DAVE LOMBARDO Explains Why 'Ghosts Of War' Is One Of SLAYER's Greatest Thrash Metal Songs (2024)

DAVE LOMBARDO Explains Why 'Ghosts Of War' Is One Of SLAYER's Greatest Thrash Metal Songs (1)

October 3, 2023

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In a new interview with Banger TV's Sam Dunn, original SLAYER drummer Dave Lombardo was asked why he previously named "Ghosts Of War", off the band's 1988 album "South Of Heaven", as one of his three favorite SLAYER tracks of all time. He responded (as transcribed by BLABBERMOUTH.NET): "Probably several reasons. The song structure, of course. It has a great pulse, great lyrics, the melody, just the way the song was put together. The drum break — it's just so heavy when it breaks down into that section. The guitars are so chunky. And the groove — it feels good. That's the bottom line. It's gotta have feeling. It's gotta breathe. Otherwise it's just sterile, it's just a straight line, no emotion. And that song, I think, captures a feeling. And there's some songs that do and some that don't. And that, I believe, has all the makings or the quality of, for me, a pure, great metal track, thrash metal track."

When he originally named "Ghosts Of War" as one of his favorite SLAYER songs in a 2022 interview with Metal Hammer magazine, he stated about his choice: "'Ghosts Of War' has a breakdown in the middle of the song, where I play these particular drum rolls over Kerry [King] and Jeff's [Hanneman] riffing — it's a certain break, and every time I played that section and that song, it would give me the goosebumps. It would just make me feel good. Whatever it is that music does to humans, stimulate your endorphins or whatever, that song uplifted me and gave me the chills when I was playing it."

Dave also chose "Captor Of Sin" from 1984's "Haunting The Chapel" EP, saying about his selection: "The reason why is that is the first time I started to use double bass."

As for his final choice, it was "Beauty Through Order", saying: "I have to go with something from 'World Painted Blood', as that was Hanneman's last album. 'Beauty Through Order', I remember recording that song, as the music had a natural crescendo, a natural de-crescendo too. We didn't follow the grid and just stay metronomically correct, we went with the emotion of the song. The song started off, for example, 150bpm, but at the end of the song it was 175/180bpm, because it grew with intensity.

"I remember sitting with Hanneman on the 'World Painted Blood' tour, before he got sick, and listening to that song," he added. "We would laugh at some of the whammy bar parts that were overdubbed, it sounded like some kind of bird or something flying through the air."

Lombardo, who has spent most of the recent years between crossover pioneers SUICIDAL TENDENCIES, horror-punk icons MISFITS, hardcore supergroup DEAD CROSS and MR. BUNGLE, was effectively fired from SLAYER after sitting out the group's Australian tour in February/March 2013 due to a contract dispute with the other bandmembers. He was later replaced by Paul Bostaph, who was previously SLAYER's drummer from 1992 until 2001.

Shortly after his dismissal, Lombardo said that he discovered that 90 percent of SLAYER's tour income was being deducted as expenses, including fees to management, costing the band millions and leaving them with about 10 percent to split four ways. While he and Tom Araya hired auditors to figure out what had happened, Lombardo said he was never allowed to see any of the information obtained.

Lombardo released a statement in February 2013 saying he "was denied access to detailed information and the necessary backup documents." He added: "I was told that I would not be paid until I signed a longform contract which gave me no written assurance of how much or on what basis management would deduct commissions, nor did it provide me access to the financial budgets or records for review. It also forbade me to do interviews or make statements having to do with the band, in effect a gagging order."

A few years ago, King said that "when Dave was in [SLAYER] this last time, I figured I'd be on the stage with him until one of us fell off the stage, dead. Things change. He got some bad advice and listened to some bad advice, gave us an ultimatum ten days before we went to Australia [to do the Soundwave festival tour]. And I said, 'I can't have this over my head.' And I feel bad for Dave to this day; I really feel bad for him because he shot himself in the foot. Maybe he thought he had the upper hand, but you ain't gonna get me."

SLAYER played its last-ever show in November 2019 at The Forum in Los Angeles.

DAVE LOMBARDO Explains Why 'Ghosts Of War' Is One Of SLAYER's Greatest Thrash Metal Songs (2024)

FAQs

DAVE LOMBARDO Explains Why 'Ghosts Of War' Is One Of SLAYER's Greatest Thrash Metal Songs? ›

He responded (as transcribed by BLABBERMOUTH.NET

BLABBERMOUTH.NET
Blabbermouth.net is a website dedicated to heavy metal and hard rock news, as well as album and music DVD reviews.
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Blabbermouth
): "Probably several reasons. The song structure, of course. It has a great pulse, great lyrics, the melody, just the way the song was put together. The drum break — it's just so heavy when it breaks down into that section.

Did Dave Lombardo write any Slayer songs? ›

The whole issue of who actually “wrote” a song can actually be a tricky one; Lombardo has NEVER received a songwriting credit for a Slayer song, but it's hard to imagine that he didn't write, or at least collaborate on, all his own parts.

Is Slayer really thrash metal? ›

Slayer is considered a thrash metal band. In an article from December 1986 by the Washington Post, writer Joe Brown described Slayer as speed metal, a genre he defined as "an unholy hybrid of punk rock thrash and heavy metal that attracts an almost all-male teen-age following".

Who were the big four thrash metal bands of the 1980's Megadeth Slayer Anthrax and? ›

The genre was commercially successful from approximately 1985 through 1991, bringing prominence to Metallica, Slayer, Megadeth, and Anthrax, all grouped together as the "Big Four" of U.S. thrash metal.

Why did Dave Lombardo play with Metallica? ›

What is this? In an interview with Speak N' Destroy, Lombardo recalls playing both "Battery" and "The Four Horsem*n" with the band. "I remember being approached by Slayer's manager, and he just basically said, 'Hey Dave, we have a bit of a crisis – Lars can't make it to the show. ' And I was like, 'OK, what's going on?

Why doesn't Kerry King like Dave Lombardo? ›

King deeply dislikes that guy, noting that he really fell out with him during the financial disputes that resulted in the Lombardo leaving the band.

What band inspired Slayer? ›

The artists that helped inspire the members of metal kingpins Slayer to start playing music are vast and varied, including the doom-y visions of Black Sabbath and the snotty punk of Sex Pistols.

Who are the 4 fathers of thrash metal? ›

Four American bands, Anthrax, Megadeth, Metallica, and Slayer, are credited with popularizing the genre, earning them the title of the "Big Four of Thrash".

What are the big 5 of thrash metal? ›

Four decades ago, the Big Five — Metallica, Slayer, Anthrax, Megadeth and Exodus — remade heavy metal, no holds barred. Showing no mercy: Slayer in the mid-'80s. Credit: Chris Walter/WireImage.

What is the Big 8 of thrash metal? ›

They are also often credited as one of the leaders of the second wave of thrash metal movement from the 1980s, and considered one of the "big eight" of the genre (along with Metallica, Megadeth, Slayer, Anthrax, Testament, Exodus and Overkill), as well as one of the so-called "Big Six of Bay Area thrash metal" ( ...

Who is the big 4 of death metal? ›

Experimentation in death metal began in the late 1980s and early 1990s by four bands that are often grouped together as "technical death metal's Big Four" – Death, Pestilence, Atheist, and Cynic – as well as Nocturnus; all but Pestilence being part of the Florida death metal scene.

Who directly inspired thrash metal? ›

The two main components that would contribute to the rise of thrash were the New Wave of British Heavy Metal groups — such as Iron Maiden and Judas Priest — and the punk groups — the Ramones, the Misfits — of the mid to late 1970s.

What band invented thrash metal? ›

Which band invented thrash metal? It's a debate that has raged for decades. Metallica are widely acknowledged to have released the first thrash album with their 1983 debut album Kill 'Em All.

Why was Dave kicked out of Metallica? ›

Mustaine had a severe alcohol problem. It was not that the others would not drink, but Mustaine would just become violent whenever he got drunk. His bandmates tried to come to terms with his extreme behavior, but eventually, they said enough. This was not the first time Dave was fired from the band.

Do Slayer and Metallica get along? ›

"Metallica and Slayer were never very close," Slagel tells Metal Hammer. "They were competitive. I was friends with both bands, and Metallica would ask me, 'What are Slayer doing?

Who taught Metallica to play guitar? ›

Joe Satriani Was Kirk Hammett's Guitar Teacher.

Who wrote Slayer riffs? ›

John Consterdine of Terrorizer magazine noted: "without Jeff Hanneman, Slayer certainly would not have created some of the most famous riffs in metal, which undoubtedly changed the entire genre". According to Jeff Kitts of Guitar World, he "influenced a generation and changed the course of metal forever".

Who wrote Slayers? ›

Slayers (Japanese: スレイヤーズ, Hepburn: Sureiyāzu) is a Japanese light novel series written by Hajime Kanzaka and illustrated by Rui Araizumi. The novels have been serialized in Dragon Magazine since 1989, before being published into individual volumes.

Who wrote Angel of Death Slayer? ›

"Angel of Death" is the opening track on American thrash metal band Slayer's 1986 album Reign in Blood. The lyrics and music were written by guitarist Jeff Hanneman.

Who was the main guitarist for Slayer? ›

For the uninitiated, Slayer's co-founding guitarist Kerry King has been at the forefront of thrash metal for almost four decades.

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