it doesn't come out this year, then it will be out at the very beginning of next year. I mean, the bottom line is it will be out a couple of months after it's done and everybody should hopefully be happy.

_________________
It's the nexus of the crisis and the origin of storms


05 Mar 2007 17:12
Profil Site Internet
Heavy Metal Lawyer
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 26 Déc 2005 11:15
Messages: 1783
Localisation: Nantes
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
Oh fait chier. Chinese Democracy Syndrome ? :D

_________________
AERIS // post metal


05 Mar 2007 19:46
Profil Site Internet
Long Distance Runner
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 17 Mar 2005 19:47
Messages: 3975
Localisation: Toloose
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
Ah ben je vais encore moins me "ruiner" en achat de nouveauté cette année :D

Je sens que je vais être bien déçu par contre.

_________________
Image


05 Mar 2007 20:31
Profil Site Internet
Long Distance Runner
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 16 Mar 2004 19:22
Messages: 3531
Localisation: Toulouse
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
Coupe toi du net, et un jour à Gibert tu verras ce new metallica : tu n'en attendras rien du tout et tu risques d'apprécier. Si tu attends, forcément...


05 Mar 2007 21:22
Profil
Barde

Inscription: 22 Fév 2007 15:55
Messages: 78
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
d'après le rock hard du mois de mars, metallica passe en juin en france (pas plus de précisions c'est un des titres de la couv') 8-) (moi ça me concerne pas,je suis pas en france :( et le pire c'est que c'est une des rares tournées européenes ou ils ne passent pas par l'angleterre!)

_________________
Tequilius!


05 Mar 2007 22:41
Profil Site Internet
Long Distance Runner
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 17 Mar 2005 19:47
Messages: 3975
Localisation: Toloose
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
@Caza: c'est ce qui s'est passé avec St Anger...
Y a 2 choses dont je serai content en tous cas:
1_ entendre Metallica
2_ ça sera différent musicalement (je me doute...; par contre rien ne dit que je vais aimer.)

Je ne vais rien écouter jsuqu'à sa sortie, et je n'ai aps non plus envie de lire les réactions, je ne me fie à personne et je ne veux pas avoir une idée préconçu sur la zic en elle même. Juste savoir que Metallica joue et que ce sera différent. Je ne veux savoir rien d'autre.

Je vais faire pareil avec le PL.

(putain ça va être dur lol )

_________________
Image


06 Mar 2007 0:31
Profil Site Internet
Long Distance Runner
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 16 Mar 2004 19:22
Messages: 3531
Localisation: Toulouse
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
Je sais Axel, tu en as parlé x fois ici lol
Et sinon la radio de Queen ? :siffle:


06 Mar 2007 0:32
Profil
Long Distance Runner
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 17 Mar 2005 19:47
Messages: 3975
Localisation: Toloose
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
Toute façon j'arrête pas de me répéter ici lol

Ben l'emission je comptais t'en parler à mon retour sur msn.

Tiens un mp.

_________________
Image


06 Mar 2007 0:34
Profil Site Internet
Soundchaser
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 26 Mar 2004 16:25
Messages: 418
Localisation: Lorraine
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
ah oué au fait, je sais pas si ça a été posté: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpG94t14D6Y

la version complète de The Ecstasy Of Gold, bon on voit que ça a été produit par le groupe lui même lol , tous les lead sont de Hetfield qui a chopé le syndrome "wahwah" d'Hammett? lol

_________________
Darrell Lance Abbott 20-08-1966/08-12-2004
R.I.P Cowboy!!!


06 Mar 2007 19:35
Profil Site Internet
Creature de la Nuit
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 17 Mar 2004 19:04
Messages: 510
Localisation: Perpignan
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
Franchement ...

Je les défend souvent mais là c'est .... pas terrible quoi. :?


06 Mar 2007 22:10
Profil
Long Distance Runner
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 17 Mar 2005 19:47
Messages: 3975
Localisation: Toloose
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
Ca fait très Maiden par moment

_________________
Image


06 Mar 2007 22:59
Profil Site Internet
Creature de la Nuit
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 17 Mar 2004 19:04
Messages: 510
Localisation: Perpignan
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
T'es pas obligé de me répéter :D


06 Mar 2007 23:04
Profil
Soundchaser
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 26 Mar 2004 16:25
Messages: 418
Localisation: Lorraine
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
disons que ça donne l'impression que ça a été bouclé en 2h! lol

_________________
Darrell Lance Abbott 20-08-1966/08-12-2004
R.I.P Cowboy!!!


07 Mar 2007 9:59
Profil Site Internet
Creature de la Nuit
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 17 Mar 2004 19:04
Messages: 510
Localisation: Perpignan
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
manquerait plus qu'ils aient mis 2 mois pour faire ça ! lol

mais bon on s'en branle moi jveux un bon album pour fin 2007 bordel ! :edbang:


07 Mar 2007 10:45
Profil
Skeleton In The Forum
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 15 Mar 2004 23:51
Messages: 5370
Localisation: Saint Ganton
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
Un couple suédois en procès pour pouvoir appeler sa fille Metallica

STOCKHOLM, Suède (AP) - Metallica est un nom parfait pour un groupe de hard rock, mais pas pour un nourrisson de sexe féminin de l'avis des autorités suédoises qui s'opposent sur ce point à un couple de jeunes parents récalcitrants.

Michael et Karolina Tomaro sont ainsi en procès avec les autorités qui refusent d'attribuer à leur fille de six mois le nom du célèbre groupe de rock.

"Ce prénom est fait pour elle", a pourtant déclaré mardi Karolina Tomaro, 27 ans, à propos du bébé. "Elle est déterminée et elle sait ce qu'elle veut".

Bien que la petite Metallica ait déjà été baptisée, le bureau d'Etat civil suédois refuse d'enregistrer le prénom, arguant qu'il est associé à la fois au groupe de rock et au mot "métal".

Selon le père du nourrisson, le fonctionnaire en charge du dossier aurait même parlé d'un nom "affreux".

Le couple a reçu le soutien du tribunal administratif de Göteborg, qui, dans son jugement du 13 mars, a estimé qu'il n'y avait pas de raison d'interdire le prénom. Le tribunal a par ailleurs observé qu'une autre Suédoise porte déjà Metallica comme deuxième prénom.

Le bureau d'Etat civil a alors fait appel devant une juridiction supérieure, ruinant les projets de voyage de la famille.

"Nous avons dû annuler des voyages et nous ne pouvons aller nulle part parce que nous ne pouvons pas lui obtenir un passeport tant que le prénom n'est pas approuvé", s'est plaint le papa. AP

_________________
Je veux bien laisser Ziggy partir en envolées lyriques sur du black-métal norvégien en spandex léopard, mais Pet Sounds faut pas déconner.

En fait ton metal est à mon metal ce que mon café est à ton café.


20 Avr 2007 13:40
Profil Site Internet
Crimson Idol
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 15 Mar 2004 19:25
Messages: 2420
Localisation: Quiche Land
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
Et pourquoi pas "The fifth horsewoman" ? Ca pourrait être sympa aussi.
Le fonctionnaire devait être fan de Maiden, voilà tout.

_________________
Moi aussi je te schtroumpfe.


20 Avr 2007 13:43
Profil
Skeleton In The Forum
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 14 Mar 2004 23:12
Messages: 9025
Localisation: Savigny sur orge (91)
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
Taré ses fans de metallica :(((


20 Avr 2007 13:44
Profil Site Internet
Skeleton In The Forum
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 04 Aoû 2006 22:56
Messages: 9663
Localisation: Au fond à gauche
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
Y a bien des gens qui appellent leur fille Mégane. Et c'est le nom d'une bagnole...

_________________
If we keep our pride / Though paradise is lost / We will pay the price / But we will not count the cost.
Inoxydable - Blog hard // punk // rock


21 Avr 2007 0:10
Profil Site Internet
Crimson Idol
Avatar de l’utilisateur

Inscription: 09 Jan 2007 22:41
Messages: 2831
Localisation: Bourg-le-Cul
Répondre en citant le message
Message 
Interview de Trujillo et Hammett sur le prochain disque :

Rock Hard Greece: Can you tell us if the two new songs (Song#1, Song#2) that you played on the last tour will be included on the upcoming album?

Trujillo: "I don't think so. There are parts from one of the songs that may be in the album, but that depends on which songs will be finally on the album. We can't be sure, not until we sit down and listen to all the songs completed, to make sure that each and every one of them sounds perfect. But I can tell you that these two specific songs that you've heard won't make it, at least not in that form.

Rock Hard Greece: Could you describe the new album's sound? Lars Ulrich, just before the release of "St. Anger", had — very accurately — described it as raw, ugly and unpolished. Can you come up some adjectives for the new album?

Trujillo: "I would say that this is album is dynamic, heavy, groovin' and you'll probably be excited to know that there will be guitar solos on it! For me, this album incorporates part of the dynamic and character of 'Master of Puppets', as well as the melodic style that people liked in the 'black album,' as far as the melodies are concerned."



METALLICA lead guitarist Kirk Hammett recently told Austrian web site Krone.at that he thinks the band's upcoming album is "the best album we've put out in, say, fifteen years. This time we're not afraid to refer to our past music in order to create future music. People will see that we've kind of embraced our old vocabulary again and are using that vocabulary to express new things...I think with this album we're definitely going a little more back into our roots."

Hammett also hinted that the new record features "a lot of really, really fast songs, a whole lot of really heavy stuff. We changed our approach to writing the songs...There's a lot of changes that we've made, but I believe that they are all for the better."

The guitarist said that while the band had also written some "slower and melodic" tunes, he wasn't sure if any would make the final track listing.

An early 2008 release is planned.


En résumé, ce sera da best album eva, avec plein de solos, rentre-dedans, et ça mélangera l'énergie de Master of Puppets avec la mélodie du Black Album. On y retrouvera des clins d'oeil au Metallica 80's.
Ils ont quelques morceaux tatas, mais ils finiront peut-être pas sur le disque, tout comme les 2 titres qui avaient circulés l'année dernière.

_________________
"J'aime bien ce groupe parce que les solos sont instrumentaux. Et j'adore la voix du chant." (un chroniqueur)


04 Juin 2007 18:08
Profil
Afficher les messages postés depuis:  Trier par  
Répondre au sujet   [ 1848 messages ]  Aller à la page Précédente  1 ... 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 ... 93  Suivante

Qui est en ligne

Utilisateurs parcourant ce forum: Aucun utilisateur enregistré et 41 invités


Vous ne pouvez pas poster de nouveaux sujets
Vous ne pouvez pas répondre aux sujets
Vous ne pouvez pas éditer vos messages
Vous ne pouvez pas supprimer vos messages

Rechercher:
Aller à:  
Powered by phpBB® Forum Software © phpBB Group
Designed by STSoftware for PTF.
Traduction par: phpBB-fr.com