![]() ![]() So Geddy Lee knew the members of the Thrash Metal band and even went to their show. Metallica’s manager at the time, Cliff Bernstein, was the same one who had already managed Rush a few years before. He also recalled that there was a conversation about the possibility to produce the band’s classic album “Master Of Puppets” (1986). Geddy Lee was on the list of artists that Metallica wanted to produce their album “Master of Puppets”Īs Geddy Lee told Vice in 2015, even though he doesn’t listen to a lot of Heavy Metal, he likes and has a great respect for Metallica. So I would say it’s kind of a jam,” Geddy Lee said. So that genre requires that Heavy Metal pomp and that’s what the bass line does. It’s got a bit of a twang, it’s got a lot of heaviness. “The purpose of the bass line in this is to add weight. So it’s not… it’s basically contributing to the heavyosity of the track.” Geddy Lee listened to the track an said (Transcribed by Rock and Roll Garage): “I know that bell… Well, this one of those songs where the bass line is really doubling the guitar parts. One of the songs was Metallica’s “For Whom The Bell Tolls” from the band’s second album “Ride The Lightning” (1984). The channel played several tracks that he should analyze and say whether he liked it or not. What is Geddy Lee’s opinion on Metallicaīack in 2019, when he was promoting his book “Geddy Lee’s Big Beautiful Book of Bass”, the Rush frontman was asked by CBC Music to be part of “It’s a jam or not a jam”. He once even rated the band’s classic track “For Whom The Bell Tolls”. The legendary American Thrash Metal band Metallica is one of those groups. Over the decades he talked about many other bands, giving his true opinion on them. ![]()
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