Metallica - Wherever I May Roam - 4K - Remastered - 5.1 Surround

Опубликовано: 03 Ноябрь 2024
на канале: CaptainCarlossi
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#Metallica #WhereverIMayRoam #4K #Remastered #2160p #UHD #Surround #Subtitles #Lyrics #Subs Metallica with "Wherever I May Roam" from the Album "Metallica / The Black Album" (1991). Remastered and AI upscaled in 4K @ 60 FPS with lossless 5.1 Surround Sound taken from their Black Album DVD ( = Audio DVD). I used the original, lossless 5.1 Surround Mix. It was a very difficult work, and took me one day, because I had to (find out and finally) adjust the Speed to 99,9017% (including a pitch correction), sync it with a correct delay and cut out 32,904 seconds exactly in a specific place to make it fit. (The Video has a lenght of 6:08 Minutes, the DVD-Audio 6:44 Minutes). If you wonder why James voice sounds a litte bit quiet: That's not my fault, it's exactly the same in the 5.1 original mix. It's probably supposed to sound more like a live concert. And last but not least: Sorry for the average picture quality. I used the best available video source, but it is still not very good.

"Wherever I May Roam" is a song by American heavy metal band Metallica. It was released in October 1992 as the fourth single from their eponymous fifth album, Metallica. It reached number 82 on the US Billboard Hot 100 peaked at number twenty-five on the Billboard Album Rock Tracks chart, and peaked at number two in Denmark, Finland and Norway.

All stringed instruments featured in this song, both guitars and basses, use standard tuning. The intro of the song is notable for its unusual instrumentation for the band: Asian instruments such as a gong and sitar, along with an overdubbed Warwick twelve-string bass. This 12-string bass was only used for effect during the intro to emphasize several accented notes and then a standard tuned 4-string bass was used as the main bass instrument throughout the remainder of the recording.

The song is performed frequently during the band's live concerts, and was performed with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra (conducted by Michael Kamen) on the live S&M and its companion DVD, as well as the 2019 S&M2. When performed live, the band has always relied on their original sitar recording for the intro (the band enters on the first accented note to dramatic effect); however, for the S&M concerts guitarist Kirk Hammett utilized a Danelectro electric sitar for the intro before switching to his ESP electric guitar.

The music video featured clips from Metallica behind the scenes and in concert, during their Wherever We May Roam Tour. The video version of the song is edited omitting the first bridge and third chorus and the last line in the second chorus "Where I lay my head is home" edited to end off as the third chorus does on the studio version with the words "That's where" leading into Hammett's guitar solo of the second bridge.

The song's demo was recorded in Lars Ulrich's home musical studio "Dungeon" on August 13, 1990.

(Wikipedia)