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Metallica's Kirk Hammett to Release His Debut Solo Album at Age 62: 'A Fusion of All Sorts of Styles'

Metallica's Kirk Hammett to Release His Debut Solo Album at Age 62: 'A Fusion of All Sorts of Styles'

Yahoo01-04-2025

Kirk Hammett is making some career moves.
In an interview with Rolling Stone on Sunday, March 23, the legendary Metallica member — who has been the band's guitarist since 1983 when Dave Mustaine left — revealed he's working on his debut solo album.
While speaking about his new book, The Collection: Kirk Hammett, which offers fans a rare glimpse into his extensive collection of guitars, Hammett, 62, explained how he's getting the ball rolling on the LP.
'I'm just actively getting ideas together for my [first] solo album,' he told the publication. 'I guess the best way to describe it is it's gonna be a fusion of all sorts of styles…. All of a sudden I'm writing classical progressions, and all of a sudden I'm writing more heavy stuff and all of a sudden I'm writing like a funk thing…."
Related: Kirk Hammett Says His New Gibson Book Is a 'Tribute' to the 'Wonderful' and 'Awe-Inspiring' World of Guitars (Exclusive)
He added: 'There will be vocals because the songs that I wrote scream for vocals this time around. So I'm like, okay, who's gonna be doing the vocals? I don't know. I hope I'm not—I already have too much to do on stage…."
"I have an instrumental piece that to me sounds like it's 2000 years old called 'The Mysterion.' It's based on all this stuff that I've been reading, the ancient Greek texts, and it's amazing to me because I wouldn't have had this instrumental if I didn't start reading these ancient texts," the "Enter Sandman" artist concluded.
Hammett dropped his first solo LP in 2022 with the Portals EP, a four-song, 27-minute instrumental project
Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
Related: Metallica Extends M72 World Tour with 2025 North American Dates and Fans Are Excited: 'Absolutely Not a Drill'
On Friday, March 21, the "Master of Puppets" musician spoke to PEOPLE about his new book The Collection: Kirk Hammett, written by Chris Vinnicombe, Gibson's Editor-in-Chief, and released via Gibson Publishing on Thursday, March 20.
"The idea with this book is to just put together the guitars that I love the most and share 'em with everyone out there and hope that there's some cool, unexpected results that come out of this," he said of the book.
Hammett added: "I love guitars, and I know there are people out there who love guitars just as much as I do and will just stare at a picture of a guitar forever."
Ultimately, The Collection: Kirk Hammett is for people who have "a real passion for the greatness of electric guitars, or guitars in general."
Read the original article on People

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Where Are Elizabeth Smart's Kidnappers Now? Here's What Happened to Brian David Mitchell and Wanda Barzee
Where Are Elizabeth Smart's Kidnappers Now? Here's What Happened to Brian David Mitchell and Wanda Barzee

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Where Are Elizabeth Smart's Kidnappers Now? Here's What Happened to Brian David Mitchell and Wanda Barzee

Elizabeth Smart's life was forever changed when she was abducted in the middle of the night by Brian David Mitchell and Wanda Barzee. During the early morning hours of June 5, 2002, Mitchell broke into the Smart family's Salt Lake City home and snatched then-14-year-old Elizabeth from her bed. Mitchell — who claimed to be a religious prophet named Immanuel — and his wife Barzee then held the teenager captive for the next nine months, with Mitchell repeatedly raping Elizabeth while Barzee watched on. As Elizabeth endured this terrifying ordeal, her missing persons case captivated the nation and her family never lost hope that she would be rescued. 'We always knew that if Elizabeth was alive it would be a miracle,' her uncle Tom Smart told PEOPLE. 'But we always believed that the miracle was very, very possible. And sure enough, it was.' On March 12, 2003, Elizabeth and her kidnappers were spotted walking in Sandy, Utah. Despite being dressed in a disguise and giving police a fake name, Elizabeth was ultimately saved by authorities and reunited with her family — while her kidnappers were taken into custody. About a week later, Mitchell and Barzee faced charges of aggravated kidnapping, burglary and sexual assault, according to the Los Angeles Times. In the more than two decades since her abduction, Elizabeth has managed not just to survive the traumatizing experience — but thrive in spite of it. With a focus on sharing survivors' stories, Elizabeth is an accomplished author, TV correspondent, motivational speaker, philanthropist and victims' rights advocate. In her personal life, Elizabeth wed Matthew Gilmour in 2012; the couple are parents to three children together. So where are Elizabeth Smart's kidnappers, Brian David Mitchell and Wanda Barzee, now? Here's everything to know about the husband-and-wife who abducted the Utah teenager and their lives today. Mitchell and Barzee first met in the mid-1980s at a group counseling session in Salt Lake City run by the Mormon church, The New Yorker reported. At the time, Mitchell's marriage to his second wife, Debbie, was falling apart amidst allegations that he had abused Debbie's two younger children from a previous marriage, according to CNN. Meanwhile, Barzee alleged in court that she was in the process of ending a 20-year abusive marriage while also losing custody of her six children, per CNN. The two were married within nine months of their first meeting, on Nov. 29, 1985 — the day Mitchell's divorce was finalized, Deseret News reported. In the following years, Mitchell worked as a die cutter at O.C. Tanner, while Barzee stayed home to practice and study the organ. Both were active members in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. But by the mid-1990s, all of that changed when Mitchell quit his job and stopped paying taxes, according to CNN. The couple sold off all their possessions and began living off the land, panhandling to get by as they hitchhiked across the country. During this time, they also distanced themselves from the Mormon church and began to wear religious robes, as Mitchell had become convinced he was a prophet who was to have seven wives. Mitchell first encountered the Smart family and their Utah home in November 2001, PEOPLE previously reported. Lois Smart met Mitchell while he was panhandling on the streets of Salt Lake City. At the time, she gave him $5 and an offer to do some roofing work on the family's home — an extension of kindness that was not uncommon for Lois and her husband Ed, who were Mormons. Mitchell returned to the family's Salt Lake City home months later with sinister intentions. On the night of June 5, 2002, the self-proclaimed prophet cut a hole in the Smart's kitchen screen and entered the bedroom that Elizabeth shared with her younger sister, Mary Katherine. He then abducted the 14-year-old Elizabeth at knifepoint. 'He placed his hand on my chest and then put the knife up to my neck,' she said in federal court in October 2009. 'He told me to get up quietly and if I didn't then he would kill me and my family.' Mitchell then forced Elizabeth to march three miles through the woods to a makeshift camp where Barzee was waiting. Elizabeth was changed into a robe and wed to Mitchell in a pseudo-ceremony performed by the religious zealot himself. Mitchell then raped Elizabeth for the first time. Over the next nine months, Mitchell raped Elizabeth up to four times per day and kept her tethered to a tree with a cable when he was not assaulting her. Barzee not only witnessed everything but also did nothing to stop it, Elizabeth later revealed. 'She would encourage him to rape me. She would sit next to me. The side of her body would be touching me while he was raping me,' Elizabeth said during a September 2018 interview with CBS This Morning. 'There were no secrets. She knew what was going on.' In July 2002, seven weeks after Elizabeth was taken, Mitchell attempted to abduct Elizabeth's cousin, 18-year-old Jessica Wright. Mitchell allegedly cut through Wright's bedroom window screen and attempted to enter her room using a chair he placed below the window — similar to how he had broken into Elizabeth's home, according to ABC News. However, in Wright's case, Mitchell fled when the family dog began barking. 'When I heard that, I thought they were trying to get a companion for Elizabeth,' her uncle David told PEOPLE in March 2003. 'We were like, 'No question, she's alive.' ' Elizabeth later revealed in her 2018 book, When There's Hope: Healing, Moving Forward, and Never Giving Up, that Mitchell had attempted to kidnap another girl while she was in captivity. According to Elizabeth's recollection, Mitchell began looking for his 'next wife' and searched local churches for young girls. He befriended a Mormon family in El Cajon, Calif., and after learning they had a young daughter, selected her as 'his next victim,' Elizabeth wrote. One night, Mitchell left their campsite dressed in dark clothes and with a knife in hand to kidnap the young girl. However, his plan was foiled when he entered the home and was alarmed by a man snoring. The sound compelled Mitchell to leave and abandon his plans to take the young girl. 'I know most people consider snoring a health risk or an annoyance, but in the case of this young girl, it saved her life,' Elizabeth wrote. The road to rescuing Elizabeth — and catching her captors — got its first break in October 2002, when Elizabeth's sister Mary Katherine told her parents she remembered who had taken her sister. Mary Katherine revealed it was the worker she knew as 'Immanuel,' and Ed knew immediately it was the man who had worked on their roof, PEOPLE previously reported. Based on Mary Katherine's recollections, a police sketch of Mitchell was revealed in February 2003. Following the police sketch, Mitchell's sister came forward and provided photos, which were then featured on a February episode of America's Most Wanted. Additional photos of Mitchell were shown for a second time on the program in March. On March 12, 2003, two separate couples who had seen America's Most Wanted spotted Mitchell walking around Sandy, Utah, with two females and called 911, PEOPLE reported at the time. When they were approached by police officers, Elizabeth — who was disguised in a gray wig and sunglasses — claimed her name was Augustine Marshall. At the police station, Elizabeth eventually confirmed her identity and was reunited with her family, while Mitchell and Barzee were arrested on suspicion of aggravated kidnapping, The New York Times reported. Due to delays, mental evaluations and competency hearings, it took nearly eight years for Barzee and Mitchell to be brought to trial for the kidnapping of Elizabeth. In November 2009, Barzee pleaded guilty to kidnapping and unlawful transportation of a minor in a deal with prosecutors, The New York Times reported. As part of her plea deal, Barzee also agreed to cooperate in the case against her estranged husband, Mitchell. (Barzee filed for divorce in November 2004, per the outlet.) In exchange for her guilty plea and cooperation, Barzee was sentenced to 15 years in federal prison, according to The New York Times. 'I am so sorry, Elizabeth, for all the pain and suffering I have caused you and your family,' Barzee said in court. 'It is my hope that you will be able to find it in your heart to forgive me.' Mitchell's trial began in November 2010, and his defense tried to argue he was not guilty by reason of insanity, but was found competent to stand trial, per The Seattle Times. In December 2010, a jury found Mitchell guilty of kidnapping and transporting a minor across state lines with the intent to engage in sexual activity, The New York Times reported. He was sentenced to life in prison. After getting arrested by Utah authorities in March 2003, Barzee spent the next several years in custody when she pled guilty in November 2009. She was subsequently sentenced to 15 years in federal prison for her role in Elizabeth's abduction, but received credit for time served. In 2016, Barzee was transferred from a federal prison to a Utah state prison to begin serving her separate one-to-15-year sentence for the attempted abduction of Elizabeth's cousin, NBC reported. However, in June 2018, Barzee's attorney requested that she receive credit toward her state sentence for her time spent in federal prison. Utah parole officials initially denied that request and set Barzee's sentence to run until January 2024. But the parole board unexpectedly reversed that decision in September 2018 — ruling that, after 'further review and advice from legal counsel,' Barzee's time spent in federal prison, as well as in a state hospital and jail, must be credited toward her current term. The news left Elizabeth 'surprised and disappointed,' she revealed in a statement at the time, per KSL. 'It is incomprehensible how someone who has not cooperated with her mental health evaluations or risk assessments and someone who did not show up to her own parole hearing can be released into our community,' Elizabeth said in her statement. During a press conference, Elizabeth urged the parole board to reconsider their decision. 'I do believe she's a threat,' she said about Barzee. 'I believe that she is a danger and a threat to any vulnerable person in our community, which is why our community should be worried.' Barzee was let out of prison on Sept. 19, 2018, and began five years of federal supervised release. She was first placed in a halfway house before moving into an apartment in Salt Lake City near an elementary school, The Salt Lake Tribune reported. Following her early release, Elizabeth spoke out about how she refused to let the past affect her present happiness. 'I'm not gonna let these people or this woman stop me from living the life that I want to live, and that's how I still feel,' she said. Most recently, in May 2025, Barzee was arrested for violating her parole. She allegedly visited parks in Salt Lake City, which she is restricted from doing due to her status as a registered sex offender. A spokesperson for the Salt Lake City Police (SLCP) told PEOPLE that "detectives developed information." Barzee was later released on judicial orders and the SLCP will continue monitoring the situation, requiring her to do weekly check-ins. While Barzee was released early from prison, Mitchell has been serving a life sentence with no possibility of parole since being convicted in 2010. Mitchell is currently an inmate at the United States Penitentiary, Terre Haute, a high-level security federal prison in Indiana, per its inmate directory. With Mitchell behind bars, Elizabeth revealed she does not spend much time thinking about the man who permanently altered the course of her life over two decades ago. 'They're not people that I think of regularly,' she told PEOPLE about her captors in September 2024. 'I guess every now and then, part of me wonders how you could get to a point where you would think it's okay to kidnap a young girl.' Mitchell, she added, 'should never get out' of prison. 'I just think no matter what, if he got out, he would be a danger if not to me than to another young girl,' Elizabeth said. 'I think he will always pose a threat.' Read the original article on People

Former Disney star Christy Carlson Romano reveals shocking details about nearly losing her eye after being shot in face
Former Disney star Christy Carlson Romano reveals shocking details about nearly losing her eye after being shot in face

New York Post

time6 hours ago

  • New York Post

Former Disney star Christy Carlson Romano reveals shocking details about nearly losing her eye after being shot in face

Christy Carlson Romano is speaking out about nearly losing an eye after she was shot in the face four months ago. During an appearance on the upcoming June 10 episode of the 'Not a Damn Chance!' podcast, via a sneak peek by People magazine, the 41-year-old former Disney star recalled the terrifying incident while she was shooting clay pigeons with her husband, Brendan Rooney, for his birthday. Asked how it happened, Romano explained she was not 'at liberty to say specifics,' according to People. The actress previously revealed on Instagram that she was 'hit in five places,' including below her eye. Romano shared details for the first time about what transpired. 'It's a birdshot that got sprayed in my direction by another party, and essentially it was within 200 feet, which means really fast and hot,' she told hosts Neen Williams and Frankland Lee. 'They weren't malicious,' Romano clarified. 'It wasn't aggravated assault. It's what happened.' The 'Even Stevens' star then emphasized the importance of gun safety and described her initial response. 4 Christy Carlson Romano sits in the hospital after being shot in the face at a party in February, 2025. 'I feel very out of body about it. … It's pretty wild,' she said. 'I'm shocked, and what goes through my head immediately is, 'Oh that's dope, I just got shot.' And then I go, 'Oh now I'm gonna die,'' she said. 'I take a knee. My husband witnessed it and was like, 'Hey are you hit?' because I didn't scream. I didn't do anything. I was just out of body.' Romano recalled she had a knee-jerk reaction upon being shot that stemmed from her time on the third season of the FOX reality TV series 'Special Forces: World's Toughest Test.' 4 The actress previously revealed on Instagram that she was 'hit in five places,' including below her eye. Christy Carlson Romano/Instagram In the show, celebrity contestants take on grueling military exercises and challenges under the direction of ex-Special Forces operatives. Romano explained that the contestants were trained to give a thumbs-up to let their fellow cast members know that they were OK during the series' perilous challenges. The 'Kim Possible' alum recalled that, out of habit, she gave Rooney a thumbs-up immediately after she was shot. 'He was like, 'Oh, you're good.' And I was like, 'No I'm hit.' He goes, 'Oh s—,'' Romano recalled of her husband's reaction. She remembered that Rooney rushed to her aid and had to restrain himself from retaliating against the other party. 4 Christy Carlson Romano and Hillary Duff in a scene from 'Cadet Kelly.' ©Disney Channel/Courtesy Everett Collection 'So, he's running to me and making sure I'm OK, and he's fighting the urge to hurt the person … but he's been practicing stoicism recently, and there was something in him,' Romano recalled. 'He was immediately into action mode, evaluating me and ran to get the car. 'I felt this huge rush that I'd never felt before where I was starting to get really woozy. I think it was shock.' Romano told the hosts she didn't experience any pain initially and described the thoughts that were running through her head, including her fears her children might be affected. The actress shares daughters Isabella, 7, and Sofia, 5, with Rooney. 'I was covered in blood from my forehead … and I said three things. I was like, 'Am I gonna die? Who's gonna take care of the girls? Is my career over?'' she recalled. Romano explained that she came close to being blinded or killed. 'If my head would've been tilted in any other direction, I would have been blind in my right eye. Or if I had turned my head, I could have gotten hit in a softer side of my skull, and I would have potentially been dead,' Romano said. 'It's still in my eye,' she said of the pellets from the shotgun. 'I have a fragment still in my forehead, and I have a fragment still behind my eye, which is 1 millimeter away from blinding me.' Romano previously explained on Instagram that the lead fragment behind her eye had to remain in her face because removing it could leave her blind. 4 Christy Carlson Roman poses for a picture during a family trip to Disneyland in May 2025. Christy Carlson Romano/Instagram The shot fragment lodged in her skull will also remain in place because doctors said it will expedite her healing process. During her podcast interview, Romano told hosts she put on a brave face at first and was making jokes about her medical crisis after she arrived at the hospital. 'In retrospect, I was trying to be funny and not cry because I wanted the people around me to feel more calm so that they could take better care of me,' Romano said. The former Broadway star admitted that it has been difficult to accept she is a 'gunshot survivor.' Clay pigeon shooting is an outdoor sport in which upside-down circular disks made of limestone and pitch used as targets are propelled into the air by machines called traps. Shooters use shotguns, with each shot projecting hundreds of small lead balls to hit the clay pigeons. The sport is typically not considered dangerous as long as safety measures are follow.

Richard Burgheim, a Founding Editor of PEOPLE, Dies at 91: 'A True Friend and Mentor'
Richard Burgheim, a Founding Editor of PEOPLE, Dies at 91: 'A True Friend and Mentor'

Yahoo

time11 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Richard Burgheim, a Founding Editor of PEOPLE, Dies at 91: 'A True Friend and Mentor'

Richard Burgheim, a founder editor of PEOPLE, has died at age 91 The pioneering journalist was tapped to serve as a Senior Editor for the then-soon-to-be-launched PEOPLE years ago "The best thing about him was that he recognized and developed talent wherever he found it," a former PEOPLE staffer rememberedRichard Burgheim, a founder editor of PEOPLE, has died. He was 91. The pioneering journalist and St. Louis native died on Sunday, June 1, at Weill Cornell, according to an online obituary. Burgheim began his career in journalism at Harvard University, where he served as sports editor of The Harvard Crimson, the Ivy League university's student newspaper, as well as the campus stringer for the Associated Press. He went on to become a writer for TIME magazine, where he worked for many years, and was later tapped by Richard B. Stolley, a Managing Editor, to serve as a Senior Editor for the then-soon-to-be-launched PEOPLE years ago. PEOPLE first hit newsstands in March 1974. In the decades since, PEOPLE has grown to become the iconic brand it is known as today — expanding from a newsstand-only publication to now include digital news coverage and social media coverage, as well as a new app, among other ventures. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Remembering Burgheim, Claudia Dowling, a former PEOPLE Senior Writer, said, "I owe my career to him." "The best thing about him was that he recognized and developed talent wherever he found it, whether in a copy clerk like me or a secretary," she continued. Andy Abrahams, a former PEOPLE Editorial Manager, met Burgheim as a fact checker at Time Inc.'s TV Cable Week magazine. He recalled, "Dick wanted us to know that we were important in the process, no matter what our station was at the magazine. He had a natural gift for striking the right tone in a story, with a keen eye towards writing and editing for a mass audience with humor and grace." The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now! "He was smart, funny, barked like a seal when he laughed and was a true friend and mentor," added Cutler Durkee, a former PEOPLE Executive Editor. Burgheim is survived by his wife, Ricki Fulman. Donations can be made in his honor to the New York Public Library. Read the original article on People

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