MEGADETH Frontman Dave Mustaine - "Without My Energy, I Don't Know That METALLICA Ever Would Have Become The Band That It Was"
July 29, 2010, 14 years ago
Dan Robson at The Canadian Press caught up with MEGADETH frontman Dave Mustaine when the band hit Toronto recently. The following is an excerpt from the story:
On the cover of "Mustaine," a new autobiography from the frontman of metal band Megadeth, a more youthful, almost-cherub version of Dave Mustaine stares impassively at the reader.
In Toronto this week to do press in advance of the book's release next Tuesday, the metal star, 48, is now a bit more weathered, although he still sports the same wavy orangish hair that drapes down his shoulders, and a T-shirt and jeans that appear to have been with him since the 1980s.
His look and the music, that much remains. But according to Mustaine, everything else has changed.
The book chronicles Mustaine's journey from a neglect-filled childhood, to the dangerous excesses of his rock n' roll lifestyle, to today's more sobering existence as a family man who has found God — a persona that doesn't quite jive with the typical metal archetype.
"I think in the beginning there were a lot of people who were very angry because they'd lost their guitar player, their singer, their frontman, their Dave Mustaine," he says of the fan backlash after announcing his conversion to Christianity in 2003."(But) if you go back and look at all my lyrics now, there's a lot of God in it."
It was a long road of drug and alcohol-fuelled mayhem and tragedy that led Mustaine on a new path.
Before Mustaine fronted Megadeth he played guitar for Metallica, and thrash metal fans are well-versed in his story as one of the founding members of that super group.
But Mustaine was booted from Metallica in the band's early days for his excessive drug and alcohol use, and watched as an outsider as the band took off into superstardom.
Left with nothing and feeling betrayed, Mustaine founded Megadeth. He says the ousting became an "inspiration" and he was fuelled by a need for revenge. In the book, he takes Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich to task for denigrating his contribution to Metallica in its early days.
"Without my songs and my solos — without my energy — I don't know that Metallica ever would have become the band that it was," he writes.
Still, Mustaine says he now has "no feud" with the band.
"It was the press that kept that going," he says.
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