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Nothing Else Matters

"Nothing Else Matters"
Metallica - Nothing Else Matters cover.jpg
Single by Metallica
from the album Metallica
B-side "Enter Sandman" (live)
"Enter Sandman" (live)/"Harvester of Sorrow" (live)/"Nothing Else Matters" (Demo)
Released April 20, 1992
Format CD single, Cassette, Vinyl, Download
Recorded May 30, 1991 at One on One Studios (now called 17 Hertz Studio) located at 5253 Lankershim Blvd. in North Hollywood, California.
Genre Heavy metal
Length 6:28
Label Elektra
Writer(s) James Hetfield and Lars Ulrich
Producer(s) Bob Rock
James Hetfield
Lars Ulrich
Metallica singles chronology
"The Unforgiven"
(1991)
"Nothing Else Matters"
(1992)
"Wherever I May Roam"
(1992)
Music video
"Nothing Else Matters" on YouTube
"Nothing Else Matters '99 (Live)"
Metallica - Nothing Else Matters (live) cover.jpg
Single by Metallica
from the album S&M
B-side "For Whom the Bell Tolls" (S&M version)/"−Human"
Released November 22, 1999
Format CD single
Recorded April 21–22, 1999 at Berkeley Community Theatre, Berkeley, California
Genre Heavy metal, Symphonic rock
Length 6:47
Label Elektra
Producer(s) Bob Rock
James Hetfield
Lars Ulrich
Michael Kamen
Metallica singles chronology
"Die, Die My Darling"
(1999)
"Nothing Else Matters '99"
(1999)
"No Leaf Clover"
(2000)
San Francisco Symphony chronology
"Nothing Else Matters '99"
(1999)
"No Leaf Clover"
(2000)
"Nothing Else Matters"
Single by Lucie Silvas
from the album Breathe In
B-side "Better Love Next Time" (Demo)
Released October 31, 2005
Format CD single, Digital download
Genre Pop
Length 4:36
Label Mercury
Producer(s) Mike Peden
Lucie Silvas singles chronology
"Forget Me Not"
(2005)
"Nothing Else Matters"
(2005)
"Everytime I Think of You"
(2006)

"Nothing Else Matters" is a song by American heavy metal band Metallica. It was released in 1992 as the third single from their self-titled fifth studio album, Metallica. The song peaked at number 11 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks chart as well as top-ten positions on many European charts. "Nothing Else Matters" was featured as a playable track in the music video game Guitar Hero: Metallica. Recognized as one of Metallica's best known and most popular songs, it has become a staple in live performances. The song has been covered over forty times.

Lead singer and rhythm guitarist James Hetfield wrote the song (credited to Hetfield/Ulrich) in 1990 while he was on the phone with his then girlfriend. Since he held the phone with one hand, he plucked the four open strings of a standard E-minor chord with the other, which eventually made up the first two bars of the song. The lyrics, which talk about being "so close, no matter how far", were also dedicated to his girlfriend, indicating the bond they shared even when Hetfield was on tour. Initially, the song was not meant to be released, as Hetfield had written it for himself, but after drummer Lars Ulrich heard it, it was considered for the album.

The song's demo was also called "Nothing Else Matters" and was recorded in Lars Ulrich's home musical studio "Dungeon" on August 13, 1990.

Its intro is an E minor arpeggio beginning with the open low E followed by the open G, B and high E strings.

It is one of the few Metallica songs in which Hetfield, plays the guitar solo. Given that Hetfield recorded all rhythm and most harmony tracks on the band's first five albums and that Hammett has stated he didn't learn how to play the song until they were well into the tour for the album, Hammett does not play on the studio recording, making it one of the few in the whole Metallica repertoire, along with Cliff Burton's "(Anesthesia) Pulling Teeth", in which he does not appear.

The music video premiered on MTV on February 26, 1992. It was directed by Adam Dubin, and edited by Sean Fullan. The clip consists of parts of the A year and a half... video tape which was shot during the recordings of Metallica. One of them shows Hetfield playing the 12 string during one of the choruses. MTV will not air the video during daytime hours anymore because it features nudity in the form of pin-up posters and Playboy centerfolds that are taped up in the studio. It also has a picture of Kip Winger which Lars Ulrich is seen throwing darts at. On the band's 2006 music video compilation DVD, the posters are censored, as was done with the nudity featured in the music videos for "Turn the Page" and "Whiskey in the Jar".


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