Covers
- "One" was covered by Crematory for the A Tribute to the Four Horsemen CD and was also on their Revolution album.
- "One" was covered by the band Korn as part of the MTV Icons Metallica tribute TV-show. This cover version is featured as a hidden track on their 2003 album Take a Look in the Mirror and their album Live and Rare. However, Korn's version was shortened to a little more than four minutes, like most performances at MTV Icons, and lacks much of the second half of the song, including the final guitar solo. The bridge is also played often at live shows as an outro to their song "Shoots and Ladders", however, as of 2009, "Fake" usually ends with the "One" outro.
- Apocalyptica has covered the song. It is the last track on the album Inquisition Symphony.
- Mexican-born, Dublin-based duo Rodrigo y Gabriela covered "One" on Live in Manchester and Dublin.
- "One" was covered by German thrash metal band Dispatched.
- "One" was covered by Die Krupps, a German industrial rock/EBM band.
- "One" was covered by Iron Horse, a Bluegrass band.
- "One" was covered by Periphery, a Djent band, for the Homefront soundtrack. Guitarist Misha Mansoor later stated that he was not pleased with the cover and thought that it was "a waste of time" because they did not add something of their own style to it.
- "One" was covered by Nuclear Rabbit, an American 'avant-garde' metal/ska band, on their 1991 demo, "Bowling For Midgets."
Read more about this topic: One (Metallica Song)
Famous quotes containing the word covers:
“Boys finding for the first time their loins filled with hearts
blood
Widowed farmers whose hands float under light covers to find
themselves
Arisen at sunrise”
—James Dickey (b. 1923)
“What art can paint or gild any object in afterlife with the glow which Nature gives to the first baubles of childhood. St. Peters cannot have the magical power over us that the red and gold covers of our first picture-book possessed. How the imagination cleaves to the warm glories of that tinsel even now! What entertainments make every day bright and short for the fine freshman!”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“In truth, politeness is artificial good humor, it covers the natural want of it, and ends by rendering habitual a substitute nearly equivalent to the real virtue.”
—Thomas Jefferson (17431826)