header banner
My City, Entertainment, Music

Lars Ulrich suggests The Rolling Stones kept Metallica from splitting up

Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich has suggested the Rolling Stones are responsible for keeping the Bay Area thrash titan...
By Agencies

Picture Courtesy: loudwire.com


Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich has suggested the Rolling Stones are responsible for keeping the Bay Area thrash titans going.


As he told The Sun Wednesday (June 19), the influential English rockers gave the metal band "the way to start it back up again" after a period of difficulty signaled a possible split. Roughly the same era was documented in detail in 2004's Some Kind of Monster, when Ulrich and his bandmates were recording St. Anger.


Related story

Director Lars von Trier diagnosed with Parkinson's disease


But a tour invite from the Rolling Stones may have been Metallica's saving grace, and the lessons learned since that fateful pairing could be why the band Ulrich started in 1981 are still together after all these years.


"For us it's all about inviting ­people in and making ourselves as ­accessible as possible to fans," Ulrich said in the interview. "That period [in 2004] certainly wasn't easy for us and, since then, we have learned boundaries and where our breaking points are."


He continued, "That was the last time we had a real break — we haven’t shut down the band in 14 years, but we disappeared then for about a year."


But when the future was uncertain, it was the iconic band led by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards that offered Metallica a lift. When they proposed a joint tour, the offer was simply too good to refuse, Ulrich indicated.


"And then the Rolling Stones called us up and said, 'Come and play some shows with us in ­California,' and we sort of agreed, you' re not going to say no to the Stones, so that was it," the drummer recalled. "It gave us the way to start it back up again. Whether you're a team in an office or a bunch of dudes in a rock and roll band, at some point people have to figure out how to get along and work as a team."


He added, "If you don't care, it's easier to walk away, but fortunately we cared enough about Metallica on behalf of ourselves and the fans to figure out a way to make it function. I'm happy that we did."


Earlier this month, Metallica invited a 13-year-old drummer to sit in with them, and Ulrich previously hinted at a second covers album to follow Garage Inc. The band kicked off the current leg of their "WorldWired Tour" with a gig at Ireland's historic Slane Castle June 8. 

Related Stories
My City

‘We’re back on the road!’ Rolling Stones relaunch...

My City

The Rolling Stones will release their first studio...

My City

Rolling Stones delay tour as Jagger seeks medical...

My City

Rolling Stones kick off album launch in New York w...

My City

Rolling Stones launch new album 'Hackney Diamonds'