Metallica's Love For Venom: How Two Worlds Collided


Key Highlights :

1. Venom were a heavy metal band from the UK that became popular in the early 1980s.
2. They were invited to tour with Kiss and Judas Priest, but did not ask for or receive any invitations.
3. They were eventually invited to tour with Metallica, and had a good time.
4. Venom's fanbase was known for being violent and aggressive.
5. John Frusciante once claimed to have an encounter with a horny ghost while recording Blood Sugar Sex Magik in a haunted mansion.




     At the dawn of the 1980s, the world's biggest hard rock and heavy metal bands were not blind to the emergence of an exciting new generation of raw, hungry and ambitious young British groups with aspirations to join them at rock's top table. As such, emerging upstarts were booked to join Kiss and Judas Priest on tour, while hit the road with AC/DC. Venom, however, received no such invitations.

     "We never asked and were never offered anything," band leader Cronos told this writer. "I felt we were a totally different entity, and we didn’t want to be in anyone’s club. We knew from the kind of mail we were getting back then that our audience was extreme. I remember saying to the lads [guitarist Mantas and drummer Abaddon], Our crowd is going to be one fucked-up bunch of motherfuckers."

     Among those "motherfuckers", Cronos came to learn, were an excitable quartet of diehard Venom fans in California who had formed a band of their own, Metallica. "I had a friend who was a bootlegger and he sent me this VHS of Metallica playing in LA or San Francisco, and [guitarist, and future Megadeth frontman] Dave Mustaine was wearing a shirt," Cronos recalls of hearing Metallica's name for the first time, ahead of Venom's first headline shows in America. "And then when I listened to Kill 'Em All, I thought, Wait, that’s fucking us! They’re not just wearing our shirts, they’re stealing the fucking music as well! But they were young and enthusiastic so they seemed like a good fit to play with us, so we invited them to open the Staten Island shows [on April 22 and 24, 1983]."

     Those guys had so much energy and we all had a fucking great time," Cronos recalls of the show. It was at one of these shows, that Cronos discovered that his instincts about Venom's potential audience were correct. "When the gig was over and we were packing the gear away, one of the security guys called me over," he recalls. "He pointed at these big metal barrels by the door of the club, and said, ‘Check this out.’ I looked in and these barrels were half full of weapons, knives and clubs, that they’d confiscated from kids on the way in. We were like, Shit the bed! Fucking Hell! That was the sort of crowd that we attracted."

     Later that year, when they started plotting out their Seven Dates Of Hell shows in Europe for early 1984, Venom once again invited Metallica along for the ride, and a good time was had by all. "They were good guys, they were cool," Cronos recalls. "I remember Lars [Ulrich] asking for the shirt that I had on, and he swapped it for a Metal Up Your Ass T-shirt. We got on really well, the tour was great and we had a good laugh. I remember at their last gig, in Belgium, we cut Lars’ drumsticks halfway through, and put talcum powder on his snare drum, and pyro underneath his little drum riser. When he started playing, he snapped his sticks, the talc went into the air and nearly choked the guy, and then the kit exploded underneath him. And then we threw rotten tomatoes at them. It was like, there’s your initiation, you’ve been Venomized! But it was all taken in good spirits, considering that we were fucking up their gig!"

     Metallica have continued to sing Venom's praises to this day, but, perhaps oddly, given their obvious debt to Cronos' band, the group have never recorded a cover of a Venom song. Yet, anyway.

     The collision of Venom and Metallica's two worlds was an exciting moment in the history of hard rock and heavy metal, and it's a testament to the friendship between the two bands that it ended in laughter rather than tears. The legacy of their musical partnership lives on in the work of both bands, and it's a testament to the power of music that two bands from such disparate backgrounds could come together and create something so special.



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