jasonnewsted
In a new interview, Robert Trujillo explained what made Metallica‘s previous bassists, the late Cliff Burton and Jason Newsted, special. Trujillo joined Metallica in early 2003 after the departure of Newsted two years prior. Thus, he’s played on their last three releases — Death Magnetic (2008), Hardwired… To Self-Destruct (2016) and last year’s 72 Seasons. “I’m not being disrespectful to all the bass players out there, but there aren’t many bassists that could do this job. Playing with Metallica is the most demanding gig there is,” Trujillo said during a conversation with Bass Player. Ron McG...
Loudwire
Flemming Rasmussen, the producer who worked on a few of Metallica‘s albums in the 1980s, has a theory on why the bass was turned down on …And Justice for All. Rasmussen first worked with Metallica on their sophomore album Ride the Lightning, and the band worked with him again on Master of Puppets and …And Justice for All. The latter is known for having an infamously low bass volume to the point where it’s hardly audible at all. Metallica brought Jason Newsted in as their new bassist in October of 1986, just a month after the death of Cliff Burton. Newsted has admitted in interviews that he “wa...
Loudwire
Robert Trujillo spent some time chatting about Metallica‘s bassists with Eddie Trunk on his radio show, Trunk Nation. The conversation highlights Trujillo’s thoughts on the differences between the way Cliff Burton and Jason Newsted played. “They’re very different players and I think that’s great,” Trujillo told Trunk. “I love the fact that we’re all different, we all have our thing that we bring to the band.” “With Cliff, he was such an incredible musician. I mean, he was really a composer when it came to the instrument, in the same way that sort of a Jaco Pastorius or Stanley Clarke would’ve ...
Loudwire
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