100 Greatest Guitar Solos: 24) "Fade to Black" (Kirk Hammet)
“I was still using my black Flying V on Ride the Lightning, but ‘Fade to Black’ sounds different—it has a warmer sound—because I used the neck pickup and played through a wah-wah pedal all the way in the ‘up’ position,” says Kirk Hammett. “We wanted to double the first two solos and I did the first one no problem. But I had a much harder time doubling the second solo because it was slow and had a lot of space in it. Later, I realized that I actually harmonized it in a weird way—in minor thirds, major thirds and fifths. After cutting those two, I really wasn’t sure what to play for the extended solo at the end. I was really bummed out because we had been in Denmark for five or six months, and I was very homesick; we were also having problems with our management. Because of that, and since it was a somber song anyway, I thought of very depressing things while I did the solo—and it really helped. We didn’t double-track that solo, although I did play some arpeggios over the G-A-B progression. After that, I went back and did the clean guitar parts behind the verse, and James [Hetfield] played an arpeggiated figure while I arpeggiated three-note chords. The result was what I always have considered a very Dire Straits-type sound.”
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malhalla
November 06, 2009 at 11:33am
I cranked this song everyday for two years straight when I was thirteen. I could never go a day without Metallica or this song. It spoke to me when it seemed nothing else did. At the time Metallica seemed to be the band of the outcasts. It gave us hoods something to hang onto. Of course that was before the sad Black album changed the mighty Metallica forever..














