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Kings of Thrash Starts TONIGHT! San Diego, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Hollywood – Ellefson, Poland, Young – 2022 – VIDEO

David Ellefson:

San Diego here we come!!! Kings of Thrash starts TONIGHT! Fast, old school thrash, loud & rude….just like the old days!

Come meet the band before the show! Get your KINGS OF THRASH VIP tickets now at http://www.kingsofthrashvip.com and concert tickets to the upcoming shows now at these outlets below:

San Diego

Phoenix

Las Vegas

West Hollywood

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Megadeth’s Dave Mustaine: “Very rarely have I started sh**, you know?” – 2022 – Interview – Talks Metallica, James Hetfield, Lars Ulrich, Gar Samuelson

Classic Rock Magazine:

The Big Interview: Dave Mustaine

An excerpt from the interview can be found below. You can read the entire interview @ this location.

INTERVIEW EXCERPT:

Is it difficult for you to talk about Metallica?

Dave Mustaine:

No. I really don’t give a fuck. And you know what? I love those guys. I sent a text message to James just a couple of days ago after he’d said that he was insecure about his playing. I said: “James, I love you and I really like your playing.” He didn’t answer. Of course not. Why would he? The point is I wanted him to know that I’ve had those feelings too, but I don’t now.

I must remind you that when I joined Metallica, James did not play guitar. He just picked it up and started playing when I was in the band. But let’s be honest, James is one of the best metal guitar players in the world. So for him to have those feelings, that’s a lie, because he’s a mind-blowingly talented guy. So I just felt I needed to say something to him. I didn’t tweet it. I didn’t want anybody to know what I said. But I’m telling you because, hey, you brought it up!

(In your autobiography) You said of your time in Metallica: “I was the leader of the band.” That’s quite a statement to make.

Why?

Because the guys who founded that band, James Hetfield and Lars Ulrich, are such alpha males.

Oh no. I am clearly the alpha male between the three of us. Why did I have to do everything when I was in the band? Why did they always ask me talk to the promoters and collect the cash? Why was I the one who had to do the fighting? Why did I have to talk in between songs?

You’ve said your father was an alcoholic. Have you ever felt that your descent into alcoholism and drug addiction was in some sense pre-ordained?

I was always curious about drinking, and it tried to lure me into that abyss. There’s a lot of other people from that period that didn’t make it out alive, but I’m still here to tell the tale. I consider myself to be really happy. I have a wine company, and I’ll sip the wine to taste it when we’re doing new blends.

And when my son Justis got married, it was balls-hot and I wasn’t going to just sit out in the sun drinking water, man! But the days of looking for hookers to help me find some heroin in the Moulin Rouge district? Those days are over. And honestly, I don’t know why you brought that up. It’s kind of unfair. I mean, fuck, it’s not very flattering.

You weren’t shy about telling your drug stories in your autobiography ten years ago. On the contrary, you put it all out there in lurid detail.

My point is, do we want to regurgitate stuff, or do we want new stuff, seeing as I’m living and breathing, and I’ve got new things to talk about? It’s your call. And however you write it, I just hope that nobody who looks up to me would read this and think that something like heroin is the answer. Because that’s how I got tricked into it. Gar [Samuelson, former Megadeth drummer] told me if I wanted to be great, I had to do it.

Looking back at your life now, do you have any regrets?

Yeah. I regret not saying goodbye to Gar. When we parted ways, it was really ugly, because Gar and Chris [Poland, then Megadeth guitarist] were selling [the musical equipment] for heroin. Every time we get ready to go on the road we had to go to all the neighborhood pawn shops to get that stuff back. So when we parted ways it was bad.

And then many years later, out on tour, we went through Florida one time, and I saw Gar and he looked really different – and not in a good way. His hair was super-long, and his eyes were really sunken. He ended up dying from liver failure. I wish I would have known and been able to talk to him a little bit more. It was always: “Hey, I’ll call you in a couple of days.” And you don’t. So that’s a regret for me.

That said, you seem happy with where you’re at now.

Well, there’s a saying we have here in Tennessee: that dog don’t hunt. And there’s another around here: if you’re going to run with the big dogs, you need to learn how to piss in the tall grass.

That’s an odd expression. Can you explain how it relates to you?

Let’s just say that it takes a little bit more to get me riled up nowadays. In the past, when people used to talk shit about me, I would look at who it was and I would think: “This guy is saying something, and he wants me to respond because he’s got a new album coming out. He wants some cheap publicity.” Usually whenever I say anything, it’s back at someone else. Very rarely have I started shit, you know? But someone would say something and then I’d say: “Alright, game on!”

You can read the entire interview @ this location.

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Kings of Thrash Promo/Rehearsal VIDEO – David Ellefson, Chris Poland, Jeff Young – 2022

David Ellefson: KINGS OF THRASH “The MEGA Years” tour promo!
David Ellefson, Jeff Young, Chris Poland – Kings of Thrash

Kings of Thrash are gearing up for our OCTOBER WEST U.S. TOUR

GET TICKETS

The Kings of Thrash “The MEGA Years” tour dates are as follows:
Spread the word & get your tickets now!

10/12/22 – San Diego, CA
10/13/22 – Phoenix, AZ
10/14/22 – Las Vegas, NV
10/15/22 – West Hollywood, CA

Video by Paul McGuire

KINGS OF THRASH ~ “The MEGA Years”
Featuring David Ellefson & Jeff Young

KINGS OF THRASH “The MEGA Years” featuring David Ellefson & Jeff Young set to perform live the “Killing is my Business….and Business is Good” as well as “So Far, So Good… So What” albums in their entirety on upcoming west coast tour.

KINGS OF THRASH “The MEGA Years” features GRAMMY® Award winning bassist David Ellefson, along with guitarist Jeff Young, reuniting to perform the early Thrash classics upon with the genre was built and defined in the 1980s. Showcasing the songs from the Killing is My Business…and Business is Good & So Far, So Good…So What albums in their entirety, Ellefson & Young stay true to material not performed live in several decades, along with the spirit of the era which launched one of the greatest genres of heavy metal music.

Says Ellefson, “I think we’ve assembled an energetic song list and group of musicians to capture the spirit of a genre we helped create & define so many years ago. Fans have been requesting these songs for a long time now and it seems like a good moment to bring them back to the stage”.

Jeff Young adds, “The mission here is to bring a connection of goodwill through the music, with a collaboration of musicians and friends in our community. Our thrash tribe casts a wide net to give people hope in a time when they’re looking for something positive & uplifting. What better than way to do that than through the music which has become the soundtrack to our lives.”

The KINGS OF THRASH “The MEGA Years” tour will be introducing Chaz Leon on lead vocals & guitar with Fred Aching on drums. Also joining the evening will be special guest guitarist Chris Poland.

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Dave Mustaine on Marty Friedman Quitting Megadeth: “I looked at him as tears ran down his face…I knew that was probably going to be the end” – 2022 – Interview

Guitar World: Dave Mustaine reflects on Marty Friedman’s Megadeth departure: “What happened to Marty was definitely not okay.” You can read the entire article @ this location.

An excerpt from the interview can be found below.

EXCERPT:

Dave Mustaine:

“I’ve always believed we should give the guitar player an opportunity to do a solo that he feels is right for the song. If someone plays something that doesn’t work for the part, then I may make some suggestions. If it’s still not happening, I might say, ‘Okay, this is what I want you to play here.’

“If a lead totally doesn’t work then I’m going to do the part myself. That’s what happened [on] Breadline. And Marty Friedman quit over the solo in Breadline.”

Mustaine explains that Friedman had written and recorded a solo for Breadline in the studio, but Megadeth management wanted the track to be a single, and thought his solo wasn’t right for the song.

“I said [to management], ‘Well, you have three choices. Either you mute the solo completely, have Marty come back and redo it, or I do it.’ And then I said, ‘If I do it, you’d better tell him.’ Well, I redid it, and nobody told Marty.

“So we’re in there listening to the finished album and the solo comes on. It’s my solo, not Marty’s… I looked at him as tears ran down his face and I knew right away that nobody had told him. I knew that was probably going to be the end of Marty Friedman.”

“Our management was supposed to tell him and, for whatever reason, they didn’t do it. I think that was a terrible thing to do to him.”

Questioned on whether he could have asserted that it wasn’t his call to axe his solo from the track, Mustaine continues:

“Having been a partner with Marty for so many years, as much of an enigma as he was, I could tell he was really upset and he had had enough.

“What happened to Marty was definitely not okay. Our management was supposed to tell him and, for whatever reason, they didn’t do it. I think that was a terrible thing to do to him.”

Read the full interview with Dave Mustaine and Kiko Loureiro in the new issue of Guitar World, available via Magazines Direct.

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Megadeth’s Dave Mustaine Talks Drugs & Metallica on The Joe Rogan Experience: “Kirk Hammett got my royalties for “Metal Militia” for many, many years” – 2022

Dave Mustaine:

I hope you’re ready for this episode… The Joe Rogan Experience.

What did you do right after Metallica?

I think, in my mind, I went right into Megadeth. But, at the time, I was still kind of trying to digest everything that took place.

Well, you were still only twenty-years-old.

Yeah. The thing that bothered me most was I had all my music, and I left it behind.

I said, “Don’t use my music,” and, of course, they did. They used it on the first record. They used it on the second record. There are parts of my music on the third record.

All the solos on the first record are mine except that they’re performed by Kirk (Hammett). Close but not the same. He’s not a bad guitar player.

Did you get royalties for that?

Most of them, yeah, but Kirk got my royalties for “Metal Militia” for many, many years. He has to see the check, so I know somebody saw that I wasn’t getting paid.

On Band Drug Use:

It wasn’t until Megadeth got going and we met Gar (Samuelson) and some of the people in that circle, where we started to experiment with other stuff.

We had a manager, at the time, who was very, very bad-off. He would always try to keep us loaded, and we ended up having to fire the guy because it was for our own health (laughs), our own safety.

I mean, if I was a cheap bastard and didn’t have any money, I’d say, “This is great.” You get high for free. But the thing was is, the guy was keeping several members of the band sick.

When we got signed to Capitol Records, we went up into the tower. We went up into one of the little rooms up there, and the guy slid his desk open. There were lines everywhere. So, yeah, they gave us a box of Nike shoes and all the blow you could eat.

I heard about a band, with a frontman that I really respected, that wanted to be paid in crack. I just thought, “You know what? I’ve lost all respect for you now.”

Listen to the entire episode on Spotify.

Brand new full in bloom interview w/ Ex-Megadeth guitarist Chris Poland

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Interview w/ Guitarist Chris Poland – Talks Megadeth, Drugs, Killing is My Business, Peace Sells: “The drugs that we were doing…You’d do it, and then you’d be able to work all day” – 2022

This is a full in bloom interview with Megadeth/OHM guitarist Chris Poland.

LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA THE EMBEDDED YOUTUBE CLIP BELOW. You can access the video directly on YouTube @ this location.

An excerpt from the interview has been transcribed below.

DESCRIPTION:

Chris talks about Megadeth, Gar Samuelson, Dave Mustaine, David Ellefson, Slayer’s Kerry King, drug use during Killing is My Business and Business is Good and Peace Sells but Who’s Buying.

INTERVIEW EXCERPT:

full in bloom: What was your impression of Dave Mustaine’s playing when you first heard him?

Chris Poland:

I don’t know. There was a lot of drinking going on. The songs were awesome. You knew it was Dave when he played. It just wasn’t the tone I would’ve chosen. As time went on, Jesus, when he made ‘Rust in Peace’ that’s when he really started to get his guitar tone dialed in.

full in bloom: Yeah, to me, that was kind of the peak. Although, ‘Peace Sells’ is my favorite album.

Yeah, I know. His playing on ‘Peace Sells’ is like, it has got that Jimmy Page stagger, but it’s still like dead on. And that’s what was cool is because we were different guitar players and I think that’s what made it, hard-left and hard-right, two different guitars that sound different and were played different is why it gave it that character.

full in bloom: Just to confirm, you guys both played the rhythm tracks, correct?

On ‘Peace Sells,’ yeah.

full in bloom: So, Dave cut all rhythm tracks on ‘Killing is My Business?’

99% of them, yeah. There was a big buzz on that record when it got released, so when we did ‘Peace Sells…’ ‘Peace Sells,’ the reason that record sounded so good is because we did so many tours before we went in to record the record, we knew what worked live. We went right into the studio, coming off the road, so we were really ready to make that record, and we did it in thirty days, man.

full in bloom: And you guys were playing songs from ‘Peace Sells’ on the “Killing is My Business’ tour, right?

Yeah, absolutely, before the record even came out, we were playing them live.

full in bloom: Do you recall which ones specifically?

Probably “Wake Up Dead” and “Peace Sells,” a lot of the good ones. I can’t remember. I know we did a lot of those songs, and we did a lot of the songs from the first record, too.

The first record was hard, man. Those rhythm parts were hard to play. Even the rhythm parts on ‘Peace Sells’ weren’t easy. That’s why Gar (Samuelson) told me, “This band is really challenging, and you won’t get bored, trust me.”

On Drug Use During the Recording of ‘Killing is My Business’:

The drugs that we were doing, it wasn’t like that. You’d do it, and then you’d be able to work all day. Nobody was like falling down or drooling or anything. It was just something that we did.

full in bloom: How did you end up getting into drugs, like even shooting up? How did you get into that?

Well, it got to the point where we were snorting it. The people I would buy it from would tell me, “You’re wasting hundreds of dollars doing that,” and we were running out of money. One day I just thought, “Well, I’m going to see if I can do this.” I sat down and tried to do it and wound up figuring it out, and the rest is history.

full in bloom: But that’s also prior to joining Megadeth, correct?

Oh, no. I didn’t start shooting up until I was in Megadeth.

full in bloom: I thought you and Gar were kind of the experienced ones on that end and Dave and David were…

Oh, yeah. No, we were doing heroin. During that time when I was like, working for those guys. I was going out on the road with them and kind of helping with the equipment, going to gigs when they were a three-piece. That’s when I started (shooting up), money was scarce, and I just figured it out.

Those guys (Dave Mustaine and David Ellefson), when Gar told them, “You don’t want to do this,” they said, “No, we want to do it.” Gar said, “No, you don’t.” They said, “Yes, we do,” and that’s how it happened.

full in bloom: And that starts on ‘Killing is My Business?’

Somewhere in that time period, yes. Sometime, I think, before the recording. But those guys weren’t strung out. They were what people call, ‘chipper/chipping,’ when they just do it once in a while. It wasn’t a habit for them yet. It didn’t become a habit until ‘Peace Sells.’

The entire Chris Poland interview segment is available via the embedded video clip below.

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David Ellefson Looks Back on Megadeth’s ‘Killing Is My Business… and Business Is Good!” Album – 2022 – Kings of Thrash

David Ellefson: The tour Kings of Thrash “The MEGA Years” featuring David Ellefson & Jeff Young, with special guest Chris Poland has been announced! The launch of the four-show run of dates in October 2022 will kick off a celebration of these two seminal Thrash records.

Over the next two weeks Jeff Young and David Ellefson will be weighing in during a web-a-log series talking about the setting and atmosphere in which these two albums were created, as well as the music & culture (and counterculture!) that surrounded them.

Here we go!

THE KILLING CHRONICLES

Episode One:

Although the “Killing is My Business….and Business is Good” record was our debut album, only a few of the earliest compositions actually made their way onto that record. Albums take on a life of their own during production and the song list seems to kind of determine itself. So, many of the initial compositions from 1983-84 were held back but would appear on our sophomore release “Peace Sells…But Who’s Buying”, and one even sat patiently until the “So Far, So Good…So What” album (more on that one later…).

Of the songs which did make their way to the KIMB album were tracks such as ‘The Skull Beneath the Skin’, ‘Looking Down the Cross’ (the original working title ‘Speak No Evil’) ‘Rattlehead’, ‘Loved To Deth’ and ‘Chosen Ones’.

Other early contenders, like ‘Devil’s Island’, ‘The Conjuring’ and ‘My Last Words’ (initially titled ‘The Last Victim’) were recorded two years later in 1986 for the ‘Peace Sells’… album. And of course, ‘Mechanix’ became the controversial song which was initially recorded when Dave was in METALLICA on their “No Life ‘Til Leather” demo. The song was later renamed ‘The Four Horseman’ for their debut album “Kill ‘Em All” which was released summer of 1983. The truth is, while both songs offer the same intro, verse & solo riffs, they are performed very differently by each respective artist. The “Kill ‘Em All” version is simplified and the tempo pulled back significantly while the KIMB version retains its original and more complex note structure in the riffs, and off course the overall arrangement, tempo & lyrics revert back to its original intent as well. Also, Metallica’s double kick drumming follows the staccato verse guitar riff, while the KIMB version offers a shuffle beat which was introduced by Gar Samuelson and his more fusion style drumming methods.

Then, the cover of Nancy Sinatra’s ‘These Boots (Are Made for Walking)’ was suggested to us by our then-manager Jay Jones. Years after the KIMB release, a controversy arose by the song’s composer Lee Hazelwood over the recorded version of the lyrics on KIMB. So, we would thus create edits on the re-release in 2001, as well as a full revamp of the lyrics to its original composition for the re-release of “The Final Kill” in 2018, to avoid any further controversy.

To get some perspective of the musical culture at this time, it was 1983-84 and MTV was thriving and becoming the main driver for all musical artist’s success, even metal! At the time, we lived in Los Angeles and the city was abuzz with the Sunset Strip’s hero’s success of Motley Crue, Quiet Riot, Ratt, W.A.S.P. as well as the city’s outliers and power-metal sounds of Armored Saint & Warrior, each staking their next claims in metal music. Clearly, what we were doing with the creation of the KIMB album was very out of step with this current climate but was one which would lay an important cornerstone for the next genre of Thrash metal which would ultimately take the next crown.

Episode Two:

FAST, LOUD & RUDE was the billing of our debut shows in the San Francisco Bay Area during February 1984, with Kerry King (Slayer) on second guitar.

Coming home from that successful launch of the band, Dave set out to write two more songs before we headed back to the Bay Area for a second round of shows two months later in April. Those two songs would become ‘Rattlehead’ and ‘Loved to Deth’. Both were blistering songs which raised the bar of speed and attack for us as the Bay Area was no place for anything less than full-on brutal assault and aggression. The riffs were cool, and the speed made them exceptionally tricky to perform with proper execution and clarity. That would become a hallmark of our music over the years….

 

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By this time, it was only a year since Dave’s departure from METALLICA but to me, his guitar playing had far surpassed his previous work on the ‘No Life ‘Til Leather’ demo as he was really coming into his own as an inventive and innovative player, implementing new techniques beyond what was heard at that time.

To that end, we wrote, practiced and worked on the songs every day, usually just the two of us between rehearsals in whatever housing situation we were struggling to get by in…where we would move in with friends who would let us crash at their place for a few weeks before we moved on to the next one. It was pure survival mode at this point, and we did whatever it took for us to make it day to day. But the music was always the focus and we worked on it every day trimming, refining and developing the songs until they were complete.

It’s important to note that everything in the band was thought out before it was executed. Never did we just get in a room and jam ideas. Every song was carefully crafted with vision and intention and the song was never done until it was really done!

I began to view Dave as to what I’d read about Eddie Van Halen in the guitar magazines, in that he was always hearing something in his head before he played it on his guitar and he used any method of overhand, tapping, playing up above his fingerboard on his Bill Lawrence pickups (the solo to ‘The Skull Beneath The Skin’) or other methods to achieve what he was hearing & visualizing. That same approach was applied to me on bass as well, as he would often compose a part and then say, “Hey Junior, play this on the bass”, or “Let’s have you do a bass break during this part here”, etc. A couple of those bass features can be found in ‘Chosen Ones’ and ‘The Skull Beneath the Skin’. I was experimenting with lighter gauge strings, Marshall bass amps even a medium scale Gibson Flying V bass (to be able to play faster and capture the European sounds from bands like Mercyful Fate who were a key influence on the early Mega sound). I actually ruined two of my B.C Rich basses by putting a Kahler tremolo bar on my NJ Eagle and I shaved the neck on my coveted Mockingbird I brought to LA with me from Minnesota but hit the truss rod in the process, thus destroying the stability of the neck and pretty much rendering the bass useless since it was a neck-through instrument. All were attempts to play faster and with new ideas & sounds not heard yet in that day.

As a saxophonist in my middle & high school orchestra bands, this approach to composing and utilizing the strengths of each member was akin to what the great composers like Bach & Mozart would do in their symphonic movements, too. Everyone was featured at some point in the composition. In fact, we began to incorporate the forbidden DEVIL’s TRIAD (or Devil’s Tritone) into many of the chord changes and single note passages. The solo of ‘Mechanix’ is a perfect example of this but it can also be heard in riffs like ‘Skull…’, too. It creates a chilling and haunting sound by flatting the fifth note of the scale. Also incorporated was the use of diminished chords which is a staple of the chord movements in ‘Looking Down the Cross’.

Transitions would inevitably come and following those first five shows in the Bay Area, Kerry went back to Slayer and then-drummer Lee Rausch departed the group. Within a few weeks our manager Jay Jones introduced us to drummer Gar Samuelson who brought a fresh approach to the band due to his jazz fusion style. In fact, in many ways Gar’s drumming set us apart from the other bands in THE BIG 4.

Soon after Dave, Gar and I went into Hitman Studios in Hollywood with manager Jay Jones to record a three-song demo which consisted of ‘Last Rites/Loved To Deth’, ‘Mechanix’ and ‘The Skull Beneath The Skin’. Samantha Fox, who hosted the Los Angeles KMET FM weekend metal hour debuted ‘Mechanix’ on the airwaves in the fall of 1984. All of which helped us finally ink our deal with Combat Records that year.

Shortly thereafter, guitarist Chris Poland was brought into the band as we headed to the studio to cut the KIMB album in December 1984.

Episode Three:

It’s widely known that the KIMB album is one of the fastest Thrash albums ever to descend upon mankind. However, rapid fire tempos in the band was not always the case. When we formed the group and first batch of songs were being composed in mid to late 1983, the tempos were much, much slower. In fact, almost at a Black Sabbath tempo. I recall ‘The Skull Beneath the Skin’ being almost half the tempo as it was finally recorded, which gave it this monstrous groove and weight. The same was true with ‘Chosen Ones’ which allowed me to play the bass lines with my fingers in a more Geezer-esque manner.

However, one day a fan letter showed up to our mailbox addressed to Dave which pleaded, “I hope your new band is faster than Metallica” and BOOM that was it…game over! That night at rehearsal, all the tempos were increased dramatically (20-40 beats per minute minimum!) and thus the KIMB LP represents a true turning point in the trajectory of speed being the primary calling card of cool factor with the founding fathers of the Thrash genre. EXODUS was already fast as hell and once Kerry King had seen them live, SLAYER would follow suit.

Episode Four:

In early 1984 discussions began between record labels to sign the band. Among its earliest suitors were Road Racer Records (later renamed Roadrunner), Metal Blade, Shrapnel and Combat. I recall Walter O’Brien at Combat (who later became Pantera’s manager) seemed to have the right instincts to make that label our new home. After several discussions a deal was tendered, and the rest is history.

With the modest recording budget of only $8000 from Combat we went into Indigo Ranch studios in Malibu (formerly owned by The Moody Blues) to cut the drum, bass and guitar tracks, with Karat Faye engineering and co-producing. All songs were recorded live in one take with me, Dave and Gar Samuelson in the main room together. The only effects I used on bass was a chorus pedal on the break in ‘The Skull Beneath the Skin’.

The ‘Last Rites’ piano introduction to ‘Loved To Deth’ was something Dave composed on guitar and best I recall was played with an overhand two-hand approach. Once in Indigo Ranch, the studio’s piano served as the perfect instrument for Dave to play the part in a more classical setting, yet still performing the two-handed guitar piece as an accompaniment. I was literally standing behind him with my bass as we recorded the track together with no click track. There is one bass note at :19 which still bugs me to this day, as I played it ever so slightly early.

In all three versions of the releases, we’ve never set out to correct it, so I guess it remains as part of the performance forever. In the same way, when mixing the song, the jet engine ramp-up which served as a segue from ‘Last Rites’ into ‘Loved to Deth’ was always just slightly too loud, and in my opinion left the intro guitar of ‘Loved To Deth’ a bit faint. Fortunately, this was corrected on the remix of KIMB “The Final Kill”.

On the Kings of Thrash tour we’re excited to highlight these finer details of the songs without losing any of the “teeth” which made the album a staple in thrash metal all these years later.

Get your KINGS OF THRASH tickets now at these outlets:

10/12— San Diego — Brick by Brick – TICKETS
10/13 — Phoenix — Crescent Ballroom – TICKETS
10/14 — Las Vegas —The Space – TICKETS
10/15 — West Hollywood — The Whisky a Go-Go – TICKETS

Megadeth w/ Slayer’s Kerry King 1984

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Megadeth: Kings of Thrash w/ David Ellefson, Jeff Young, Chris Poland – TOUR – 2022 – TICKETS – San Diego, Phoenix, Vegas, Los Angeles

David Ellefson:

Kings of Thrash tickets now on sale!

DAVID ELLEFSON + JEFF YOUNG ANNOUNCE KINGS OF THRASH “THE MEGA YEARS” TOUR – BAND TO PERFORM KILLING IS MY BUSINESS…AND BUSINESS IS GOOD + SO FAR, SO GOOD…SO WHAT! IN THEIR ENTIRETY

David Ellefson and Jeff Young announce the first four shows of the Kings of Thrash “The MEGA Years” Tour.

The band, which also includes drummer Fred Aching as well as guitarist/vocalist Chaz Leon, will perform the classic thrash albums Killing is My Business…and Business is Good and So Far, So Good…So What! in their entirety. Joining the band for these four dates will be ex-Megadeth/Ohm guitarist Chris Poland.

The Kings of Thrash “The MEGA Years” tour dates are as follows:

10/12— San Diego — Brick by Brick – TICKETS
10/13 — Phoenix — Crescent Ballroom – TICKETS
10/14 — Las Vegas —The Space – TICKETS
10/15 — West Hollywood — The Whisky a Go-Go – TICKETS

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Guitarist Jeff Young on Dave Mustaine Blaming Him for Canceled Megadeth Tour, “What kind of piece of s*** does that?” – 2022 – Interview – Slams – MySpace Blog/Letter – ‘So Far, So Good’ 87-88

full in bloom: Guitarist Jeff Young talks about Megadeth, Dave Mustaine, and Chris Poland. If you would like to listen to the interview, watch the video clip below (the excerpt has also been transcribed).

TRANSCRIBED EXCERPT:

full in bloom: On that Megadeth tour (So Far, So Good… So What!), when you watch old videos, and of course, all the stories are out there with Mustaine anyways, he looks, especially to me, on that tour, more drugged out than any other tour. What was he like to deal with on a daily basis?


Jeff Young:

I was straight-edge when I met those guys. So, you can imagine it wasn’t a great deal of fun for me and that probably speaks to why my tenure in the band was so short. I didn’t want to be around the junk.

At some point, Mustaine said the reason why Megadeth left Australia early was because you needed heroin.

Yeah, that’s pot calling the kettle black if I ever heard. Blame-shifting, is that what we call that? Cowardly Lying. Buck passing. What do we call that? I think we all know who ran out of heroin. I think we all know Jeff Young didn’t have the power to cancel that tour. What kind of piece of shit does that? Tries to shift the blame and put it on the person who wasn’t abusing.

And then in another clip, Mustaine said you tried to bang his fiancée.

Yep.

Is a true?

Untrue. I have answered all this on Music Without Boundaries (Jeff’s Radio Show/Podcast) and it’s far from true. But if you want to alienate your fans from following me to my next project and maybe keep me from getting a new gig, how would you do it if you were a diabolical piece of shit? And I’ve told this on my show. It’s not like a secret, man. He cried that he gave the girl herpes. That was one of his drunken-pissing-and-moaning things. He told me on the tour bus one night. So, would you go near someone if you knew she had STDs? My thing is like, I wouldn’t go near anyone with a 10-foot pole that he had been near, surely not her.

I interviewed producer/engineer Randy Burns, who recorded the ‘Peace Sells’ record. And then of course we did another interview where he talked about Chris Poland’s recording ‘Return to Metalopolis.’ Randy thought Dave was kind of annoyed with the fact that he was so into Chris when he met him. He just couldn’t believe how gifted he was. What was your initial impression of Chris’s playing?

My initial impression is the same as it is today. He’s one of the greatest unsung players on the planet. The only reason I did that gig was to have the honor and pleasure of figuring out his solos. I went down to Capitol Records, I solo’d all his tracks and I figured them out note for note. That’s one of the things Dave likes to say in interviews because he knows I did that and people can go back on YouTube, you can watch, and you can hear how close I did the solos. He likes to say, I didn’t want to do Chris’s solos. I’m like, ‘What the fuck are you talking about, man?’ Chris has a damaged finger. His first finger was damaged in a shop accident in high school. I had more use of my fingers, so I’m going to play my own way. I’m not him, but I did cop as much as I thought was critical to cop. He’s been on my radio show. He’s a great pal. I can’t speak highly enough of him.

The problem with Megadeth is that the band traditionally needs a guitar player that’s that good. And then the other guitarist can’t handle that. Anyone can get that. It’s not hard to understand the dynamic and the psychology behind what goes on in that band. Dave said negative things about Chris, Marty (Friedman), me, Nick (Menza). It’s a tradition. And all of the ex-Megadeth members, we’re all friends and we have a commiseration society. The day Shawn Drover quit Megadeth, I got a friend request from him. Everyone’s cool but one person. And all that drama, you saw I rarely answered it. But when he said he sang my solos in Guitar World, then it was on. All you’ve got to do is go online and just search ‘Jeff Young Slams.’ You don’t even have to type the last bit of that phrase. You’ll see all the stuff that went down. It’s all still there archived. I wrote a really nice blog on MySpace in response to that Guitar World. It was called, ‘Dave Mustaine, Your Pants are on Fire.’

Excerpt from Jeff’s Blog, ‘Dave Mustaine, Your Pants are on Fire’: “Until now, I chose to keep my mouth shut, even for the VH1 ‘Behind the Music’ episode. And boy, could I have eaten up some serious air time with the truth about what REALLY went on ‘behind the music’ in Megadeth. But it’s been well over twenty years and the guy just can’t seem to stop himself.

“Here he goes again, bragging in the pages of Guitar World about how he allegedly sings the solo melodies to all his lead guitarists!!

“Seriously, folks? This guy should take his comedy act on the road, if you’ll pardon the pun.

“I can’t speak for the others but as exceptional as all the Megadeth lead guys have been, I don’t believe his preposterous yarn for a second.

“Regarding the ‘So Far, So Good, So What?!’-era sessions: Mustaine was nowhere in the building during any of my rhythm or lead tracking sessions. And since I came into the process at the last minute, there were also NO band rehearsals whatsoever. So when, exactly, did he sing me those solos?

“Fact is, from what I heard of his unedited ‘So Far, So Good, So What?!’ lead tracks, the guy can barely play his own lead lines, let alone sing some of the stunning lines that Chris, Marty, or Glen played.”

“Let’s be clear for the record: you were not in the studio with me during any of my tracking… not one song, not one second. You know it and I know it. You need to stop blatantly lying to your fans and in the media.

“Perhaps next time you look in the mirror with the ole’ ‘hello me, meet the real me’ crap, you’ll pause to consider why you feel the need to continually perpetuate ridiculous bullshit and belittle others in order to make yourself seem more significant or talented.

“You consider yourself a ‘genius,’ yet after all these years, you’re still not smart enough to comprehend that when you diminish others, you diminish yourself most of all, even as you clearly telegraph your raging insecurity for anyone with an ounce of insight to see. You may also want to go back and re-read the lyrics you wrote in ‘Liar’. Then consider the giant glasshouse you’ve built for yourself and put your silly little stones down, once and for all. At the very least for all the players that helped create all the success you now so arrogantly and selfishly enjoy.

“Oh, and while we’re at it: you may want to stop telling the world that you invented the ‘spider chord!’ Classical guitarists commonly use that approach and it is considered part of the standard classical guitar technique, you fool.”

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OHM “Exit Stage Left” New SONG/VIDEO/ALBUM – 2022 – Chris Poland, Carlos Cruz, Robertino “Pag” Pagliari – M-Theory Audio

Heavy progressive/fusion band OHM have signed with M-Theory Audio. The power trio – whose lineup in 2022 consists of guitarist Chris Poland (ex-Megadeth), bassist Robertino “Pag” Pagliari (Uli Jon Roth, Frank Gambale), and new drummer Carlos Cruz (Warbringer, Machine Head, Power Trip) – will enter the studio this summer to record their as-yet-untitled new album. In the meantime, the band unveiled a visualizer video for “Exit Stage Left,” their first new studio recording since 2012. Watch the clip below.

Says Poland, “OHM is ecstatic to announce our signing with M-Theory Audio! It’s been a very long time since the release of our last album and with the passing of our previous drummers, David Eagle and Nick Menza, I’m truly grateful to share our new sound alongside bassist, Robert “Pag” Pagliari, and drummer, Carlos Cruz. We’re excited for all to hear the new dynamics of our Instrumental/Fusion, especially the heavier elements brought in by Menza and continued by Cruz! Thank you to everyone involved for having us enter a new year with a new label team and to all who continue to support OHM!”

Poland and Pagliari first crossed paths in 1977, when they formed Los Angeles-based rock band The New Yorkers with Gar & Stu Samuelson. Poland and Gar Samuelson were then recruited by Megadeth, where they played on the band’s first two records, “Killing Is My Business…And Business Is Good!” and “Peace Sells…But Who’s Buying?” Poland departed Megadeth shortly after the release of the second album, and would go on to play bass for the Circle Jerks and release his 1990 solo record, “Return to Metalopolis.” Poland – with his brother, drummer Mark Poland – soon co-founded the progressive-metal trio Damn The Machine, which released one self-titled album on A&M Records in 1993.

Chris Poland and bassist Robert “Pag” Pagliari reunited in 1997, forming OHM. Poland and Pagliari took the early sound of OHM into a direction that was more influenced by progressive/fusion and jazz, and throughout four albums and dozens of live performances over the next fifteen years were augmented on drums by a variety of multi-talented musicians, including acclaimed jazz drummer Koko Bernejo, Kofi Baker (Extreme Cream, Uli Jon Roth, Vinnie Moore), Joel Taylor (Herb Alpert, Al Di Meola, Allan Holdsworth), Frank Briggs (Cirque Du Soleil, Five For Fighting), and David Eagle (Tina Turner, Oingo Boingo, Gary Hoey).

OHM was joined on the drum kit by another Megadeth alumnus, Nick Menza, in 2015, after the passing of Eagle. The next year of live performances and jam sessions saw the musical chemistry between Poland, Pagliari, and Menza evolve into a heavier metallic direction while retaining the progressive/fusion roots that OHM had established with its blueprint. This lineup began to firmly establish its groove, before a heart attack during a live performance with OHM on May 21st, 2016 at The Baked Potato in Studio City, CA tragically claimed the life of Nick Menza at the age of 51.

The musical direction that Poland and Pagliari had been pursuing with OHM since the addition of Menza continues on in 2022. Carlos Cruz joined the band in 2018, bringing with him an expansive heavy metal drumming resume bolstered by hundreds of live performances with bands such as Warbringer, Hexen, Exmortus, and Power Trip. Early live performances from this new iteration of OHM have seen the band continuing to infuse their progressive/fusion blueprint with more overtly metallic chops while remaining a spectacular display of precision musicianship.

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Chris Poland’s OHM: Prepare For Some Stellar New Music w/ Heavy Riffs – Robbie ‘Pag’ Pagliari – Carlos Cruz – 2022 – Megadeth

Chris Poland: What’s up everyone?! Ready for new music?! My trio OHM will be making announcements this week, so prepare for some stellar new music with heavy riffs, monster fretless bass playing by Robbie ‘Pag’ Pagliari & wicked double-bass drumming by Carlos Cruz!

📸: Alex Solca

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Ex-Megadeth Guitarist Chris Poland: In the Studio Working on New Music w/ Thom Hazaert, Christian Lawrence, Dave Sharpe, Ricky Bonazza – 2021

Thom Hazaert: So stoked to be back in the studio this week working on some top-secret new music with my friend Chris Poland along with Christian Lawrence, Dave Sharpe, & Ricky Bonazza.

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Megadeth ‘Peace Sells’ Producer Talks Dave Mustaine, David Ellefson, Chris Poland, Gar Samuelson, Band Drug Use – Interview Excerpt

This excerpt was taken from the full in bloom interview with producer/engineer Randy Burns. You can listen to the entire interview @ this location.

LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA THE EMBEDDED YOUTUBE CLIP BELOW OR ON YOUTUBE.

YOU CAN ALSO LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA SPOTIFY & SOUNDCLOUD. (Links Coming Soon)

INTERVIEW EXCERPT DESCRIPTION:

Randy talks about working with Dave Mustaine, David Ellefson, Gar Samuelson, & Chris Poland during the Megadeth ‘Peace Sells…but Who’s Buying?’ recording sessions.

Randy Burns Interview Excerpt via YouTube

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Chris Poland ‘Return to Metalopolis’ Inside the Album w/ Megadeth Producer Randy Burns – full in bloom Interview

This is a full in bloom interview with producer/engineer Randy Burns.

INSIDE THE ALBUM:
Chris Poland
Return to Metalopolis

LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA THE EMBEDDED YOUTUBE VIDEO BELOW OR YOU CAN WATCH IT ON YOUTUBE.

YOU CAN ALSO LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA SPOTIFY & SOUNDCLOUD.

INTERVIEW DESCRIPTION:

Randy talks about recording Chris Poland’s 1990 debut solo album, ‘Return to Metalopolis.’

If you found this first, make sure to listen to our Megadeth Peace Sells…but Who’s Buying? Inside the Album interview w/ Randy @ this location.

Randy Burns Interview via YouTube

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Megadeth ‘Peace Sells…but Who’s Buying’ Inside the 1986 Album w/ Producer Randy Burns – full in bloom Interview

This is a full in bloom interview with producer/engineer Randy Burns.

INSIDE THE ALBUM:
Megadeth
Peace Sells… but Who’s Buying

LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA THE EMBEDDED YOUTUBE VIDEO BELOW OR YOU CAN WATCH IT ON YOUTUBE.

YOU CAN ALSO LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA SPOTIFY.

INTERVIEW DESCRIPTION:

Randy talks about recording Megadeth’s 1986 platinum album, ‘Peace Sells… but Who’s Buying?’

Randy Burns Interview via YouTube

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Megadeth Producer Talks ‘Peace Sells’ Band Drug Use During 1986 Album Recording Sessions – Interview Excerpt

This excerpt was taken from the full in bloom interview with Megadeth producer / engineer Randy Burns. The full-length version of this interview will be posted soon. Subscribe to our YouTube channel if you would like to be notified when it’s up.

LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA THE EMBEDDED YOUTUBE CLIP / SOUNDCLOUD WIDGET BELOW.

YOU CAN ALSO LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA APPLE PODCASTS.

INTERVIEW DESCRIPTION:

Randy talks about Megadeth’s extracurricular activities during the recording of the band’s breakthrough album, ‘Peace Sells… but Who’s Buying?’

Randy Burns Interview via YouTube

Randy Burns Interview via Soundcloud