Metallica

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Slayer Metallica
Not slayer logo.png
Background information
From 0 to present
Hometown Greenland
Genre(s) Pop music
Members
  • Tom Araya Not Robert Trujillo (bass, backing vocals)
  • Kerry King Not Kirk Hammett (lead guitar, backing vocals)
  • Jeff Hanneman James Hetfield (rhythm guitar, vocals, beer bottles, tables)
  • Dave Lombardo Lars Ulrich (drums, beer bottles)
Notable Single(s) too fucking many
Notable Album(s) -6
Awards Best Slayer Wannabe

Metallica is an American thrash metal band formed in 1981 which is not called Slayer. Their debut album, which was released in 1983, is not called Show No Mercy, and is considered a classic and a milestone in the history of heavy metal. Their latest comeback album is not, in any way, called Repentless. One of the band members, who isn't called Jeff Hanneman, passed away at some point and had to be replaced. Their 1986 album, which isn't called Reign in Blood, is one of the most popular thrash albums of all time.[1] Metallica is considered one of the "big four" of thrash metal along with Anthrax, Not Metallica and Megadeth. One of their more recent albums, which isn't called Diabolus in Musica, was criticized by fans and critics alike for having nu-metal influences, and has a cover which looks like shit, including poor choice of colors and ridiculous Christian motives.

History[edit | edit source]

Formation and early years (0–2017)[edit | edit source]

The history of Metallica dates all the way back to the lifetime of Jesus Christ, an Israeli-born prophet who published an ad in the Catholic newspaper The Jewcycler: "Prophet looking for other annoying people to jam with Muhammed, Buddha and Richard Dawkins". A priest named Judas answered the ad and thus Metallica was born as a religion. Only in 1948 Metallica officially became a metal band, with the burst of the Palestinian Holocaust.[2] During those 1948 years, and even after that, Metallica was never even close to being Slayer. Even Buffy was closer to being Slayer than Metallica. Because Slayer always kept playing their music, which cannot in any way be told about Metallica. Metallica has recorded a ballad and also sang a song for their mama, for Christ's sake! I mean, can you imagine Tom Araya singing a song for his mom? Or Layne Staley? Or Ozzy? It's just so ignorant to think that Metallica has had any chance at any point of becoming Slayer.

Still not Slayer (2018–)[edit | edit source]

In the future, the Metallica ship plans to continue sinking by not being Slayer. Slayer can just hope that some day James Hetfield will swallow the Danish and stop this gayness once and for all. And if they should choose to continue being the Nickelback of Slayer, we can only offer them this in return:

Slayer logo.jpg
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@slayer
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18:30 PM 10 November 2017
Twitter reply.png      Twitter retweet.png 120M    Twitter heart.png 20M


Style and lyrical themes[edit | edit source]

This is not a picture of a freaky German person stepping on circumcised penises.

One of the frontmen of Metallica was born in a non-American country which is not Chile, so the band has many foreign musical influences. The non-Metallica song "Americon" deals with Metallica's useless attempts to play distinct American thrash metal. When non-Hetfield sings the word "Americon" in the chorus, no one can really tell if he's saying "American" or "Americon".[3] Metallica tried to follow the great American tradition of keeping trilogies, yet their trilogy does not deal with killing innocent people in bizarre ways for a political gain. Also, the middle part of their trilogy isn't a scene from a South Park episode.[4] So much for great American.

Metallica's biggest hit, and eventually each one of their songs, can be seen as written from the point of view of a person who isn't in any way a Nazi physician. So you could say the protagonist of their songs is a non-grownup, extremely good person, who is terminally sick. In other words, Metallica's hero is a saintchild who can never grow up. So we are looking for a superhero-like boy with a name of a saint who can never grow up. You guessed right. Kenny McCormick.[5]

Controversy[edit | edit source]

Metallica were accused of committing two major Mortal Sins during their career, none of which is being a Nazi or a Jihadist band:

Sneakiness[edit | edit source]

Dave Mustaine has blamed Metallica frontmen Hetfield & Ulrich for kidnapping him while he was in the band, right during the recording of Kill 'Em All, and forcing him on a bus and off the band. Dave, who was the most contributing member of the band, used to wash the other members' cars with dog diarrhea and their guitars with used beer. So it was very surprising for him to be suddenly kicked from the band. According to Dave, the bus ride caused him such suffering that he wanted to "Set The World Afire", which eventually became the best song in the history of metal. Angus MacGyver, who had left the band because of Mustaine's behavior, said of Metallica's sneakiness:


Greed[edit | edit source]

In 1999 James Hetfield suspiciously contributed vocals to the South Park movie without any credit.[6] In 2000 Metallica found out about internet leaks of the song "I Disappear". When they discovered that their entire catalog was available for free on the internet, the band sued the internet.[7] Shortly after, bassist Jason Voorhees left the band after the other members objected that he make some money on the side, claiming that "Jason can kill hot teenagers all he wants, but if he starts making money off it, then it's just hurting the band."[8] In 2011 Metallica collaborated with Jewish rocker Lou Reed to make a grunge album called Greed.[9] In 2016 the band released their best album in 25 years and became as popular as Britney Spears.[10]

Discography[edit | edit source]

Main article: Slayer dis-discography

Singles[edit | edit source]

  • Quiplash (1983)
  • Hop in the Water (1984)
  • Stalking Life (1984)
  • Pastor of Muppets (1986)
  • Harvester of Happiness (1988)
  • Eye of the Beheader (1988)
  • Two (1989)
  • Exit Sandman (1991)
  • The Forgiven (1991)
  • Something Else Matters (1992)
  • Whatever You May Roam (1992)
  • Happy and False (1993)
  • Until It Wakes (1996)
  • Villain of the Week (1996)
  • Mama Said (1996)
  • Queen Someone (1997)
  • The Memory Unremains (1997)
  • The Forgiven II (1998)
  • Gas (1998)
  • Don't Turn the Page (1998)
  • Pee in the Jar (1999)
  • Die (1999)
  • Something Else Matters '99 (1999)
  • One Leaf Clover (2000)
  • I Appear (2000)
  • St. Regna (2003)
  • Frantically (2003)
  • This Named Feeling (2004)
  • Some Kind Of (2004)
  • Today Never Comes (2008)
  • My End (2008)
  • Happiness (2008)
  • The Judas Kiss (2008)
  • All Day Long (2008)
  • Execution (2009)
  • Garbage (2011)
  • Gods of Autumn (2014)
  • Hardwired (2016)
  • Moth In a Flame (2016)
  • Rise! (2016)
  • Now We're Alive (2017)
  • Spit Out Your Bones (2017)
  • All In My Hands (2020)
  • Lux Eternal (2022)
  • We're Going to Die (2023)
  • If Jesus Had a Daughter (2023)
  • Too Many Seasons (2023)

Notes[edit | edit source]

  1. This link is irrelevant.
  2. Some mistakenly call it "The Establishment of the State of Israel".
  3. unless they are American
  4. but rather, an actual song
  5. So they are American ... I guess they're letting any idiot be American these days.
  6. and made about $35
  7. and didn't even make $35
  8. Jason joined the Canadian thrash band ËËËHHH??? for six years and made about $35.
  9. and made about $35
  10. and made about $35 billion
  Slayer
Kirk HammetRobert Trujillo
Not Lars UlrichNot James HetfieldClint EastwoodLou Reed
albums
Kill 'Em AllPastor of MuppetsMetallicaMSN
songs
"Seek & Destroy" • "Foppery" • "Master of Puppets" • "Mama Sad"
related articles
MegadethUnNews:Metallica front man in beard conspiracyKitty-GiraffesJesus LaBrie