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For keeping with more stuff like this and to help me make more videos, any sign of Subscription or like will be highly appreciated. For any questions, guitar lessons or some sort of information you may need… Contact me at: bboboriginals@gmail.com Follow me! / b.bob_originals / bbob-originals-425290221321275 ______________________________ I’ve never heard a darker sound coming from an album. Even if this sound comes from a thrash metal band it provoques an instant reaction to the listener. Just like Chris Poland said in a documentary referring to Megadeth’s music: When we played on stage the songs of the Peace Sell’s era, nobody reacted to music like that. Mustaine could say to the audience, “go outside and kill the first person you see… and they would”. Terrific but honest words coming from the lead former guitarist who stayed in Megadeth for the first four years. Megadeth was still under contract with indie label Combat Records when it started recording Peace Sells… But Who’s Buying? at The Music Grinder Studios in Los Angeles on Feb. 15, 1986. Mustaine co-produced the album with Randy Burns, and the group exited the studio March 20. While the budget was scant, the albums sounded much fuller and more professional than the band’s debut. Before the album was released, Combat sold Megadeth’s contract to Capitol Records, which hired engineer Paul Lani to fix the recording flaws and give the record a crisper bite.Clearly, songs like the chant-along “Wake Up Dead” and the barreling, graphically brutal “Good Mourning/Black Friday” were next level stuff, but the obvious standout was the title track. From the opening jaunty bass line to the contagious main riff, “Peace Sells” remains one of the most memorable numbers from the thrash era. The vocals were snarky, but political, proving that Mustaine had more than tales of decadence and mayhem in his lyrical arsenal, and the rhythmic shifts in the song gave it lasting impact.Peace Sells was their redemption: seven taut declarations of contempt for humanity and one tongue-in-cheek, extra-guitar-shreddy cover of Willie Dixon’s “I Ain’t Superstitious.” A tune that I die for as a blues lover. Even though I play and listen all sorts of music I always come to the Peace Sell’s album. Undoubtedly defined my teen years and I found in that iconic musician who’s name is Dave Mustaine the iconic image, strength and self confidence that i wanted to have when I first started to play guitar and love music. I love this song and I hope you love it too. Thanks. B.Bob.