"If myself and Dave Mustaine could have co-existed, Megadeth would have been a very different band." Kerry King on riffs, venomous housepets and which bands he'd join given the chance

Thrash metal icon Kerry King answers fan questions and discusses which legendary bands he'd love to tour with

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When the King issues a summons, you can’t refuse. That’s how Hammer find ourselves in the basement – or should that be dungeon? – of Freizeitheim Castle in Germany, face-to-face with legend Kerry King. But while the gibbets, iron maidens and torture racks have (presumably) been shifted out in favour of massive Marshall stacks so King can play his solo debut, , at infernal volumes, the threat of some mild maiming is enough to get the thrash legend to answer your questions.

After all, if he doesn’t, we might have to get medieval on his ass...



“Oh man, that’s tough because I did all of ’em! I love the guitar break in , the first song we released. The riff before the leads that comes in towards the end, it’s a good place to start.” “First and foremost, that they could all play! Mark [Osegueda, vocals] has one of the best voices in metal, but the thing that mattered to me most was getting friends and not having to worry about egos or drama.

We’re all too old for that shit. So getting friends together who all had that same drive to make music, and at the end of the day when we’re done playing onstage and get on the bus, we can have a drink and chill. We’re all at a stage in our lives where we don’t need that shit – I don’t have time for it.

” Sign up below to get the latest from Metal Hammer, plus exclusive special offers, direct to your inbox! “Well, I first met Paul when he tried out for ahead of in the 90s, but I’d actually heard his playing on the Forbidden albums and had kinda wrote him off! It wasn’t anything out of the ordinary to me, but I had a guitar tech who was like, ‘You need to check out Paul Bostaph again.’ I went back and listened to him again and realised he wasn’t doing anything wrong, they just weren’t using him a lot. He came in to audition, and as soon as he finished playing, I knew he was the guy.

He just stomped everyone’s guts out, fucking crushed it. I was very impressed.” “That’s difficult.

I’ve already played with everybody I wanted to! I wouldn’t say Pantera, because it’s not Pantera anymore – there’s a lot of opinions on that, but I won’t go into it any more than that. What I think would be really cool to be part of – but it’ll never happen – would be to play with Deep Purple. The Deep Purple with [Ian] Gillan and [Ritchie] Blackmore.

So fucking amazing, that band. I’d even take [David] Coverdale if I had to! I’m such a fucking huge fan of that band. Beyond that.

.. I’ve kinda gotta go with old-school people that don’t exist anymore, like Van Halen.

How cool would that be? Playing with Eddie!” “Wouldn’t it still be the same? Ha! I don’t really know enough about 21st-century metal to speak too authoritatively on that, but I’d obviously pick , who we’re playing a bunch of shows with. Beyond that, well, the other three of the Big 4 still play. Maybe I’ll be a bro and let Lamb Of God take our spot up there with Metallica, Anthrax and Megadeth.

” “The only one that loosely fits the description is Vin Diesel. If you go down that road you might also say The Rock, but I’m not nearly that giant! That would be awesome, though – I’ll say The Rock, because I like a lot of the stuff he’s in.” “I guess I haven’t, have I? Any time we ever got close to writing something you could call a ballad, it’d turn into a scary song! kinda fits, but it takes a turn with those spooky lyrics.

I don’t have any intention to, not for any reason other than it was very overdone in the 80s, the first time. Don’t Testament have one literally called ? ’Nuff said! There’s billions more, but they called theirs that, so it’s all covered.” “Style came before sound, I think.

You work on sound for a while but you won’t find it until you have it. I mean, I started playing when I was 13 and our first record came out when I was 19, but my style was still evolving on that first record or two. Sound and style I’d say were really locked in around – even today, I still sound the same as that.

” “Fuck! That’s cool! I guess one horsesized rat, because there’s only one mouth to contend with. That’s my answer – I’m going purely on numbers.” “I don’t have any snakes anymore.

And I never had any venomous snakes, I made that rule first and foremost. If I got bit by a venomous snake, my guitar playing could be over and that’s what pays the bills. I was so conscious of that on day one, so wouldn’t have venomous reptiles in the house.

” “I was almost in Megadeth. I think if myself and Dave Mustaine could have co-existed for four years, it would have been a very different band. I’m not saying I’d have made them better – I’d have made them different.

It’s funny, I was backstage at Mercyful Fate’s show in Las Vegas and got talking to [guitarist] Hank Shermann, and said to him, ‘I thought you guys might come knocking’, and you could see his head explode. ‘It never fucking occurred to me!’ I’m a huge Mercyful Fate fan so I’d have done that in a heartbeat. I’d also love to play with – that brief second where Richie [Faulkner] got sick and they suggested going out with one player, I thought if they called me and said, ‘Can you be that one guitarist?’, I honestly don’t think I could, because they’re such a dual guitar band.

Thankfully they never did it, but if they’d have asked, I think it would have been the hardest ‘no’ of my life!” “I think I was, like, 17 or 18. I think it was a pet store – it was actually around ’88 or ’89 and I didn’t need the job, but when Slayer weren’t working I’d go pull a shift there. The last job I had to work was when I was at my parents’, at a mini-golf place, believe it or not.

They’d get me in to clean out the holes that were flooded, fixing pinball games...

any odd job I could fake my way through.” “Oh absolutely! Jeff brought that to all of us, but I ran with it. There’s two songs on this record that are directly punk influenced – , which I wrote to sound like an 80s West Coast punk song, and is more thrashy punk.

I tried to touch on all my influences on this record, I wanted to incorporate it all.” “That’s difficult. I have to say .

It’s not just one riff in that song, but a whole showcase. If you pushed me, I’d say the intro too, as people still sing along to that guitar line.” “I don’t think so.

Middle America makes up too much of the vote and they love Jesus a lot.” “I could go a number of ways with that, but I’ll say for the sheer speed of it. That’s probably our fastest song, and it’s not one I’m looking to play live any time soon!” “It depends how long the tour takes! I will be prepared to record next year, but depending how long the tour cycle is.

.. that’s a grey area.

” Staff writer for Metal Hammer, Rich has never met a feature he didn't fancy, which is just as well when it comes to covering everything rock, punk and metal for both print and online, be it legendary events like Rock In Rio or Clash Of The Titans or seeking out exciting new bands like Nine Treasures, Jinjer and Sleep Token..