David Ellefson On Megadeth’s Final Album: “To Me It Just Doesn’t Sound Like Megadeth”

During a new episode of “The David Ellefson Show,” former Megadeth bassist David Ellefson discussed the band’s self-titled farewell album. According to him, “it just doesn’t sound like Megadeth.”

Ellefson said the following:

“I do say this: I don’t remember [hearing] any of the songs [that are on the new MEGADETH album]… I thought ‘Let There Be Shred’… Look, [current MEGADETH guitarist] Teemu [Mäntysaari] is obviously a great guitar player. He’s fantastic. He’s a great player. To me, he’s kind of the story of MEGADETH right now. He’s the shining star of the group. I wish they would not Pro Tool Dirk [Verbeuren, current MEGADETH drummer] so much ’cause the guy can play, and he’s got this kind of loose… We always said he’s the closest to [early MEGADETH drummer] Gar Samuelson since Gar Samuelson. It’s, like, take the guy off the fucking Pro Tool grid, stop quantizing him and let him breathe a little bit. He can play. Let him breathe. And so there’s some of those production things that I — even on the last album that I was a part of until I wasn’t… I was, like, don’t lock everything to the grid, man. It’s, like, let people play; let it breathe. Let it feel like the ‘Peace Sells’ album.”

He continued:

“Maybe one day [frontman] Dave [Mustaine] will unmute my bass parts [on ‘The Sick, The Dying… And The Dead!’] and actually put out the remixed, remastered David Ellefson and Dirk Verbeuren version, because I’m telling you, dude, there was magic in those parts that Dirk and I played on that last album together on that — I hate that title, ‘The Sick, The Dying… And The Dead!’ Ugh.

But I will say, I listened to the new [MEGADETH album]. I mean, look, Dave’s got a new band. He’s got a new sound. So I just sat and listened to it just as a listener, a fan even of MEGADETH and even of Dave’s abilities. ’cause I am — I admire what he can write and do and stuff. you know. And one thing I will say about Dave — he writes a lyric that makes you wanna listen to what he’s saying. Usually with heavy metal, it’s like a bunch of riffs. Then the singer comes in either growling, yelling, whatever. You sort of check out — at least I do. Chuck Billy’s [TESTAMENT] another one I listen to because he’s such a freight train that you can’t help but hear him and what he’s saying. But Dave does write a lyric that you listen to it. ‘Cause I always say, when you’re mixing, when the singer comes in, everything else has to kind of step back, ’cause people wanna hear the singer. I mean, that’s what women listen to. When they hear a song, it’s, like, listen to the singer. So, to me, that’s what you should do.”

He also added the following about it being labeled as the band’s farewell album:

“I still look at it as Dave’s retirement because I still think of MEGADETH as our band. I think it’s a sin to just go off and claim it as his own. And look, at the same time, [there’s] this woman who I’d done an interview with. And she tells me that she’s also a psychic, and one day she calls me and we do some psychic reading. I’m, like, yeah, there’s probably some… just like reading a horoscope to me, there’s probably some truth in and around some or all this stuff. So one day she calls me up, and I don’t know her. She goes, ‘You know Dave doesn’t want you on his last album.’ I said, ‘Yeah, no shit. He’s certainly behaving like that. He’s taking all my songs off, takes my bass parts off. Yeah, no kidding.’ And now I’m not in the band. So on one hand it’s sort of, like, all right, look, if the friendship is done, the musical relationship is over, hey, move on. And of course, getting to use the MEGADETH name, well, guess what? Now a million people pay attention to it. Try doing what the rest of us have done — go out under your own name, which I know he tried to do back in 2004 and everybody, they repelled back and said, ‘No, we need this album to say MEGADETH.’ … That’s what’s under contract here.. So he gets the the benefit of that. ‘Cause I hear it and I go, okay, this is a Dave solo record. This is Dave and his new band, Dave and his new guys. It says MEGADETH, so obviously it gets all the attention, but realistically, I hear it and to me it just doesn’t sound like MEGADETH. And that’s just me — period. It sounds like Dave doing what Dave does, but with a different set of guys in a new day. And this is Dave’s retirement. So that’s my view on it in a nutshell.”

Ellefson also commented on Megadeth’s cover of Metallica’s “Ride The Lightning”:

“The funny thing, [Dave] was mad at [current METALLICA guitarist] Kirk Hammett for playing [Mustaine’s] solos [on the songs that ended up on METALLICA’s ‘Kill ‘Em All’ album], and now here’s Dave playing Kirk’s solos.

I remember being at some party down in Orange County. And I think I remember the woman who owned the place. But that was Dave’s haunts. It was Orange County. It’s kind of where he came out of. I remember Ron McGovney was there, from METALLICA, the former bass player. He was there with his girlfriend. And it was a big party, and somebody there had the [then-]new METALLICA album, ‘Ride The Lightning’. And we listened to it. We put it on. I remember Dave goes, ‘They fucking stole my riff.’ That [riff in the instrumental break before the bridge] because we had that; Dave used to play that in the apartment. [Early MEGADETH guitarist] Greg Handevidt seems to think that was actually in [the original version of] ‘Set The World Afire’ [the first song Mustaine wrote after being kicked out of METALLICA]. And he may be right. It may have been in that song. And then we had to take it out because they [METALLICA] used it. So, they clearly used a couple of Dave’s riffs. Dave speaks about it now like they were all sitting in the room writing ‘Ride The Lightning’ together. I wasn’t there, so I don’t know the details of it, but it seems to me if it was really a finished song, it would’ve been on ‘Kill ‘Em All’. But it wasn’t. It was a couple of years later. So, look, did Dave have a participation? Yeah, but it seems to me more like that song was sort of put together after he was out of the group. But again, I wasn’t there. I do know this much: James [Hetfield, METALLICA frontman] is a very different lyric writer than Dave was. So by ‘Ride The Lightning’, you hear very much James coming into his own as his own lyricist, as I hear it. So there’s that.”

[via Blabbermouth]