User: sonnytsn1 |
Why Metallica Sucks READ THIS!!! ******** ElRancholo2 said ******** The Metallica nutlickers keep saying "so what if they changed their music a little?" They didn't just change their music, they changed their entire genre! It's like if Dr. Dre added some saxophones and started singing the blues. Or if Johnny Cash joined a boy band. Metallica didn't "evolve" or "modify" their style, they completely scrapped their entire image and changed the very genre that they made. There is NOBODY, no band that has sold out as blatantly as them, period. ******** wingchisao said ******** ...they are lost in the money machine. it's cool to make money...dont get me wrong, but when you trade your integrity and your style for the sake of money, you lose your fan base, and all the respect you once had from those once loyal fans.... go ahead and retire you sellouts! we (your original fans since kill 'em all)will be happier with that, than we will with you selling your souls. ____________________________________________ For those about to flame me, please read this. 1. Lets try bringing up reasons instead of flaming me. 2. Don't bring up irelavent things because your fucking dum and can't prove anything (IE. SONNYTSN1 U SUCK DICK YOUR JUST JELOUZ CUZ MEATALLICA IS THE BEST AND YOUR JUS A GAY FAGSZ) -------------------------------------------- I miss the old metallica. For those that that keep hate'n this vid. You have no idea what THRASH means. It means that we're going to bring the spirit of 'Sabbath and 'Madien back to the masses, fuck all those GLAM metal fags dressing up like chicks to get more albums sales. Back in 83' James said right before the song "No Remorse" "This song is gonna kill all the FAKE people out there" Look at them now. They completely comformed (Cut their hair, changed their genre to get more radio play, filed lawsuits against fans) Sharing music is what got them where they are today. ******** History of Metallica lawsuits ******** Metallica have a history of aggressively protecting their brand name, launching lawsuits against a lingerie company, an off-shoot of Pierre Cardin, a tire company, a perfume makers, a wrought-iron manufacturers and a nail polish/file company. Tags: metallica sucks old new now frantic master of puppets kill 'em all em the four horsemen no remorse Saint St. Anger |
User: Kahrytes |
Kareoke at L&L During the first "Rhythm and Brews" Coffeehouse at the Uni of Vermont, I stepped up and performed "Ring of Fire" by Johnny Cash. Tags: johnny cash ring of fire kareoke |
User: fury4321 |
Mafia Chevrolet Caprice Video Ich hatte mal Lust ein wenig zu fahren. hab das ganze mit Musik unterlegt. I'm just driving around and hear to music Tags: Mafia Chevrolet Caprice Elvis Sam Dave Johnny Cash |
User: bronk17 |
Destination Unknown Life is so strange-Johnny Cash, Frank Black, Boxcar Willie, Henry Mancini, BTO, Bee Gees Tags: strange life family friends Ramones Ultravox Talk Thomas Dolby New Order The Selecter Missing Persons |
User: LillianMark |
MIA - Paper Planes Remix (Feat. Jay-Z, Lil Wayne) [DJTL EXC Johnny Cash God's Gonna Cut You Down from the album American V: A Hundred Highways available on Lost Highway Records Tags: Young Jeezy The Recession Barack Obama Crazy World Put USDA CTE Gucci Mane Kanye Weezy ATL Cent |
User: FandRproductions2124 |
SEVENDUST - HURT (LIVE 2008) sevendust covers johnny cash's hurt at the lincoln theatre in raleigh nc Tags: sevendust hurt lajon clint morgan john vince raleigh north carolina lincoln theatre rock live 2008 johnny cash |
User: doctorthomas76 |
dr. Thomas (give my love to rose) One of the greats! I miss you john so much! Tags: alternative blues country folk jazz r&b rock soul world music johnny cash |
User: sjuutl80 |
Banks Of The Ohio Country song, original performer unknown (if someone knows, tell me!) Tags: Judith Seepma Banks of the Ohio country Joan Baez Johnny Cash |
User: OTTOS0033 |
Shane His biggest hit "Shane" of Ladislav Vodicka - Czech Johnny Cash (1970). From today's perspective Vodicka is considered the pioneer of English rap. Tags: country |
User: bucknorrismusic |
Ghost Riders In The Sky Buck Norris sings "Ghost Riders In The Sky" sung originally by Gene Autry and also a big hit by Johnny Cash. His first recordings had just been released when his mother, who'd been ill for months, died at the age of 45, apparently of cancer. Autry's father began drifting away soon afterward, and he became the head of the family and the main supporter of himself, two sisters, and a younger brother. In early December of 1929, Autry cut his first six sides for ARC. The music was a mix of hillbilly, blues, country, yodel songs, and cowboy ballads. His breakthrough record, "That Silver-Haired Daddy of Mine," co-written by Autry and his friend Jimmy Long one night at the railroad depot, was released in 1931. The song sold 30,000 copies within a month, and by the end of a year 500,000 had been sold, an occasion that American Records decided to mark with the public presentation of a gold-plated copy of the record. Autry received a second gold record when sales later broke one million. And that was where the notion of the Gold Record Award was born. The record also led him into a new career on the radio as Oklahoma's Yodeling Cowboy on the National Barn Dance show sponsored by WLS out of Chicago. It was there that Autry became a major national star -- his record sales rose assisted by his exposure on radio. During the early years of his career, Autry took a number of important collaborators and musicians aboard. Among them were Fred Rose, the songwriter (later responsible for "Your Cheatin' Heart") with whom he collaborated on many of his hits, and fiddle player Carl Cotner (who also played sax, clarinet, and piano), who became his arranger. Autry had a knack for knowing a good song when he heard it (though he almost passed on the biggest hit of his career), and for knowing when a song needed something extra in its arrangement, but it was Cotner who was able to translate his sensibilities into musical notes and arrangements. Mary Ford, later of Les Paul fame, was in Autry's band at one time, and in 1936 Autry signed up a 17-year-old guitar player named Merle Travis, the future country star and songwriter. By the early '30s, Autry became one of the most beloved singers in country & western music. By 1933, he was getting fan letters by the hundreds every week, and his record sales were only going up. Autry's career might've been made right there, but fate intervened again that year, in the form of the movie business. The Western -- especially the B Western, the bottom-of-the-bill, low-budget action oater -- had been hit very hard by the coming of sound in the years 1927 to 1929. Audiences expected dialogue in their movies, and most Western stars up to that time were a lot better at riding, roping, and shooting than reading lines. Not only did producers and directors need something to fill up the soundtracks of their movies, especially on the limited budgets of the B Westerns, but something to substitute for violent action, which was being increasingly criticized by citizen groups. Cowboy star Ken Maynard, who was a great trick rider and stuntman but no singer, had tried singing songs in a few of his movies, and the producers noticed that the songs had gone over well despite his vocal limitations. Maynard was making another Western, In Old Santa Fe (1934), for Mascot Pictures, and producer Nat Levine decided to try an experiment, putting in a musical number sung by a professional. By sheer chance, the American Record Company and Mascot Pictures were locked together financially, though indirectly, and with the help from the president of ARC, Levine was steered toward Autry. A phone call brought the young singer and another ARC performer -- multi-instrumentalist/comedian Smiley Burnette -- out to Hollywood, where, after a quick meeting and screen test, the two were put into In Old Santa Fe. Autry had only one scene, singing a song and calling a square dance, but that scene proved to be one of the most popular parts of the movie. Tags: Buck Norris Classic Country Gene Autry |
User: abargle |
new cash Cash's show-opener from the January 13, 1971 episode of "The Johnny Cash Show." The title says it all except that he didn't write it himself, he gives credit to a Nashville songwriter apparently named "Dick Feller." Also includes Cash's trademark opening greeting, in response to a commenter's request. This one's for you! Tags: americana cash johnny redemption rehabilitation |
User: JohnnyCashLive |
Live Song of the Day 9/5/08 Song: Medley (Big River, Get Rhythm) Time: Unknown (57-59) Place: Town Hall Party? Tags: Johnny Cash |