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"Fuel" is a song by American heavy metal band Metallica. It was written by James Hetfield , Lars Ulrich , and Kirk Hammett , and was released as the third single from their seventh album, Reload (1997).
Fuel (hardcore band), an American post-hardcore trio from California; Fuel (Larry Young album), 1975; Fuel, an album by Raised Fist, 1998; Fuel, by Fuel, 1994; The Fuel, an EP by Koncept and J57, 2015 "Fuel" (Metallica song), 1998 "Fuel" (Eminem song), 2024 "Fuel", a song by Ani DiFranco from Little Plastic Castle, 1998
Lead guitarist Kirk Hammett was credited with songwriting on every Metallica album from Ride the Lightning to Death Magnetic. Metallica's original lead guitarist Dave Mustaine co-wrote a number of the band's early songs. Bassist Jason Newsted joined in 1986, performed on four studio albums and co-wrote three songs.
Guitar Hero: Metallica features a "full band" mode similar to Guitar Hero World Tour that allows for up to four players to play lead guitar, bass guitar, drums, and vocals. [1] Players can play alone or with others both locally and online in competitive and cooperative game modes.
Metallica’s “One” jam track is included in the “Festival” pass’ premium reward tier, and other songs available for purchase in the shop include “Enter Sandman,” “Fuel ...
It should only contain pages that are Metallica songs or lists of Metallica songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Metallica songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
The music video, directed by Paul Andresen, features a surreal, anti-gravity concept. The band plays on a large, suspended platform making full and continuous rotations throughout the performance, like an enormous swing. The platform and band are actually stationary and the room, a giant constructed box, spins around it.
The band had recorded songs on earlier albums in tunings lower than E: "The God That Failed" (Metallica) was in E♭, and "Sad but True" (Metallica) and "The Thing That Should Not Be" (Master of Puppets) were in D tuning. Hetfield also felt that the change to E♭ was a bonus, as it was easier to perform string bends in the riffs. [16]