AVATAR’s JOHANNES ECKERSTRÖM: ‘METALLICA’s ‘For Whom The Bell Tolls’ Is The Heaviest Song Ever Recorded’

Johannes Eckerström Live

In a recent interview on “Wired In The Empire,” the 96.7 KCAL-FM show hosted by Radioactive MikeZ, AVATAR frontman Johannes Eckerström was asked to choose which METALLICA album he prefers, Ride The Lightning or Master Of Puppets.

Johannes said: “When I talk to people who like the music but don’t necessarily play the music and talk about the finer details in what makes something awesome, and talking about, for instance, when talking about fast and slow songs, I love to show an example of how ‘Aces High’ is the fastest song ever recorded by IRON MAIDEN, which, of course, there are, on paper, much, much faster songs, but there’s something about having that drive when you play, it almost feels like it’s falling apart… It’s there in the drumming already and the bassline and it carries through. And that’s how, when you push it, when you push the tempo.

“Every kid who’s been playing drums even once hears someone talk about AC/DC, of course, and you take, for instance, ‘Back In Black’. You have to have that drag when you play. Then you have certain iconic songs that provide a certain ideal.

“And in the same way that I always said ‘Aces High’ is the fastest song ever recorded, ‘For Whom The Bell Tolls’, I think, is the heaviest song ever recorded. And I know MESHUGGAH and NEUROSIS exist, and I know OBITUARY exists, and all kinds of stuff. And that’s also true. And that’s the heaviest thing ever also in another way.

“But just those riffs, that anger, with that rage and sense of — I don’t know — its importance that comes through in how that riff is played, that primitive riff in the beginning, and the decision to put the cymbal crash on the first snare in the bar after instead of the other one, and all that. So that song — I’ve never tried to write a song like that, but I keep going back to thinking about that song in terms of what’s actually heavy music. Yeah, we tune down and that part of the sound is important, but none of the things that matter before — you can’t put the cart in front of the horse… So it has to be Ride The Lightning.”