Performance coach speak
In a recent interview with The Kansas City Star,
Metallica's former "performance coach" Phil Towle
spoke about being present when former Metallica
bassist Jason Newsted told the band he was leaving,
though that scene isn't in the Metallica documentary
"Metallica: Some Kind of Monster".
Asked how that went
down, Towle said, "We'd been sitting around talking
for about a half-hour when Jason says to me, 'I want
to talk to the guys. Will you excuse me?' So I went
into the other room in the suite. I could hear all
this pain resonating from the room they were in, and
after about 10 minutes, I went back in. Jason says, 'I
don't want you in here.' I said, 'I was hired to be
here, to work with you guys and your issues, and I
can't in good faith stay in the other room.' There was
silence. Then Lars says, 'Let him stay.'
"They were all jarred so much that a family member for
14 years was leaving for various reasons. They said,
'We gotta do something about this.' Here's what I
offered: Rather than invest energy in being pissed at
Jason, use this thing to explore the underlying issues
of discomfort and conflict that led to his leaving.
"In a very dysfunctional family, Jason had the courage
to stand up. He was the one who set in motion this
process of calling everyone out. I'd read an old
interview with METALLICA in Playboy in which the band
members separately trashed each other. So now the
conflict had come to a head."
Towle also spoke about the scene toward the end of
"Metallica: Some Kind of Monster" documentary where he
and James and Lars get into it over Phil's continued
role with the band. Asked what happened there, Towle
said, "The band was going through a moment of
indecision about whether to continue with me and on
what terms. I needed an answer. I said I gotta know
because I'm thinking about moving out here. Off camera
we had talks about continuing. So I really felt a
little ambushed. I felt I'd had one understanding
where I'd do it part time to resolve some issues.
"But it was also difficult for me to think about
leaving. … I was with this one client every day for
almost 2 1/2 years. We started with 2- and 3-hour
sessions, and then when things heated up as they made
the album, I was in the studio every day. I just
didn't want to leave the process, the intimacy. And I
thought we had a deal in place. But, you know, the
thing to come out of that was Lars coming to James'
support. That really cemented things between them."
Thanks to metsnake / Source: blabbermouth.net
Discuss this story and more in the message forums
Encyclopedia Metallica
http://www.encycmet.com
|