Written By: Patrick Prince / Powerline
There’s quite a lot going on (or about to go on)
in Megadethland. Of course, there’s the latest studio release of
“Thirteen,” one of the finest metal albums in years, and then the
December 10th jam of Dave Mustaine and Metallica, back on stage together
again, playing old songs, for one of the 30th Anniversary Metallica
shows at the Fillmore in San Francisco, California — a remarkable event
that brought everyone from Jason Newsted, to Lloyd Grant and Ron
McGovney out to celebrate. And soon will be the launch of Gigantour on January 26 in Camden, NJ
— the mega-Megadeth tour with Motorhead, Volbeat and Lacuna Coil (all
bands hand-picked by Dave Mustaine, of course).
The following is an interview with Dave Mustaine on December 13, 2011.
This new album sounds fresh and exciting. Do you think the reappearance of David Ellefson had something to do with that?
Dave Mustaine: Oh, he had everything to do with it. I sucked without him.
Well, I didn’t mean it that way, man (laughs).
Mustaine: (laughs) I know, I’m just playing with you.
Yeah, Dave added an element of excitement and fun to the band. Every
player who plays an instrument is gonna have their own way that they
handle the neck and the strings and stuff like that. We could have had
the last guy [James LoMenzo] who was playing before Dave do this record
and play exactly what Dave played but it still wouldn’t have sounded the
same.
Dave was in the studio while we were getting ready for the Rust In
Peace tour and I said ‘Hey, you want to try and record on (the song)
“Sudden Death”?’ And he did and we just knew it was gonna work out. So,
yeah, I think he added a really great element but I think there are a
couple other guys in the band [Chris Broderick on guitar and Shawn
Drover on drums] that aren’t so bad either.
In all sincerity, I think Thirteen is one of the
best metal albums in years. I’m a traditional metal guy and the thing
about it is that it sounded a lot more like traditional metal … songs
like “We the People” and “Deadly Nightshade” … Was it intentional to
bring back some of that classic sound?
Mustaine: There was no intention of anything on this
record. Honestly, we just went into it with the desire to make our last
record for Roadrunner and to make a really great offering and who knows
where this record goes because I hadn’t had my surgery yet [neck
surgery] and I pretty much thought as soon as this record was turned in I
was gonna crawl off into a retirement home somewhere because my neck
and back were becoming such a problem. But the record turned out pretty
well and the label’s done really good with it and I got the surgery and,
man, everything is just going great right now.
And some of the songs were written years ago, right? “Black Swan,” “New World Order” …
Mustaine: “New World Order” was really, really old. We
had never really officially recorded that and some people had said
stuff about Nick [Menza, drummer 1989-1198, 2004] and, you know, yeah,
he wasn’t a really busy writer but he did write a couple good things and
“New World Order,” he had a hand in writing some of it, so it’s kind of
cool. I don’t know what he’s doing right now but I do know that when he
wrote that, it was very modern sounding. So when I came to do that song
on this record, because we hadn’t done it officially, it was a
no-brainer.
And it still seems to fit seamlessly on this new record, it’s hard to tell it was written way beforehand.
Mustaine: It was. (laughs)
Looking at the lyrics on Thirteen, you lay out your political and spiritual views and it doesn’t come off as preachy, at least not to me. Do you agree?
Mustaine: I’ve become more active in politics and more
concerned in my fellow man because of my own discoveries and
decision-making. I know if someone would have told me ‘You couldn’t do
that,’ I would have said ‘Watch me.’ Because it’s just part of my
nature. Not that I’m defiant just for the sake of being defiant because
that would become kind of predictable, and there’s nothing cool about
being predictable. It all just kind of goes back to what
you want to do with your life.
And you still feel strongly that we’re headed towards a global government?
Mustaine: Yeah, I do. You hear China say that they are
preparing to go to war with the U.S. — they said that on Fox yesterday —
that’s not small potatoes, bro.
Don’t you think that the government sometimes seems like a puppet for banks and corporations?
Mustaine: Yeah, it is. It is the elite that are doing
this. But I gotta tell you, the elite have been running the government
and all this stuff for a long time. People with the IMF (International
Monetary Fund) and with the Fed and it’s all the Rockefellers and the
Rothschilds, they’re the ones that call the shots. I just think right
now that the American people are getting screwed so bad and they just
don’t know it. They cannot see the forest for the trees. Actually I
think there’s lot of stuff that’s going on right now — I read a lot, I
study a lot, I watch the news a lot because I’m a political writer. Not
by choice. I started off writing about cars — “Mechanix” — and jumping
into the fire. That had nothing to do with peace selling. …
You do say it best in the song “We The People”: “The devil’s henchmen in suit and tie.” That sums it up a bit.
Mustaine: Yeah, yeah, I think so. This whole nonsense …
if you watch what’s going down with the super committee [on deficit
reduction]. I called that before it even started — that it’s a joke and
it’s not gonna work. And it didn’t work.
Do you agree with the Occupy Wall Street movement?
Mustaine: I think that the intent was very misguided. I
believe that people going out into the streets to demand change — they
went to the wrong address. They needed to go to 1600 Pennsylvania
Avenue. You don’t go out and tell a bunch of guys who are working on
Wall Street that you want change. You go to the President.
Or Congress.
Mustaine: Well, Congress is pretty much completely
gridlocked right now. And the President is insulting them every chance
he gets. So, I think the Occupy Wall Street people, if they really
really want to see this happen, they need to go (to 1600 Pennsylvania
Avenue), instead of going to the ports and shutting down commerce ,which
is hurting people like the truck drivers and longshoremen and all the
people on the boats. It’s just ultimately hurting us because that’s just
gonna raise the price of food and stuff. And there’s that old saying:
He who controls the water and controls the food, controls the people.
Well, these guys are handing our control over to the elite by taking the
food off of the shelves. If you’re gonna have anything to do with these
guys, somebody smart has to tell them what to do.
Recently in an interview you called yourself a survivalist
— and the song “13″ expresses that — but if this were a reality show
like Survivor you’d probably be the finalist.
Mustaine: (laughs) Maybe.
And it looks like you’ve had a guardian angel over the years.
Mustaine: That I have. I still have it.
And good luck comes into play, too. And maybe 13 isn’t such an unlucky number after all.
Mustaine: Well, it wasn’t on the day I was born. The
number 13 was bad for the Templar Knights — the knights who helped
Solomon’s temple — those dudes were all rounded up on Friday the 13th
and burned at the stake or something like that. I think people don’t
know about that and they kind of just connotate the number 13 with
marijuana and that it’s bad, you know. I was born on the 13th, I started
playing guitar when I was 13 and this record’s my 13th record.
As far as spirituality in the lyrics, as a born again
Christian, the less challenging creative road would have been to write
songs like Stryper. But you do a pretty good job at being provocative.
Mustaine: Music is something that we listen to give us
a change in our mood, to help us get out of a bad mood or continue to
perpetuate a good mood. And I think if you put on music and someone’s
condemning you and making you sad or making you cry … that ain’t my gig.
Somebody else can give that. You know, I like listening to stuff that’s
sentimental and emotional and stuff, too, but I don’t want to be the
guy who does that. I’m good at beating my guitar until it throws up and I
think people got a good look at that this weekend when I went up and
played with Metallica again. That was really fun. I know a lot of people
were really surprised because they never saw me play with the band.
It must have been a great feeling going up there onstage again with them.
Mustaine: I had some mood swings. There was some ups
and downs and stuff. And, you know, got excited, and kind of got
impatient, ‘Let’s go. I’m okay. Well, lets go!’ and this kind of thing
and that’s just the artist in me. I’m just squirrely like that.
Playing some of those old Metallica songs — did you have favorites or are there still favorites now?
Mustaine: You know, it felt fun to play them. I wish I
would have had a little bit more opportunity to get prepared with the
band. You know, because I’m a perfectionist. I would have liked to have
had my sound just so and make sure when I did the solos they would jump
up the volume and stuff like that that I’m used to, but we were at a
club and playing at a club and playing like a club band. It was fun to
take off all the rules and regulations and stuff and kind of shoot from
the hip.
I was surprised you didn’t play “The Four Horsemen.”
Mustaine: I think there’s a reason for that. I think I
know why we didn’t play that song but I’m not going to go out on a limb
on it. I think one of the things was because we recorded “Mechanix” and
they recorded the other way, there’s not really a need to do that.
There were several other songs that were really important — like “Jump
in the Fire” was the first song I brought those guys. And “Phantom Lord”
and “Metal Militia” were songs that I brought to them, too, and the
only other song was “Mechanix” which later changed to “Four Horsemen.”
And the rest of those songs were written by James (Hetfield) or by Hugh
Tanner or Lloyd Grant and that’s why those guys were there .. and a
little weird for me, too, you know, standing onstage. I thought it was
cool to be just with Metallica but Ron McGovney’s up there and Lloyd
Grant’s up there. I was kind of like ‘Alright, well, I’ll bite the
bullet. I’ll be cool. This is not so terrible.’ I got up there and, you
know what, I didn’t even notice them. I was having so much fun they
weren’t even there.
Well, you mentioned mood swings. You should have had flashbacks with McGovney ….
Mustaine: Actually, you know what. I didn’t even see
him the whole time I was up there. It was cool that he was there. He was
pretty nervous, too. Ron’s a good guy. I was locked into Lars’ playing
and James’ playing. Me and James, we were like the the Toxic Twins back
when we played together and we were a very very dangerous duo. And for a
moment I think I stirred some of those old feelings up. I saw one of
the videos and it looked like he was having fun. I know I was having
fun. I had a smile that I went to bed with.
Do you remember the very first Metallica gig? I think it was in Anaheim, 1982.
Mustaine: You know, I remember a lot of those shows
but not which one was the first one. One of them, when we played there
.. this is funny, I was just saying this to somebody the other day, and I
don’t even know if James will remember this. He used to go partying
with me and we used to go out drinking all the time and we found out
that when we were up there, there was a contest, a battle of the bands
and the winner got to open up for this new band from Ireland — a band
that had just come on MTV and had this song “I Will Follow.” I told
James: ‘These guys are gonna be huge, dude. You watch.’ It was U2,
when they came over and if we had entered the battle of the bands we
probably would have gotten to open up for them which would have been
pretty interesting. You know, there’s been a lot of firsts for Metallica
but I don’t think that they’ve opened up for U2 yet.
Lastly, Gigantour. Are you glad you picked bands like Lacuna Coil for Gigantour?
Mustaine: Yeah, I ‘m glad I picked Motorhead and
Volbeat, too. I think that all the bands that are on Gigantour this year
are gonna be great. They all have a certain type of cool factor.
Motorhead has that straight-forward, ‘I’m gonna kill you’ kind of music,
and Volbeat is that kind of dangerous kind of music — kind of like
Elvis metal — and listening to Lacuna Coil with the two singers, it’s
very dynamic and they’ve got good guitar players in there. It’s also
cool that at one point we had Christina (Scabbia) sing a song with us.
We haven’t discussed having her come up and sing “À Tout le Monde” with
us each night. We probably should but we haven’t talked about that yet.
Megadeth Official Site
Vintage Megadeth Posters
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