With Metallica celebrating 30 years of The Black Album in August, and gearing up to release The Metallica Blacklist and The Black Album (Remastered) on September 10, the band have reflected on the record's 1991 release, and how it turned them into the biggest metal band on the planet – but not to the delight of all their fans.
Speaking to Kerrang! for this week's Cover Story about the Number One album, Kirk Hammett describes how it felt when Metallica were put into a "different league" thanks to The Black Album's overwhelming success, "doing numbers like Guns N’ Roses and U2".
"It felt really strange," admits the guitarist. "It was great, in that we were flying the flag for heavy metal, we were bringing our type of music to a lot of people that had not heard it all around the globe. But at the same time, a lot of our core underground fans, they thought they were losing us. And I can understand that."
Kirk reasons: "When a band goes from selling a million albums to all of a sudden selling 12 million albums, the feeling of intimacy with that band starts to erode."