Specialty: Making sure Metallica thumps harder than ever Description: 5'9" & 150 lbs (1.75 meters
& 68.04 kilos); brown/red hair & blue eyes Marital status: Single Drives: '94 Land Cruiser, IBIS
Titanium, Cyclocross bike Drinks: Bordeaux, Barolo, barbaresco wines. Evian, Metrx Shakes Eats: Thai Curry,
Frosted Flakes, Bananas, Ginseng Sports teams: NBA: Phoenix Suns, Chicago Bulls; NFL: Detroit Lions, L.A. Raiders Before
Metallica: Flotsam and Jetsam, Dogz Pre-Metallica career: Burger-flipper, pizza-maker, and truck-driver Likes:
Mountain biking, Elizabeth, Basketball Listens to: Kiss, Black Sabbath, Tom Waits, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Machine Head,
Sly and the Family Stone, Sepultura, Wes Montgomery, Snoop Doggy Dogg, Bob Marley, Johnny Cash, Jaco Pastorius, Anything and
everything First concert: Ted Nugent, 1975, South Bend, Indiana, Notre Dame University Heroes: Gene Simmons,
Al Pacino, B.B. King, my father, Zach Harmen, Bob Marley Describes self as: Energetic, caring, goofy
Bassist Jason Newsted may not have been an original member of Metallica, but he was present for the band's rise from the
metal underground to the top of the charts worldwide from the late-'80s up to the dawn of the 21st century. Born on March
4, 1963, in Battle Creek, MI, Newsted and his family relocated when he was 14 to Kalamazoo, MI. Shortly thereafter Newsted
discovered rock music via Kiss and their blood-spurting, fire-breathing demon bassist, Gene Simmons. He soon discovered other
popular metal bands of the day (Ted Nugent, Rush, Black Sabbath, Blue Oyster Cult), all the while learning bass and playing
in local bands. In 1981, Newsted and a friend left Michigan with hopes of making it to California to start up a band, but
made it only as far as Phoenix, where they remained. Newsted formed a new band shortly thereafter, dubbed Dogz, which changed
their name to Flotsam & Jetsam by 1983, specializing in a newly founded metal style -- thrash. It was also around this
time that Newsted discovered the frontrunners of thrash, Metallica, quickly becoming his favorite band. Flotsam & Jetsam
signed with the Metal Blade record company, appearing on an edition of the label's Metal Massacre compilation and recording
a debut album, 1986's Doomsday for the Deceiver. All the while Newsted was the band's leader, serving as the main songwriter
and lyricist in addition to his bass duties.
Flotsam was quickly moving up the ladder when Metallica (who had just released their most successful album yet, the classic
Master of Puppets release) suffered the tragic death of bassist Cliff Burton mid-tour in September of 1986. Metallica decided
to soldier on and began auditioning bass players to fill the void left by Burton. Despite a promising future with Flotsam
& Jetsam, Newsted opted to try out for Metallica and got the gig. Metallica picked up where their tour left off shortly
after naming Newsted their new member and spent 1987 working on their highly anticipated follow-up to Master. Although 1988's
epic prog-metal concept album And Justice for All was a major hit and broke Metallica to the big time, Newsted's bass was
barely audible in the mix, while his songwriting talents were barely utilized at all (he earned a lone co-songwriting credit
with the album-opener, "Blackened"). By the release of 1991's self-titled release, Metallica had become one of the world's
most popular rock bands -- a more straightforward musical approach and embracement of music videos had paid off, as the album
would eventually sell over ten million copies in the U.S. alone. After a mammoth two-year tour in support of the album had
ground to a halt in 1993, the members took time off.
It wasn't until 1996 that the quartet would issue their next studio album, Load, but the group took some heat from longtime
fans due to their new look (short hair, designer threads) and a more varied musical style that embraced other forms besides
metal. But Load was another sizeable hit, as was its follow-up a year later, Reload. 1998 saw a compilation of cover tunes
from over the years, Garage Inc., while 1999's symphonic metal experiment, S&M, was well received. Newsted had also found
time to guest on other artist's recordings (Voivod's Phobos, Jim Martin's Milk & Blood, U.N.K.L.E.'s Psyence Fiction,
and Sepultura's Against) and was set to launch a side-project titled Echo Brain in 2000, which appeared to cause some strife
within Metallica -- confirmed by a tell-all interview by all four bandmembers in Playboy magazine in early 2001. Around the
same time the aforementioned Playboy interview hit the stands, Newsted abruptly left Metallica, offering the statement, "Due
to private and personal reasons, and the physical damage I've done to myself over the years while playing the music I love,
I must step away from the band." ~ Greg Prato, All Music Guide
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