In the latest episode of Kerrang! magazine’s “The Album That Saved My Life”, DISTURBED frontman David Draiman singled out METALLICA‘s 1984 full-length “Ride The Lightning” as one of the most important releases during his formative years.

“The power, the complexity, the aggression — there’s so many things that would attract anyone to METALLICA,” Draiman said (see video below). “I think that they are the prime example of a metal band.

‘Creeping Death’, that was a special song for me as a kid, because that was the one that every single Jewish kid thought, ‘Oh, METALLICA wrote a song for us. He wrote it about the exodus of the Jews from Egypt under slavery,'” he continued. “We all used to get into that. I remember just the glee we all used to experience when [we heard], ‘Hebrews born to serve, to the pharaoh.’ That line alone was just, like, ‘Yes! Vindication!’ We were recognized in a METALLICA song.

“That one, [and] ‘Fade To Black’, certainly — those have to be my top two favorites on the record,” David added. “I love ‘Trapped Under Ice’ too. But ‘Fade To Black’, just this amazing construct — a song that defied the definition of what METALLICA was perceived to be at the time. [I] love it.

“Other music that ‘Ride The Lightning’ led me to discover was to start really kind of sinking my teeth into some of the thrash of the era that I literally had no exposure to — whether it was SLAYER, whether it was TESTAMENT, whether it was MEGADETH. It was the opening of a doorway, for me, to a whole new palette of music.

“When I hear the album now, it still makes me feel the same burst of excitement and energy and power that it did when I first heard it.

“The album changed my life [in that] it gave me a very rude awakening to the heavier side of music, and I’m very happy to be awake.”

DISTURBED‘s latest album, “Evolution”, was released on October 19.

Fonte: Blabbermouth.net

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