RTS The Michigan Daily Thursday, October 31, 1991 Page 5 'Exit light': Metallica storms Palace by Annette Petruso M etallica virtually redefined metal in the '80s. With their new LP, Metallica, the band has once again pushed the bounds of heavy metal into a new stratosphere of noise. Talking to lead guitarist Kirk Hammett from his hotel room in Evansville, Indiana, he was, atfirst, more concerned with his home than his band (which includes drummer Lars Ulrich, guitarist/vocalist James Hetfield and bassist Jason Newsted). "y've had a really stressful cou- ple days. I'm in Evansville, right? And I live in North Berkeley, which is where that big fire was," Hammett explains. "And when I landed in Evansville, I called to make sure everything was all right at home, and I found out it wasn't all right. As it ended up, the fire stopped like two blocks above my * house, and like three blocks to the north of my house... I didn't know whether I should go back home, whether I could get into my house, 'cause they evacuated my neigh- borhood. And my girlfriend rescued four cats, thank God, so..." Fortunately, Hammett, his girl- friend, his cats and his house are in one piece. Though what follows could be called arrogance- or a dis- '* play of a large ego, Hammett's spo- ken attitude is more self-confidence and pride than big-headedness. If you were in Metallica, you'd be like that too. Annette Petruso: Why are you do- ing a circle in the round thing? Kirk Hammett: Well, it's not re- ally -in the round, and it's not really a circle. I mean, I don't really want # to go into depth about it because we. want it to be a surprise to everyone, the whole stage concept. We're do- ing it because we're basically tired of the standard stage set-up where, you know, one person is always on one side of the stage, and another person is on the other side of the stage, and you run from one side of the stage to the other, and it's, like, boring after a while. And no matter how much junk you put on the stage, you're basically going to do that, you know, in every situation:. So we just decided to throw all that out the window and just do something different this time. And, I've been saying this to a lot of people, it's we cut our teeth on press in the mid- Eighties and late Eighties, because we never got any sort of airplay and we weren't an MTV band at that point, so, you know, press is very important to us, and it still is im- portant to us. Whatever you can do to bring the music to the people or spark people's interest is important. And our whole philosophy is that, "So what if this little magazine has a circulation of like three thousand and SPIN has three hundred thou- sand?" It's still equally' as impor- tant. AP: So what do you think of Sub Pop and grunge, etc.? I mean, you said you liked it. Who are your fa- vorite bands? KH: Well,-I was just listening to the Soundgarden album. Nirvana is, like, my favorite band at the mo- ment. I love Nirvana. I love Mudhoney. But I like Alice in Chains. I like Soundgarden. I like Tad. I like a lot of the other stuff that's coming out of Sub Pop that isn't from Seattle, like Smashing Pumpkins and L7 and the Fluid... I think it's really good. Really really good. You know, it's a good altema- .tive for me, because we started as a thrash band, and we influenced a lot of thrash bands. And when I listen to a lot of those bands like Sepultura and Lawnmower Death and Morbid Angel, and whatever all that other stuff is, I don't hear a whole lot of originality. Because of that, I just kind of like shied away from that a few years ago and went looking for other types of music that was heavy and had a lot of ag- gression, and I found this whole Sub Pop thing. And I just love it. I .lis- ten to most of the stuff that comes Metalli-fuckin'-ka is: (-r, in the back) James Hetfield, Kirk.Hammett and Jason Newsted, with Lars Ulrich up front. -Is the band alternative? Heavy, metal? Alterna-metal? MC Hammett seems to be into lots of Sub Pop types, but does that mean anything? there's so less actual stage space that that wouldn't be possible. at all. I mean, it's a crazy thing... I mean, that doesn't rule out the pos- sibility that we're going to be not playing on any standard stages any more, because we obviously will still, And when we're on stages like that, we'll have opening acts,, you know? But for this portion of the tour, we just'decided to go with a video introduction. You know, kind of like what Paul McCartney did or the Cure did.. AP: Why are you allowing taping at concerts now? KH: You know, it's just kind of a cool thing. It's also a good way to support the underground tape trad- ing that goes around. And heck yeah, if you're an avid fan or a real avid collector of live tapes, and. come to the gig, and make like fifty copies of that particular gig to give to all 'I mean, any gig is no less important than any other place, but some places have a different atmosphere. Like, I don't know, for some reason Detroit, the people in Detroit, are just so much more maniacal and just so much more extreme. I mean, it's the same thing with San Francisco. The people there are so much more extreme' -Kirk Hammett, on the Motor City go out and dish out forty bucks for the same gig just put out by a boot- legger. AP: Did Elektra give you a problem with this? KH: No, not yet. I mean, it's some- thing that other bands have done too. Well, I should say another band has done. That's the Grateful Dead, and they've been doing this for a while. And there's been people who've popped up who, like, do nothing but trade and collect Grateful Dead live, tapes. And-I think we feel it would be a good thing if we could get something like that started with our fans. AP: Is there a definite set list every night or do you go out -and play whatever? KH: We're not Guns N' Roses. They play just whatever. There is a definite set list, but it's structured so we can go off on different varia- tions of a theme, you know? I think in the first part of the tour, it's go- ing to be changing a lot, 'cause that's the way it always happens. It changes quite a bit. Other than that, we have a lot of room for a lot of different things, and we're going to try a lot'of different things this time. AP: Is there a difference in your ap- proach or in the audience's response when you play an out of the way place that rarely gets concerts, like Saginaw, (as opposed to) when you play a big concert city like Detroit? KH: Well, I mean, any gig is no less important than any other place, but some places have a different atmo- sphere. Like, I don't know, for some reason Detroit, the people in Detroit, are just so much more ma- niacal and just so much more.ex- treme. I mean, it's the same thing with San Francisco. The people there are so much more extreme. I mean; the approach is different from the audience's point 'of view. I mean, from our approach, we just go out there and play the gig, whether it'.s in front of ten people or ten thou- sand people, whether we're in Butte,. Montana or Boise, Idaho or, you know, wherever, Los Angeles. I mean, we go out and play to. our best... AP: Why are you so intense live? A. Metallica show is always a mind- boggling experience. KH: We like to play. That's one thing. We like to play the type of music that we like to play. And, uh, I think a lot of it has to do with the four personalities on stage. I think we all hold up our part, our role in the "band, -to the fullest. And every- one's always pushing, and Ithink that- has a lot to do with it. It's just the way our band is, I guess. And we've always played like that, and we've always.pushed it to the limit. And I think it has a lot to do with the energy .of the songs, the aggress Mion of the songs, our approach to it,, and just the energy level overall. AP: Do you guys get sick of singing older stuff? K H: No, not at all. Those ,older songs still hold up for us. They're. still real fun to play live for us. .And .I think they've gotten a lot better. Like "Seek and Destroy," we've played that'song since 1983, and now it's gone through a lot of different changes and it's still a real fun song to play. Every time we go out on tour, the songs change a little bit more;'We try to make them a lit- tle more interesting than they were last time around. .And when we make' it a little more interesting to play for us, -undoubtedly, it's going to be interesting for. the audience too.. AP: What about your audience? You seem to have the kids on one hand, the critics who love you, and then 'Nirvana is, like, my favorite band at the moment. I love Nirvana. I love Mudhoney. But I like Alice in Chains. I like Soundgarden. I like Tad. I like a lot of the other stuff that's coming out of Sub Pop that isn't from Seattle, like Smashing Pumpkins-and L7 and.the Fluid... I think it's really .good. Really really good' -Kirk Hammett, on a few of his favorite things who were playing us in 1983, 1984, 1985, on the college stations.. And they just thought that we're differ- ent enough- for back then, we had a different enough vibe- that we're cool enough to play on college sta- tions. And, what I'm trying to get to, is that sort of vibe has still stuck with us. You know, that different kind of alternative deal has still stuck with us.-Actually, I'm a big fan of alternative music. I.-listen to a lot of it.. A lot of it has to do with when we first came out, when Metallica first came out... a lot of hard core fans and people who dug that kind of music were attracted to us because of the raw energy that our first album had. And, you know, I think we have a place in'those peo- ple's hearts still. We've grown and so have those people and they've al- ways' found us exceptional, and they still find us exceptional. AP: What about fanzines, 'cause on the one hand you're in Metal Edge, which most alternative people find .a joke, and then you're on the cover of SPIN? And then you're in every kind of press-in between. K H: Well the whole press thing, out of there. AP: Do you think they'll ever be, like, collaborations between Metallica and someone on Sub Pop? KH: Well, see, I'm the biggest Sub Pop fan in the band. I mean,; the other guys, they're not as interested in it as I am. So, I' doubt it. But I mean, I'm friends.with the guys in Soundgarden and I got' them on the bill for Day on the Green, which is this big festival we have in the Iay area every year, and I got Soundgarden on the bill, 'cause they're great and they're friends of mine and they're new album's won- derful. AP: What do.you think the state of the metal nation is, then? Better? Worse? Becoming one big clich6? KH: Well,.it's breaking off into a lot of different sub .genres. You know, you have your funk-metal, you have your grindcore, you have your rap-metal, you have pop-metal. And then you have your heavy metal, thrash metal, speed metal, death metal, and a lot of it isn't so hot, but then, on the other hand, a lot of it is really good. And I.think See METAL, Page 8 the alternative- people who , wouldn't listen' to much other. - metal? Why had this happened? KH': Those alternative people, or a lot of those. people, are the people . -ambitious.To say the least: AP: Why not use any opening act? A spot on your tour would give a new band a lot of good exposure. KH: We realize that, and we would if we could, but I don't think it would be practical to have an open- ing band on this stage, you know, what I mean? You know how on a regular stage opening acts perform on the same stage,. in front of the other band's equipment? Well, your friends, that's great, because- that's fifty less people who will go out and buy a bootleg album... AP: But aren't you afraid bootleg- gers are going to come and do it too? KH: They will, but chances are there might be one bootlegger there and, like, fifteen tapers who, like, just circulate the tape anyway. So, now this gives people a choice, whether or not to, like, just find a tape, which makes it kind of fun, or Farcical Court blinds justice with Silence! by Mike Kolody game, there comes a battle," says director Peter In a timely coincidence with the recent Hill-Thomas hearings, the production of Vijay Tendulkar's Silence! The Court is in Session at the Performance Network dramatizes a similar kind of crucifying courtroom procedure.. Produced by Blue Donkey Productions in cooperation with Shaman Drum, the play is a comedy that presents a farcical mock trial which eventually leads to rather sinister results. The story deals with a part-time theater troupe in India missing one of its usua1 actors. that decides to Knox. "It becomes a mob thing." The play was first produced in 1970, and is clearly about the human condition, as opposed to being a his- torically and culturally bound piece of work.. As contemporary Indian critic Kumud Mehta writes, Tendulkar is "acutely conscious of the violent im- pulses behind a respectable facade and of the over- whelming compulsions of sex" - instinctive drives that are obviously not Indian or American, but rather human. Though Silence! is set in India and was written by 'X:X~:<~'X&"~X'$'fl.' '7 ________________________________ . ~.Xtc$N"~'b ~' U'4"'~ ,''~:.:X.X" "~'>' ' X~?<'X~'$Vv'r4X."'~~