SmartLess - "Lars Ulrich"
Episode Date: September 25, 2023This week, it’s bread balls, zero-glide potential, protein shakes, and tofu… with tennis player turned rock legend, Lars Ulrich of Metallica. Welcome to SmartLess.NATIONAL DISCLAIMER: Mus...t be 21+ and present in select states. FanDuel is offering online sports wagering in Kansas under an agreement with Kansas Star Casino, LLC. First online real money wager only. $10 first deposit required. Bonus issued as nonwithdrawable bonus bets that expire 7 days after receipt. Restrictions apply. See terms at sportsbook.fanduel.com. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit FanDuel.com/RG in Colorado, Iowa, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Tennessee, and Virginia. Call 1-800-NEXT-STEP or text NEXTSTEP to 53342 in Arizona, 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat in Connecticut, 1-800-9-WITH-IT in Indiana, 1-800-522-4700 or visit ksgamblinghelp.com in Kansas, 1-877-770-STOP in Louisiana, visit mdgamblinghelp.org in Maryland, visit 1800gambler.net in West Virginia, or call 1-800-522-4700 in Wyoming. Hope is here. Visit GamblingHelpLineMA.org or call (800) 327-5050 for 24/7 support in Massachusetts or call 1-877-8HOPE-NY or text HOPENY in New York.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What did the ocean say to the beach?
Nothing, it just waved.
Nice, okay.
It's pretty good.
You want one last one?
Yeah, please.
Where do you learn to make a banana split?
I don't know where.
Sunday school.
Oh, man, that's good. Welcome to Smartless banana split. I don't know where. Sunday school. Oh, man, that's good.
Welcome to Smartless, everybody.
Welcome, everyone.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart. Smart. Smart. I've been watching all these interviews with William Freakin, who direct the movies
that we can't name, but amazing interviews.
Are we celebrating a life lost?
Yeah, we are.
He was a tremendous artist and just one of the funny things I just read this thing,
so I'm talking about going to this,
speaking to these students and the students,
and I'm about to shoot my student film,
what format should I shoot it at?
And he said, who gives a shit?
Is that true?
William said that.
I'm sure you're stirring.
Oh, maybe, maybe,
I'm, he directed a scary movie that I can't watch today
because it's so scary.
Hey, Sean, I know we talk about this a lot, but it's enough from me, from my mouth.
What? No. You being in New York.
I know. I know.
So dumb.
Can we have a date?
Now, I'm sure this is going to air past the day because I feel like we're close.
How much longer?
Three weeks, 21, Sean.
Sean, I got sent a picture yesterday from somebody
whom you do not know, my friend Elizabeth,
and she sent me a photo of her partner,
a center photo of her.
She didn't want to leave her seat,
and he took a photo,
because she was out your show in the balcony,
and she was so moved.
She was sat there for like 20 minutes,
like just reacting to it.
She was so moved by you for so nice.
It's so nice.
Yeah, wow.
It was two nights ago. I mean, that's so nice. That's your story. Yeah, wow. It was too nice to go.
I mean, that's so sweet.
It's, it's, please tell her, thank you.
And, um, wait, two things though.
One is Scotty being stuck here, J. T.
Your Point, treated me to a helicopter ride the other day.
Will. Yeah. Hopefully he wasn't flying.
No, he was not flying. Okay.
And we flew so close to, because we haven't left.
They're done anything in six months. Um six months, lyric apartment theater, apartment theater. And, uh, and
so we flew around and the Kyla copper came really close to the Statue of Liberty. Like,
really close. It was unbelievable. I never seen it that close. So Scotty just said, hey,
let's go take a helicopter trip around the city. Yeah, because we haven't done anything
just to do something. Just to tell you.
Sounds great.
Have you ever done that?
No, I would love to.
Now, I'm a little, I'm not a huge fan of helicopters.
I love their mobility, their flexibility, and all that stuff.
But, you know, there's zero glide potential.
I get it's the glide.
It's the glide.
What do you mean glide?
Well, I mean, it's sort of a, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's fools comfort anyway to
think, you know, the plane has glide potential if the, if the engines go to
shit. Well, the guy told me that, the guy's like, because I'm like, what's the plan? He's
like, oh, no, if the end, you started the trip, we were in the air. And I talked about it.
I shouldn't have, because it freaked me out. And he goes, look, if the engines fail,
and they won't, he goes, you just glide down to the bottom. It's got like that potential.
So is he like helicopter does it? Yeah, what kind of helicopter were we on? Did it have
a bunch of, I don't know, is it was a wings on it? Or a bunch of birds attached to it?
You're seeing a second kid who's dropped. Just falls, man. Yeah, I mean, there's, there's
some physics and yeah, so anyway, I mean, listen Don't think that's how any of us none of our listeners none of us. That's not how we're going no
I know I know what you mean when the thing took off and you know wobbles when it takes off left to right left to right
Yeah, and it's like it's pretty scary. You're gonna choke on a wanton one day
And that's how you're gonna go
Like I can get one morning here
And that'll how you're gonna go. Like, Scotty, I can get one more in here. Give it a minute, man.
And that'll be it for you.
Just a word to one time. Oh, one time.
Sorry, you kidding?
That sounds pretty.
He's gonna choke on the fucking heel of a loaf of wonder.
He's like, well, I'm still bread.
I'll just have the heel.
There's a little bit of that.
Hold it on, son.
You ever make bread balls,
or you take the center of the white bread
and you just, we'll ball it up with a something.
Look at it, it's a bread meat ball.
I collect heels.
I just make heels.
All my sandwiches are from heels of loads of bread.
We ate, we ate tortillas, just a tortilla.
You know shit, what's 9am?
So that makes sense.
Hey, listen.
We never make bread balls. You. Whatever, my bright ball.
Hey, you know, you know, I love me some music.
I love music.
And, and I love all kinds of different music.
Man, I always have.
I've always had a, I like to think that I have an eclectic taste because sometimes I think,
well, I'm just kind of a dinosaur,
sort of 90s indie rock guy, but I'm not.
I'm kind of all over the place.
You're the one tall Paul Simon to go down to Africa
and do Graceland, right?
You're on the inspiration for him.
You've explored these sounds?
But I've been into, you know,
we've had a lot of great musicians on the show,
and I've been a friend of them all,
whether it's from sort of new wave or, you know,
whatever, to classic rock and roll, to, you know, whatever, to classic rock
and roll, to, you know, I don't know, just everything.
Think about it.
And today's guest is such a representative of an entire genre of music that they kind
of inspired so many musicians, and not just of their genre, but of all genres.
It's so rare when somebody
from one genre is able to inspire people across all different types of music. You got Madonna.
This person, this person is, he's, he's, he's, he joined us from overseas, born in Denmark,
and then moved to the U.S. and formed a band that has sold nearly 120 million albums worldwide.
That's my...
Generating more than 15 billion streams.
He's from Denmark?
Yeah, I mean, nine Grammy Awards, two American Music Awards, multiple MTV Movie Video Awards,
2009 induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Just all over the place, they've done it.
All they played with everybody.
This is none other than one of my all-time faves.
It's Lars Ulrich of Metallica.
Good Lord.
Ways.
And now the high-tech reveal, see if I can do this.
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
No way.
No way.
Also known as a high.
My name is Brett Balls. I like Brett Balls. No way there. Also known as, hi, my name is breadballs.
I like breadballs.
That's breadballs.
Breadballs, I like breadballs.
Oh my God.
Or otherwise known as Michael Cooper's best friend.
How's Cooper?
Yes, that's right.
Michael Cooper, he's the texting me as we're speaking
and he's texting you.
You know, now Michael Cooper's got one of these ailments
that I think affects a lot of people
on the next thing.
Tell us who Michael Cooper is.
He's a friend of yours.
He's a guy I used to work with.
Sure.
And now he's working with fans here, folks, than me.
But he uses the send button as a period when he texts people.
That's a, yes.
That's a 23 text showing up at one time.
This is a normal five minutes of Michael Cooper,
but they're all sent with love and kisses.
I love them.
And there are pictures of himself driving.
How many pictures of Michael Cooper?
Do you have of him driving?
Driving, showing off a watch or a new hairstyle
or a new set of glasses.
You know, I'm not on,
I didn't sign up for the Cooper fan letter.
I love him now.
As long as you have an iPhone and a text message thread with him,
you're in that fan club.
I love him.
Look at what I just want to say, one thing that,
and I'm sure you guys have heard this before,
but you don't need guests on your show,
just the seven minute banter there before the reveal.
That's, that's plenty. It's all done. I've taken, I've taken some potential Metallica titles away
from this. I think bread balls is the one to be. I like zero glide potential. That sounds more like
an album title. Great hard rock title. Yeah, I think sure that's, you know, that's like, well, they did it before.
It's called Led Zeppelin.
Yeah, right.
Zero glide.
Yeah, there's a lot of bad jokes in there that we should shy away from.
And then the last thing I would say also, is it Madonna?
I like that one too.
That's she's the mayor of all genres.
Dude, dude, Lars, thank you for doing this, man.
It's so great to have you. Right back at you.
And I had the good fortune of hanging out just a couple times with Larris a few years
ago through mutual friends.
That's right.
And I've always, and of course, I didn't want to, you know, drill you with it at the
time and, and Baris, you have always been such a fan of Metallica and your music.
And, and one of the things that I did not know, and I guess a lot of hardcore
Metallica fans did know this was I didn't know that you actually moved to the States just
to play tennis. I knew that you were a tennis player and that you were a competitive tennis
player, but I didn't know that that was the whole purpose of your move was to play tennis.
Is that true?
The whole purpose was to, so my father, I grew up in Copenhagen, Denmark, as you guys circled.
And you were born there?
Born, yeah.
Born and raised in Copenhagen.
And my dad was a professional tennis player.
And I come from a family of tennis players.
So his brother was one of the other greats in the country.
And at one point, the Davis Cup, the Danish Davis Cup team was my dad, his brother, and the captain was their dad.
So it's a long line of famous tennis grates in Denmark,
and I, of course, wanted to follow in their footsteps.
So when I finished school in 1979 in Denmark,
I ended up in Braydenton, Florida.
The first year of Nick Boleter's tennis academy.
No way.
And you moved because of tennis?
Is that what you mean?
Yes.
Absolutely.
Nick Bolotair, tennis camp, which at the time, by the way, was revolutionary.
It was like the real place where a lot of these famous young tennis dedicated tennis players
went.
It was like the first of its kind, in my rather.
Yeah.
And it was also a transitional time in tennis where, you know, up till the mid 70s to the late 70s,
the best tennis players all over the world
were the ones that had the most talent.
But as it shifted in the late 70s,
the best tennis players ended up
becoming the ones that worked the hardest at it
and played six, eight hours a day
and doing drills and worked in the weight room
and all this type of stuff. That there was a seismic shift in the whole setup.
And I went the first year to Nick Boleteris.
And then after that, we moved out to Southern California,
ended up in Newport Beach, where I was going to attend Carl Del Mar High School,
with my dad's friend, the tennis great from Australia, Roy Emerson, his son Anthony.
And so in Denmark, up through those years,
in my junior years, I was ranked in the top 10
consistently in the country.
And when I came out to Southern California
and went to Colonel Dillmar High School
as a junior in 11th grade, I did not, I did not.
This is true, Stuart.
I did not make the fucking tennis team. I was not, I did not, this is true story, I did not make the fucking tennis
team. I was not, I was not one of the, I was not one of the seven best players at
Crowell the Mar High School. Geez. So the whole tennis dream and following in, in the
Ulrich footsteps that came crashing down, no pun intended to the zero glide potential there, but that came crashing down in one afternoon,
and then rock and roll was hovering, hovering in the trenches and took over.
But wait, so Lars, you make this, and you sort of, you talk about it very openly in the
fact that, yeah, I knew that you had this, this, come from this dynasty, this Danish, tennis, dynastic family. And then you move to, you go to Nick Bolleterri and then
you come to Southern California. And like you see in one afternoon, like all of a sudden,
what they put, you try out, they put out the list for the tennis team, you're not on it.
And you're like, well, there goes everything. Like, that was that.
Yeah. I mean, you know, I've heard myself obviously tell that story 9,000 times. So it, it,
it gets shorter and shorter and becomes more of a sound bite.
But it is pretty much what happened.
Music was always hovering.
And music was my escape away from the discipline of tennis.
And I'd been playing both guitar and drums in Denmark.
And as you, I was 17 at the time, as you, you get a little older,
and you start drinking a few beers,
and looking at the girls differently,
and blah, blah, blah, blah, and things change.
And, but I was, it pretty much came crashing down.
That's why.
Did you teach yourself to play guitar and drums,
or were you doing it like through a,
in school?
In Denmark. In school.
What language are they speaking, Denmark?
They speak Danish.
And he's...
He's trying to contact you for a second.
Sorry, Lars.
So sorry for one second.
So sorry, dude.
And you still speak it?
Just a second.
I'm not a third, Danzke.
I have stayed to take Danzke.
I have 100% Danzke, or I...
But your mic's going out.
Ville, Danzke.
You're going over.
I'm still, I'm still proudly, you know, there's only five million of us and we keep it,
we keep it loud and proud and I'm still a Danish citizen actually and still travel on
my Danish passport.
Wow, that's so cool.
Yeah.
Now, so, so then, so that you learn these two instruments in, in school, it in school, it wasn't a music school, was it?
Or was just a...
No, no, it was just Danish public school.
Pick an elective and band was one of them
and you gravitated towards those two instruments.
Was that that simple?
Ish, yeah, yeah.
I mean, I was, my dad, my dad's passion away from tennis
was also music, so I grew up in a very musically rich household.
You know, there was a lot of, you know,
all the jazz greats from Miles Davis to Cold Train,
to Charlie Parker, to Dexter Gordon,
all these, you know, and a lot of Hendrix and Doors
and Rolling Stones playing out of my dad's music room all the time.
So there was a lot of music in the family and in the household.
Was there a particular band or drummer or guitarist that got you to want to, you know, jump
into those two instruments?
Or was it just that?
When I was, I started going to concerts in Denmark early.
I was nine years old when I went to see Deep Purple.
And over the next couple of years, like 74, 75, I saw bands like The Sweet
and Slade and Status Quo and Kiz came to Denmark in 76 and then it started to grab it,
you know, going into Thin Lizzy and Rainbow and so on. But Deep Purple was my first real
music experience and has always been the North Star for me.
What about drummers? Who are the drummers that you were like?
Yes.
Ian Pace from Deep Purple, the guy with the round glasses,
who was just insane driving Deep Purple.
I gravitated towards also Phil Rudd from ACDC, who's obviously very different than Ian Pace.
But he was a huge inspiration.
How did it go over with your family?
That was, you say I was a big tennis family,
I'm assuming that there wasn't a lot of hard rock happening
in the car on the way back and forth to the court.
It's like, how did they feel about that?
Although it was a lot of...
There was a lot of anything happening in the car
because I bite to school,
starting in second grade.
That big sort of career pivot for you
and lifestyle pivot for you,
were they cool with that?
Yeah, my dad was very forgiving with all that.
Like I said before,
his passion was music.
He actually wrote about jazz music
for some Danish publications.
And at that time, excuse me, in the 50s and 60s,
especially Copenhagen, but Stockholm to a degree
in obviously Paris were just the European,
havens for American jazz music.
So many of the American jazz grades came
to Europe, spent a lot of time on Scandinavia.
People like Ben Webster lived in Copenhagen,
Dexter Gordon lived in Copenhagen, John Chi-Kai,
but Copenhagen was very much a hotbed
for jazz music at the time.
Growing up to, like, kind of at Jason's point,
where you, your parent, because I was like, I we live we grew up in a super small house
And I was always playing piano practice piano and drove everybody crazy because it was so tiny
How in the world like Jason will what if your kids just I don't dad want to play drums?
I mean that going on in the house constantly
We got the electric we got the electric ones now with it with the head
Yeah, yeah, that's you're right. That's true. No, we didn't have that back
in the day, right, Lars? They didn't have those back in the day. No, we, I had a room
down in the basement, where I had a little music room where I had my records and my record
player. And I got a drum kit, a small piece together drum kit down. And I could bash away
down in the basement
and do my thing down there without pissing off
too many of us.
So good.
I can imagine that going through the house all the time.
I mean, it's great that you did it.
And everybody did it.
Now Lars, us soft actors, we fantasize about life
on the, you're pretty soft too.
Well, you're hard rock, you know, traveling and touring and having all that fun.
And what you look so good, so healthy, so not like you've been on the road in like arguably
the biggest rock and roll band ever for years and years and years, has the touring change now in the past decade or so
such that you don't look like death warmed over.
What's, how is it all working now?
You guys get to bed early.
It's now a shake.
Another good title.
It's not 30 beers.
It's just 15.
Yeah, it's a protein shake, right?
It's a mindfulness.
Yeah, you know, in the short answer is yes.
You know, we just played a couple shows out at MetLife Stadium on Friday and Sunday here
in New York where I'm checking in from and worn away up to Montreal in a couple days.
Right.
Right now we're playing every Friday and Sunday for the rest of the summer.
We play two shows in each city.
So the travel is less and it's a weekend thing.
And it is, it's protein shakes, it's tofu, it's vegetables.
If my 20 or 30 year old self was on this podcast with your
guys, he would be sitting going, what the fuck are you talking about?
But you know, 42 years in, obviously you have to, to make these changes and growing up
in a, you know, around tennis and growing up around sports.
It's not that difficult for me to be rigid and disciplined.
I barely drink.
I haven't had a drink in three months.
I'll have a half a class of champagne
and that's it occasionally, but other than that.
Still playing tennis?
I still do play tennis.
Yeah, I love playing tennis and I love sports
and I love being engaged and I work out. They have me chained to a peloton. Most of the time when I'm not doing
podcast or playing watch shows. And so I do work out a lot. But it is true about the protein shakes
and we have a fortune to have a, you know, our great chef Simon who travels with us and hands us all kinds of healthy
and it's healthy drinks and it's good.
Listen, we've lived it.
Lots of crazy fun.
I mean, also we started, James and I met when I was 17.
He was 18.
We started Metallica.
We put our first record out when we were, when I was 19 and we were touring the world, 19 and 20.
So we started early.
Just some amazing.
And, you know, you got to, you got to, we got a lot of that fun stuff out of the way.
And I can access a good part of those memories when I want to some of them live really far back there behind doors that that are hard to open and probably shouldn't be opened.
Yeah. this year and the only way to play shows like we just did out at MetLife Stadium here is
to be in the best shape you can be. So, you know, all kidding aside and clichés. Yes, it
is obviously pretty different than it was 20, 30 years ago and thankfully so because
the victory now is the perseverance and being able to still do it. And that's kind of what
motivates us. Yeah, I bet it doesn't.
I bet you can't imagine.
I bet you're speaking about your younger selves.
I bet you're 17 year old self when you met James Headfield and you guys formed Metallica.
Can you imagine that all these years later, you guys would still be fucking rocking out
and going and playing stadiums around the world.
Yeah, it's pretty crazy.
We've just, we've been playing. So I looked into it the other day. So we've played out it used to be called giant stadium
Now you have to say met life so you don't because you get into a whole divisive conversation
That naming a giant in the jets. You don't want to you don't want to do that around here
But we've played I just looked it up. We've played giant stadium nine times and
And we've had an obviously a relationship
with a greater New York tri-state area,
whatever you wanna call it, for four plus decades.
The two shows we just played this weekend
were the two biggest shows we've ever played
in New York City.
So that, that's amazing.
So that's not a, hey, look how great big Metallica is or whatever.
That's about the music scene, that's about post-COVID people want to come out and live
again.
That's about hard rock still.
But they're not coming out for everybody, you know.
You deserve credit for the longevity and the relevance and the quality of the music
and your relationship with your fans and all of us up,
your mental health, right?
Because if you guys were a disaster,
people would probably get turned off by
if there was a bunch of infighting and all that garbage.
So you've kept it all together.
Thank you.
I appreciate that.
But I, you know, I think a significant part of what
drives us to this day is that we're kind of led by the
mantra of our best days are still ahead of us and our favorite record is the
one we haven't made yet and that we actually made sure and professional at some
point of view is for real one day. And we will be right back. Smart list is
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And now back to the show.
You know, I want to kind of give into a little bit about you and James,
you got, because you guys met at such a young age,
talking about like the, you know,
and that you seem to still have by virtue
of what you just said.
You still have this like drive to like create something new
and you're still excited about that creative process.
What was it about that when you guys met at such a young age with coming from such different
backgrounds?
What was the thing that clicked for you guys creatively?
Yeah, because before you answer that, just to piggyback on that, I think it's fascinating.
What will just said, that at such a young age, you found somebody else that wanted to take
it as serious as you did.
What are the odds of that?
Yeah.
You know?
And every time people ask me that question, I always have to throw in that the energy of
the universe is a big part of it because, you know, like you're saying, the two of us
finding each other, you know, what we had in common, there were so many things we didn't
have in common, but what we had in common was that we were both sort of loners. We were both, we weren't like outcasts in that sense or like the awkward weirdos, but we
were loners and we were misfits and we were disenfranchised in a way that we just lived
in our own worlds and listened to all music.
When I ended up at Coral del Mar High School in 1980.
Trust me, there was nobody else
wearing an iron maiden t-shirt.
And so it was a pretty,
it was a pretty isolated existence.
And so what James and I ended up doing was
we were the brothers that neither of us, you know,
never had.
And we started writing songs together and
and just creating the world for ourselves that we wanted to inhabit. And at that time
there was never anything about, you know, goals or success or we're going to be, you know,
famous or this is going to translate into something, you know, with the mainstream success,
that there was none of that,
because at that time, the music that we were into
and the things that were turning us off
were so edgy and so isolated away from mainstream
acceptance that was never, that was never even the cards.
But, you know, what's interesting about that, Laras,
is that you guys were making like,
you know, whatever you want to call it, hard rock, heavy metal.
You guys were making like music that was really driving it and it was not necessarily mainstream.
And then I think about, I think I probably went through your four records in with, by the
time you guys made Metallica, which is a lot of people called the black album, by the time
you guys made Metallica, you really broke through to the mainstream.
You had a few hits that were kind of like leading up to it,
but then the black album really broke through.
And in a lot of ways I've thought before,
I was like, is it that everybody else's tastes change
or that you guys kind of,
you guys prepared everybody to listen to this music.
Like you guys kind of got them into this hard rock in a way.
I don't know.
I think you have to put the record companies in there
when you answer that question.
And so the record companies at that time
were the gateway to everything.
So the record companies, it's like the analogy of said many times
is that you walk into a restaurant and you can have anything that you want in the restaurant
as long as it's on the menu.
The record companies were the purveyors of the menu and so the record companies were only
signing things that they thought would appeal to a large group of people.
But hovering over in the left field were all these people like ourselves that wanted something that would anxieties and issues just like ourselves.
And so slowly over the 80s, as more and more kids understood that they were music out there for them,
like the type of stuff that we were doing, they started moving further and further, left.
They started moving the mainstream further and further out to where bands like ourselves were hovering.
And there was that seismic shift then towards the late 80s when all of a sudden, the mainstream
realized that there were other options that they had been fed over the years.
Right. And you guys were like you said, lyrically, Sean, that way, and I don't know,
lards, if you heard me before you came on, I quoted your song one. And I said,
you know, take my brothers, I pray for death. uh, uh, you know, take my brothers.
I pray for death.
Oh God, please take it.
I did.
Yeah.
And like that, I didn't write that one down as a potential, but no, I know.
I have the other ones.
Well, you already have that song.
That song already exists as a hit.
And it's like, it's still hard to beat bread balls.
But that song is like, I mean, you think about you guys that, I mean, that song specifically
is about a guy who's basically
in a calmer right, he's kind of paralyzed,
or what's the deal with that?
Like, nobody was writing songs about that and everything.
We spent a lot of time, we spent a lot of time
sort of wondering what, you know, different mental states.
And so at one point we were talking about what would be like
if you couldn't speak, see or or hear and you had no arms or legs
But you were just a living conscious. What would that feel like?
What what would go on inside you if you were just a living conscious?
And then we found out about Dalton Trumbull's story of Johnny Gartis gun and then
We wrote a song around that and then realized that there was actually
a movie with Jason Robards that came out, I think, what, late 60s, early 70s. And that
became our first video. And that was a four albums in. And at that time, we had never
made any videos for MTV. And we were sort of the anti-MTV band, but we finally felt that we had an idea
that was worthy of making a video.
And you guys remember something called dial MTV
back or day.
So the first day that that video premiered
and was eligible for dial MTV had premiered at number one
and it stayed at number one for like the next couple of months.
And that was a significant, I think,
a wake-up call to a lot of the industry,
them realizing that there was something else out there
than I don't wanna mention names,
but that that was out there at that time
that was generating a lot of the attention.
Something more than Frankie goes to Hollywood with the lasers.
Way to go, JB.
I mean, well, the dancing all around it.
Do you miss videos at all?
We still make videos.
We made for a new album.
Now it's actually the opposite for the last two records we put out.
We've made videos for every song on them because if you now, you know, so many people
here, albums on YouTube, so you want to have a video that you've made yourself for every song on your album rather than having somebody else make them. So we've made
videos for every song in the last album that just came out a few days ago. I love that.
I remember long, long time ago, I don't remember the year, but just when you're dead. This is when you're dead. When my dad left, yeah, it was 1975.
No.
Do you have a question for my dad?
I'm trying to drive and just light up the rear
positraction and go.
No, I have a question.
You know, just like, just like Metallica,
they turn professional one day.
You guys should do this.
We will try to do it.
No, I remember when hearing about you doing a concert in Antarctica, right?
That's right.
I was the only band who's played on all seven continents.
It was sort of by chance. It was not something that we set out to do.
Well, I don't think one would.
But yeah. No, but it's not like you sit there and go,
Hey, what should we do this year?
Let's play all seven continents.
We were playing in Latin America.
We were playing in Europe.
We were playing in North America.
We had shows in, you know, in Africa and Asia
and all of a sudden it was like, whoa,
there's a thing happening here.
And we got an offer from, I believe it was Coca-Cola.
It was soft drink in Brazil,
who said that they were putting together a competition.
And the prize was to travel to an article and hang out
and they wanted to know if we would come down
and play for this group of soft drinkers.
Was it cold?
Well, it was December, which is their June,
which is their high summer.
And it wasn't as cold and it wasn't as frigid
and it wasn't as sort of otherworldly
as you would expect it to be.
Yeah, because I was gonna say,
how do your hands work?
But we were down there for a couple of four or five days.
We stayed on an icebreaker
and we stayed with all the contest winners
and all our crew were all on this icebreaker together
which was super fun.
And then we played on a Chilean research base
and we played in a tent.
And you guys know what Silent Disco is?
No, we were already very busy. So every, exactly, everybody had headphones on.
So the, I think there were like maybe 300 people there
and total everybody had headphones on,
so they could hear the music.
And so it didn't disturb the environment.
It didn't disturb the penguins.
It didn't disturb the other endangered species
of animals that were there.
And so we left no, there was not even,
not even noise pollution. It's weird I last
summer I was in New York and I saw these kids like late night and they're all in
the steps of this church like midnight on a Friday night and everybody's moving
nobody's saying a word and I realize they've all got headphones on they're all
jamming and they're all dancing to the song but you can't exactly the only thing
you can hear in the room
are the lead vocals and the drums.
Other than that, all the amplified instruments
are going through the headphones.
So it was definitely a mind-fuck to be down there,
a lot of fun and to answer your question.
It wasn't as crazy cold or as fucked up
as you would imagine it to be.
But it was cool.
Well, I want to go back to James just for one second.
Just talk about collaboration and sort of sharing power and creativity and not just with
him, but with the rest of the band mates.
I mean, you guys have been together and so successful and so harmonious, no pun intended for so long.
Is there a secret sauce to that?
I'm sure there's some good leadership involved.
Yeah, I would say the probably the word compromise.
Sure.
You gotta learn to compromise.
You gotta learn to know and to lead
and you gotta learn when to step back.
James and I have been obviously in the band since the beginning and we, I guess, we steer most of the creative conversations
and we take turns steering and I think compromise is the key thing. And if you want to be in a band in your 50s and 60s,
and really want to be in a band,
you've got to learn to sort of work with the environment
of sort of how to deal with everybody's personal needs.
The reason that there is millions of bands how to deal with everybody's personal needs.
The reason that there is millions of bands of people
in their teens and 20s and fewer bands of people
in their 50s and 60s is, you know,
when people get older, they just don't wanna deal
with other people's shit.
And you don't wanna compromise and you don't wanna,
hey, I've got, you know, my son's graduation
is the week of Lala Palusa.
Oh, well, I guess we can't play Lala Palusa or whatever.
So there's a lot of those types of conversations
that take place.
And we have a thing in our band where everybody gets a chance
to, you know, black dates out and put, you know,
exes in a calendar and that can't be challenged.
We're very supportive of each other's personal space.
And we, you know, we put more resources and time into sort of the whole thing functioning as a band than we ever have before.
And I'm not going to bullshit you.
I mean, that doesn't get any easier as you get older now
Most of the kids are grown up and and you know off to college or in their 20s So there's less concerns about getting home, but we you know we
I mean 10 years ago we were tour in two-week increments
We would go on the road for two weeks go home for two weeks, you know go on the road for two weeks, go home for two weeks, you know, go on the road for two weeks, go home for two weeks.
So we wouldn't miss, you know, being with our kids and all that stuff.
It's gonna ask you about that about family. I mean, you guys must have had some very
supportive and flexible families
throughout all the way.
Yeah, but we've also steered it in the direction
of trying to keep all that, you know,
as together as possible.
I'm sure it's the same with you guys,
but you know, in our world, it takes a few years
before you realize that you actually have a say
in some of this.
Yeah.
When you start out, you just get handed a schedule
there's like, and when you're 22 years old,
hey, I just want to play as many gigs as possible
and travel as much as be as drunk as possible
and get into all kinds of crazy shenanigans.
But then you realize later, hang on a second,
I can actually say, I only want to be on the road
for three months, and then I want to spend three months
at home.
Or, you know, so, you know, as you go along and become more successful, you realize
it, you have a saying this stuff.
Well, we're lucky because we started doing, certainly we started doing this thing in our
50s. And as we've done, and we've talked about maybe, you know, we went on, we did a short
two or a couple years ago and we're talking about doing another one. But everything that
we do, we always do
with the understanding that like everybody's got stuff,
and if somebody's got stuff, we never challenge it
in that same way either because we know what life's like
and it's kids and it's thing
and it's Sean's been doing his play for six months
and like that's important.
So we've got to honor that and that's a thing you got to do.
I forgot to ask, because I've always wanted to know this.
Favorite color? No, I was to ask, because I always wanted to know this. Favorite color?
I think I was gonna, I was gonna,
I was gonna, I was gonna, I was gonna,
I was gonna, I was gonna, I was gonna, I was gonna,
I know that Sean was letting up.
Favorite advertiser on the Chin Chin menu.
No, no, no, no.
What was, what's your favorite?
Dipping sauce for the-
Who came up with Metallica?
No, Metallica, we're that kind of-
Don't play Dipping Sauce.
The name?
Yeah, man.
Ron Quintana. Ron Quintana.
Ron Quintana was a friend of mine at San Francisco.
Up in San Francisco, there was a little bit
of a different music scene than an LA
when we started, and we started playing up
in San Francisco early, and we had some friends up there
and so on, but one of the guys up there, Ron Quintana,
he, back then, pre-internet, pre- you know, all this stuff, you know, if you wanted information
about your favorite bands, you had to, you know, write to pen pals or, you know, and everybody,
everybody that was really into music at the time made their own fan scenes, as they were called. So it was eight pages, stable together down at Kingco's
about whatever their favorite French heavy metal band
that five people had heard of was into.
And so Ron Quintana wanted to start a little fan magazine.
And he asked me one day whether he should call it Metal Mania
or whether he should call it Metallica.
And I told him to call it Metal Mania.
And we're taking Metallica.
I'll hang onto the Metallica for you.
And so I've been forgiven that.
Thankfully a long time ago and Ron is still a good friend.
It's cool.
It's a fucking, it's a rad name.
It's good.
Feels good on my tongue.
So Lars, this is the stand shot.
Oh, I'm sure you're done.
Hey, Sean.
Sorry to subject you to my dumb question here,
but I asked, but I use my favorite answer.
God, again, Lars, we're so sick.
I'm a city to play in.
Isn't it cold playing without your top on?
No.
Sure. No, I don't know.
Reef's not.
Reef's not.
Reef's not.
Why is your hand always backwards?
What's going on?
You don't want to see what lives under here trust me.
Oh, what doesn't live under there?
I want another craziest tourist story, like fan weirdness.
There's something that went wrong on stage or during a set or like you got to have something
that just was like,
oh God, the worst one of all was blank.
Well, we're very lucky.
I'll answer both.
We're very lucky in that we have an incredible group
of people that follow us pretty much wherever we go.
We actually started selling tickets to them.
On the last tour, we have something called a black ticket.
So you can buy now a ticket that gets you into all the shows on a tour.
And so there's, uh, there's, uh, hundreds, if not thousands of people, you know,
we'll go out and play for, you know, six, eight weeks in Europe, order.
And it's, you know, we see all the same faces down front.
No, so passionate and they come from all over from Latin America, from Asia, from Europe.
So we have the black tickets.
What's that black ticket running, Lars?
Yeah.
Yeah.
The black ticket.
Well, I know people, if you're interested, Jason, and you want to come out, it runs,
uh, it's got to be some kind of a break on it, right?
800, that's, what?
That's a big break.
Yeah.
There's a big break.
That's nothing.
Uh, it's, uh's for all those shows.
We tried to be his fan for. How much did he say?
How much did he say? $800. You can see all the shows in the entire tour.
Fucking way. Now they don't get to jump on the plane. I don't get to jump on the plane.
No, but I'm going to buy for I'm going to buy for all of us. Fuck, Lars. I'm going to get
you one too. Yeah. You know what though? I wish'd had that, you know, I saw you guys. So, Lars, I saw you in Guns and Roses in September of 1992 at C.N.E.
Canadian National Expression Stadium in Toronto. It was one of the fucking great concerts.
All right.
I'm in. It was unfuck in real. I was 22. Sure.
And you guys rocked it out. And I have such a vivid memory of you. Got it. And even
what it was basically every song you guys played.
And everybody in Unison rocking out, I've never seen it.
I've never seen anything like it before or since,
in the way the dedication and the sort of the rhythmic
unison.
It's very, very, very past religious stuff.
Your eyeballs have seen from your position.
You get to see the whole band in front of you
and then
all of the people in the crowd.
Dude, I'm telling you, it's bizarre.
It was fucking images you have in your head must be.
We're also now, I'll circle back to the question, the Chani was asking earlier and I'll
give you a variation in what you just said about seeing all the people in front of me.
So you talk about malfunctions.
The first one that always comes to mind
because it left a deep, deep scar.
You were talking about the black album will.
And so we were touring on the black album,
which was our most successful record, up till then.
And we had been in America for maybe a year, year and a half.
We'd done the guns and roses tour and we were
starting in Europe a few months later and we were playing in London and at that time and obviously
still you know London is just press and business and peers and you know publicity and all the
all the you know people from all from all the record companies and all the publicists
and everybody from all of Europe are there.
It's London and at that time it's all music magazines and weekly, like the enemy and
Karrang and blah, blah, blah.
And so we're playing in the round, which we still do.
And I have a drum kit on either side of the stage,
and halfway through the set,
I'm supposed to run over,
and then the other drum kit,
I'm supposed to sit on the other drum kit
as it lifts out of the stage,
and then I play the other half of the show over on the other side.
We could probably guess what happened.
So this is the first big show
of this European tour. Everybody in our universe is there. And so the drum kit, you know, under the
stage, I'm on the drum kit and it won't fucking lift up out of the stage. So my view is not 20,000 crazy
people in Wembley Arena, wherever it was.
It's all the nuts and bolts and the steel
and the 12 roadies that are down under the stage
with like crowbars and fucking screwdrivers and hammers
or whatever they're trying to do
and they're trying to get this thing
to lift up out of the stage.
I ended up playing like a song in a half underground.
Under the stage submerged, just sitting there.
And as Metallica was supposed to have all these articles written about the triumphant return
back to Europe after three years after being the biggest rock band in America.
The whole story was just about Larsus fucking drums
that didn't want to lift out of the stage.
Welcome back to Europe. Thank you very much.
That's great. I love that.
That is so great.
And so...
So, what did you finish the rest on the other drum set?
The rest of the show on the other.
And eventually, with enough crowbars and determination,
the drums ended up on stage where they belonged.
That's good.
We'll be right back.
up on stage with their belong. That's good.
We'll be right back.
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And back to the show. Are you excited by anybody right now that you're comfortable saying that has
sort of the same kind of early ambition that you guys had to sort of be a little left or
a little right of what is being embraced, you know, that sort of real mainstream. You
guys are really courageous by kind of pushing the envelope. Is there somebody in music right
now that you're excited about their courage?
I mean, there's a lot of great people in garages
and in bedrooms all over, obviously,
making records on their computers now
that don't need to go into studios
and do the whole, the whole spiel
that everybody had to do 20, 30 years ago.
They don't have to rely on record companies.
I think an artist like Billy Eilish, you know, what her and her brother did a couple years
ago, those first records that were made at home on the computers is crazy cool and is
so, it sort of epitomizes, you know, the shift of, you need a record contract and you need half a million bucks
to go into a proper studio and make a record now.
And they made those first couple of records
just at home on their computers.
And that to me, it's indicative of the possibilities
now that the technology, the four of us could make a record for the rest of the possibilities now that the technology,
you know, the four of us could make a record
for the rest of the afternoon and put it out tomorrow.
Let's do it.
Jesus, where are we not doing this?
Where are we not doing this?
Why are we not doing this right?
Fucking now, Lauren, do we want to break the internet or not?
What are we doing?
Well, speak a little bit more about that,
about the record industry and stuff,
not not to get sort of in the weeds about all that, but, you know, obviously there's been a
big, a big, big change in the record industry were streaming, etc.
Yeah, and you're not really selling albums as much as more of kind of all a cart kind
of songs that are downloaded on streamers, and then the bands really make their money
curriculum if I'm wrong from touring now.
And so I'm assuming that the bands, if they want to make money, they got to be on the road more. Are you guys on the road more?
You guys don't need to make money. But how are you, how are you feeling about the way the,
the business is sort of balanced right now as far as being out versus selling album, staying home
and the, the, the, the ratio of that? Well, obviously it's changed quite a bit.
and the ratio of that.
Well, obviously it's changed quite a bit.
And in your guys' industry, some of the same things that we were dealing
with 20 years ago are happening.
I mean, big picture,
and I know this may sound like a little bit of a cop out.
I'm just happy that fucking anybody cares
about what we're doing and she'll stop to see us play
and still stream or buy or steal our records or whatever.
It, the engagement in self, I think,
is the triumph and the victory.
Obviously, it's way, way harder for a lot of the younger bands
nowadays because they don't get the support
of the record companies nowadays because they don't get the support of the record companies
for basic things, just like gear and tour support. So there is very much of a different thing.
It's, I just, you know, talent, good songwriting eventually will find a home with a larger group of people
and whether you do it from your bedroom
or through a record company or whatever.
I believe that everybody will be heard eventually
if they're talented, but it is tough.
It's tough for a lot of the younger bands out there
and for a lot of the bands that, you know,
20 years ago could make a living playing clubs or theaters or have in a harder time now because
they don't sell as many records and you really have to be out there and pushing it.
Do you feel like when you go and you make a record, like your new record, 72 seasons that you guys
made, that came out this year and that you're touring,
I think you're touring this year on, right?
This is what the, on the new record.
When you make that new record,
when you guys have conversations about it coming out,
like are you guys like, or I don't know,
the record company or whoever,
it's such a different approach
because you're not going to the record store,
it's not sending out vinyl or it's not sending out CDs or it's not sending out.
It's like load, load up the, the streamer or does that play it all into it?
Yeah, I mean, it's the key thing, you know, as an artist, I think when you,
you write songs and it's the same with you guys, you want to start a conversation.
You want people to engage.
You want people to hear your music.
How they hear it, I guess, eventually become second tier.
And you understand that it's a changed model
than it was 25 years ago, 50 years ago, or whatever.
I think that in our know, in our band,
we just love writing songs and we love making records.
We love the creative process and that's,
there are a lot of bands that have been around as long as we have
that simply don't want to make records anymore because it either
doesn't work for them or the business model of it doesn't work
for them and I can't speak for everybody else.
We love writing songs.
Being creative is a significant part of who we are and it gives us a chance to
you know what what makes us stay functioning is that we go from writing to recording to playing gigs to writing to home. We're always changing up what we're doing.
So we never get stuck in the sameness over and over.
And so we're not always on the road.
We're not always in the studio.
We're not always taking our kids to school
or whatever we're not always doing the same thing.
So you have to kind of keep just breaking it up
and changing what you're doing. And so obviously,
I understand that we're exceptionally fortunate, but our success gives us the opportunity to
to sort of do all that. And but we would be if if somebody said you can't write or make records
anymore, we would probably stop what we're doing
because it's such an essential part of just our existence.
Sure, sure.
And I love, by the way, I love that you didn't say
exceptionally lucky you said it for you
because you're not lucky.
It wasn't luck that you guys got here.
You guys are talented, but you do recognize the full story.
You also have nowhere at minute 1590,
as it said storyteller.
I know it's true, it's true, he's not so story-tellier.
We, Lord, I have a list of words here not know it's true. It's true. He's not saying storyteller. We love the Lord.
I have a list of words you're not to say on podcast.
That's number seven.
Yes.
If we if we if we got a hold of if we got a hold of your personal music device, whatever
it is that you that you use when you're like working out on when you're cycling or whatever
doing whatever what's on there.
What do you listen?
What gets you going?
What do you like to listen to?
Currently, I don't mean of all time, Mrs. Erly.
It's very varied, obviously.
I'll still circle those deep purple records
from 50 years ago that I...
Is there a genre you're not a fan of?
No, I mean, I listen to everything from rock music,
to jazz music, to reggae, to pop, to hip hop, R&B.
I think the easiest way to answer is,
and forgive me again, if it sounds like a cop-op,
but there really are only two kinds of music.
There's great music and less great music,
and so in hard rock, there's great music and less great music, just so in hard rock, there's there's great music and less great
music, just like in pop or in reggae, you know, a couple days ago, driving back from rehearsals
out at MetLife Stadium. We were we're just going to think to a...
We love Brunsky.
I was pumping some bronsky beat and some...
It's a one.
Jimmy Somerville.
Yeah, Jimmy Somerville.
Beat boy, beat boy, hit that perfect beat boy.
No way.
And you're listening to the happy Mondays.
We're really listening to Stone Rose and Stone Rose.
Tristan Memele, man.
You know you speak so, man.
Oh, Stone Rose of Fools.
Who's gold? I love Stone Rose. Dinner, dinner Rose of Fools, go. I love Stone Rose.
Dinner, dinner, dinner, dinner, and listen to that.
So it's a lot of varied stuff.
A lot of varied stuff.
To a lot of time.
Lars, we're in the same, we're in the same.
What about listening to a full album?
And like since, since, people don't, yeah, people don't really buy albums as much as they
used to.
They're sort of pulling down kind of a single song here,
Alacart there, whereas like Pink Floyd,
the wall comes to mind where there's a whole through line,
a thread, a continuity, a thematic that goes
throughout the whole album because bands knew
that people would potentially buy an entire album.
Is that a single?
You're saying it to a history?
And you're saying that they're telling us to.
I'm all around it, but I'm not going to say it. You were so close to it. But like,
do you think that that will ever kind of happen again? Where there's like a like a rock opera
that's kind of like Tommy. Yeah, it's in the beginning to not and not in the classic sense that
you're saying it. I mean, there's a great band who we've had
played with us the last couple years called Greta Van Fleet.
Oh, that love that those guys are great.
And they have a they still write longer songs. They, you know, appeal to a very young
audience and they still do like crazy long guitar solos. They're really, really great
songwriters. They're very dramatic. They're very theatrical, those kids, man.
Yes, they're cool.
But super cool.
We've had them with us playing a special guest
for the last couple of years to our last shows.
But I don't think that...
Yeah, but let me tell you something.
Jason's idea is good because here's the thing.
In Hamilton, the musical Hamilton, it's rapping.
Everybody wraps.
It's like, a musical that,
people would be floored if you guys
used your music or create a new music with your sound.
It's never been done.
I'm not going to do a musical.
What about a musical, ours?
That's what I'm saying.
Come on.
Let's make some, let's make some news right now.
I love the reaction to this face.
No, I can see his face.
That's a, yeah, guys, we've got it.
There it is.
The tale of the music.
You can use it. Laura, let me ask you this before we're looking for you.
An exclusive. Is that what we're doing? No, we're not, we're not getting into musicals.
Sean, for once, just one guest, just leave them out of musicals.
Yes. Stop getting everyone on the board.
He wants to fucking nobody likes musicals.
Lars doesn't like cats. I know. He doesn't. I, listen, I saw Hamilton.
I saw OG Hamilton.
Yeah.
OG OG and was as blown away as everybody else and subsequently saw what four times.
And think that Lynn is amazing.
I'm going to challenge the credible on this planet.
Oh, it's talent.
It's talent.
I went back later that night and just like Google
then YouTube as much as I could.
That clip where he's in the White House,
like five, six years earlier,
did you guys see that clip?
So Hamilton came out in about 16.
This is what oh nine, he was in the White House
and was telling Obama and the rest of the gathered there
that he was working on a musical about Alexander
Hamilton.
Yeah, and everybody was just laughing.
Yeah.
And then he did like, he did the first five minutes of it afterwards that he got like standing
a face.
Yeah, he's a genius.
He is.
Fucking never seen that clip, Jason.
No, I'm going to check it out.
Oh, it's, you got to check it out.
It's just a piano in him rapping.
Yeah.
Oh, that's great. Or something like that. check it out. It's just a piano and him rapping. Oh, that's great.
Or something like that.
Really fucking crazy.
Yeah, he's a mega talent.
He's a mega talent and guess what?
I'll tell you what, let's meet, I'll meet you halfway.
Okay.
Okay.
My sense is it's going well.
So when Metallica has some musical news,
you guys can break it.
Yes, I love it.
I love that. I love this for you. If you'll have me back even just five minutes and we can break it. Yes. I love that. I love that. I love that.
I love that. If you'll have me back even just five minutes and we can make it an exclusive
for us. You're the fourth host. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth. You're the fourth take you to the market for us. He did, you're a man.
Wow.
We was going great to you.
We can get into, I read about William Freak
and also this morning, or yesterday, and I understand
the no mentioning of the great films that he made,
and et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
And I did read about the,
so people know it because of this strike we can't mention them.
Just a tracinac.
Yeah, no, I'm right there with Lars
Yeah, listen, he was he was another genius too and I and I and I again
I don't want to embarrass you, but you're a genius man. You you've made so much great music for so long
Yeah, such a fan you're a nice guy. Yeah, that's that's the that's the patient
You don't have to be in you all right vibe and you're such a great dude and it was such a pleasure meeting you all those years ago and having you on your
Right back at talking you man
And just like I've known you
Continued success dude. Well, thank you. Thanks. I have to get back out. Get back here. We'll go hang out with coupe
Let's do it. He's gonna cover him. So I'm sitting up in my publicist's office here in in down in Tribeca
And I walked in and was handed this piece of paper.
I go, wow, this is high tech.
Yeah, I care.
Yeah.
No limits here.
We are top of the heap over here.
It's marvelous.
Thank you for saying yes to this guy.
Thanks for having me.
Thanks for being your pick, Will.
I enjoyed the time a couple years ago in France.
And it's great to see you guys.
It's nice to meet you.
Nice to meet you too.
And good luck on the rest of the tour.
Yeah.
When we have musical news, we'll break it with you.
I love it.
It would be honor.
Thank you, Lars.
Thanks, buddy.
See you soon.
Thank you, man.
Bye.
Bye, bye, bye.
Wow.
That was a great gett Willie.
Yeah.
You know, it's the interesting about him is, you know, I wasn't
one to run out and buy Metallica.
Obviously, I like their songs and know a lot of them and was a fan of them growing up
too.
But it's rare that the drummer is as famous as the band.
It's true.
Well, who else?
Phil Collins.
Phil Collins.
Yeah, but Lars and James started
the band right so they formed it together. So you had guitarist and drummer like WAM band.
Yeah, I guess I guess boy, that might be the first connection there. Yeah. So which one
would Andrew Ritchley be? I guess it would be Lars. Huh, okay.
Let's get Lars back on the lower way.
And by the way, and let's get James on here real quick, you know what I mean?
James that makes you George.
So I guess.
No, you really very very cool.
He's so cool.
He's such a cool dude and he does have such a great vibe and he's so, I don't know,
he's, I just love the way you can really access all everything
when you ask him a question and he can really access it and he's so sort of concise and
he's so quick and.
Yes, I like that he's open to sharing anything.
Yeah, yeah, I love that.
I thought it's a key to keeping a little, a little grip together.
It's just don't be a dick.
Yeah, okay.
Yeah, 100%.
You see me looking at you, Sean and Will.
No, he's looking at me. He's looking at me. No, you're looking in the mirror, you're looking in the mirror.
No, not looking at my square. You're square. Just laptop.
You're gonna see I can't believe we miss them at giant or met life,
whatever. I think it's a great idea if they open for us.
But we should leave you as close.
If you ask for metallic. It's so great that he was offering.
I'm pretty sure he was offering to open for us.
Yeah, let's wait till they get a little closer to Los Angeles.
I know, but they are because they're on tour for their record 72 seasons.
And it would be great to go and we should definitely go see them in Los Angeles.
That'd be so fun.
That'd be fine.
I would love to see.
I'm going to go see Tate Tate tomorrow night.
Are you?
I think that's what is not what kids or kids are calling her.
Tate Tate's lefty.
Yeah.
Are you going to Tate Tate tomorrow?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Are you taking Franny and MAP?
No, no, just solo.
Just a one.
Just a one.
It's going to be in the parking lot with a little sign.
Single.
Single.
Single.
Anyone got a single?
No, it will be a full family.
Thanks video of your self to alone. Yeah, she's part of the family and we're all going
to go and a self driver over. No, I'll be self driving, you know, don't drink
anymore. So I know, I know, but I know how you know, we get into the state, where's it?
So if I it's at so far, yeah, And apparently you got to pick an album to sort of dress as, and I don't know.
Name one of our albums, one.
Name one of our albums.
I couldn't.
I'm going to go ahead and see what I'm wearing right now.
That's what it'll be tomorrow night.
Oh, you know what I refer to that is the, the, the, the, fuck it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You got a lot of buckets.
Wasn't George Costanza's, if you wear sweats, you're were a sweats, you're telling the world you've given up?
I mean, I guess so.
There it is, Sean is giving up.
Oh, look, Sean.
Look, I have something to say.
If Metallica can't open for us at every single leg of our tour,
if we tour again, they should just do at least at one of them
or two of them just do a fly.
Bye!
Don't do the flying.
Don't do the flying.
Bye, smart.
Bye, smart.
Bye, smart.
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Every big moment starts with a big dream. But what happens when that big dream turns out to be a big flop.
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