Sad but True
"Sad but True" is a song by American heavy metal band Metallica. It was released in February 1993 as the fifth and final single from their 1991 self-titled album. The music video for the single was released in October 1992. The song peaked at number 15 on the US Billboard Mainstream Rock chart.
Music
"Sad but True" is in D Standard tuning, however the song was originally written and demoed in E Standard. Bob Rock, who produced The Black Album, recalled to Musicradar.com: "We were in pre-production, which was uncomfortable because nobody had ever made them go through their songs in such a deliberate way before, and six songs in 'Sad But True' came along. Suddenly, I realized that every song, including this one, was in the key of E. I brought this to the band's attention, and they said, 'Well, isn't E the lowest note?' So I told them that on Mötley Crüe's Dr. Feelgood, which I produced and Metallica loved, the band had tuned down to D. Metallica then tuned down to D, and that's when the riff really became huge. It was this force that you just couldn't stop, no matter what."Rock, Hetfield, and Ulrich are all credited as producers, and Randy Staub and his assistant, Mike Tacci.
Music video
The music video filmed in January 1992 in San Diego and directed by Wayne Isham. It premiered on 5 October 1992.Track listing
US single- "Sad but True"
- "So What?"
- "Sad but True" – 5:27
- "So What?" – 3:09
- "Harvester of Sorrow" – 6:41
- "Sad but True" – 5:27
- "Nothing Else Matters " – 6:31
- "Creeping Death" – 8:01
- "Sad but True" – 4:53
- "Sad but True" – 5:26
- "Nothing Else Matters" – 6:13
- "Sad but True" – 6:12
- "Sad but True" – 5:24
- "Nothing Else Matters" – 6:29
- "Sad but True" – 5:27
- "Nothing Else Matters " – 6:29
- "Sad but True"
- "Nothing Else Matters"
- "Sad but True"
Personnel
;Metallica
- James Hetfield – vocals, rhythm guitar, baritone guitar
- Kirk Hammett – lead guitar
- Jason Newsted – bass
- Lars Ulrich – drums
- John Marshall – guitar on "Nothing Else Matters"
Cover versions
The Metallica Blacklist, a compilation album released in 2021, features seven covers of the song, including a live version by Sam Fender and studio versions by Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit, Mexican Institute of Sound, Royal Blood, St. Vincent, White Reaper and YB.