Sweating Bullets (song)

"Sweating Bullets"
Single by Megadeth
from the album Countdown to Extinction
Released January, 1993
Recorded January - April, 1992
Genre Heavy metal
Length 4:29
Label Capitol
Writer(s) Dave Mustaine
Producer(s) Max Norman, Dave Mustaine
Megadeth singles chronology
"Foreclosure of a Dream"
(1992)
"Sweating Bullets"
(1993)
"Skin o' My Teeth"
(1993)
Countdown to Extinction track listing
"Foreclosure of a Dream"
(4)
"Sweating Bullets"
(5)
"This Was My Life"
(6)

"Sweating Bullets" is a song by the American heavy metal band Megadeth. It was released in 1993 as the third single from their fifth album, Countdown to Extinction. The song charted at #29 on the US Mainstream Rock chart and at #26 in the UK.

The term "sweat bullets" means to be very nervous or anxious about something. About the lyrics, Dave Mustaine stated "I wrote that about myself. It was pointed out to me that I'm kind of schizophrenic and that I live inside my head. Which is something I don't subscribe to, but I enjoyed the theory nonetheless.", and "I think all of us are sweating bullets all the time. Society's a joke right now, and people are getting more and more hostile. When you think about having an evil twin or schizophrenia, I think a lot of us are schizo, because we live inside our heads. There's someone we all confer with; it's called our conscience. Some people cannot control their other side; it takes them over. Everybody has that psychotic side. Everyone has a thing that will make them snap."[1]

It is featured in the 2009 video game Guitar Hero 5.

Music video

The music video for "Sweating Bullets" (directed by Wayne Isham) features Dave Mustaine living in an insane asylum. While looking at a mirror, someone grabs him, revealed to be himself. As the other Dave Mustaine talks to him, more Dave Mustaines appear and interact with the original. The other band members are also represented visually to have the same Dissociative identity disorder.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, July 16, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.