The Great
Divide: Metallica Vs Motley Crue
by Keavin Wiggins
.
Zane has a great feature on his blog called
"Now Playing". So he innocently asked me if I wanted to write a little
something for it and I agreed. So I grabbed my iPod and hit shuffle and
Metallica's "Fade to Black" came on. I started thinking about what I could
write about the song and as what always seems to happen a torrent of thoughts
and reflections came rushing out. So the little blurb turned into 18 and
half thousand words. What can I say? It's like I told Zane, it was sort
of like that line from 'Almost Famous' and I was writing pages and pages
of dribble just to write. I guess subconsciously this topic's been in the
back of head for a while just waiting for the chance to come out. I'm sure
it's nothing like what Zane expected, but it is what it is. Here is how
I witnessed the great divide and the conclusions I drew from it. This did
run on Zane's blog but somehow slipped through the cracks here at anti,
but with Metallica's Rock Hall induction it seems fitting to look back
on the band's impact on metal. I've slightly updated it since it was written
before both Motley Crue and Metallica released their latest albums - Keavin
Smoking Something In The BoardroomThe
memory is still fresh in my mind like it was just yesterday. It was right
before summer break of my 7th grade year. I walked into my history class
and saw my friend Rob with a look on his face like someone had died. I
asked him what was wrong and he sneered and tossed a metal magazine at
me and exclaimed, "They look like pansies!"
I looked down at the full color photo spread
in the mag (Circus or Hit Parader) and there was Motley Crue in pink, white
and black outfits and make-up that made them look like skinny bikers in
drag. It was a bit shocking to see. My initial thought was that it was
some kind of gag. I tried to reassure Rob that it had to be a joke and
he looked desperate enough to believe that since Motley Crue was his absolute
favorite band. I was proven wrong a short time later when the video for
"Smoking in the Boys Room" came out and they had those silly drag queen
outfits on.
Music isn't all about image, so I told
Rob to hang tight. Surely Motley Crue wouldn't change their music drastically
on their new album. Sure, "Boys Room" was a far cry from "Looks That Kill,"
but it still kinda rocked..... in a song to try-and-win-your-girlfriend-over-to-a-band-you-like
kind of way.
Soon the other shoe dropped when Theater
of Pain came out. Poor Rob was devastated. Not only had the band gone
with a pansy image, but the music pretty much matched the look. Mick may
have tried, in vain, to add some blues licks here and there to at least
give it some rock feel, but it was the sound of a band selling out in a
huge way.
Then the ultimate insult to Rob's past
devotion came and it was the straw that broke the camel's back for him.
He was thru with the Crue! That insult was the second single from the album
and the video that accompanied it, "Home Sweet Home". The pink and white
was back, but with a ballad complete with Vince running around in assless
pants with a pink bandana covering up only enough to make the video safe
for viewing on MTV. And did MTV ever play it. It was on ad nausem and helped
take Motley Crue from being a popular band in the metal scene to a mainstream
pop band. They had gone from the power chords of "Shout at the Devil" to
Tommy playing a piano on "Home Sweet Home." A short time later I remember
watching an interview with Vince where he claimed they were always more
glam then metal, because metal was too punk. He still hasn't gained back
my respect.
The success of Motley's sellout was a large
mark on the wall of what was soon to happen to metal. It was in the midst
of a seismic shift that would send the genre off into two totally different
directions. Pretty soon the heavy weights of the metal mainstream at the
time were going soft in sound and dressing like drag queens. Even Ozzy
got into the glammed up image with the release of The Ultimate Sin in
early 1996. It was complete with a MTV friendly video for the radio friendly
song "Shot in the Dark," which gave us the Prince of Darkness decked out
in sequins with a Tammy Faye Bakker perm and makeup.
Even Judas Priest was pulled down this
dark path. For their album Turbo, they replaced most of the guitars
with guitar synthesizers, and ended up sounding like a little heavier edged
Duran Duran. Rob Halford's mullet from the period is still pretty comical.
Then Poison appeared on the scene and it was all over. Metal had gone pop
in a big way.
Fade to BlackWhen I started back
to school the next fall, Rob was over the Crue sell out. A new band had
caught his attention over the summer. In fact, the band had caught the
attention of a lot of the older metalheads in our town, which is where
Rob heard about them. It was band of thrashy upstarts from San Francisco
that didn't give a damn about image or dressing up and played a bit faster
and a bit heavier then the metal we were used to at the time. The heaviness
of the music made "Shout at the Devil" sound like "Home Sweet Home" in
comparison. The band even refused to make a video(unheard of in 1985).
The band was Metallica and once their sophomore album Ride the Lightning
was
re-released on Elektra, they moved out of the deep metal underground (where
those of us in jr. high had yet to travel) and they began slowly getting
exposure among a wider metal audience.
Ride The Lightning was new to us,
but it wasn't a new album. It had come out in 1984, but by the time it
started catching on in wider metal circles, the timing was perfect. With
the exception of Iron Maiden, it appeared that all of the big metal bands
had gone soft and taken a trip down the slippery slope that Motley help
lay out. Metal fans, being fans of metal, wanted some real metal... not
Ozzy harping like Jane Fonda about nukes. He was starting to look like
a heavier Jane Fonda as well.
Metallica was still a bit too heavy for
a lot of my metal friends. While it seems tame now in comparison to today's
metal, at the time it was really heavy when heard against the backdrop
of the big metal bands of the day. There was one song on Ride The Lightning
that
was just mellow enough to open the door for those that found Metallica
a bit too heavy. It was the track "Fade To Black," and it's easy to see
how it became an instant classic. It has the power of Metallica but was
more accessible. Whereas a "Fight Fire With Fire" might send an unsuspecting
metalhead (of the time) running off to the hills screaming, "that's too
punk!" When they heard "Fade To Black" they were usually sold and over
time, songs like "Fight Fire with Fire" would gain a foothold as well.
Metalheads absolutely hated punk and punkers at the time. So a band that
was thought to be too punk wasn't given a fair shake. And the punk comparisons
were heard loud in clear in my circle of friends during the fall of 1985.
That would soon change. Thanks in part to Ozzy and Priest going pop, but
also in Southern California where I grew up, it was largely thanks to a
little underpowered radio station out of Long Beach.
January of 1986 didn't just bring a new
year, it brought a new era for metal and like almost all trends, it usually
starts in California. Seemingly out of nowhere a small radio station we
had never heard of down in Orange County, changed formats from alternative
rock to 24 hours of metal. The call letters were KNAC and their tagline
was "Pure Rock". At last metalheads in Los Angeles and Orange County had
an outlet to discover new music and high on the list of new bands gaining
instant fans was Metallica. "Fade To Black" was played all the time, as
were a few other tracks from Ride the Lightning. KNAC had only been
on the air for a few weeks when Metallica's Master of Puppets was
released and aided by the triple assault of "Battery," the title track,
and "Welcome Home (Sanitarium)," there was a new heavy hitter in metal
town and they were taking metal in a lot heavier direction than last year's
heavy hitters; who were going soft.
By late spring Metallica was the favorite
band of almost all metalheads in my town. You could even tune into KNAC
every night for a block of songs from the band during "Mandatory Metallica."
The band had claimed Los Angeles and Orange County. The irony is when they
first started out in L.A., they couldn't get arrested in that music scene.
Ozzy (or more likely Sharon) were paying attention to these upstart thrashers
and invited Metallica to support Ozz on the Ultimate Sin Tour. Metallica
were about to go national.
That tour exposed them to metalheads across
the U.S. and they often had no problem using their high energy thrash to
blow Ozzy (and his new poppier music) off the stage each night. Friends
didn't ask you if you were going to the Ozzy concert, the question was
"are you going to see Metallica!?!"
Talk Dirty To Me At the time when
Metallica was winning over the diehard metal crowd in 1986 and 87, other
metal bands were going after the MTV audience. And many of them did succeed.
The new glammed out Motley Crue were all over MTV. For the first time Ozzy
was getting healthy MTV play as well, which helped land "The Ultimate Sin"
and the single "Shot in the Dark" in the Top 10 on the album and single
charts. The synthesized Judas Priest was also riding high on the video
wave with the goofy videos for "Locked In" and "Turbo". The album cracked
the Top 20 and the first single went Top 40.
But if anyone had any doubt that metal
had split into two totally different directions, those doubts were smashed
when the cat dragged in Poison during August of 1986. The band took the
Crue's glammed out image to the extreme and ultimately upstaged the Crue
on the charts when their debut hit No. 3, where Motley's Theater of
Pain peaked at No. 7. (though the Crue ultimately sold a million more
copies in the U.S., proving that selling out does pay!)
Poison's first single tanked, but a silly
video, filmed for an even sillier song, caught the attention of the image
conscience MTV and soon you couldn't turn on the video channel without
hearing Poison's anthem "Talk Dirty To Me," which helped the band's debut
go triple platinum.
You Give Love A Bad Name While the
diehard metal fans were discovering other heavy bands like Slayer, Anthrax,
Megadeth and Exodus in the wake of Metallica, the pop mainstream was primed
for an avalanche of pop-metal. In the second half of 1986 and in 1987 they
got it. A band that had once been jeered while opening for KISS, came out
of New Jersey and exploded on the scene and took it to another height of
success.
In November of 1986, a new sensation was
born when Bon Jovi's first single from Slippery When Wet, hit the
top of the singles chart. "You Give Love A Bad Name," was tailor made for
MTV and radio. Sometimes derisively referred to as happy metal,
Bon Jovi's looks and pop hooks took the world by storm and helped the album
sell over 12 million copies in the U.S.. Though it had very little to do
with metal, the pop in pop-metal became the dominate popular music form
in 1986 and 87, making pop metal officially the new pop.
Pour Some Sugar On Me By 1987 you
couldn't escape Bon Jovi on radio or MTV (or even on a t-shirt adorned
by your high school cheerleader). Def Leppard's smash success back in 1983
was a distant memory. The band had taken too long to release a new album
and fell off of most people's radar while metal was going through its massive
split during those five years.
After the band's 83 album Pyromania
became
a megaseller (second only to Michael Jackson's Thriller that year),
the band or their label decided that their 1981 album High 'n' Dry
deserved a second chance. So they rerecorded the album's ballad and a brand
new track and reissued the album. While the new version of the ballad was
basically the original with keyboards added, the new song "Me and My Wine"
gave the world the impression that the band was heading into a new heavier
and more punk direction.
Known for their melodic hard rock, Def
Leppard had two roads to choose from with their new album. They could continue
down the road started with "Me and My Wine" or turn their melodic hard
rock into pop. They decided to go pop... completely.
Hysteria landed on American record
store shelves and languished. No one was interested in Def Leppard. It
was all about the Bon Jovis, Motley Crues and Poisons. The first single
"Women" topped out at No. 80 on the charts. The second single "Animal,"
gained a little more traction and received some MTV play, but it just barely
broke the top 20. Then the title track finally landed them at No 10 on
the charts and set the ball in motion.
By this point the album was selling relatively
well, but it needed to be a smash hit to earn back the massive amount spent
on its production. America was hungry for pop metal, and Def Leppard was
giving them pop. So for their next U.S. single they decided to go with
a song that did well when issued in the UK. They tossed together a quick
video with footage from an upcoming concert promo film and gave it to MTV.
"Pour Some Sugar On Me" had just the right amount of pop and just the right
amount of rock to win over MTV executives who put the video into heavy
"Bon Jovi" like rotation. It exploded at radio, and shot to No. 2 on the
charts. The floodgates were open and Def Leppard gave Bon Jovi a run for
their money when Hysteria also went on to sell over 12 million copies
in the U.S. (20 million copies worldwide) and topped the U.S. album charts.
Welcome To The Jungle As pop metal
was being consumed by the millions, a ragtag group of misfits in Los Angles
were about to turn the music world on it's axis. Vulgar, loud, aggressive,
and unapologetically born from the streets, Guns N' Roses had about as
much in common with Bon Jovi, Motley Crue, Poison or Def Leppard as Paris
Hilton has to a Nobel Prize winner. As the chart toppers were producing
happy sing-along songs with mostly insipid lyrics, Guns N' Roses introduced
themselves with the line, "You know where you? You're in the jungle baby...
you're gonna die!" It was a battle cry and a challenge to a generation.
And unlike Motley Crue, these guys weren't posing; they lived it.
Like most rock and roll success stories,
it was a long way to the top for Guns N' Roses. Their first single, "Welcome
To Jungle," didn't go anywhere upon release. It took them almost a year
to find their "overnight success," aided largely by David Geffen's plea
to MTV to give them a chance. The video channel finally played the "Welcome
To Jungle" video early one morning, but that was enough. The fans that
saw it, loved it, and barraged MTV with requests. That must have been pretty
shocking to the execs at the channel who were overdosing America on Bon
Jovi. But heavy rock fans were hungry for something that they hadn't had
yet and Guns N' Roses delivered just that. GNR found a magic middle-ground
between the pop-metalers and the thrashers. While Bon Jovi and Def Leppard
sold 12 million copies of their radio friendly albums, the debut album
from the not ready for primetime players in Guns N' Roses went on to sell
15 million copies in the U.S. (the same as Springsteen's Born in the
USA).
Continue
tell
a friend about this article
.
...end |