Fade to Black (song)

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"Fade to Black"
Image:Fade To Black.jpg
Single by Metallica
from the album Ride the Lightning
Released 1984
Recorded Sweet Silence Studios Copenhagen, Denmark, 1984
Genre Thrash metal
Length 6:57
Label Elektra Records
Writer Kirk Hammett
James Hetfield
Cliff Burton
Lars Ulrich
Producer Metallica
Flemming Rasmussen
Mark Whitaker
Metallica singles chronology
"Jump in the Fire"
(1984)
"Fade to Black"
(1984)
"Creeping Death"
(1984)
Music sample

"Fade to Black" is a song by heavy metal band Metallica from their second album, Ride the Lightning (1984). It was the first musical ballad released by the band.

In an interview with drummer Lars Ulrich on the set of the production "MTV Icon: Metallica" in 2005, he does recall how himself and bandmate James Hetfield were obsessed with death at the time the album and song were produced. It was written after almost all of their equipment, including a very rare amplifier, given to singer/rhythm guitarist James Hetfield by his mother just before she died, was stolen in Boston, MA, following a gig at the Channel Club on 14th January 1984. This event forced Metallica to borrow equipment from fellow tour band and friends, Anthrax, for the remainder of the tour. The lyrics suggest the story of a man contemplating, and eventually commiting, suicide.

It begins with an acoustic guitar introduction and becomes progressively heavier as the song goes on.

At the time, some of the more extreme elements of fans deemed the song a "sell out" as it was such a departure from Metallica's then-normal style, but since its release, "Fade to Black" has been a fan favorite and a fixture in Metallica's live performances. It was also the last song that Metallica performed live with Jason Newsted. Jason's last gig was at the VH1 Music Awards on November 30, 2000. It was one of Newsted's favorite Metallica songs, and was said to be of great sentimental value to him, although it had been written before he had joined the band. Interestingly, Jason Newsted's old band, Flotsam And Jetsam, performed a song called 'Fade To Black' on their 1986 album, Doomsday For The Deceiver before Jason left to join Metallica, although it bears little to no resemblance to the Metallica version.

This was also the song that Metallica had been playing the opening of during their infamous concert at Montreal's Olympic Stadium in 1992, when James Hetfield suffered second-and-third degree burns from a pyrotechnic accident.

The song's title is never mentioned in the lyrics. However, the song's title is mentioned in the track "The Memory Remains" off the band's 1997 album, ReLoad.

The song has been covered by several bands, including:

In 1996, Norwegian black metal band Dimmu Borgir released "Master of Disharmony" in their EP Devil's Path (1996), a song contains 30 seconds of the last riffs / solo of "Fade to Black" as last bridge.

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