Despite all the chaos of 2020, at least one good thing has come out of this year: “METALLICA are in a very healthy place” according to Lars Ulrich.
Speaking in the latest issue of the band’s fan club magazine So What!, Ulrich discussed learning his bandmate was heading back to rehab and how the band were handling Hetfield’s needs going forward. Ulrich said he first heard the frontman “had some issues” in September 2019 “and that he had to go and deal with that.” “Nobody at that time really knows what that means,” he said. “You know, what does it mean for him, what does it mean for us, what does it mean for scheduling, all that shit. “You just kind of sit there, and obviously your first thoughts are, ‘Is he OK? What’s going on?’ Then the Australian dates got moved. Then there was the ‘Helping Hands‘ concert that got moved, so on and so forth. You start understanding more.”
The drummer noted that having been together for so long meant the band “love each other, we believe in each other.” “We have each other’s backs,” he explained. “We will fight for each other, and we sort of roll with it.”
Speaking of the state of the band now, he added: “James is in a very healthy place, the band is in a very healthy place, and obviously COVID has played a major role in all of it.” “It’s been a mindfuck of a year; I’m sitting here on October 16th, I feel confident and excited about the state of the Metallica nation, and I feel very optimistic about what’s ahead.” “I think we’re better at [handling things] now than we were ten years ago. “10 years ago we were better at it than we were 10 years before. So it’s all just part of the path forward.” Meanwhile, the drummer said earlier this week he didn’t expect arena shows to return for a year “at the earliest” due to the on going coronavirus crisis.
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