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Hic, every time I listen to Fade, I think about the scene where some of our Meta brothers just finished sweating profusely and filmed backstage when they saw the thief clean up. For Bellz, it was the horrifying and painful gaze of the soldier who looked up at the blue sky one last time before he died but only saw the black gun smoke mixed with the roar of the farewell cannons. Take a look to the sky just before you die, It is the last time he will, Blackened roar massive roar fills the crumbling sky, Shattered goal fills his soul with a ruthless cry…). Inspired by Easter and the plague in the world of the ancient Egyptian pharaohs "Creeping death" gives us the feeling of an Imhotep-style Taoist in The Mummy. Desert of the Egyptian plains to come and kill the newly born Pharaoh (Die! By my hand! I creep across the land! Killing first born man!). It is impossible not to mention "Ride the Lightning" in the mood of a horrible death row inmate when he could smell his flesh burning on the electric chair ... (Flash before my eyes, Now it's time to die, Burning in my brain, I can't feel the flame). At the end of the album, Metallica was once again shocked by the beautiful symphony "The call of Ktulu". This article was inspired by the work of horror writer HP Lovecraft. Kirk and Cliff enjoyed the old man's books again, tried to persuade the rest of the members ... and succeeded. It is a call from some mysterious, mysterious spiritual realm, or a call from a creepy place like the hell on the bottom of the Midian Sea that the Cradle of Filth described in the Midians (2000). This is the best instrumental of Metallica and probably one of the best instrumental rock. But perhaps the most evil songs to mention are "For Whom The Bell Tolls" and "Fade To Black", which anyone who hears rock must know. "For Whom The Bell Tolls" is named after the famous novel "Bell of the soul" by writer Ernest Hemmingway during World War I. During the previous anti-war songs, in this work again drawing a picture of the stupidity of war and the desire to kill *** c to satisfy an individual's ambition. But it was "Fade to Black" that stunned the metal world at the time. Could an emerging rock band be the father of such a great ballad? Although there were criticisms that "Fade to Black" promoted the suicide movement, it was the fans that the song actually helped them through difficult times. the most difficult in life. Each song that refers to this problem is a double-edged sword, if not properly understood to have a negative effect when playing. This song was composed when the band's amplifying device was questioned by the thief as mentioned above, it is unclear if any member of Metallica intended to kill himself, as Fade actually blew up. metal world at that time.