Back in April, Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich mentioned the group could make a new album during quarantine, which gives us hope the follow-up to 2016’s Hardwired…to Self Destruct could happen sooner than we think. Last month, Ulrich spoke to Swedish talk show host Fredrik Skavian and further elaborated on the possibility of recording a new album during lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic. 

 

He revealed:

“We’re just starting, in the last four weeks maybe, we connected again. We’ve been obviously connected [even before that], but we [have now] connected creatively, and now we’re sort of in discovery mode, I think is a good way to say it. We are sending ideas to each other via e-mail and via Zoom and [trying to] make music in these unusual situations. We have a weekly Zoom connect. We’ve been doing that basically since [the coronavirus pandemic] started 10 [or] 11 weeks [ago] — since it started in America. So we get together once a week on Zoom for a couple of hours and catch up. The good thing about that catching up is we really just talk about how we’re doing and we don’t sit and talk about Metallica for hours and hours. But now that we’ve started exchanging some ideas, it’s great. It’s nice to be in touch, it’s nice to be part again of that group, and I look forward to the creative opportunities that lie ahead of us.”

 

On whether the quarantine album will be different than making a “normal” Metallica record: 

“So far, at least the sonic side of it and the practical elements are in surprisingly good shape, actually. So now we’ve just gotta figure out how much we can create without being in the same space. The difference, obviously, between bands like ourselves and people that are still bands, like the U2s of the world or the Red Hot Chili Peppers or Coldplay or Iron Maiden or whatever is that you really are bands, and you rely on the group format to really move everything forward. So unlike if you’re a solo artist and it’s just you and your guitar or whatever. So it’s a different thing.”

 

Watch the interview below:

 

 

In more Metallica news, you can now watch the entire stream from their 2013 Melbourne performance below:

 

 

 

[via Blabbermouth]