Favorite Slayer song? Is that just a personal thing that you don�t care to do a whole lot of interviews, or�. KNAC.COM: I�ve read that Tom�s brother John and your brother Joey had a band called �Bloodcum,� is that right? The same applied to Slayer’s all-time worst decision, their terrible 2006 cover of Steppenwolf’s Born To Be Wild. “That Les Paul was defiantly my first real guitar,” recalls Jeff Hanneman. If it sounds modern, it’s because we’re into modern music and that shows. KNAC.COM: Where was Dime�s video camera when you needed it? KNAC.COM: Yeah, I�m sure you spend enough time on the road with them that you need that break. How many metal musicians can say the same? A couple of excerpts from the chat follow below. KNAC.COM: Well, the cool thing about Slayer -- I mean, some people bitch about originality, some people love the sound obviously; you guys were onto something way back then, you�re still onto it now, and you�re still keeping it strong. [From the Archive: Guitarist Jeff Hanneman Discusses Gear and Slayer’s Beginnings] Jeff made changes to his Les Paul, he installed a Kahler tremolo system and changed the bridge pickup. By By Mark Morton . Then when I get sick of her I go and hang out with these guys. He recalled: “There are nights when you’re sick and the last thing you wanna do is go up onstage. For nearly three decades, Jeff Hanneman was a fixture of that stage—a blonde symbol of young headbangers who fell in love with satanic-infused heavy metal aggression and never looked back well into their adulthood. KNAC.COM: What would you say were your main punk influences? So that whole raining on stage came up again and we made it happen this time. KNAC.COM: Yes. I mean, shit -- I can only imagine. He had his own signature guitar, the ESP Jeff Hanneman Signature model KNAC.COM: Right, living in their cushy houses... KNAC.COM: It seems like there�d be a few subjects that you guys could pull off a pretty solid album with. And it�s cool that they�re still playing and Priest got back together with their original line up. KNAC.COM: [Laughs] �Now what?� This is from an interview Hanneman talked about wife Kathryn staying home.. [Laughs] We need some footage of that. Yeah, the thing that tied me and Kerry together was that I was just getting out of stuff like Maiden and Priest, Zeppelin -- whatever, and I was getting into punk. [Laughs] Okay, is there any certain celebrity, public persona, actor/actress, musician, whoever -- that just makes you wanna climb a fuckin� clock tower to save the world from their bullshit? “No. $2.00 HANNEMAN: [In a stuffy voice] �Oh I can identify with that person because I think that way sometimes too.� What the�?!?!? [Laughs] I hate seeing those interviews and they start talking about their character like it�s real. The rest is history. Ex-Slayer drummer Dave Lombardo salutes his former bandmate (Image credit: Larry Marano/Getty Images) The first time I first met Jeff was in 1981, just after Kerry [King] and I had put the band together, when we were rehearsing at my parents’ house. That�s when the lyrics start falling into place, and the song will change here and there; but it�s all done spontaneously, it�s not like-- we don�t sit down around a table before the album comes out and have a meeting on what the album is going to sound like. I actually do,” he guffawed. Alright, this is one of the most common things that can be found about you on the net, so I won�t get into it too much, but the whole-- the German war medals, and I know your father started you up into that� but I noticed you talked with Lemmy [Kilmister, Motorhead] and he�s also into that? We�re trying to work all the details like that out right now so that hopefully maybe when we go out on this Jaegermeister tour in-- what is it, November -- we can have it in a lot of venues; Probably not all of them, but several anyway. KNAC.COM: So you don�t say, �Kerry, you�re going to write 6 songs, and I�m going to write so many�..� So what�s it like being out there with Sabbath and Priest? I’m like, ‘Shut up. You feel great. KNAC.COM: So do you have anything towards the new album yet? DAVE MUSTAINE Talks JEFF HANNEMAN, Having 'Personal Relationship' With God August 1, 2013 0 Comments Richard Bienstock of the Denver Westword recently conducted an interview with MEGADETH mainman Dave Mustaine. HANNEMAN: But the disadvantage is I miss a lot of stuff coming out that I might like. We were still in High School --well, the three of us; Tom was out by then. And� probably the first time we played with Ozzy and Sabbath. HANNEMAN: The third show into that tour we had one of those BAD drinking nights -- it was a black out and nobody knew what happened. KNAC.COM: I�ve read that Tom�s brother John and your brother Joey had a band called �Bloodcum,� is that right? He also discusses his admiration for Hanneman, his latest novel and much, much more. Lamb of God's Mark Morton Interviews Slayer's Jeff Hanneman and Kerry King. Kathryn Hanneman tried to get him to therapy, but all Jeff wanted was to play guitar again. Then I�ll bring it to these guys and play it, see what they think, and Kerry will add a riff or Dave will say something about �change it here� or �change it there� and Kerry does the same thing. We were still in High School --well, the three of us; Tom was out by then. I mean, obviously you guys have had more opportunity than any other metal band out there as far as being able to play with your biggest influences. I like the dark side of music that gives you a mood – a certain sickness that makes you feel like hurting someone, or doing something evil.”. KNAC.COM: Is that fascination inspired by your father mainly, or is there other�. Guitarist Jeff Hanneman, who died of liver failure at 49 on Thursday, was the songwriter, sometimes-lyricist and shredding fingers behind some of Slayer's most enduring songs: the … On the downtime most of you guys� main obsession is sports, right? KNAC.COM: Just kind of came together and developed a sound between the two...? And then one day my dad was just cleaning out his closet, and he dumped all these medals on me and goes, �You want these? KNAC.COM: So as far as the new album, I read that you�re not actually going in until around January because Rubin has changed distributors again. KNAC.COM: �Now I gotta clean up the mess!� [Laughs] Speaking of Reign In Blood, you guys just filmed a DVD. KNAC.COM: Okay. The one thing I like about this record is that it is moody, by the time you get to the end, it reads like a book.”, Not a book which many Slayer fans wanted to get into, unfortunately, but it says much about Hanneman’s character that he understood that fact. HANNEMAN: That was just something--we were asked to be on that compilation, and we couldn�t think of a song and time was winding down [laughs] and then somebody came up with that song -- I don�t know who it was, I don�t know if it was somebody in the band, or the record company or management -- and we just fuckin� -- we were under the wire, and we just did it. Not just because of what other people think of it -- it�s more like at that time that album was stamped into my memory because things were really starting to change for us and things were starting to get professional and serious, and that�s the first time we had a tour bus and a real record label. The title says it all. I could just imagine the festivities backstage. So it was cool talking to him. What brought you into Slayer? [Laughs] Then me and Kerry will be sitting on the tour bus just talking and we�ll come up with something that was really funny then we�re like, �Why didn�t we think of that then?! Sports and a few little hobbies here and there. Why that�s not anywhere on an album, or�? That was definitely great. HANNEMAN: Oh no, it�s all just whoever comes up with what. KNAC.COM: [Laughs] Right on. You�re not sitting there looking at the clock going, �Hmm, yeah -- how long is this song gonna be?� and whatever. SLAYER's GARY HOLT Wishes JEFF HANNEMAN Was Alive To Take His 'Rightful Spot Back'. I mean, it would basically be like -- you kill them and you�re like, �Wow, that was a rush. 109873961, citing Pacific View Memorial Park, Corona del Mar, Orange County, California, USA ; Maintained by Find A Grave . And �Angel Of Death� is always fun. HANNEMAN: Oh yeah. HANNEMAN: But the disadvantage is I miss a lot of stuff coming out that I might like. When asked a few years later why Diabolus… had been rejected by much of Slayer’s following, he shrugged and gave the dejected answer: “Well, we do what we do in the moment. KNAC.COM: What did you guys think of the Extreme Steel Tour? HANNEMAN: Well, my father was in WWII, and I had brothers in Vietnam so it was always around the dinner table. KNAC.COM: [Laughs] So I�ll come up with something at home, or Kerry will come up with something. Here are some parts of the interview: You being in Slayer for 9 years, I was going to ask this question, do you think your time in Slayer has influenced some of the new Exodus material? But in that hour or so of conversation back in 2004, I found myself really liking the guy. “I hate airports, I hate getting in a van and going someplace… I hate the whole travelling aspect. HANNEMAN: You know the scene? Yes. Influenced by punk music growing up, Hanneman stated that the genre influenced Slayer's sound to create a … Yeah!�. It�s pretty awesome. [Laughs] var vclk_options = { sid: 14382, placement_id: '60bf72ff-417f-4c53-b69c-ac4296054355', version: '1.4' }; If Slayer broke up for whatever reason today, I would still want to write music but I would want to get a bunch of fresh guys. [Laughs] KNAC.COM: I�ve heard a song called �Ice Titan� on the Internet. HANNEMAN: Yeah, I got that wake up call like we talked about earlier, a long time ago when Rubin told me, �Don�t do that, that�s the kind of thing that breaks up bands.� He was totally right. [Laughs] Well, I was scrambling for shit -- there really is very little to find about you. KNAC.COM: Are there any punk bands nowadays that are catching your attention, or do you think that�s a dead scene? Visit our corporate site. Crucially, Hanneman cared more about Slayer as a whole entity than he did about his own individual fame. I was like, �Goddamn, that almost sounds like Slayer!� [Laughs] Slayer guitarist Jeff Hanneman passed away in 2013, but his legacy still stands. Because I�m into war history anyway, like WWI and the Franco-Prussian War, all that other stuff. KNAC.COM: Yeah, I�m sure you spend enough time on the road with them that you need that break. KNAC.COM: And so obviously side projects and things like that are not even an option for you. Why that�s not anywhere on an album, or�? HANNEMAN: Yeah, we just basically--we always start with music. So what�s it like being out there with Sabbath and Priest? Then Kerry said that he�d played in another band with this singer named Tom [Araya], and soon he was in the band. Fuck it!� [Laughs] If you believed the American tabloids, particularly in the 1980s, he was a Nazi- memorabilia-collecting, gore-and-Satan-obsessed danger to today’s youth. I mean, you don�t notice because it�s so tight and flows so well. After I killed the first guy I�d be like you said:�What a mess!� [Laughs] �I don�t wanna do this again!�, KNAC.COM: �This is too hard!� [Laughs] So obviously we can easily expect the usual Slayer album. I just don�t do a lot of interviews because I don�t read a lot of interviews, so it�s kinda like, �What�s the point? I’d only been playing for like a month by the time I met Kerry, and after I saw him play I was like, ‘Oh man I gotta speed up the learning process’.”, Even after Hanneman’s guitar skills had evolved, he was fully aware that King was the more technical player. Do we all like it? What’s most important there, given that this piece is trying to explore Hanneman’s personality rather than the bare facts of his career, is that he knew [and admitted] when his songwriting tastes led Slayer up a blind alley. “There’s just something inside of me – this kind of evil atmosphere,” he said. HANNEMAN: [Laughs] We never did figure out what happened. HANNEMAN: But I�ll call you back if I do! HANNEMAN: Nobody from any band remembered anything. KNAC.COM: It seems like there�d be a few subjects that you guys could pull off a pretty solid album with. John is Tom�s brother, so me and Joey would look at each other and say, �Hey, you should be my brother!� [Laughs], KNAC.COM: [Laughs] Ok, yeah -- that�s misquoted a lot on the Internet. HANNEMAN: Yeah� well, it was more just like one of those odd songs that a lot of people didn�t know, but it was a favorite of Kerry and I, so we just picked that one. KNAC.COM: If it ain�t broke, don�t fix it. It was just a last minute thing. HANNEMAN: Yeah, I got that wake up call like we talked about earlier, a long time ago when Rubin told me, �Don�t do that, that�s the kind of thing that breaks up bands.� He was totally right. HANNEMAN: Yeah, it�s pretty cool. KNAC.COM: [Laughs] There you go -- that works out pretty well. I just read an interview with you that was just posted today and you were saying that the wife stays home, and you kind of have the separate worlds there that keep things in balance for you. All rights reserved. HANNEMAN: Ah� barely 18, I think. At the age of only 49, Hanneman died three decades before his time and we can only mourn him for what he was – one of metal’s finest. So you used your song �Damm (Drunks Against Mad Mothers)� on Undisputed Attitude� HANNEMAN: Um� I hate to say it, but probably Reign In Blood. Thank you for signing up to Metal Hammer. Right before I wrote �Angel Of Death,� I read a bunch of books about [Nazi Doctor Josef] Mengele because he was pretty sick. “Every time I write something, it seems to find its way in there somehow. And actually, I think� yeah, I think the chorus in that song is part of one of our songs on Reign In Blood, so we couldn�t put it out after that. KNAC.COM: Maybe its better that way, you know? Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Respect is due. He also wanted to have a more recognizable guitar, so he paint-splattered the guitar with a red paint and screw chains on it, to give it “more personality” and recognition. HANNEMAN: Exactly -- it�s that knee-jerk reaction -- �Huh? - advertisement - I didn’t have time to think it through, all right?’.”. HANNEMAN: Well, we might surprise you and write a bunch of ballads. The major problem with it now is that it makes a mess, and I don�t know how many places are going to let us do it. KNAC.COM: Was that because of the war theme in the lyrics? England and Wales company registration number 2008885. Once I get to point B – fine. KNAC.COM: I�ve heard a song called �Ice Titan� on the Internet. HANNEMAN: Yeah, we did two of my songs. HANNEMAN: That was the only one I think we did on our usual albums. KNAC.COM: [Laughs] �I feel like this role was written just for me!� KNAC.COM: �Now I gotta clean up the mess!� [Laughs] KNAC.COM: Right -- try to separate that from the actual band�s music. KNAC.COM: Alright, well I appreciate you taking the time to talk with me. KNAC.COM: [Laughs] Oh shit! Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com: accessed ), memorial page for Jeff Hanneman (31 Jan 1964–2 May 2013), Find a Grave Memorial no. One of the most brutal songs of his career, 2006’s utterly pulverising Psychopathy Red, was written when he was 44. KNAC.COM: [Laughs] It was really cool -- when you played here Phil [Anselmo] had come on the stage during your set, and during your leads Phil�s out there giving Tom hits off a joint. Time was winding down, so we just did it. Tom and I are the only ones that occasionally meet up socially – and that’s fairly seldom.” This is true of most bands, in fact, but few of them have the balls to tell it like it is. KNAC.COM: So you don�t say, �Kerry, you�re going to write 6 songs, and I�m going to write so many�..� Bluesy kind of music; and Kerry for some reason was trying out for that band. HANNEMAN: Yeah. So as far as the songwriting, from what I�ve read, you guys don�t have a real formula as far as just sitting down together and hashing out some songs, is that right? And I was like, ‘Dude, you’re in Slayer! KNAC.COM: Yeah, that�s always annoyed me. When EMI India withdrew World Painted Blood, because the sleeve art was too blasphemous, he genuinely didn’t care. HANNEMAN: [Laughs]. Okay, concept albums -- I know they�ve become extremely clich� these days, everybody and their mother are putting one out -- but is that something Slayer has/would consider? Favorite Slayer song? You get sucked in. KNAC.COM: �This is too hard!� [Laughs] Then the show’s over and you start to feel sick again. But there was always-- like when I was a kid, there were all these war movies on TV, and my two older brothers used to build tanks and models, which I eventually got into. In fact, you�ve probably heard this, but our biggest scare on that record is that once we got finished with it we checked the time and it was like 28 minutes. So I�ll come up with something at home, or Kerry will come up with something. HANNEMAN: Yeah, we had tons and tons of songs and we were getting ready to record it. I was catching up.”, None of this stuff really bothered him, though. KNAC.COM: There�s a confidence there that you guys are going to perform just like you�ve been performing. When I asked him if he knew that he had a slightly weird picking-hand style, he laughed: “Yes, Kerry always points it out. HANNEMAN: Yeah, it�s� it�s kind of on the shelf, or whatever you want to call it. HANNEMAN: Kerry and I met-- I was hanging out with some friends who played� I don�t know what kind of music it was� more like Robin Trower?

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