Vocal ANALYSIS of "One". This is emotionally deep, and Metallica again nearly had me in tears.

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  • Опубликовано: 24 фев 2022
  • This is the second Metallica song I've ever listened to and analyzed, and I keep getting drops of heavy topics. This time it's about a soldier that loses their limbs, sight, hearing, smell and taste. They're left only with pain. Whoah. This is dark, heavy, and poignant. I appreciate getting these heavy songs by such prolific artists.
    Join professional opera singer Elizabeth Zharoff, as she listens to Metallica performing "One” for the very first time.
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    Performed by Metallica - Words and Music by James Hetfield, Lars Ulrich
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    I definitely recommend watching the original video without interruptions. Here's the link: • Metallica: One (Offici...
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    Elizabeth Zharoff is an international opera singer and voice coach, with 3 degrees in voice, opera, and music production. She's performed in 18 languages throughout major venues in Europe, America, and Asia. Currently based somewhere between Los Angeles and Tucson, Arizona, Elizabeth spends her days researching voice, singing, teaching, writing music, and recording TONS. She also plays Diablo and Dungeons & Dragons.
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    Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
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Комментарии • 14 тыс.

  • @TheCharismaticVoice
    @TheCharismaticVoice  2 года назад +471

    We just released merchandise! Check out the full line-up here: thecharismaticmerch.com

    • @roncriswell2685
      @roncriswell2685 2 года назад +11

      Metallica is the greatest metal/rock n roll band ever, check out the "S&M" (Metallica and the San Francisco symphony orchestra) double album it is amazing, it's on RUclips\m/

    • @chrisd3211
      @chrisd3211 2 года назад +2

      Enter sandman is Metallica’s best song I’d say 👌 review this if you haven’t already

    • @roncriswell2685
      @roncriswell2685 2 года назад +9

      @@chrisd3211 while yes it's a great song it's not close to their best, The Call of Ktulu, Creeping Death, Orion, Master of Puppets,2×4 and The Frayed Ends of Sanity all better imo 😉\m/

    • @bakerfresh
      @bakerfresh 2 года назад +3

      This was my first intro to Metallica. My brother listened to it and played guitar. I did sports and listened to Top 40 and Yo mTV Raps. I was reluctant even at first to hear it.

    • @bakerfresh
      @bakerfresh 2 года назад +1

      @@roncriswell2685 my brother once in Jazz Band had the band play Metallica when the teacher stepped out. Before the collab.
      Teacher wasn't happy. Like a Twisted Sister video, "We're not Gonna Take It."

  • @walterely4528
    @walterely4528 2 года назад +6522

    I’m a disabled veteran of Desert Storm warfare. I am paralyzed, can’t see or hear well with heavy ptsd. I can relate. I remember when this song came out. I could only feel self pity. I am handicapable now. Keep moving forward not dwelling on the past.

    • @gratefulila9980
      @gratefulila9980 2 года назад +382

      Thank you for your sacrifices brother. May you be blessed

    • @matti72033
      @matti72033 2 года назад +179

      You are an amazing human. Thank you.

    • @jamesestrada82
      @jamesestrada82 2 года назад +83

      Mission before self as they say… God bless you Sir.

    • @mitchellpark7157
      @mitchellpark7157 2 года назад +75

      Thank you for your service and sacrifice brother! We are all blessed to have men and women like yourself lay your lives on the line for our freedoms, we're not worthy of your gift! 🤘

    • @danramos6192
      @danramos6192 2 года назад +79

      Jesus man I cant even imagine. That sort of resilience is beyond admirable. Thank you for your service

  • @nasty509ss
    @nasty509ss 2 года назад +7697

    If its emotion and Metallica you want,look no further than Fade To Black,gives a guy the old chicken skin every time he hears it.Cant wait to see what you think of ONE,thank you for doing this!

    • @Broccoli_Highkicks
      @Broccoli_Highkicks 2 года назад +283

      Sure, but for vocal analysis, the second half of their career, where James actually had to sing instead of yelling in key (his own words), is more interesting, so instead I'd suggest The Unforgiven.

    • @daisypooch4034
      @daisypooch4034 2 года назад +84

      This is one of the greatest metal songs of ALL Time; but it is due to the inspiration that came from the book: Johnny Got His Gun by Dalton Trumbo!! The clips in music video are from a movie that was created from Trumbo's short novel. I believe someone read the book, then saw the movie and wrote this amazing song! I have always hoped they would remake the movie because it doesn't come close to the power of the book. Metallica's One DOES! But the book is basically the story of a man mutilated by war with only his brain and life functions (breathing, heart pumping) still working, thinking about life and the terrible place he is now trapped in. Pretty difficult to create a movie completely about one mans thoughts! The book actually places you inside the man trapped in his own body! You actually think you might go crazy if you read another page! Its visceral and moving!
      Just as Metallica's ONE is!
      So glad you are covering this amazing song. I read the book first; but now anytime I hear this song, I have to pause and listen to it until the end... just like the book, you can't put it down.
      Thank you!
      Everyone should read this novel, it will change your life and perspective and could possibly change the world.

    • @tacklecentralfishing1051
      @tacklecentralfishing1051 2 года назад +92

      To Live is to die

    • @robbob5302
      @robbob5302 2 года назад +129

      Fade to Black or Nothing Else Matters would be right up Elizabeth's alley.

    • @Donbazzini
      @Donbazzini 2 года назад +75

      I agree if it’s emotion from Metallica you want then fade to black is top tier

  • @PuckTheFenguins
    @PuckTheFenguins 8 месяцев назад +539

    She just casually stumbled upon one of the most iconic rock songs of all time.... Awesome

    • @jvillain9946
      @jvillain9946 6 месяцев назад +37

      There is no way anyone her age hasnt heard One. Its an absolute impossibility unless she just crawled out of a cave. The same with most of the songs they "say" they never heard before.

    • @mathisg.8393
      @mathisg.8393 6 месяцев назад +13

      ​@@jvillain9946you just don't realize lol.

    • @Balikon
      @Balikon 6 месяцев назад +34

      @@jvillain9946 When "And Justice For All" was released, she was two years old. I remember, most of my mates just refused to listen to metal music - not one second. When Metallica was accepted by more people, there are people never had contact to Metallica nor to this song. Don't think the whole world is listening to Metallica. I stumble myself upon bands, which exist since forever and I did not know they even existed.

    • @klmbuilders5385
      @klmbuilders5385 5 месяцев назад +12

      @@jvillain9946 I used to think that too but, to be fair, I have not heard any of her style of music either. (Opera)

    • @honekun
      @honekun 5 месяцев назад +3

      Guess I came out of the cave today too

  • @jessieyoung3759
    @jessieyoung3759 6 месяцев назад +552

    When the chaplain is asked " don't you have anything for him " and he replies "he is a product of your profession , not mine " the coldest line in a movie ever . Even worse knowing this has happenned to many soldiers is what makes it all the more terrifying .

    • @Walksthewalk
      @Walksthewalk 5 месяцев назад +9

      Yeah definitely the most brutal

    • @kevinmichael9482
      @kevinmichael9482 3 месяца назад +5

      Yeah, have read books on WW1 and the collective brutality is shocking.

    • @JC.LC.
      @JC.LC. 3 месяца назад +20

      It's definitely a brutal line. But the one where his father says: "Each man faces death by himself, alone" it very cold and scary.

    • @The1rust
      @The1rust 3 месяца назад +5

      Even the grace of God has abandoned this man.

    • @1320crusier
      @1320crusier 3 месяца назад +2

      @@kevinmichael9482 When one reads about World War 1, stories like Storm of Steel are as important as stories like All Quiet.

  • @hellhound1389
    @hellhound1389 Год назад +1687

    The drums were the machine guns and canons, the guitar is the screaming of the wounded, and the singing is the feelings and emotions of the victims. Heavy metal indeed

    • @nexpro6118
      @nexpro6118 Год назад +43

      That's a great way of listening/accepting the song

    • @guitarMaster666Poop
      @guitarMaster666Poop Год назад +44

      Low key the bass was just James mourning cliff

    • @bubblegum0912
      @bubblegum0912 Год назад +17

      ​@@guitarMaster666PoopI think that's a fact, I don't blame him either ...and justice for all was a banging album, just one step in their massive career 🤘

    • @adrito_talukdar
      @adrito_talukdar Год назад +10

      the bass is the sound of use of arrows and maces

    • @erichgrunberg8396
      @erichgrunberg8396 Год назад +5

      That's the best explanation, why Jasons´ bass was missing. No part in the story.

  • @SodiumWage
    @SodiumWage Год назад +2738

    When this song came out I was failing high school. My 60 year old English teacher had us listen to this song and read the book and she interpreted the drums as being the munitions and gunfire exploding on the battlefield. That moment changed my life because I suddenly understood how art can be used to express emotion and the human experience. And though many more years would go by I eventually did get my BA in English literature and I thank my teacher and Metallica for that. This song will always hold a special and very intimate part in my life.

    • @carlosvazquez12
      @carlosvazquez12 Год назад +91

      Thats a great teacher!

    • @vinyldash2333
      @vinyldash2333 Год назад +156

      Imagine an English teacher telling you to listen to Metallica as an assignment. Best class ever.

    • @Nimogen55
      @Nimogen55 Год назад +1

      Wait, who? Cares.

    • @jaywood7501
      @jaywood7501 Год назад +56

      The drums are the same beat at SOS in morse code as well

    • @megamage911
      @megamage911 Год назад +21

      @@vinyldash2333 I had an English teacher that wanted us to interpret RHCP - Californication, which I'd say is definitely on the same level xD

  • @skylersmall6322
    @skylersmall6322 9 месяцев назад +250

    I served in the Marines during the Afghan War, this song really hits deep for me. I know everyone experiences combat differently, the guitar solo at the end reminds me of the panic and fear you feel when you're assaulting an enemy position. Everything is in fast forward, you have no time to think, barely have time to breathe. You just run and shoot until it's over. For the guy in the video he's fighting with that same desperation.

    • @lozloz7418
      @lozloz7418 4 месяца назад +2

      Have you heard red gums only 19 it’s about a Vietnam war vet

    • @kimmi7199
      @kimmi7199 3 месяца назад +3

      Thank you for your service Sir.

    • @brettsalazar1886
      @brettsalazar1886 3 месяца назад +1

      My interpretation is the man reaching his boiling point and wanting everything to be over but you could be right 🧐

    • @saidlikewhoa
      @saidlikewhoa 2 месяца назад

    • @phirstaide
      @phirstaide Месяц назад +2

      God Bless you Devil Dog. Semper Fi!

  • @danielmay7107
    @danielmay7107 7 месяцев назад +174

    Haven't cried in a year or so until now. Just had a nice 15 minute cry watching you experience this masterpiece for the first time. Thank you.

    • @AiryFears
      @AiryFears 5 месяцев назад +5

      Me too

    • @ramacabral4399
      @ramacabral4399 5 месяцев назад +1

      lol

    • @ithemba
      @ithemba 4 месяца назад +2

      its weird, isn't it? I watched it back a year ago when it first came out and watching it again just now and welling up.

    • @ramacabral4399
      @ramacabral4399 4 месяца назад +3

      dudes, she's faking it, lol

    • @fredthechihuahua
      @fredthechihuahua 3 месяца назад +4

      ​@ramacabral4399 you need to watch more of her channel, and listen to her sing, too. Her life is music, man. More than yours or mine.

  • @CJ-qk5si
    @CJ-qk5si 2 года назад +492

    "This is so much more lulling and soft than my first introduction"
    How many of you smiled when she said this and said, "Oh, just wait a bit".
    Elizabeth is to music for me as I imagine cataract surgery is for the blind. She makes me see what I would never have otherwise seen.

    • @alexandrefournel7263
      @alexandrefournel7263 2 года назад +25

      I was just thinking something similar... "you're at the half way mark of a Metallica song... just wait it's coming"

    • @caelsherrod9540
      @caelsherrod9540 2 года назад +14

      I started laughing and was like “in a minute that’s gonna change”

    • @Thjorsson
      @Thjorsson 2 года назад +10

      I was thinking "Hold on to your seatbelt"

    • @p.blasko1203
      @p.blasko1203 2 года назад +6

      @@alexandrefournel7263 I was thinking the same exact thing!!!!🤣😂

    • @EntertainMeNow78
      @EntertainMeNow78 2 года назад +3

      Yeah me too.

  • @owenjacobs65
    @owenjacobs65 2 года назад +443

    “This is so much more lulling and soft, than my intro to Metallica…”
    Me: visibly giggling at the screen in anticipation

  • @danielmay7107
    @danielmay7107 7 месяцев назад +80

    The last line before the intense guitarr solo is "He's a product of your profession... not mine." which always made me interpret it as anger against those responsible for the war but also the horrific state the patient is in.

    • @daxuss
      @daxuss 2 месяца назад

      yes fully agree with your interpretation

    • @tildabirzeanu3352
      @tildabirzeanu3352 Месяц назад

      I got that feeling as well, however, given that the other person was actually trying to get a reaction of mercy from him, kind of like “do something”, that’s how it sounded to me at least, this guy just shut him down in a personal matter, and I think the bigger issue was the state of the patient, and not his own beliefs and ego. Just my opinion.

  • @quizshorts2023
    @quizshorts2023 6 месяцев назад +83

    I heard this song as a teenager when it came out. I went straight into the Army after HS. It means so much more to me after being in combat and seeing men be blown up in front of me. It makes me appreciate every one of them who gave their lives and bodies. It could have easily been me.

    • @JC.LC.
      @JC.LC. 3 месяца назад +2

      Wow, man. That's deep. I'm glad you made it. Thank you for your service.

    • @Usuerusers81
      @Usuerusers81 3 месяца назад +1

      Dang 😢

    • @saidlikewhoa
      @saidlikewhoa 2 месяца назад

  • @HerculesRockefellerESQ
    @HerculesRockefellerESQ 2 года назад +656

    "He's the product of your profession. Not mine." Is one of the most chilling lines in the entire film.

    • @thememecow1673
      @thememecow1673 2 года назад +94

      For democracy, any man would give his only begotten son. That gets me every timw

    • @raha2470
      @raha2470 2 года назад +24

      What’s fucked up is the elite will celebrate the winning of a war as if they gave up everything in that sacrifice.

    • @maximummatt73
      @maximummatt73 2 года назад +58

      "Kill me. Over and over again, kill me."
      That's what got me

    • @HerculesRockefellerESQ
      @HerculesRockefellerESQ 2 года назад

      @@thememecow1673 good point.

    • @HerculesRockefellerESQ
      @HerculesRockefellerESQ 2 года назад

      @@raha2470 exactly.

  • @drewknoles3258
    @drewknoles3258 2 года назад +846

    "One" is one of the most important songs in music history, more specifically the heavy metal genre. The subject matter and musicianship we're impossible to dismiss. The song was released only 14 years after the end of the Vietnam war so the gravitas of the subject matter was very topical and in the public conscious. The video followed the same vein. There were no dragons, devil's, or scantily clad women. Just four guys in skinny jeans and Reebok's refusing to be ignored.

    • @coreyabell6332
      @coreyabell6332 2 года назад +36

      *13 years not 14 Nam ended in '75 and One dropped in '88

    • @drewknoles3258
      @drewknoles3258 2 года назад +32

      @@coreyabell6332 thank you for looking out.

    • @suvadeepchatterjee9098
      @suvadeepchatterjee9098 2 года назад +44

      It's not about only any war, it's about what all wars bring. Only sadness in normal lives.

    • @Scarecrow853
      @Scarecrow853 2 года назад +27

      . . . And Justice for all will always be my favourite Metallica album.

    • @jamesestrada82
      @jamesestrada82 2 года назад +6

      Pretty positive they rocked Nike back in the 80’s, not Reebok.

  • @Tales-from-the-Crypt
    @Tales-from-the-Crypt 7 месяцев назад +37

    I just want to thank you for respecting the song for the master piece it is.

  • @jennielee3977
    @jennielee3977 4 месяца назад +24

    I saw this film, when it came out in 1971, during the Vietnam War. Then I read the book. I still remember it vividly. The most horrifying point is when the doctor realizes that he is conscious and has him hidden away in shame. I knew nothing about this song or video. Thanks for this!

  • @LaneyLia
    @LaneyLia Год назад +754

    My dad pretty much forced me to listen to this and watch the video about a year before he died when I was 15/16 to show me Metallica, and how deep it was. I didn’t really get into Metallica and that whole genre until after he passed, so I couldn’t thank him for it, but this song gives me my dad back for just a minute.

    • @ollieishere4122
      @ollieishere4122 11 месяцев назад +28

      I was already emotional before I read your comment because of the song. Now I’m on the verge of crying. I’m here laying in a hospital bed with a Motley Crue shirt on. I lost my dad at 14. He wasn’t a vet but a have a lot of family members who served or are serving. My cousin in the Air Force and my brother is a marine. I wanted to serve. But my health is so bad, my stomach partly paralyzed along with my intestines. I faint and have asthma and cerebral palsy. My dad was also disabled. Spinal cord injury. His body finally gave out a month before I started high school freshman year. He gave me so much. And one of the best thing he has given me is my music taste. I use to be rocked to sleep as a baby to ozzy, kiss, AC/DC, and more. I would sleep to heavy metal and screamo to lullabies. I was singing kid rock and AC/DC as soon as I could talk. I knew the lyrics to at 3 or 4. I grew up with his music and of course my alternative and emo music 😂. Music is one of the reasons I’m still alive. I wish I could hug him and thank him. Without my music I would of felt so alone and never would be able to process emotion. Or even feel close to my dad. I’m in the hospital hooked up to feeding tubes and ivs because i cant get nutrients. I am 20 now and would give anything to have my dad beside me. So I am so grateful for this channel and the music. Thank you so much for sharing. I really needed to hear that. If you ever need to talk I’m here.

    • @LaneyLia
      @LaneyLia 11 месяцев назад +9

      @@ollieishere4122 thank YOU for sharing that. I’m sorry for your loss, and all of the medical stuff you have going on. I hope you get to get out of the hospital soon. And thanks to your cousin and brother for their service.

    • @ollieishere4122
      @ollieishere4122 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@LaneyLia thank you so much. Sorry I was in a hard mental place at that time. I am pretty okay with my health and am coping. I’m back home and got some not so good health news. But hey, I can live until I’m 90 and I have wonderful people in my life. So I can be content! Anyway thank you for listening. I hope you are doing well❤️

    • @SenorSmoke79
      @SenorSmoke79 10 месяцев назад +4

      You're not alone. We belong to the Metal Militia. Hope you feel better right now. I'm a friend from Mexico.

    • @LaneyLia
      @LaneyLia 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@SenorSmoke79 thank you 🖤

  • @Spotastic9
    @Spotastic9 Год назад +703

    I'm a Marine Corps veteran who joined shortly after 9/11. I was also in a coma for more than 7 days after severe trauma. This song has so much of that experience wrapped up into it. I really didn't know when I was awake or not, but I was totally aware that things were happening around me at times. "One" of my favorite songs.

    • @dirtydeeds4free553
      @dirtydeeds4free553 Год назад

      Thank you my man, hope Uncle Sam paid you well for that damage to your brain bucket.

    • @allenwinberg5119
      @allenwinberg5119 Год назад +15

      And I ate all your jello.

    • @JeffTiberend
      @JeffTiberend Год назад +34

      Thank you for your service.

    • @quegacho077
      @quegacho077 Год назад +24

      Thanks for sharing and thank you for your service

    • @williammaynard6740
      @williammaynard6740 Год назад +6

      Fair enough fellow I have ben there ( not me) but it was us & you know as I do shits real
      SEMPER FI

  • @enloopious
    @enloopious 9 месяцев назад +25

    The major chords represent the hope and the minor keys represent the tragedy, frustration, and anger.

  • @VaderIWNL
    @VaderIWNL 7 месяцев назад +27

    I always get the chills when James starts singing the darkness imprisoning me verse. Absolutely amazing song, will always be my all time fav Metallica song.

    • @cddp2484
      @cddp2484 5 месяцев назад +1

      Agreed this is the song that made me Starr listening to Metallica

    • @oahts5906
      @oahts5906 4 месяца назад +1

      Yep. They build that part up just absolutely perfectly. This music does not discriminate

  • @Deft2000
    @Deft2000 Год назад +581

    When I served in the army in 2013-2014 (I am from Russia, we have a draft army), my country unleashed the first stage of the conflict in Ukraine. I was lucky, I did not participate in hostilities, I had a staff position. But I specifically read the book "Johnny Got His Gun" and listened to this Metallica song so as not to succumb to the false military propaganda.
    It's absolutely scary, creepy, heavy, but a great book and an equally great song. Thank you for taking it apart in such detail and emotionally. At the end, I broke down and cried.
    (Excuse me for my English)

    • @nexpro6118
      @nexpro6118 Год назад +2

      In, Russia, can a militray aged male be drafted more than once? For example, since you were drafted to the Invasion in, Ukraine back in, 2014. Can you get drafted again, 2023 for the now, new invasion of ALL of, Ukraine?

    • @Deft2000
      @Deft2000 Год назад +38

      @@nexpro6118 After military service in the Russian army, the serviceman is transferred to the reserve. If partial or full mobilization is announced in the country, then he can be called up again in the Armed Forces.
      In 2014, during the occupation of Crimea, I served, but did not participate in this operation. I served in another region.
      So yes, in theory, they can call me directly to the region of warfare. So far, this has not happened, but in fact, no one is insured against this.

    • @nexpro6118
      @nexpro6118 Год назад +9

      @@Deft2000 thank you for sharing. Here in the US (I served in the marines from 2004 to 2009 and I was able to get called back until, 2013. After 2013, the ONLY way to get called back would be if the US implemented the Draft again

    • @Deft2000
      @Deft2000 Год назад +1

      @@nexpro6118 Does the US provide for the possibility of introducing mobilization in case of martial law?

    • @nexpro6118
      @nexpro6118 Год назад

      @@Deft2000 ONLY the President and Governor of the state that martial law is called in can mobilize the National Guard Units but CANNOT mobilize the Regular Full Time Military for martial law events.

  • @aaronhanson3799
    @aaronhanson3799 2 года назад +662

    You need to do Metallica’s “Fade to Black”. Musically it is a masterpiece. It deals with with the topic of suicide but I actually find the song uplifting. It’s a power ballad with an amazing guitar solo. Cliff Burton’s influence can definitely be heard on this song. R.I.P. Cliff

    • @cavetoad1678
      @cavetoad1678 2 года назад +17

      Fade to Black is the way... it's probably the song that gave Metallica access to the semi-general public. The amazing part to consider is the year... what, 1986? Maybe '85? The popular music at the time pretty much was nothing close and it was metal and punk trying to out do each other... good times. :)

    • @jeffwoods9986
      @jeffwoods9986 2 года назад +2

      Exactly bro. I thought of "Fade to Black" too.

    • @baronvonsatan
      @baronvonsatan 2 года назад +8

      It really doesn't get much sadder than "Fade to Black."

    • @patmctallica3522
      @patmctallica3522 2 года назад +3

      Damed right!
      ...but please the Moskow 91 s**t
      Unbeatable! 🤘

    • @davido5496
      @davido5496 2 года назад +2

      Fade to black is better than this iteration of the song. Metallica butchered the studio recording of AJFA - RTL is miles better. I only ever listen to AJFA stuff from live recordings!

  • @AdamB12
    @AdamB12 7 месяцев назад +22

    The film they use in the music video is called Johnnys Got His Gun. The main character has a horrid fate where he is struck by a nearby artillery round. As Metallica sang: (landmines) have taken my speech, taken my hearing...the main character of the film becomes a prisoner of his own body. Its frightening to even fathom such a trauma.

  • @metalhead4352
    @metalhead4352 10 месяцев назад +25

    So many reasons why they were able to convey so much pain. This was the first album they wrote after the death of their original bass player, founding member, and best friend, Cliff Burton. His loss rocked the entire metal community, and the pain of that loss shows throughout this album. They channeled that to a range of messages like Anti-war (One), systemic injustice (...And Justice For All), to polluting the Earth (Blackened). There is a reason they are so prolific.

    • @frostback62
      @frostback62 7 месяцев назад +2

      The founding bassist was Ron McGovney, Cliff joined a year later

    • @gregturner2899
      @gregturner2899 5 месяцев назад

      This album was recorded with no bass track fyi.

    • @peachy-tay
      @peachy-tay 13 часов назад

      @@gregturner2899 lmaoooo

  • @yodaguy6956
    @yodaguy6956 2 года назад +682

    I spent a month in a coma on full life support in a sealed isolation chamber with every organ in complete failure and given zero chance of ever living or recovering. (Several years of "fuuuuuuck that" later I had an almost complete recovery). It took a couple years before I could listen to this song again. But I could never get even partway through the video for the past twenty years, the movie narration linked with the lyrics just destroys me. This is the first time I've gotten through it since then, and I'm crying my fucking eyes out remembering the eternity of unimaginably horrible things I went through in the coma. But I've finally regained one of my favorite videos ever, and it was your genuine compassion and humanity throughout it that helped me get through it. Thank you for being you, the world is a better place for it

    • @NotBenCoultry
      @NotBenCoultry Год назад +54

      Holy shit man. Glad you came back. Had a friend who went through 3 of them from 3 separate injuries and came back 3 times, he was practically Lazarus, but I don't think he was conscious during those stretches. I can't even imagine.

    • @austindouglas268
      @austindouglas268 Год назад +14

      Holy fuck, dude

    • @nikchristley6554
      @nikchristley6554 Год назад +22

      So glad you pulled thru man.

    • @Nick-bb9km
      @Nick-bb9km Год назад +13

      Holy shit bro. So glad you are here. You are an extremely strong person

    • @redneckshaman3099
      @redneckshaman3099 Год назад +3

      @@Nick-bb9km why thank you. Like I always say, once you go black, it's like smoking crack ❤️

  • @trueherofit3317
    @trueherofit3317 2 года назад +323

    I asked Kirk a similar question about the solo a few years ago. He said it’s his interpretation of death, adrenaline rush followed by euphoria, that’s why it starts intense and slows down at the end.

    • @ceebee491
      @ceebee491 2 года назад +1

      Name drop much?!!

    • @kentksclark
      @kentksclark 2 года назад +48

      @@ceebee491 If I knew Kirk Hammett I'd name drop every single day, so would you. lol

    • @ceebee491
      @ceebee491 2 года назад +8

      @@kentksclark too right, I would !

    • @alex0589
      @alex0589 2 года назад +2

      christ... that makes it even heavier lol. Did you meet him or interview him?

    • @trueherofit3317
      @trueherofit3317 2 года назад +23

      @@alex0589 I got to hang out with him after a show because a friend of mine knows Kirks tour assistant. It was a wild experience since he is my guitar idol.

  • @visionofdisorder
    @visionofdisorder 3 месяца назад +10

    you have such exaggerated reactions to some of this music that's just infectious to watch. as a depressed person it makes me feel more emotionally connected somehow. not in some weird infatuated way, but you seem like such a nice person with genuine empathy that it makes me think there's still some decency left in the world. thanks for sharing yourself.

    • @Scott-fy7fm
      @Scott-fy7fm 3 месяца назад +1

      I'm in a dangerously depressed and socially isolated state myself also, and I also take some small comfort in these videos recognizing the genuine humanity of their reactions as I try to rediscover my own ability to feel such things

  • @erickelm4974
    @erickelm4974 8 месяцев назад +2

    At the end of this video, when he is desperately tapping out S.O.S. with his head(the ONLY way he can communicate), is haunting.

  • @madmaxls6
    @madmaxls6 2 года назад +296

    As a nurse, I deeply feel that the guitar solo at the end of the song is relative to the nurse’s internal struggle to ensure life and longevity of the veteran’s body versus treating the intense mental and emotional agony of continuing to live on in the face of utter hopelessness. Her internal struggle to act upon this desire to mercifully end his pain is in direct contradiction to her sworn duty to preserve life and is a weight few will ever experience. I sincerely feel that her final decision to carry out the merciful aspect of her calling as a provider of comfort was robbed from both her and the patient when it was so callously interrupted by those that have NO understanding of TRUE compassion. It is a dichotomy that cannot easily be expressed in one or two paragraphs but rather one or two meaningful moments in time when one’s life hangs in the balance.

    • @elchupasangre
      @elchupasangre 2 года назад +13

      This also provides an interesting context for the observation that the movie quote about each person dying alone is immediately followed by the harmonized guitar solo.

    • @ianfinney7820
      @ianfinney7820 2 года назад +12

      Damn. Wow. 👍

    • @stevesummerford3690
      @stevesummerford3690 2 года назад +4

      I agree and believe this is absolutely part of this, but also believe the solo is representative of this soldiers struggle to have his message/wishes heard by those and once heard, carried out. This apex of his story and the song were represented by the guitar solo as decisions were made, the act was carried out, and the emotional struggle and aftermath for her was administered as she dealt with her own actions which while necessary/requested by her patient were contradictory to her core as a care giver. The solo played a good transition for a lot of themes being carried out in the finale of this song and video.

  • @richardblaszak162
    @richardblaszak162 Год назад +572

    "One" is arguably The greatest song that Metallica has ever written, recorded, mixed, mastered and performed live through their entire career in the genre of Heavy Metal!

    • @hilham89
      @hilham89 10 месяцев назад +3

      Couldn't agree more!

    • @user-BenjiCS
      @user-BenjiCS 9 месяцев назад +34

      Everything but the mix!

    • @dieseldabberdoug8285
      @dieseldabberdoug8285 9 месяцев назад +2

      I politely disagree, enter sandman, is so much more.
      As far as substance of story and meaning.

    • @Rowan611
      @Rowan611 9 месяцев назад +32

      @@dieseldabberdoug8285 what??? No way. Absolutely not. The Black album is a good album. But, it is NOT And Justice For All OR Master. And, while Enter Sandman is a good song, One is an amazing song. That has real meaning.

    • @mikek9297
      @mikek9297 9 месяцев назад +4

      And the best version of it ever recorded is on S&M v1

  • @saigemazda9219
    @saigemazda9219 8 месяцев назад +18

    This is one of the few songs that gives me goosebumps every time. It is also one of my favorite songs to play live. When people start singing it, it gets crazy.

  • @badger1296
    @badger1296 6 месяцев назад +23

    22:11 The guitar solo is the battle for life and death while losing one's mind.

  • @mooonpaw
    @mooonpaw 2 года назад +289

    The guitar solo at that specific time was his heart rate and growing insanity. Take it from someone who was blinded, paralyzed and lost 80% of the use of my muscles for a time. The fact that they were communicating with him pushed adrenaline through whatever is left of his body and his mind kicks into overdrive because of it.

    • @marks1429
      @marks1429 2 года назад +2

      Lol so much more lulling and soft right before it goes off

    • @shannonherb2048
      @shannonherb2048 2 года назад

      Yes

    • @davesherry3464
      @davesherry3464 2 года назад

      It was urgency for the victim

  • @ronaldmcrae4896
    @ronaldmcrae4896 2 года назад +300

    "Johnny got his Gun" that the clips are from, is the most gut wrenching film you could ever watch. They didn't help the nurse who discovered he could be communicated with by Morse Code, euthanize him, they stopped her and they fired her to cover up their misjudgment of his condition. They wheeled him into a private room so there would be little contact and no one else would discover they made a mistake. Ending scene was wheeling him into the room, turning around, walking away, killing the lights and closing the door leaving him alone. I burst into tears and was sick to my stomach and I'm a 77 yr old man and saw this 2 yrs ago.

    • @tomdude96
      @tomdude96 2 года назад +41

      Not just the film, but the book is a whole different story. Its enough to mess with your head and look at war and life and any kinda of suffering in a whole different sense. You're the first comment I read mentioning this which saddens me. Thought there would be more Johnny git his gun comments. This song was literally based on the book and film. How some of these fans don't know that, blows my mind. Thank you

    • @ronaldmcrae4896
      @ronaldmcrae4896 2 года назад +15

      ​@@tomdude96 Also surprised! I'm a pretty avid reader but never that one. Knowing books are always better than the movie that they spun from, probably won't read it. The movie was heartbreaking enough. Movies are never able to capture the real feel. Only one I saw that followed the book well was "Time Travelers Wife" and then they had to spoil it at the very end. Biggest abomination was "Clan of the Cave Bear". An absolutely wonderful complex story that took six books to cover and wound up being a grunting monkey movie. Jean Auel must have been appalled!

    • @philphilips1020
      @philphilips1020 2 года назад +4

      @@ronaldmcrae4896 I don't know this first hand, only from what I'd consider a reliable source, but one of the only examples of a movie that follows the exact course of the book it was derived from is Stanley Kubrick's 'A Clockwork Orange' based on the book by Anthony Burgess.

    • @ronaldmcrae4896
      @ronaldmcrae4896 2 года назад +1

      @@philphilips1020 Never read that. Was aware of it but the title never drew me to it. You peaked my interest and found a pretty good synopsis of it. Actually sounds interesting. I may give it a whirl, thanks.

    • @reineh3477
      @reineh3477 2 года назад +2

      @@tomdude96 scrolling through the comments I noticed the same. I realized that after reading the book, later I also heard Lars mention it in an interview.

  • @ZeroPoint88
    @ZeroPoint88 8 месяцев назад +12

    I swear to god this is like musical blue balls. I get that she is trying to break down and analyze the video but she has the most amazing talent for pausing at every memorable musical change. When our brains are hardwired to need that resolution to the melody or to anticipate a change we know is coming and then have the video paused repeatedly at those moments is borderline torture.

  • @paulhaddon2390
    @paulhaddon2390 5 месяцев назад +11

    Never seen a reaction with such emotion in her/your eyes to this song. You totally got it

  • @fireman2375
    @fireman2375 2 года назад +374

    "Johnny got his gun" is one of the most disturbing movies I have ever watched in my life. And while it is a movie masterpiece, I have never had the heart to put myself through it for a second time - and I normally watch war movies like Saving Private Ryan, Fury, 1917 or Band of Brothers fairly regularly…
    The intensity of the solo at the end is clearly matched to the movie:
    After they finally figured out, that there was still a human spirit in this pile of flesh (and has been for several years by that time), they indeed learn that his only wish is to be put out of his misery. They refuse, for scientific reasons, only the nurse has a heart and actually tries to kill him. She is stopped however, and the movie ends with the curtains on the window being shut, and he loses his last sensation, the sun on his skin...

    • @metalhead9315
      @metalhead9315 2 года назад +55

      I'm a U.S. Marine combat veteran...and that movie is extremely disturbing for me. I was in a coma after my second TBI and I am so grateful I woke up.

    • @patrickschardt7724
      @patrickschardt7724 2 года назад +20

      I’ve never seen it aside from these clips but that description sounds like it’s a must watch movie before you die. I’ll add it to my list

    • @lv-426paradise3
      @lv-426paradise3 2 года назад +23

      Read the original book by Dalton Trumbo, it’s way better than the movie.

    • @timpatrickhanna
      @timpatrickhanna 2 года назад +28

      The book makes it even more terrifying, if that's possible.

    • @patrickschardt7724
      @patrickschardt7724 2 года назад +13

      @@lv-426paradise3 just bought the book and audio book. I’ll listen to it on my way to work

  • @armyfazer1410
    @armyfazer1410 2 года назад +373

    As an old Infantryman, this song went from being my high school get fired up song to being a hard dose of reality for many of my brothers and sisters. Decades later, it means so much more.

    • @shaun_177
      @shaun_177 2 года назад +10

      Amen to that bro. Take care

    • @leenagel3605
      @leenagel3605 2 года назад +17

      Navy 1981-1985. I was in Beruit in 83-84. I know that feeling.

    • @TruthRISING2024
      @TruthRISING2024 2 года назад +17

      God damn right battle. Operation Iraqi Freedom 2003-5 6-7.

    • @bond_3239
      @bond_3239 2 года назад +14

      Affirm, brother. OIF grunt, Purple Heart 10/2004

    • @playblox7508
      @playblox7508 2 года назад +7

      The internet can be a great place. Teared up reading this while listening to one of the best songs (and reaction) ever.

  • @motoman2428
    @motoman2428 9 месяцев назад +7

    Metallica's ability to move back and forth between rage, and compassion is very telling. How they used what seems to be rage to draw people into compassion in everything they have done is mind boggling. They are the tap on your foot at 2 a.m. telling you to wake up.

  • @rosenblau
    @rosenblau 9 дней назад +1

    My story is very different yet I can relate. I've been through multiple surgeries. First time when I was a 10 year old girl. Woke up too early feeling the tube in my throat and horrible pain, wondering what is happening as nobody prepared me for anything. At the age of 13 I got paralyzed from the neck. Metallica did a terrific job in describing the horrors of being trapped in your head and body and not being able to communicate. I too tired to scream for help, over and over. I could hear the doctors vaguely just like the echoing voices in the video. But I couldn't speak nor move nor open my eyes. Nobody could hear me. I was only 10... Once paralyzed it was also difficult to tell what is real and what not for days. Thank you Metallica for giving a voice to the voiceless and describing the experience this well. I hope that I will have the opportunity to visit a concert - it's one of my dreams. I am 34 and tetraplegic, but my hearing is outstanding and music means everything to me.

  • @clutchkman
    @clutchkman 2 года назад +350

    Another song that is lyrically heavy from Metallica is “Dyers Eve.” It’s about Hetfield’s frustration and anger about the way his parents raised him. As a kid, I never thought much of the lyric until my dad asked me “what’s he saying there?” Until I just read him the lyric. He’d never taken any interest in a metal song before but I could tell that he was moved by it, and he said “that’s the way it was for me, “ and “that’s the best song they ever wrote.” I’m glad that I had such a great dad, and that I had the sense to tell him that he wasn’t like them.

    • @TheePIB
      @TheePIB 2 года назад +10

      Agreed, fantastically heavy song lyrically, with well-matched music and rhythm.

    • @sentenced03
      @sentenced03 2 года назад +8

      dyers eve is my favorite Metallica song hands down... when paurd with to live is to die its just *chef kiss*. dyers eve is easily one of their most angry, aggressive, and bitter songs it's fantastic.

    • @giladbaruch147
      @giladbaruch147 2 года назад +7

      Best pure thrash song they have written.
      One of the best thrash metal songs ever.

    • @clutchkman
      @clutchkman 2 года назад +9

      @@TheePIB "Dear mother, dear father, what is this hell you have put me through?" Man... the song is poetry. Not only great thrash, but that's the spirit of rock and roll summed up.

    • @wildae.
      @wildae. 2 года назад +5

      great to hear such stories, i have been metallica fan since early 90's and no one in my peers can stand heavy music and don't understand anything. So its just good for me to read such comments

  • @corssecurity
    @corssecurity 2 года назад +96

    Fyi this was the first music video Metallica ever produced.
    They told the fans they'd never make any. The first time 'they sold out'. To wit Lars (drums) said yes we sell out every show.

    • @stagecoachrobbery
      @stagecoachrobbery 2 года назад +24

      The best part is that during the time in 1989, 'metal' music videos were all dudes on Harleys riding with chicks and drinking beer at strip clubs. Metallica comes along and drops this staggering anti-war video that provokes the discussion on the humanity of physician assisted suicide and a persons right to die, a discussion that is only exasperated just a few years later by the practices of Jack Kevorkian.
      I would definitely not call that selling out.

    • @johncrafton8319
      @johncrafton8319 2 года назад +7

      Yeah, "selling out" means getting more people to listen to your music. As though a band is only being true to themselves (and their fans) if no one ever hears of them. What a crock.
      Millions of Metallica fans would be missing out on Metallica's music if they didn't "sell out". That would be damn near criminal.

    • @TeslaMaster2
      @TeslaMaster2 2 года назад +12

      To be fair, they've been accused of "selling out" way before 1989. When Fade to Black was released as a single in 1984, many accused Metallica of going soft and selling out to the music industry. All because the song started with an acoustic guitar, and was not thrash metal all the way through like the previous album Kill 'em All.

    • @corssecurity
      @corssecurity 2 года назад +5

      @@TeslaMaster2 true people will bitch. I figure it like this they started as a bunch of teenage alcoholics (I can relate) and now they are pushing sixty. Times change! People grow.

    • @metaltim
      @metaltim 2 года назад +3

      This isn't their first 'sell out' that was fade to black, the 'ballad'. And it was Jason that replied with 'we sell out every seat at every show'

  • @ceskychlap
    @ceskychlap 7 месяцев назад +6

    I love how you now have an understanding of metal. I feel an incredible amount of emotion from metal. For me it guided me during my childhood and dealing with having a broken home. Listening to something so freeing made me cry to no end.

  • @tristanjohnson822
    @tristanjohnson822 9 месяцев назад +8

    My mom was around 14 when this video was released. She still says she is borderlined traumatised by seeing the music video when it first came out. Such an insane piece of music by Metallica, coupled with the disturbing nature of the video, it combines to one of the greatest songs and music videos of all time

    • @2006gtobob
      @2006gtobob 8 месяцев назад

      I know EXACTLY how she feels. I LOVE this song for the absolute emotional roller coaster of horror this song and video convey.

  • @LateCloser
    @LateCloser 2 года назад +347

    Don't know if this has been mentioned already, but this was Metallica's first ever music video. They were famous for refusing to make them. MTV was in their hay day. Metallica had become quite large without mainstream radio play or visibility on MTV. Finally, they relented after finding a way to present one of their songs in a manner that wasn't considered "selling out" to them. Most video's of the time were pretty shallow and without message; regardless of the song's content. It was the end of the "hair band" era. Many videos featured bands looking outrageous and doing outrageous things on stage. This video contrasts all of that, with the band featured in all dark cloths in black and white; placing the focus on the music and lyrics. It was QUITE the contrast to the other videos being played on MTV at the time. Fans were so happy to finally have a video of their favorite band on MTV, that it was voted #1 on MTV's fan selected countdown show for a very long time. I think, they may have had to actually retire it because it kept on getting votes from fans for such a long time it was keeping other videos from getting their rightful exposure.
    This video had an incredible impact at the time. Not just the song itself, which is of course incredible in its own way.

    • @rossconroy1674
      @rossconroy1674 2 года назад +8

      Remember when Justice came out ? I waa about 17. Didn't know what to feel about it. Now its music royalty

    • @rossconroy1674
      @rossconroy1674 2 года назад +5

      Having said that, I'm one of those weirdo's that actually like St Anger. Can't really say much for magnetic or hardwired, sounds stock to me ?

    • @OptimusX1972
      @OptimusX1972 2 года назад +5

      @@rossconroy1674 Eww...you are a weirdo. lol j/k I've tried to like St. Anger, just. CAN'T. Frantic is the only song I can listen to. While I LOVE Magnetic and even more so, Hardwired, I don't like the "unfinished" sound to St. Anger.

    • @OptimusX1972
      @OptimusX1972 2 года назад +3

      This video also marked the moment when "fans" started to call them sell-outs.

    • @LateCloser
      @LateCloser 2 года назад +4

      @@OptimusX1972 Yeah, St. Anger never appealed to me. Death Magnetic however, seems like the proper successor to Justice more so than the Black album did. Hardwired is just too many different riffs in the same song. They probably could have broke those up and made like 50 songs and it would have been better and MUCH easier.

  • @anandohum3551
    @anandohum3551 2 года назад +221

    "I didn't understand the depth of sadness that metal could communicate".
    I wasn't quite anticipating that sort of reflection for my reasoning in listening to metal as a genre, but it brought a big insight into myself, and I burst out crying, feeling seen by that statement. Thank you, I didn't know I'd get getting therapy and emotional release by witenssing someone listen to, and reflect on Metallica, but hear we are. Thank you Elizabeth!

    • @Damoinion
      @Damoinion 2 года назад +11

      I have used metal as a means to allay my emotional lows as well as to help express my joy ever since I discovered the genre back in the early 1970's.

    • @xscorpx
      @xscorpx 2 года назад +2

      Weirdo

    • @Damoinion
      @Damoinion 2 года назад +6

      @@xscorpx Why? Apart from your very self descriptive name....

    • @alanandjess7516
      @alanandjess7516 2 года назад +9

      Metal is a very intelligent genre, with poets, philosophers and virtuoso'. Okay not all, but I think it's the most emotive music out there...

    • @anandohum3551
      @anandohum3551 2 года назад +1

      @@alanandjess7516 It's true, or at least often. It's a style of music very much related to deeply felt, but often tumultuous emotions. Part of the reason that I've connected with Devin Townsend's music so much is that I relate to his own journey of emotional evolution that he demonstrates in his music.

  • @jaysonmelrose9529
    @jaysonmelrose9529 5 месяцев назад +16

    One, The Unforgiven and Nothing else matters are all equally masterfully emotion incarnate. Absolute perfection💯💥

    • @washworks7630
      @washworks7630 4 месяца назад

      fade to black is better then Unforgiven and nothing else matters

  • @user-mf1ry5mx3c
    @user-mf1ry5mx3c 4 месяца назад +2

    After all these decades I still can't watch this video without crying. It's a masterpiece.

  • @oldredeye413
    @oldredeye413 2 года назад +208

    James has said that he related to the soldier after his brother referred him to the book. James’ dad left when he was 13 and his mom died of cancer shortly after. When he wrote the song, he wrote it recalling his own feelings of being trapped in his own body and not knowing how to deal with the anger and grief.
    This was also Metallica’s first ever music video.

    • @Mr1Tanker
      @Mr1Tanker 2 года назад +4

      ...after swearing they would never sell-out, or make a music video. So many young fans don't realize this.

    • @TimedRevolver
      @TimedRevolver 2 года назад +46

      @@Mr1Tanker If a band is going to break their no music video rule, this is the way to do it.

    • @mr.wilson9341
      @mr.wilson9341 2 года назад +7

      "The God That Failed" also derived from his Christian Science mother

    • @Basketbd
      @Basketbd 2 года назад +7

      @@Mr1Tanker bro it’s been over 30 years 💀

    • @jazzmaster909
      @jazzmaster909 2 года назад +7

      @@Mr1Tanker Most young metallica fans care more about the music than the "Tough Macho 2Cool4U" persona

  • @ReubenRosa
    @ReubenRosa Год назад +201

    This is the song that got me into Heavy Metal. I Was in college at the time. At 19 as a single young man with severe lack of confidence, I had gotten great news, I was getting my braces off in a month. I went home excited. 20 minutes later my life would be forever changed. I was crossing the street and a driver hit me sending me 50 feet into the air and 100 feet away from the impact. The result of that accident I lost my front and bottom teeth, I had a fractured jaw and I would need12 hours of maxi facial plastic surgery. My future had just been changed in an eye blink. My original thoughts of what I was expecting were ripped from me. I was alone at home, looking at my damaged face I did not recognize. I was broken emotionally. Then I turned on mtv at the time and they played that song. I was instantly grabbed by it. This resonated with me. And despite the darkness of the song I Realized I Was not alone at all. This saved me. I have been a fan ever since. So glad you did this song.

    • @ollieishere4122
      @ollieishere4122 Год назад +5

      That is so beautiful and so terrible. I’m a way I understand that pain. Mine wasn’t as shocking and fast. When I was two weeks old o got very sick. Stoped breathing at least 3 times. Had seizures. Now I have cerebral palsy. I didn’t understand I was disabled (I was in a bad living situation too) until I was 16. It hit me. I had just over come it when Covid hit and at 18/19 my stomach became paralyzed. I lost weight, 30lbs, and got put on a feeding tube. I just got the surgical j tube right Uber my belly button. I stare in the mirror and it’s like I’m not seeing myself. I have a tube hanging in out of me. My teeth are messy (I had 6 years of braces) from throwing up everything I eat. My hair had fallen out some from malnutrition so I cut it off and dyed it. I look sickly. I faint now and can’t do much movement. One thing that saved me was my music. I would sit and listen to much. At one point using it to explain to others how I was feeling. I would not be alive without music. That’s a fact.

    • @waded2129
      @waded2129 Год назад +1

      Music has saved my life for the exact reason, that it helps me feel like I'm not alone. Other people, good people, have struggles as well. I can't explain it, but that gives me strength.
      Hang in there. (So many stories I could share here)

    • @saltyxdogg5542
      @saltyxdogg5542 Год назад

  • @scriptmonkeys71
    @scriptmonkeys71 7 месяцев назад +11

    I just discovered your channel and the content is so good, it prompted me to join your Patreon. However, for this video, despite having watched the original and listened to the song hundreds of times-including yesterday-your emotional reaction brought tears to my eyes as well. Thank you.

  • @rfdc
    @rfdc 9 месяцев назад +1

    I love seeing/hearing these classics through the fresh ears of someone that is not familiar with them. Makes me appreciate them even more

  • @jonathansprague6869
    @jonathansprague6869 2 года назад +426

    As a retired combat veteran, I identify with this song on a mental, spiritual, and emotional level. I have so much to say, there is no way I can say it all. Umm...having PTSD sometimes is like you described, being stuck in your own brain. I also experienced this after a serious accident that should have killed me, I was in a coma for a short time....a couple of days and I was aware of things going on around me at times. I so desperately wanted to reach out to my family and tell them I was okay and I loved them, but could not. This was extended by my time on a ventilator and unable to speak. I thank God, could communicate by writing and I have all my limbs, but not being able to fully express myself was difficult. I can and do understand this video on that level. Thank you for doing this song. I....

    • @mikevoisine2886
      @mikevoisine2886 2 года назад +14

      I hear you, brother. In the same boat. 🇨🇦

    • @jhseales1969
      @jhseales1969 2 года назад +11

      Ty for your service!!!

    • @jonniep
      @jonniep 2 года назад +11

      We are stronger together my brother. You are NEVER alone...

    • @yviemitchell4896
      @yviemitchell4896 2 года назад +20

      Thank you for your service and for the honesty and vulnerability in your post. I am a trained medic and nurse who's spent my adult life (22 years) caring for those who are trapped in their bodies, minds, and/or thoughts. Sometimes it feels like it breaks something inside of you but we bend, not break and get up each day to do it all over again, always knowing that we're stronger for living it. Keep staying strong, you're definitely not alone.

    • @dvaderwasframed
      @dvaderwasframed 2 года назад +12

      I was never in the service, but I was in a coma for 28 days. I do remember some of it. My heart had stopped and they had to shock me 14 times to get me back. I was fortunate to have only felt 1 shock. It hurt something fierce. I was soon out of it again. Also remeber them using breathing treatments on me. It felt like I was being drowned. I couldn't talk, didn't understand what they were doing to me or who they were. I could only growl. Thats been 6 years ago now. If I felt or was aware of more my brain has locked that away from memory...thank God

  • @harrr53
    @harrr53 2 года назад +187

    As a bit of background info. This was Metallica's first music video, even though it was their 4th album. They resisted the pull of MTV for a long time, wanting only their music to speak for them, and concentrating on live performances. When they finally did produce a video, at a time when rock videos were flashy, and usually included female models, and promoted bad boy image of the bands, this video was monochromatic, with just the band playing, not even to an audience. Almost like they still wanted to make the point that it was the music, not the image, that mattered.

    • @IamPsybo
      @IamPsybo 2 года назад +7

      Yup and then nearly every album sucked from after then

    • @jenh9221
      @jenh9221 2 года назад +8

      This was the video that got me into Metallica. I was a kid, maybe 10 when I first saw it. It mesmerized me. It horrified me and introduced me to history that I hadn’t learned about in school yet.

    • @jenh9221
      @jenh9221 2 года назад +7

      @@IamPsybo I liked a lot of Death Magnetic.

    • @wohlhabendermanager
      @wohlhabendermanager 2 года назад +6

      @@IamPsybo Thanks for your input. Can't remember anyone asking, but you do you.

    • @Jeffrey_L
      @Jeffrey_L 2 года назад +3

      @@IamPsybo yep! Bob Rock and Lars destroyed this band. Completely different from the time they entered the studio for the Black album. It was Black cause we all mourned the loss of Metallica and grimaced at the ushering in of this cheesy and phony stadium rock band that usurped one of the greatest, if not the greatest, thrash bands.

  • @onlineslacker101
    @onlineslacker101 2 месяца назад +1

    One of the greatest pieces of music ever composed. I fight back tears every time I hear it. Great job on the analysis.

  • @danielrecchia7075
    @danielrecchia7075 24 дня назад

    Your analysis is amazing...The way you describe the feeling of the music is compromised of the words many of us feel, but cannot describe

  • @kennyg823
    @kennyg823 2 года назад +378

    I wish the guys in metallica could see this. Especially James. Just the appreciation of the entire body of work is awesome. Love the channel

    • @johnmarsh2608
      @johnmarsh2608 2 года назад +11

      There might be a away for get their attention, could try sharing the video to their social media

    • @Physics_Dude
      @Physics_Dude 2 года назад +19

      I'm sure he'll see it. James LaBrie (Dream Theater) and Tatiana Shmailyuk (Jinjer) are just a few who have connected with Elizabeth after she's reacted to their work.

    • @lmof1530
      @lmof1530 2 года назад +27

      He'd be getting all emotional like he did on Stern when Elton complimented him 😅😅😅.. You've gotta love Papa Het

    • @chrislegner4816
      @chrislegner4816 2 года назад +4

      Well said. Respectful, intelligent and well prepared are what set these reactions apart.

    • @jerseybultaoreune6107
      @jerseybultaoreune6107 2 года назад +5

      With the degrees of separation in this modern world, we can make this happen. I shall try!!!

  • @Rick951
    @Rick951 2 года назад +414

    To be honest, I have heard One so many times that I haven't had an honest emotional reaction to it in a long time...until watching you react to it today. I was moved to tears several times because anticipating your reaction stripped away that jadedness and amplified what I felt from the lyrics. Great video as always.

    • @RoyalRumble246
      @RoyalRumble246 2 года назад +7

      Same here

    • @robbob5302
      @robbob5302 2 года назад +4

      Take time to sit down and revisit those old classics. So much great music, so many great bands in the 70's, 80's and 90's.
      We are indeed blessed to be living in this time.

    • @anneahlefeld1989
      @anneahlefeld1989 2 года назад +1

      Yes!

    • @BananaDave89
      @BananaDave89 2 года назад +1

      Completely agree with you here.

    • @SammyWarmHands
      @SammyWarmHands 2 года назад +2

      Same. I've watched so many live versions over the years that I barely remembered the movie samples

  • @andybrooks9855
    @andybrooks9855 7 месяцев назад +1

    The presenter is such a caring individual. The mix of musical intellect and human feeling is just so inspiring. I would love to meet someone like this in my lifetime.

  • @dannyboy6015
    @dannyboy6015 3 месяца назад +1

    Simply a modern masterpiece, thankyou for your service

  • @metalmark1214
    @metalmark1214 2 года назад +101

    Love the the line from the movie where the military general asked the Padre, "Don't you have some message for him Padre" and the Padre says back, "He's a product of your profession, not mine"

    • @johncrafton8319
      @johncrafton8319 2 года назад +20

      Except, during the time of WWI, the churches were telling people it was their sacred duty to die for their country. “Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori" was preached by the Catholic Church and many others, and it means "It is sweet and fitting to die for one's country".
      In other words, unless the "padre" bucked what many churches were saying at the time, he had some culpability as well.

    • @skaftetryne32
      @skaftetryne32 2 года назад +5

      Yeah, priests lie.

    • @metalmark1214
      @metalmark1214 2 года назад +4

      @@johncrafton8319 Good to know John, thanks. Then it doesn't surprise me about the Catholic Church. No offense to anyone.

    • @machidaman
      @machidaman 2 года назад +1

      @Neslepaks their whole vocation amd existence is predicated on the biggest lie of them all: the existence of the supernatural.

    • @pete_lind
      @pete_lind 2 года назад +2

      @@metalmark1214 Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori , is from the Odes , by the Roman poet Horace , 67 - 8 years BC , its not from catholic church , its over 320 years older . Also it s was another peat that used part of this poem in his anti war poem during WW 1 , Wilfred Owen , English poet and soldier .
      You can also see " Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori " if you visit Arlington national cemetery , it's over the rear entrance to Memorial Amphitheater .

  • @Broccoli_Highkicks
    @Broccoli_Highkicks 2 года назад +65

    Thankfully it's the full video and not the edit 👍
    For a band that for a long time didn't want to make a music video, they sure knocked it out of the park on their first try.
    I love how at the Grammy's back in the day, this song just left the whole tragically hip audience in shock 😂

    • @chrislira3574
      @chrislira3574 2 года назад +9

      Was this the Grammy's where Jethro Tull won for Best Heavy Metal Band? That would be the peak of irony if so.

    • @tommy5675
      @tommy5675 2 года назад +16

      @@chrislira3574 And When metallica finally won a Grammy, Lars Thanked Jethro Tell For not releasing an album that year :)

    • @oscardiggs246
      @oscardiggs246 2 года назад +1

      @@chrislira3574 Even Ian Anderson didn't show up for the ceremony where he won, because he was convinced Metallica would win. The voters were like "This music scares us, but this band has a flute, we like this." Also nominated, an unknown band named Soundgarden. Not metal, but closer.

  • @tildabirzeanu3352
    @tildabirzeanu3352 Месяц назад

    I have to say, I like your analysis very much, you go into musical theory, lyrics and conceptual interpretation, as well into the emotions that are conveyed to the audience, and you’re also very sensitive to the depth of art, I can see you really live those emotions. This is what an analysis should be like, and you do it wonderfully. I’ve seen a few vocal coaches react and it just doesn’t click with me, reaction without in depth emotion is just.. bland. Very good job! I enjoy your videos!

  • @charlesd4041
    @charlesd4041 Месяц назад

    Wow. Since my teenager years, I've listened to this song THOUSANDS of times, played it probably hundreds, and NOT ONCE have I all-out cried while listening to it! Your channel manages to take emotional songs and intensifiy them! Well done and keep it going! 👏🤘

  • @grayscale4960
    @grayscale4960 2 года назад +423

    i always interpreted the insane guitar solo as representing the soldier's increasing desperation and panic. the aggressiveness of it shows just how desperate he is to be freed from his pain and how he's doing everything in his power to communicate that to anyone. he's fighting like an animal with its leg in a trap, and it really puts into perspective the horrors of war that soldiers bear, and relive every time they close their eyes. my grandfathers on both sides were vietnam veterans, and they always said that war is a terrible thing, and i should understand exactly what it is that they ask young people to do. great video. rock on

    • @stephenblevins3829
      @stephenblevins3829 2 года назад +5

      I could not have said it better myself.

    • @tobywoodard7
      @tobywoodard7 Год назад

      I couldn't agree more with that assessment.

    • @GhostlyStavin
      @GhostlyStavin Год назад +2

      I agree. I don't see this this as an anti war song. But a song about a soldier coming home and struggling with the mental side of what he/she dealt with.

    • @burtknighten1873
      @burtknighten1873 Год назад

      Medically induced? It's 5 times more likely to have living memories while Ina medically induced coma

    • @burtknighten1873
      @burtknighten1873 Год назад

      I bet morse code is also in Jaymz down picking

  • @kyle26091
    @kyle26091 2 года назад +176

    Love when she said its so soft compared to the other song, and I was like "Wait there's more!"

  • @1siin
    @1siin 6 месяцев назад +1

    Watching this for the first time deeply affected me when I was a kid. This song made me love Metallica. You’re amazing at analyzing this.

  • @LauraGaron-qi3lz
    @LauraGaron-qi3lz Месяц назад

    I watched this video everyday for a year...still rips my heart out every time

  • @manuelmelendez3140
    @manuelmelendez3140 2 года назад +130

    I am one of many who suffer from PTSD. I served 2 tours in Iraq and it was my second tour that affected me the most because of the length. Our unit was one of the last that served 18 months in country. After it was all over I had the one scar that takes lots of time to heal and that is survivors' guilt. I didn't lose any body parts, only my mind and a sense of humanity. This was a song that I listened to while I was deployed in Desert Storm and now it has more meaning listening to it. I still love it and can say now that I am glad I didn't listen to it during that dark time, I know that I wouldn't have made it to this day. The whole "And Justice For All" album is genius.

    • @diesel3333
      @diesel3333 2 года назад

      *Thank you for your service, sir! We appreciate you greatly!*
      Stand for our GOD given FREEDOM!
      Amen
      🙏🙌✝️🇺🇲✡🙌🙏

    • @fail_master_z
      @fail_master_z 2 года назад +1

      Thank you for your service 🙏

    • @JPMadden
      @JPMadden 2 года назад +4

      @@diesel3333 I do not mean to deny God or impugn your faith, but if our freedoms were God-given, we would not need brave men and women to defend them. Our freedoms come from laws and other institutions created by humans, and they can be taken away by humans if we fail to be vigilant, or are merely unlucky, like Ukraine, possibly.

    • @bs4760
      @bs4760 2 года назад +1

      Served in 1993-97 USMC as a grunt. You are loved brother......by millions of those who served.
      I agree, the whole album was genius. It was the one of their last great alblums. the Black Album... meh!.

    • @bs4760
      @bs4760 2 года назад +1

      @@JPMadden correct, God doesn't ensure freedom, men and women in uniform do, but when we sign up, are conscripted or drafted, most have God close by. The Ukrainians need as much as we can get to them.

  • @brownwestmoreland1077
    @brownwestmoreland1077 2 года назад +355

    The chaos of the music represents the chaos of war, bombs, explosions, bullets flying.. I was a second lieutenant and lost both of my legs in a IED blast in Afghanistan. While under a heavy firefight and this song is the closest you can go into a battle inside of your own head. It's like being in the battle only you're safe. Metallica is masters at taking you to another place for 5 minutes even though it's only in your head. You still feel the emotion as if you were really there.

    • @jeffsguitarwork
      @jeffsguitarwork 2 года назад +31

      Thank you for your sacrifice and service.

    • @brownwestmoreland1077
      @brownwestmoreland1077 2 года назад +29

      @@jeffsguitarwork thank you very much. It was a honor to serve our great country, and protect the defenseless, innocent, and the people who like yourself appreciate what we have to sacrifice for freedom and the liberties we ALL share. And the people who lost their lives on 9/11 who deserved justice. God bless you and God bless America 🇺🇸.

    • @bradbrockhaus633
      @bradbrockhaus633 2 года назад +9

      Thank you for your service and GOD bless

    • @brownwestmoreland1077
      @brownwestmoreland1077 2 года назад +10

      @@bradbrockhaus633 thank you very much. That really means a lot. It was a honor to serve this great country. And protect the innocent people who can't defend themselves. And also find justice for the people who past on 9/11. God bless you and God bless America.

    • @SirGalaEd
      @SirGalaEd 2 года назад +6

      Respect! We citizens who have been protected from war by men like you, can never repay the debt we owe you. Thank you and God bless you are your family.

  • @flyth1002
    @flyth1002 10 месяцев назад +7

    I used to play the drums in my youth and this was one of my absolute favourites to play along. My mother immediately recognized the drum pattern as being the one played at executions. So for me the whole second part of the song is about the accelerating decent to unavoidable death. And if you take the guitar solo in context of the heavy riffs in the background it always hits me as being the manˋs desperation confronted with the hardest of realities. What a masterpiece!

    • @gerritvalkering1068
      @gerritvalkering1068 4 месяца назад

      I've read somewhere that the drum pattern is the morse code for 'kill me', or just 'kill'. If it's also used in executions, that would lend some credit to that

    • @LankNtheBoys
      @LankNtheBoys 24 дня назад

      Why does your mom know what that sounds like?

  • @jonlivingstone
    @jonlivingstone 20 дней назад

    As an Iraq war veteran I can’t listen to this without crying.
    I got out with no wounds but feel much like the character in this song. Alive but dead, and not able to speak. Thank you.

  • @jeffzeppelin3228
    @jeffzeppelin3228 2 года назад +172

    I'm soon 54 and I grew up with this. Never cried to it till now, until we took it apart and really looked deeply into it. I thank you personally for your endearing ways and your talent

    • @jacobfelt9512
      @jacobfelt9512 2 года назад +1

      So true. Im gonna spearhead our chapter viewing party of johnny got his gun. This is the song that hooked me. It is available on prime video for 2.99 rental. 😃

    • @sjhessman
      @sjhessman 2 года назад +1

      Same for me. I’m 48.

    • @maximan4363
      @maximan4363 2 года назад +1

      I'm 53 and it brings tears to my eyes. I remember when I first heard this album and I was actually pretty dismissive of it - too slow, too boring, WTF - this isn't Metallica!! Where is the aggression from Seek & Destroy, where is the sorrow from Fade To Black, where is the despair from Welcome Home (Sanitarium)?
      Second listen, OMG how could I have been soooo wrong! I think it was the change after Cliff's passing and the new Bass sound of Jason Newstead. I remember this vividly - it was way, way so much deeper that I could imagine! The Guitaring is frankly superb - on all counts!
      Honestly this is one of Metallica's best tracks and their very first music video, which in it's self is pretty amazing! Ohhh they fecking nailed it!!!! I didn't see the video for, probably a month, after I heard the album and it blew my mind!!
      I'd forgotten quite how horrific the video was! Bloody well done!!

    • @Torquemonster440
      @Torquemonster440 2 года назад

      X2.. first time I find myself really examining what's unfolding here. Pretty emotional. I've heard this song a million times, but never felt it like this. What an amazingly well crafted work of art.. Hetfield is a genius..

  • @trod1772
    @trod1772 2 года назад +144

    "Metal" music is often under rated and misunderstood...It is complex and 100% emotionally driven...If you actually dissect the lyrics from the overwhelming sounds that you hear they express something deep and explore parts of your existence you may not want to confront....This type of music is intense which seems loud... but thats exactly the feeling you are supposed to get!!! Love this reaction video!!!!

    • @kadekiger276
      @kadekiger276 2 года назад +1

      I mean you’re not wrong.
      Even a song like You Suffer by Napalm Death, it’s 3 seconds and a scream.
      But the official lyrics are “You suffer, but why?”.
      There’s something to be said for that lol

  • @rafertieslorekeeper5771
    @rafertieslorekeeper5771 7 месяцев назад +3

    Also, I just caught this when you pointed out the two-note thing: Morse code. Dot-dash. Two tones.

  • @ridley3704
    @ridley3704 7 дней назад

    Rewatched this and your reaction is so honest, to recognize metal as capable of art to convey emotion and beauty… I find it refreshing and pure. I fell in love with music as a young teen, and still write such music to this day, but it is more understandable to hear you interpret it than I can explain although I musically as a guitarist write it. That may make no sense but in short, thank you Elizabeth

  • @closewatermelon
    @closewatermelon 2 года назад +189

    That guitar solo was that man’s screams, that man’s pain, it directly captures the essence of chaos in his soul. Painfully beautiful

    • @exzyle2k
      @exzyle2k 2 года назад +10

      I think it's the patient's descent into insanity. I think being trapped as you would be like that, you'd slip into that downward spiral very very easily.

    • @closewatermelon
      @closewatermelon 2 года назад +2

      @@exzyle2k very well said, so terrifying to imagine, something I hope I never have to experience, may the lord make it quick when he takes me.

    • @DiegoLopez-dh1cl
      @DiegoLopez-dh1cl 2 года назад +1

      and maybe the relief of sending that message and it beeing heard, in the more "happy" parts of it

    • @SeanWinters
      @SeanWinters 2 года назад

      The pentatonic(or maybe it's arpeggio) descent near the beginning of the solo, the
      "Up down down, up down down, up down down" part before the second set of blast beats, at the end of his tapping, is the man's cries, his literal sobs.

    • @klassenw
      @klassenw 2 года назад

      Agreed. It's the screaming chaos of his mind and descent into madness.

  • @erynporter9951
    @erynporter9951 Год назад +292

    This is a sadly beautiful song, written by Lars and James you need to remember when this came out it was right around the time of the Berlin Wall coming down and all of the unrest from the Cold War. I remember the first time I saw them play it live half the audience was crying. Very moving.
    This is the Morse Code pattern for "Kill Me"
    -.- .. .-.. .-.. -- .
    And that is what the patient "Johnny" tries to tap out during the movie to the Drs. It follows some of the beats in the song.

    • @mattwomack5908
      @mattwomack5908 Год назад +31

      That's the main riff rythmn when they kick into "Land mine, taken my arms..."

    • @JC-qp8hj
      @JC-qp8hj Год назад +7

      I immediately thought of this at around 13:45 when she brings up the almost random changes in time and wondered if they patterned it in on purpose to match the Morse code for “kill me”

    • @animalmother1582
      @animalmother1582 Год назад +14

      That is incredible! I never knew that.
      As a drummer, that blows my mind that they could have had the ability to incorporate that in an artistic way.

    • @animalmother1582
      @animalmother1582 Год назад +1

      It reminds me of the precise rhythm on the snare beats, just before the lead guitar solo begins.

    • @wheredidkrisko.
      @wheredidkrisko. Год назад +7

      I thought I was the only one who had ever figured that out. I used to tell people that and no one would accept it 🤣
      Glad to know I wasn't crazy

  • @shaynelowe9604
    @shaynelowe9604 4 месяца назад

    Okay, three of your videos I have watched now, and you have gained a follower. Your take on what you hear is mesmerizing. Thank you for doing this, and I can't wait to adsorb more of your interpretations of great music.

  • @washworks7630
    @washworks7630 4 месяца назад

    i love how the music touches your soul, this is some of the best content on youtube.

  • @Nicodemus79
    @Nicodemus79 Год назад +286

    The second solo is Kirk’s expression of what warrior’s tears sound like. He’s absolutely at the end of his sanity. He’s been begging for death, which was slow to come. Crying “out,” relief finally comes in the form of release, and tears of relief take over the tears of terror and grief. He resolves (the outro), gathers himself, and finally - finally - death comes as the song ends.

    • @mlgamings6110
      @mlgamings6110 Год назад +27

      The thing is, based on the movie the song revolves around, he doesn't die. At least, not then and there. He is kept alive for many more years before he does, which is absolutely terrible.

    • @richf8972
      @richf8972 Год назад +1

      Nicely done.

    • @PatchouliPenny
      @PatchouliPenny Год назад +5

      @@mlgamings6110 the book is excruciating

    • @chickfinnegan8969
      @chickfinnegan8969 Год назад +1

      Didn't know that. Thanks for the info

    • @GeneRogers-xl9um
      @GeneRogers-xl9um Год назад +2

      @@PatchouliPenny I saw the movie in the theater and it is really an unusual and down trodden movie with no redemptive quality and you left the theater in silence. That’s what the movie was meant to be. I was home from Vietnam and didn’t know about the plot of this movie. Left me with nightmares.

  • @borisreid3053
    @borisreid3053 Год назад +183

    Need to remember, Metallica members were about 25 years old then and it was their first video. And they came through very hard death of their bassist who was the soul of the band... And they were drunk as hell. So this is why they were so emotional.

    • @Hippiekill4
      @Hippiekill4 Год назад +37

      R.I.P. Clifford Lee Burton

    • @haydengoodall6767
      @haydengoodall6767 Год назад

      Cliff em all! 🤘🖕

    • @borisreid3053
      @borisreid3053 Год назад

      @@ajaxslamgoody9736 didn't they have hard condition because of Cliff's death? Weren't they drunk back then? Were they quite young? Did they go to therapy?
      The whole album is dark as hell. Although I am not psychologist, I can understand where this darkness is coming from.
      This song is a masterpiece, I really love it. Why is it so dark? Well, they were talking about very dark issue, multiplied by their own experience, which surely emphasized and made stronger this dark feeling.
      And,if you disagree, there is a way of saying it, just make clear in what you disagree with me about the issue you refer, may be I would agree, don't be dissing me personally.

  • @Vei2aC
    @Vei2aC 6 месяцев назад +2

    You know, i actually love you, your passion for music, makes me emotinal, how you speak about music, you can hear in your voice that this has given you huge feeling, i think, for you, this song achived JUST what it was made for, thank you so much for your kind kind words, what a beautiful human you are, you should be proud, im so happy you exsist, lest we forget, happy remembrance day

  • @matthewgostecnik5953
    @matthewgostecnik5953 13 дней назад

    Every time I hear this song I think of my time in the military and how we all loved this song. So many memories

  • @chadiverson3796
    @chadiverson3796 2 года назад +152

    Back when I was in the worst part of my combat PTSD and depression, Metallica's music saved my life, literally....

    • @Kaddywompous
      @Kaddywompous 2 года назад +3

      God bless you, brother.

    • @Acroposthion
      @Acroposthion 2 года назад +3

      Thank you for your service - regardless from where in this world you hail.

    • @MS-ns2pj
      @MS-ns2pj 2 года назад +2

      Semper Fi, brother.

    • @firetukker
      @firetukker 2 года назад +3

      I hear you brother! Had a near-fatal firefighting experience that injured and almost killed some of my firefighting crew. Pink Floyd was my PTSD survival medicine. Comfortably numb...

    • @chadiverson3796
      @chadiverson3796 2 года назад +1

      @@firetukker oh yeah, stay strong bro

  • @JimFinley11
    @JimFinley11 2 года назад +316

    This one nails me in the pit of my stomach. I had my wake-up call when I was 18, a PFC in a Marine rifle company - I thought I was in a cool movie; then I found myself at a crash site where a helicopter had gone down and about thirty young men had died (10/22/77, on the island of Mindoro in the Philippines). We spent the day there, recovering their bodies and trying to ID them, then getting them into body bags and back to the ship. That day aged me decades - I can still feel the shock of realizing that I am mortal, not an abstract intellectual knowledge but something I could see and feel and smell. And my purpose in the world was to do this to other people while they tried to do it to my friends and me.
    I felt so stupid and ashamed for having been so naïve, and from then on I knew that my job was a horror. I ended up making a career of it, because by the time I could have gotten out I was in a leadership role, and I could see that most of the other guys leading people still thought they were in a cool movie, and thought that a time might come when I could bring more people back whole than them because I understood our job in a way they didn't yet. I can still close my eyes and be back at that crash site, though, 44 years later.
    Both my younger brothers followed me into the Corps, and I'm the only one who came out of it in one piece. One was in a wheelchair from age 18 until he died 35 years later; after he was shot he was in a coma for days, and he described having that locked-in experience being able to hear what was going on but not being able to speak or move. The other brother got blown up and survived maimed.
    It's like my stepfather, who served in World War II, said when I asked him what stood out most to him out of his whole experience over those years. He had always just told the funny stories - and there were a lot of those - but when I asked him that, he was quiet for a minute, then said, "Dead friends." The other memory that's clearest for me is of a close friend who died in another helo crash. I can see his face as if he was sitting next to me, laughing about some ridiculous thing. He laughed a lot. The day before he died, I saw him at the PX but ducked by without him seeing me because I was running late for something and he was really long-winded. The following day I heard a Huey had gone down and everyone had died - I thought about them and their families briefly, then moved on - and a couple of days later I saw his name in the paper and realized he'd been on that chopper. I still feel guilty about not stopping and talking to him at the PX that day.

    • @michaelsheffield6852
      @michaelsheffield6852 2 года назад +4

      Peace

    • @mikestone9683
      @mikestone9683 2 года назад +9

      Semper Fi Brother

    • @The_Orphanizer
      @The_Orphanizer 2 года назад +12

      Thank you for your service, and for sharing.

    • @shepaaaarrrrrd
      @shepaaaarrrrrd 2 года назад +13

      Hey, brother. I felt that same mortality when I deployed to Iraq at 21. That was a life-changing year, not the least of which because we were repeatedly on the receiving end of daily mortar strikes. When you never know which second will be your last, things get a bit haywire.
      And to your point about recognizing the full weight of the job, that, for me, was when I was writing operational contingency plans, at which point I realized that, if ever it was enacted, my plan would result in many people on both sides of a conflict dying. It’s a heavy weight.
      Hope you’re well.

    • @jeffhickman2751
      @jeffhickman2751 2 года назад +2

      Jim, I know the feeling as well. In 89 as a Lance, I witnessed a helo crash during team spirit. It was our wake up call that we were not Invincible. When this song came out it touched me deeply. That day we watched 21 young Marines die horribly. Watching this reaction video helped me realize that civilians sometimes try to understand some of the things good or bad that happens in our world.

  • @Wind_Rapport
    @Wind_Rapport 20 дней назад

    wow you really make me appreciate the beauty of art - Such a great channel!

  • @ryancarnahan9558
    @ryancarnahan9558 9 месяцев назад +3

    I thoroughly enjoy you reacting to the music I love from my youth. My father was a Vietnam vet who survived until 2021. Listening to the song with your analytical breakdown had me bawling. My father was in the hospital with femoral artery blockage and he said he said he didn't want to lose any limbs. I assume because of the Horrors he saw in Vietnam being a Medevac on Huey helicopters. He also flew as a gunner in Cobra helicopters. Thank you for your amazing insight and breakdowns of these amazing songs. Keep it up girl. ❤

  • @Greenchileaddict
    @Greenchileaddict 2 года назад +90

    If I remember an interview correctly Lars said they bought the rights to the movie and thus were able to use the content of the movie without copyright infringement. I think Metallica still owns those rights.

    • @A_Final_Hit
      @A_Final_Hit 2 года назад +1

      That's correct. 👍🏽

    • @ImDembe
      @ImDembe 2 года назад +5

      Yeah buying the rights where cheaper than the other options so it was an easy pick.

    • @jorgeluz9560
      @jorgeluz9560 2 года назад

      They do! In fact, I don't know if that is still the case, but you could by the DVD for the movie straight from Metallica's website.

  • @doomsayeth
    @doomsayeth 2 года назад +88

    The solo was the rage of powerlessness and the despair of not being able to even die. It’s the sound of the scream inside your own head that no one on earth will ever be able to hear.

    • @c.markdavis2143
      @c.markdavis2143 Год назад +6

      The excitement of finally being heard. Now I can die. Wait….. what? Let the nurse finish killing me.

  • @geogeorgeson3125
    @geogeorgeson3125 3 месяца назад

    Thanks for the beautiful and deep analysis of this great masterpiece of Metallica!
    It's impressive how deep you dig into the details and how they complement each other.
    Sometimes I feel that I'm the only one that dig so deep into such things.
    And about the solo you've asked what we think it's about:
    I believe this solo represents the immensive sadness and even delirium that the character feels for being so lonely and no one wants to help him to be left to at last die, to be free "out there". And the emotional impact is greatest as the solo is just after the indifferent response "He is product of your profession, not mine".

  • @cgc
    @cgc 7 месяцев назад +4

    I remember when I first saw this video...literally brought tears to my eyes, and I am not one that cries easily. This video still to this day disturbs me and breaks my heart. Powerful, powerful song...

  • @tomcadena4752
    @tomcadena4752 Год назад +302

    Who remember when the blew the audience away at the Grammys with this song.. When they came on, only people in the back cheered… that changed at the end. They melted their minds..

    • @Jacob-tq8ef
      @Jacob-tq8ef 11 месяцев назад +19

      That was one of the coolest performances ever. I bet the stuck up people in the front got theirs lol

    • @templarpunk9332
      @templarpunk9332 8 месяцев назад +24

      More remembered for the year the Best Rock/Metal Recording Grammy went to Jethro Tull instead. I've given zero craps for the Grammys ever since.

    • @tomcadena4752
      @tomcadena4752 8 месяцев назад +10

      @@templarpunk9332 I was trying to block that out. Lol

    • @davefetch6064
      @davefetch6064 7 месяцев назад +12

      And then *immediately* lost to Jethro Tull for best Heavy Metal album...unbelievable juxtaposition.

    • @XiahouJoe
      @XiahouJoe 6 месяцев назад +1

      oh yeah won't forget that. I'm with you on them since.@@templarpunk9332

  • @DrewOwen040
    @DrewOwen040 2 года назад +114

    Does anyone else love the way she says. “Welcome back to the charismatic voice”

  • @claytonsteckel
    @claytonsteckel 8 месяцев назад

    Metallica being my all time favorite band and One being my favorite of their songs makes me happy to see you do this one. I only occasionally watch your videos and this one was suggested just today. Thank you!

  • @williamthomason7646
    @williamthomason7646 Месяц назад

    I hate watching videos where you get sad about a song, I freaking tear up every damn time. You certainly have a unique way of capturing your listeners ears...BRAVO 👏

  • @ewrekzz7360
    @ewrekzz7360 2 года назад +35

    How many here absolutely belly-laughed when Elizabeth said, "this is so much more lulling and soft...." .. .. . .. The moments we live for.

    • @feeeeeed
      @feeeeeed 2 года назад +2

      100%

    • @jamiekuryla3940
      @jamiekuryla3940 2 года назад +1

      yeah, totally love that.

    • @dantreadwell7421
      @dantreadwell7421 2 года назад +3

      Agreed, I was thinking, oh just give it a minute, it'll punch you in the face hard soon

    • @jerrygfan
      @jerrygfan 2 года назад +2

      The anticipation of their reaction is a huge reason why we watch. I giggled when she said that too.
      My favorite surprise is the end of The Drug In Me Is You Reimagined by Falling in Reverse. Her reaction was great.

    • @stuarttaylor3642
      @stuarttaylor3642 2 года назад +3

      Yup, I said "you'll see, Elizabeth, give it a minute"

  • @SsgtHolland
    @SsgtHolland 2 года назад +112

    You could do an amazing analysis on Metallica's Unforgiven. Metallica made this trilogy of songs Unforgiven I, II and III. They span almost three decades and explore the changing struggle, perspective and insight of an aging man (Hetfield?). They are all connected musically and very unique in music. Especially for a metal band. I would love to see you tackle it.

    • @fondyin
      @fondyin 2 года назад +6

      The Unforgiven" is James Hetfield's most personal track of all Metallica songs. The song explores James' tumultuous childhood. That was from the wiki.

    • @WinterOnTheWeb
      @WinterOnTheWeb 2 года назад +1

      Yes!! This...

    • @mdnblues
      @mdnblues 2 года назад +2

      @@fondyin I could argue that Dyers Eve and Mama Said are similarly very personal songs for James. In fact, they've only performed Mama Said live only 3 times because it's such a deep, emotional song for James.

    • @Necrowolf81
      @Necrowolf81 2 года назад +2

      @@mdnblues The God That Failed would be another one. It's about his mom dying of cancer because she was a Christian Scientist and refused all treatments relying only on god to heal her.

    • @fondyin
      @fondyin 2 года назад

      @@mdnblues true the BAND hasn't played it live but 3 times but James has performed it SOLO many times.

  • @justone3243
    @justone3243 29 дней назад

    That song came into my life when i needed it most. It immediately became a part of me, that i still appreciate. Still love it, still enjoy it, it still flashes me 30 years later