Here’s what I have of the Megadeth Manga
Sweet Seals For You, Always
$LAYYYTER
todays bird
Sade Olutola

Kaledo Art

roma★

tannertan36

No title available
Stranger Things

oozey mess
noise dept.
Misplaced Lens Cap

Love Begins
Cosmic Funnies
One Nice Bug Per Day
Peter Solarz

Origami Around
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
No title available

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

seen from Australia

seen from T1

seen from Singapore
seen from Germany

seen from Australia
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from Argentina
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Portugal

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Italy
seen from Portugal
seen from Peru
seen from Spain

seen from Malaysia
seen from Poland
seen from Singapore
@cacctoes
Here’s what I have of the Megadeth Manga
metallica
james hetfield, kirk hammett, jason newsted (aka behind the james' guitar) & lars ulrich (aka not only im small, drums are big, but kirk is covering me)
lars ulrich
kirk hammett
The richest and hated musicians / businessmen 💵💰
Today is my birthday and I already wanted to draw these old men together again
In 2021 these men made more money for a controversial tribute album and a tour that was paused.
✌️✌️
#tbt old artstyle
80′s ‘tallica with KISS makeup (last year my bday gift and dtiys)
tribute to 80′s Creatures of the night photoshoot
It's fokin wimdy
The cutest moments of Lars and James
Metallica backstage at Ijsselhallen in Zwolle, Netherlands.
February 11, 1984 at Aardshock festival during the Seven Dates of Hell tour w/ Venom.
© Robert Hoetink.
[post 1 out of 2]
Lars Ulrich talking about his last evening with Cliff Burton in 'Back to the Front' by Matt Taylor:
"Stockholm was such a great gig. We were relieved, obviously, that James was back on guitar and excited about going on to Denmark and rolling into the big time—Germany and Holland and Belgium and France and so on. It was just a really good show, and there was a joyous kind of mood on the bus. It wasn't particularly celebratory; nobody was up late partying or anything. We had a long drive to Denmark, and everybody was wiped. There'd been lots of interviews; lots of stuff happening.
Cliff and I were the last two guys up. We'd been playing cards at this little table near the center of the bus, just the two of us having this kind of moment with each other. It was nice. We'd definitely drifted apart a bit throughout 1986, so it was a personal sort of connection that we really hadn't experienced for a while, y'know? It was a sense of completion, a sense of loyalty. I don't think it was anything particularly deep; it was just a reaffirmation of our accomplishments. You know, a couple of guys buttoning up the day and getting reacquainted after some distance. We talked about the gig; we talked about the day; we talked about changes to the set list—stuff that was close and relevant to that day.
I think I was always more comfortable hanging out with the guys one-on-one. Things were much more sincere, then. The most honest dialogue, or the purest dialogue, or the most straightforward dialogue would usually happen between two guys. The more people there were talking, or the more people involved in the conversation, the sillier things got, or the more animated it got, or the more controlled it got. If there were six or seven of us sitting around, the conversation had one particular flavor, or one particular dynamic, but when it was just like, say, Cliff and I, then we wouldn't necessarily sit and talk a bunch of horseshit. It was more sincere, and on that night there was just sort of a relaxed, straightforward conversation between the two of us.
It was the first time we'd hung together by ourselves for quite a while, and I enjoyed it very much. It was easygoing and mellow and sincere. It was always that way when it was just he and I together. It's one of my fondest memories."