Excellent job on your vid. Some corrections: 1) Patton wrote all the lyrics and melodies for The Real Thing in 2 weeks (not 1 week). 2) The band didn't send Jim tapes for him to record his guitar parts on, he recorded them at Toast Studios, in San Francisco, where the rest of Angel Dust was recorded by the other band mates. 3) Jim didn't relocate into Castro Valley, he always lived there. 4) I unfortunately, and erroneously, downplayed Jim's guitar playing on Angel Dust in interviews out of pure frustration but the truth of the matter is that he played 100% of all the guitars on the album. I've since recanted my statements, apologiezed to Jim, and continue to set the record straight. 5) For personal reasons pertaining to Jim, the band and I offered to wait to start making Angel Dust but he brushed us off and we thought we were moving forward. Unfortunately, despite moving the rehearsal studio from San Francisco (where the band lived and where I was staying) to Oakland to accommodate Jim (living in Castro Valley), he rarely (possibly never?) showed up for rehearsals and fine tuning the songs for Angel Dust. We were absolutely, 100% prepared when we went in to record The Real Thing and the band and I didn't want to waste money/studio time, wanted to be prepared, when we recorded Angel Dust.
Matt - Much respect for coming clean about Jim's guitar playing during Angel Dust. As a lifelong fan, I like others were disappointed when the band decided to fire Jim by fax. While they did not get along especially towards the end, I always felt it was unprofessional to end the relationship after all the success they enjoyed together. This is still an open wound for many fans and probably the reason why the band and Jim did not reunite for the reunion tour. My guess is that Jim made an error in not communicating the distraction he felt due to the death of his father. I also read that Jim preferred to figure out his guitars parts in advance and join the band at the studio for their benefit - perhaps just a quirk on his part or poor communication which they were known for. Somehow an exceptional album was still recorded. Overall, I believe Bill Gould missed his opportunity as the band leader to bring closure for the band, Jim, Chuck, and their fans at the reunion tour.
It's awesome seeing the man,the myth, the legend on here. Matt, thank you for contributing to a part of my (and everyone in the comments) life. Hope 2024 is good for you
You are tooooooooo kind. I'm a man, there are probably myths about me but I'm certainly no legend. Bands and artists can be legends, us behind-the-scenes people are supporting cast. Thanks for the kind words, though.@@SixStringFiasco
There is a lot to unpack here but, from my seat in the audience, each of the guys in the band could be fiercely stubborn, no doubt. But, I feel that there was a lot of sympathy extended to Jim and we were willing to support him in any way that he needed. We were all ready to postpone making the record until he was ready to but, while he said that he was ready to record Angel Dust, unfortunately, the rest of the guys and I didn't have the feeling that Jim was 100% on board. That said, when we did finally get down to recording the guitars, Jim was ready to throw down and he and I had a lot of fun whenever we'd take a break from recording and then go to a local bar, have a beverage or two, and then play pool. It was important to have Jim operating at 100% to balance the band with his heavy guitar parts.@@MrOutshine1
Sounds like am awesome gig! You should have been in one of the old Budweiser " Real American Hero's" commercials. " WE SALUTE YOU, MR. KEEPING JIM MARTIN'S AWESOME GUITAR TONE UP AND RUNNING MAN" In all seriousness that sounds like such a cool opportunity, something to be proud of, and I imagine being able to watch Jim kick ass every night didnt suck..
That’s awesome! Did he shit can you though? No shame if so. A Tech can be a really personal thing sometimes & you gotta dig each other on a personal level.
i hit on the guitar guy in tom azzopardi's basement on irc and yahoo i called him triple dick perpetual war he was like"get your own cab to the strawberry festival you old bag!"
I agree. His guitar approach made the compositions appeal to a bigger, hard rock audience. He probably left at a good time all things considered. He made his mark and FNM eventually fell off not long after he was gone. They tried out Geordie from Killing Joke and Justin Broderick (Godflesh) to replace Jim which would've been interesting.
Call me pedantic but Epic is a song and Angel Dust is an album, are you suggesting that only the song epic is a masterpiece or do you think the album, "The Real Thing" is called Epic?
I remember getting Angel Dust without first hearing any songs based solely off how much I enjoyed The Real Thing. By "Smaller and Smaller", I remember wondering if I made a mistake. But honestly, it's one of those albums that grows on you with each listen and is by far my favourite FNM album. It's just brilliant from start to finish.
Same here. "Midlife Crisis" was the only track I listened to on that album. It took years for Angel Dust to grow on me. I can't say as much for their last release though.
@@jonjons1 Yeah it really holds up and doesn’t sound dated. That said, I rarely listen to contemporary metal so I’m probably not the best to be making that call.
@@OldAussieAds Angel Dust and AIC Dirt are the two albums I still regularly listen to from that era. I still hear something new every time I listen. Modern music is dying a slow death, along with most other art. Being taken over by computers.
He's a legendary character, a legendary guitar sound, a legendary pumpkin grower. The cool thing was he never went crying to the press about Patton which he could have easily done. Big Sick Ugly Jim Martin, a legend.
I once met Jim at Rock City, Nottingham in the early '90's, he was a good guy, easy to talk to, down to earth and very knowledgeable about music in general, a nice guy, I wish him well in all he does.
I was at that gig. I saw them at Reading the same year (1990, I think?). They were a great live act. Rock City was a brilliant venue. I saw loads of fantastic bands there back then & like you said, many of them were more than happy to have a can of Red Stripe with fans after their gigs.
This guy was at every metal show in San Jose in the 90's. I met him several times and shook his hand a few times too. He actually got me to listen to FNM because of how cool he was.
well fuck me! looks like I'm wearing the JEALOUS pants, cause thats pretty fuckin awesome! he has a very magical way with a guitar! in One of many other parallel universe's he is still in Faith No More. "the sound was mezmerizing". where for art thou "JizzLobber"😇💫
Poor Jim. He was part of one of the most innovative bands and part of what may be one of the best progressive rock albums ever, I even think it's one of the best albums ever all stop. I don't think he really did gel with the rest of the band. As an 11 year old who'd just discovered his love for heavy music and hadn't yet purchased And Justice for All, the guitar part in Epic was what drew me in and my favorite track off the album was "Surprise! You're Dead!". By the time Angeldust came out I'd broadened my horizons, so I loved the entire thing, but still really really loved what is likely the band's heaviest song "Jizzlobber", which is a monster of a track. While not "brootal" by today's standards it still has enough bite to put most other songs to shame. Jim was just in the wrong band really. I mean calling Angeldust a "gay disco" is a little rough. I think his ideas were probably mostly ignored. He probably just wanted to rock out and write heavy guitar parts, not create an album that was at the very least 15 years ahead of the curve. Seriously I can't say enough good things about that album.
Jim was really the perfect guitarist for them (9 years strong), he was just dealing with the death of his father and on-top of that couldn't deal well with the media attention during the recording. Even after he was fired none of the internal issues fully got settled; They were imploding and considered quitting during and after the King for a Day album.
@@Splattermelt I mean, they are a very rhythm driven band. Drums and bass and keys for melody. Pretty sure Bottom or Gould stated that guitar did not matter that much in FNM.
I think "Angel Dust" was definitely their finest moment. (Jim did a pretty good job playing the guitar on that record despite having a different vision than the band did for their direction in terms of sound)
I don’t know, as much as I love Patton and the rest of the band…They were probably arseholes if you didn’t fit in to their world and what they wanted you to do. They definitely undervalued Jim’ contributions. I like the following albums, but none of them hold a candle to TRT or AD.
Jim was a massive influence on my early years of becoming a musician. It's saddening to see how he was treated and eye opening about how personally it was to deal with him. At the same time I can't say I wouldn't have acted just like Jim. Incredible talent and complexity underrated. I for one think Jim's work will forever stand the test of time........STATION!
@@DystopianJoe AOTY is still a great record. It's my second least favourite but I still love it. I would actually call it a Trey shaped hole. FNM's shit is fucking amazing compared to most bands..
Agreed, Jim's guitar was integral to the band's sound. The stand-ins were ok but it always felt like they were lacking some magic ingredient... FNM's loss was the pumpkin farming enthusiasts gain however
I always was impressed by his ability to come up with a guitar track to a basic rap track. It's not the same as having a chord chart to follow along with that has multiple chord changes. It takes a lot of creativity to fill a song with guitar tracks that have whole verses that boil down to one chord like some of their songs.
He was cool enough to be in Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey, iconic look. His guitar work was fantastic, lead harmonies, riffs, songwriting all stellar. Best wishes to him.
Straight up man. That tone was otherworldly. Zombie Eaters is unreal. And Surprise! You’re Dead just has some of my favorite guitar work ever. And the big resonating chords in Falling To Pieces. Such a phenomenal player, man.
Most (not all) of those riffs were written by Bill Gould. In fact, Bill played guitar on Another Body Murder from the Judgment Night soundtrack along with a few others when Jim wasn't present or had already left the band. That's why they thought Dean Menta would be a good fit because he was Jim's guitar tech.
Honestly the main issues seemed to be between Martin, Gould, and Patton. I remember hearing that apparently Gould reached out to Martin for the reunion, but he made some kinda joke/reference about being kicked out, Gould felt that was weird and subsequently uninvited him. Patton always runs his mouth even if he loves whoever it is he’s talking about, but that seemed to cause tension between him and Martin. I honestly think the biggest factor was the fact that Martin’s dad died right before Angel Dust started production. Martin became incredibly withdrawn and didn’t even tell the other members until way later. I can’t remember the interview I read that in, but yeah apparently when they found out they were like “shit we wish you told us sooner” but at that point there was too much of a rift between them so it kinda had to happen.
Yeah. It was conflict inside the band. Musical differences, also. Gould also said that Jim "was a real contentious person in the band, but I loved him…" when talking about the reunion... I understand that as "he had opinions and wouldn't shut up." Just imagine the flammable discussions between Gould, Bottum, Martin and Patton lol
@@redacted2275 Those guys are philosophically (and probably politically) on opposite ends of the spectrum. It wasn't Gould that said that he loved Big Jim, it was Roddy. Neither Gould or Bordin was exactly thrilled with the idea of reuniting with Jim Martin.
Faith No More was not named after "a greyhound they bet on". The original name was Faith No Man, and a friend of Billy the bass player suggested Faith No More.
There’s truth to both claims actually. But you are right about Faith No More being a derivative of Faith No Man. The greyhound bit played a part before that change took place, if I’m not mistaken. I read it not too long ago, but can’t remember every detail.
The band was pretty well known for making up stories about the genesis of their name - the greyhound story being one of them. The most likely explanation is when the singer from their Faith No Man days left, they changed their name to Faith No More because "the Man" was "No More."
Man! RN'RTS must have read my mind, I've been on a Jim Martin kick lately listening to a lot of his stuff. Yea, there isn't a lot of recent interviews and stuff with Jim, truly an underrated and under appreciated Guitarist. I'd love to see and hear more from him.
Angel Dust is not only FNMs best album but one of the best albums I've ever heard, pity Jim had to go as he was part of the iconic line up and brung a real "Metal Edge" to the music.
I agree, but the fact that he wrote so little in it and that he feels it is too contrived shows that he was not 100% ready to be part of the evolving stance of FNM.
He was definitely their best guitarist but to me FNM is really all about Puff and Gould. Laying down solid rhythm is really what set these guys apart and what influenced the later 90s bands.
I whole heartedly agree. No disrespect to Trey or even Lurch (John Hudson) but Jim had a great iconic sound that meshed so well with Bordin n Goulds heavy groovy sound.
I think he was in the wrong band and I don't think they listened to much of his input. Angeldust is one of the best progressive rock albums ever, but I get the feeling he would have preferred more Jizzlobber and less RV or Be Aggressive. I can't say that I'd want an entire album of Jizzlobber type tracks because you'd just miss out on so much variety, but it is maybe my favorite song from it, so I do wish they would have let him loose on a few more songs. The guitar tone he got on it is incredible. Coupled with the errie keyboards and Patton's ludicrous vocal range that song just punches you in the face.
@@WhyTheHorseface Definitely, I always thought Jon David got half his style from Midlife Crisis alone (as well as the crazier vocal stuff Mike likes to do live)
They hated each other. Jim treated Patton like a kid and not a serious musician. But from what I understand, Billy Gould is the one that has always stirred everything up between members. Could be wrong, but that’s the rumor.
I think it was primarily that Jim belittled Mike a lot, and Patton, being the SOB that he is, decided to fxk with Jim enough that it had to end. Jim's Ted Nugent behavior also contributed to his demise in FNM
The Real Thing was such a different album than what me and my social circle were listening to at the time. In '89, it was all about the hair metal bands. Then this funky ass record dropped and my and my band mates were blown away by it. Falling To Pieces still is one of my favorites to play on guitar.
I saw them at the Cambridge Corn Exchange in Nov 92 on the Angel Dust tour, we met Jim in the pub next door. He was happier in there, with a pint of beer, chatting with us for an hour or two about sports, guitars,... anything other than FNM and we respected that. Lovely bloke. But we weren't surprised that he left the band after that tour, it felt like he'd already checked out as we just chatted.
As a huge FNM fan, I always thought it was unfortunate Jim & the rest of the band couldn't reconcile. His playing was such an integral part of their sound. PS: No mention of courteney love being their singer briefly before Chuck joined?
@@deconstruction3397 He did play all of the guitar parts. That he didn't was a rumor started by Matt Wallace that people still repeat despite Wallace apologizing for it. Jim didn't write as much on this album as he did previously, however he came up with the music for Kindergarten & Jizzlobber.
The bloke is so under rated, especially for what he put in to make FNM what it became. His look alone is iconic and I remember as a kid when Epic came out, id be looking in magazines and the guy with the red glasses would have me going back to read the article.
Jim Martin didn’t like that the band was becoming a “disco” band, as he described it (to which Patton responded “we absolutely want to be a disco band). You could see the tension was high between him and other members in those interviews. It’s a shame that they couldn’t reconcile their differences, because Jim added colorful character to the group, and they were never the same after he left and took his signature style with him.
Martin sounds extremely lucid in his descriptions on exactly what went down. That lends a lot of credibility to what he's saying. He might have been contentious in the group but it sounds like being in the group was a pain in the ass.
I think what happened was that he was an OG metalhead while the other guys were more into the then emerging Alternative scene, supposedly Bordin hated him even back when he was with him and Cliff Burton in a band and reluctantly agreed to let him join FNM on Burton’s advice.
I love Patton, and many place him high-high up on the pedestal, but his antics and immaturity were at its worst during this period of TRT & AD. He was of course 19&up, but for JIm that must've been difficult to deal with after your father's death and all of the unwanted media attention on AD. Then you have to add in the relationship with the other members in the band.
@@Splattermelt he was truly a brat during those days, funnily enough Jim pushed for Patton to join the band after listening to the Raging Wrath of the Easter Bunny demo, but in the end their feud was what triggered his exit from the band.
Faith No More is without a doubt one of my all time favorite bands. I can tell their influence on other bands that also became my favorites. I think they left a lot of good shit on the table with TRT and AD lineup, but egos can get the best of anybody.
Great research here! I love FNM and Martin.. FNM last two albums in the late 90s took me a while to adjust to, but I ended up loving them for what they were.
Even tho Album Of The Year was one of FNM’s best albums the band was never the same without him. The older I get the more I appreciate Chuck Moseley era as well. So many great records even though the band is constantly changing key members that would kill most others
Angel Dust, The Real Thing and King for a Day were all much better records than Album of the Year .. It's a good record, but no way is it even close to their "Best" record. 😂
@@Fiveash-Art people have their opinions, the records of fnm that I play the most would go angeldust, album of the year, king for a day, in that order.
From what I recall, Jim Martin didn't like the direction FNM was going on with 'Angel Dust'. And they did the classy early 90's thing of firing him by Fax.
It's always been hilarious to me that they managed to get away with a metal song about giving submissive oral sex to a guy and include chanting cheerleaders on it. In 1992. I'm not surprised if that made Jim uncomfortable back then. Such a special band, so far ahead of their time.
I have always wondered how they managed to do that. But the kids are just saying be aggressive and go fight win. That's how they did it. Made it out to be something it isn't. I'm sure the kids that did it are proud!
Jim was a character and that shone through in his guitar playing with FNM. His quirky metal style was a part of their sound as much as Mike Bordin's rhythms were. I was really disappointed when he wasn't part of the reunion. I guess they sensed he still harbored some resentment from the past and decided it wasn't worth it. A grand opportunity missed.
@@Malum09 In an interview, Roddy, the keyboardist said he made a call to Jim to tell him about the reunion tour and asked if he was interested. Jim said yes and didn't even have a problem playing songs they made after he left. As the conversation ended, Jim made a remark about sending the contract to his fax machine. Roddy interpreted this snide remark as a negative because that was the way FNM fired him. Based on that 1 phone call, they decided not to go with Jim. I think the band was still insecure about the reunion and bringing in a character like Martin made that even more questionable.
I've heard other members complain about what Matt Wallace was doing in the studio on the Angel Dust sessions too. It's telling that they didn't work with him on the next one.
Jim's guitar playing without a doubt with a strong part of the real thing an angel dust absolutely fantastic albums and still still carry the weight today
Someone may have already said it here, but Jim was the one that found Mike on Mr. Bugle! What would King For a Day have been like, with Jim from '95? I would like to see some TH-cam channel doing the whole album!
Martin carried We Care A Lot and Introduce Yourself. His guitar work was (no pun intended) epic. TRT was probably the most perfect album I've ever heard. I've bought it like 5 or 6 times across different media. AD was incredible, but it took me years to like all of it... still not sure if I do. After Martin left, I pretty much did too. It never sounded the same. His style definitely was defining for the group.
The Real Thing is good, just wish they had trimmed the fat and added Sweet Emotion and The Cowboy Song on it instead of Underwater Love or Woodpecker lol.
I had heard an interview where he totally blamed Mike Patton for taking over the group, not making it fun anymore by changing the nature of the group to being too serious and less punk.
Ironic, because it was Martin that first suggested him as a replacement for Chuck, based on some early Mr Bungle demos. Honestly, as much of a creative genius and talented vocalist as Patton is, he's always been capable of being a bit of an arrogant jerk. But I think blaming any one person for why Jim left the band is foolish. Every single on of them has their own foibles and ideas of what they should be, and they all admit that none of them are great communicators.I think they all contributed to the fractiousness in different ways. Besides the core three of Bill, Puffy and Roddy, they were't long-time friends that grew up together or whatever; they were a weird mix of characters and always had trouble finding the people they wanted to work with. It's truly a miracle they held together long enough to give us so many amazing albums.
basically, he left because he wanted to spend more time on the albums and the label wanted to hurry it along. the rest of the band was okay with it, he wasn't.
I saw a FNM video of on outdoor venue where a fan threw a piss jug on stage and Jim poured it on his head. Immediately after dozens of more piss jugs were thrown to the stage.
The thing that i know about Fatso is that he's retires from FNM after dad's death, and began a farmer life in Maxwell Ranch (The final place from our beloved Cliff Burton). Fatso plays in "Garage Inc" and the 30 anniversary shows from Metallica.
Is it me or does Patton has a way of taking over bands? The situation seems similar with Dead Cross. He stepped in and did the vocals on the finished first album and it was great. The second album seemed like he had a ton of his influence. To me, it was a different animal. Not bad, just notably different, like it's very much a Patton record. Jim Martin was such a huge part of FNM. He really gave them an edge they never had since. His riffery is on par with James Hetfield, and somewhat similar in feel. They both do some great syncopated stuff I really love, and create some of the biggest riffs ever.
I remember reading about the Guns N Rose's tour that FNM opened on, I think it might have been in Duff or Slash's book, about how Mike Patton would take the stage and run his mouth about how lame Guns N Rose's were. I dont care if people agree with him nor not, it was EXTREMELY rude and unappreciative. I read that Jim Martin and some of the Guns guys had to approach him a few times and say " If we are so lame, why did you take the tour? Tone it down or your off the tour". Apparently that had no effect and they were kicked off. That story helps me empathize with Jim Martin. A lot of bullshit to deal with.( I dont think he was fixated on being the trendy " too cool for school" kid, he wanted to play heavy guitar and have fun.)
@@solearesoul Yes, a guy from their camp. Another guy that was part of gnr song writing was tied to another perp that harmed me weeks later. But everyone up in here has issues. Mike was force kissing fan guys face an other conduct. Everyone oked this stuff. No sympathy for us in this buisness,. Everyone has been a mega socio bully to me. Just because of this stuff. I was with the Alice coopers camp starting a kid. They are pedos.
I have to say, angel dust is probably my favorite album. I do like a great many songs on the real thing but it just seemed a little under polished especially vocally with Patton and musically too. Angel dust did just that and going through the issues I was at that time man that was my go to album to let my anger frustration pain all of it out. It cut deep but helped so much putting that album on almost religiously and blasting the sound as I slam danced around so many days thrashing my condo to let it all out. I was saddened though to see Martin leave after angel dust and that’s when myself I knew it wouldn’t be the same.
I always enjoyed his playing. It had a really strong influence from 70s arena rock. Faith No More was always a band of eclectic influences. And Martin's involvement in early Metallica lore was always an interesting aspect of his story.
I literally have been looking this up on TH-cam and Google the last 3 days stuff about Jim and why he left the band.. I look it up just now and see that 10 minutes ago this video is uploaded.. surrealism at work lol
When faith no mores the real thing came out I knew they were a stellar band. On that tour I saw them at toads place in Connecticut with circus of power. We arrived early in the morning to get up front. I saw jim Martin walk out of the venue and go walking. I followed behind him and said Jim can I have your autograph. He said sure and signed my hat and shirt. He did and then I asked nervously would you like to smoke a joint. He said he'll yeah. So in a dirty alley down the block from the venue we smoked. After that I was so high and Jim says I need ice cream. So we head out to the street and look for ice cream. We find a Hagen das store. We munched hard on ice cream I brought. We headed back to toads place and he signed all of my friends paper flyers CDs you name it. He was cool and super nice. That concert was the best concerts I have ever seen in my life.
I saw Faith No More in 1990 at the Trocadero in Philadelphia. Mike Patton was dancing around on stage and spinning around with the mic stand in his hands. He came within literal inches of hitting Martin in the eye with one of the legs of the mic stand. Like, it caught Martin's hair as it went by. If looks could kill, Mike Patton would've died right there, on the spot. Even from as far away as I was I could see him staring daggers at Patton.
There is a lengthy documentary on the making of Angle dust. It’s pretty clear in it that his and their musical interests and directions were totally at odds and that Jim HATED what they were they were headed musically. I think he said he wanted to be a straight forward metal band and not make this “weird shit”. I think his leaving was inevitable but the tension and disagreement resulted in something pretty awesome
Jim's departure at the time was my first huge band disappointment (didn't get into Jane's until a year after they broke up). But King was good, and sounds like the band could not continue as it was. Rock on, Jim!
It does change the vibe on the riff and guitar parts of King For A Day Fool For A Lifetime. Martin is that good, and was felt in this album..his absence
Jim got the tone and he got the charisma. He's the only image i have when thinking about FNM guitar player :) Sad he couldn't continue doing this, but hey, he's on one of the best albums ever recorded
That last Mr. Bungle album really caught me off guard. It's so damn good! The Raging wrath of the Easter Bunny demo? I think that's what it's called. So killer, I've got to get a copy if it, thanks for reminding me!
I absolutely love angel dust!! I love the real thing as well. But man Angel dust was pure gold! Never knew this much turmoil went down in the making. Mike Patton you’re a musical genius! Jim was a big reason for how awesome those two records were!
They were done when he left. He had a unique tone and style that also gave them legitimacy amongst the fans they drew. Their crossover appeal to the early 90s alt music scene was because of the heavy guitars.
Wow - thank you for this. I always wondered what happened to Jim. I guess it was an illusion (personal) that every guy in FNM had IT MADE after The Real Thing and Angel Dust. It is cool that he moved away and became a pea and pumpkin farmer.
Excellent job on your vid. Some corrections: 1) Patton wrote all the lyrics and melodies for The Real Thing in 2 weeks (not 1 week). 2) The band didn't send Jim tapes for him to record his guitar parts on, he recorded them at Toast Studios, in San Francisco, where the rest of Angel Dust was recorded by the other band mates. 3) Jim didn't relocate into Castro Valley, he always lived there. 4) I unfortunately, and erroneously, downplayed Jim's guitar playing on Angel Dust in interviews out of pure frustration but the truth of the matter is that he played 100% of all the guitars on the album. I've since recanted my statements, apologiezed to Jim, and continue to set the record straight. 5) For personal reasons pertaining to Jim, the band and I offered to wait to start making Angel Dust but he brushed us off and we thought we were moving forward. Unfortunately, despite moving the rehearsal studio from San Francisco (where the band lived and where I was staying) to Oakland to accommodate Jim (living in Castro Valley), he rarely (possibly never?) showed up for rehearsals and fine tuning the songs for Angel Dust. We were absolutely, 100% prepared when we went in to record The Real Thing and the band and I didn't want to waste money/studio time, wanted to be prepared, when we recorded Angel Dust.
😮 love this info
Matt - Much respect for coming clean about Jim's guitar playing during Angel Dust. As a lifelong fan, I like others were disappointed when the band decided to fire Jim by fax. While they did not get along especially towards the end, I always felt it was unprofessional to end the relationship after all the success they enjoyed together. This is still an open wound for many fans and probably the reason why the band and Jim did not reunite for the reunion tour. My guess is that Jim made an error in not communicating the distraction he felt due to the death of his father. I also read that Jim preferred to figure out his guitars parts in advance and join the band at the studio for their benefit - perhaps just a quirk on his part or poor communication which they were known for. Somehow an exceptional album was still recorded. Overall, I believe Bill Gould missed his opportunity as the band leader to bring closure for the band, Jim, Chuck, and their fans at the reunion tour.
It's awesome seeing the man,the myth, the legend on here. Matt, thank you for contributing to a part of my (and everyone in the comments) life. Hope 2024 is good for you
You are tooooooooo kind. I'm a man, there are probably myths about me but I'm certainly no legend. Bands and artists can be legends, us behind-the-scenes people are supporting cast. Thanks for the kind words, though.@@SixStringFiasco
There is a lot to unpack here but, from my seat in the audience, each of the guys in the band could be fiercely stubborn, no doubt. But, I feel that there was a lot of sympathy extended to Jim and we were willing to support him in any way that he needed. We were all ready to postpone making the record until he was ready to but, while he said that he was ready to record Angel Dust, unfortunately, the rest of the guys and I didn't have the feeling that Jim was 100% on board. That said, when we did finally get down to recording the guitars, Jim was ready to throw down and he and I had a lot of fun whenever we'd take a break from recording and then go to a local bar, have a beverage or two, and then play pool. It was important to have Jim operating at 100% to balance the band with his heavy guitar parts.@@MrOutshine1
I was Jim's guitar tech for the first six or so months of The Real Thing touring cycle. Very fun guy to work for.
Sounds like am awesome gig!
You should have been in one of the old Budweiser " Real American Hero's" commercials.
" WE SALUTE YOU, MR. KEEPING JIM MARTIN'S AWESOME GUITAR TONE UP AND RUNNING MAN"
In all seriousness that sounds like such a cool opportunity, something to be proud of, and I imagine being able to watch Jim kick ass every night didnt suck..
That’s awesome! Did he shit can you though? No shame if so. A Tech can be a really personal thing sometimes & you gotta dig each other on a personal level.
No you weren't.👎👎🤣
@@saltpeter7429 more like Them should be in one of the new Budweiser ads with Dylan Mulvaney
i hit on the guitar guy in tom azzopardi's basement on irc and yahoo i called him triple dick perpetual war he was like"get your own cab to the strawberry festival you old bag!"
The Real Thing and Angel Dust are pure masterpieces. FNM sound simply wasn't the same after Jim's departure
I agree he helped make the band weird good vs just weird. He added the right edge to them and keep them a little more grounded and organic sounding
I agree. His guitar approach made the compositions appeal to a bigger, hard rock audience. He probably left at a good time all things considered. He made his mark and FNM eventually fell off not long after he was gone. They tried out Geordie from Killing Joke and Justin Broderick (Godflesh) to replace Jim which would've been interesting.
Agreed. These two are the best.
Call me pedantic but Epic is a song and Angel Dust is an album, are you suggesting that only the song epic is a masterpiece or do you think the album, "The Real Thing" is called Epic?
@@Ridd333 Higher than a hippie in a helicopter. Fixed! 😆
I remember getting Angel Dust without first hearing any songs based solely off how much I enjoyed The Real Thing. By "Smaller and Smaller", I remember wondering if I made a mistake. But honestly, it's one of those albums that grows on you with each listen and is by far my favourite FNM album. It's just brilliant from start to finish.
Same here. "Midlife Crisis" was the only track I listened to on that album. It took years for Angel Dust to grow on me. I can't say as much for their last release though.
Yes. Angel Dust is one of the best rock albums ever released in my opinion.
Agreed. And the album still sounds as great 30 years later
@@jonjons1 Yeah it really holds up and doesn’t sound dated. That said, I rarely listen to contemporary metal so I’m probably not the best to be making that call.
@@OldAussieAds Angel Dust and AIC Dirt are the two albums I still regularly listen to from that era. I still hear something new every time I listen. Modern music is dying a slow death, along with most other art. Being taken over by computers.
He's a legendary character, a legendary guitar sound, a legendary pumpkin grower. The cool thing was he never went crying to the press about Patton which he could have easily done. Big Sick Ugly Jim Martin, a legend.
He also had the best line in the second Bill and Ted movie!
Jim discovered Patton and gave him his big break
I once met Jim at Rock City, Nottingham in the early '90's, he was a good guy, easy to talk to, down to earth and very knowledgeable about music in general, a nice guy, I wish him well in all he does.
I was at that gig. I saw them at Reading the same year (1990, I think?). They were a great live act. Rock City was a brilliant venue. I saw loads of fantastic bands there back then & like you said, many of them were more than happy to have a can of Red Stripe with fans after their gigs.
I was at all gigs mentioned.
One thing I will say about him is. He’s. Great guy …
Love Big Jim! His character and guitar skills are epic!
Jim is the best guitarist FNM will ever have. I hope he see's these comments and see all the love! What a legend. Much love brother Jim!
Jim definitely grows the biggest pumpkins of anyone in the band.
I’ll give him that.
This guy was at every metal show in San Jose in the 90's. I met him several times and shook his hand a few times too. He actually got me to listen to FNM because of how cool he was.
He would hang at Apple Jack's in LA Honda quite a bit too.
You also saw him at loads of WWF and ECW shows.
well fuck me! looks like I'm wearing the JEALOUS pants, cause thats pretty fuckin awesome! he has a very magical way with a guitar! in One of many other parallel universe's he is still in Faith No More. "the sound was mezmerizing". where for art thou "JizzLobber"😇💫
@@davidhunt1350 yeah he was always really cool
If ya want i can tell ya story about him that will make your jealousy pants inflate
@@CoinSlotKitty yes please, 😌👍👌
Poor Jim. He was part of one of the most innovative bands and part of what may be one of the best progressive rock albums ever, I even think it's one of the best albums ever all stop. I don't think he really did gel with the rest of the band. As an 11 year old who'd just discovered his love for heavy music and hadn't yet purchased And Justice for All, the guitar part in Epic was what drew me in and my favorite track off the album was "Surprise! You're Dead!". By the time Angeldust came out I'd broadened my horizons, so I loved the entire thing, but still really really loved what is likely the band's heaviest song "Jizzlobber", which is a monster of a track. While not "brootal" by today's standards it still has enough bite to put most other songs to shame. Jim was just in the wrong band really. I mean calling Angeldust a "gay disco" is a little rough. I think his ideas were probably mostly ignored. He probably just wanted to rock out and write heavy guitar parts, not create an album that was at the very least 15 years ahead of the curve. Seriously I can't say enough good things about that album.
Jim was really the perfect guitarist for them (9 years strong), he was just dealing with the death of his father and on-top of that couldn't deal well with the media attention during the recording. Even after he was fired none of the internal issues fully got settled; They were imploding and considered quitting during and after the King for a Day album.
@@Splattermelt I mean, they are a very rhythm driven band. Drums and bass and keys for melody. Pretty sure Bottom or Gould stated that guitar did not matter that much in FNM.
I think "Angel Dust" was definitely their finest moment. (Jim did a pretty good job playing the guitar on that record despite having a different vision than the band did for their direction in terms of sound)
I don’t know, as much as I love Patton and the rest of the band…They were probably arseholes if you didn’t fit in to their world and what they wanted you to do. They definitely undervalued Jim’ contributions. I like the following albums, but none of them hold a candle to TRT or AD.
@@lockyp204Mike Bordin did “The Trap Set” podcast with Joe Wong and it’s a really good time
Jim was a massive influence on my early years of becoming a musician. It's saddening to see how he was treated and eye opening about how personally it was to deal with him. At the same time I can't say I wouldn't have acted just like Jim. Incredible talent and complexity underrated. I for one think Jim's work will forever stand the test of time........STATION!
Station!
Faith No More really never was the same without Martin. Angel Dust was a great exit for him. It was the pinnacle of the group’s journey.
I don't know, I really enjoyed King For a Day, Fool For a Lifetime.
@@red.5475 yeah King was good, but there was a big Jim Martin shaped hole by the time they got to Album of the Year.
@@DystopianJoe AOTY is still a great record. It's my second least favourite but I still love it. I would actually call it a Trey shaped hole. FNM's shit is fucking amazing compared to most bands..
Agreed, Jim's guitar was integral to the band's sound. The stand-ins were ok but it always felt like they were lacking some magic ingredient... FNM's loss was the pumpkin farming enthusiasts gain however
@@arthurdent6828 just imagine that Jim Martin guitar chug on Stripsearch and Ashes though
I always was impressed by his ability to come up with a guitar track to a basic rap track. It's not the same as having a chord chart to follow along with that has multiple chord changes. It takes a lot of creativity to fill a song with guitar tracks that have whole verses that boil down to one chord like some of their songs.
His guitar tone in FNM has been irreplaceable. Was awesome to watch live too.
The man's enjoying his family life and his passions, nothing but respect.
He is so cool!! and a cameo in Bill and Ted 🖤
*STATION!*
@@Skorpio420 Station
He was cool enough to be in Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey, iconic look. His guitar work was fantastic, lead harmonies, riffs, songwriting all stellar. Best wishes to him.
Always remember the church of faith no more ❤
@@MrBeauChat praise be the rock
@@tomstruct Station!!! 🎸🤘
Hell Yeah
Such a badass guitar tone. The riff at the end of zombie eaters
Straight up man. That tone was otherworldly. Zombie Eaters is unreal. And Surprise! You’re Dead just has some of my favorite guitar work ever. And the big resonating chords in Falling To Pieces. Such a phenomenal player, man.
Jim Martin Appreciation Thread! LETS GO BIG JIM
Nobody remembers those guys now..
Yes. He grows spectacular pumpkins
Check out Milk and Blood. It's not a bad album. Some good heavy riffs.
@@russfoulkes5490 I was just gonna say this.
I can’t see Mike Bordin joining in
Jim Martin absolutely rocks. He has some mean riffs.
Mostly not his, though
Awesome tone too
Most (not all) of those riffs were written by Bill Gould. In fact, Bill played guitar on Another Body Murder from the Judgment Night soundtrack along with a few others when Jim wasn't present or had already left the band. That's why they thought Dean Menta would be a good fit because he was Jim's guitar tech.
He's awesome
Imagine FNM with Cliff Burton on bass and a FNM version of For Whom The Bell Tolls
And now, after 30 years, I realize why Martin was my favorite. 💜
Honestly the main issues seemed to be between Martin, Gould, and Patton. I remember hearing that apparently Gould reached out to Martin for the reunion, but he made some kinda joke/reference about being kicked out, Gould felt that was weird and subsequently uninvited him. Patton always runs his mouth even if he loves whoever it is he’s talking about, but that seemed to cause tension between him and Martin. I honestly think the biggest factor was the fact that Martin’s dad died right before Angel Dust started production. Martin became incredibly withdrawn and didn’t even tell the other members until way later. I can’t remember the interview I read that in, but yeah apparently when they found out they were like “shit we wish you told us sooner” but at that point there was too much of a rift between them so it kinda had to happen.
Yeah. It was conflict inside the band. Musical differences, also. Gould also said that Jim "was a real contentious person in the band, but I loved him…" when talking about the reunion... I understand that as "he had opinions and wouldn't shut up."
Just imagine the flammable discussions between Gould, Bottum, Martin and Patton lol
@@redacted2275 Those guys are philosophically (and probably politically) on opposite ends of the spectrum. It wasn't Gould that said that he loved Big Jim, it was Roddy. Neither Gould or Bordin was exactly thrilled with the idea of reuniting with Jim Martin.
Faith No More was not named after "a greyhound they bet on". The original name was Faith No Man, and a friend of Billy the bass player suggested Faith No More.
There’s truth to both claims actually. But you are right about Faith No More being a derivative of Faith No Man. The greyhound bit played a part before that change took place, if I’m not mistaken. I read it not too long ago, but can’t remember every detail.
The band was pretty well known for making up stories about the genesis of their name - the greyhound story being one of them. The most likely explanation is when the singer from their Faith No Man days left, they changed their name to Faith No More because "the Man" was "No More."
Original original name (with Mike Morris on guitar) was Sharp Young Men
Bands are always full of fights and discord. It's a miracle that a band can stay together long enough to last a couple albums.
Timothy B Schmidt said something like every band I’ve ever been in was two weeks away from breaking up
@@prd004.2 I believe it!
I always associate Faith No More's guitar sound with Jim Martin.
It's epic!
Angel dust is one of the best rock albums ever imo
Jim has been missed by everyone out there with a taste for the raw strenght he delivered... Long live Jim Martin!..!
Man! RN'RTS must have read my mind, I've been on a Jim Martin kick lately listening to a lot of his stuff. Yea, there isn't a lot of recent interviews and stuff with Jim, truly an underrated and under appreciated Guitarist. I'd love to see and hear more from him.
Angel Dust is not only FNMs best album but one of the best albums I've ever heard, pity Jim had to go as he was part of the iconic line up and brung a real "Metal Edge" to the music.
Agreed !!👌
I agree, but the fact that he wrote so little in it and that he feels it is too contrived shows that he was not 100% ready to be part of the evolving stance of FNM.
He was definitely their best guitarist but to me FNM is really all about Puff and Gould. Laying down solid rhythm is really what set these guys apart and what influenced the later 90s bands.
I whole heartedly agree. No disrespect to Trey or even Lurch (John Hudson) but Jim had a great iconic sound that meshed so well with Bordin n Goulds heavy groovy sound.
I think he was in the wrong band and I don't think they listened to much of his input. Angeldust is one of the best progressive rock albums ever, but I get the feeling he would have preferred more Jizzlobber and less RV or Be Aggressive. I can't say that I'd want an entire album of Jizzlobber type tracks because you'd just miss out on so much variety, but it is maybe my favorite song from it, so I do wish they would have let him loose on a few more songs. The guitar tone he got on it is incredible. Coupled with the errie keyboards and Patton's ludicrous vocal range that song just punches you in the face.
I ABSOLUTLEY LOVE JIZZLOBBER!!! What A FUCKING JAM!!!
Later 90’s bands? Do you think Korn’s debut album sound was influenced by Angel Dust? I think Korn wouldn’t ever have sounded that way without it.
@@WhyTheHorseface Definitely, I always thought Jon David got half his style from Midlife Crisis alone (as well as the crazier vocal stuff Mike likes to do live)
I think Patton was the main reason for this. Good as Mike Patton was for the band he ran one of the best parts of the band out.
They hated each other. Jim treated Patton like a kid and not a serious musician. But from what I understand, Billy Gould is the one that has always stirred everything up between members. Could be wrong, but that’s the rumor.
@@eddthewordsmith I could see that. But honestly Patton acted immature and didn't take anything seriously at that point especially. Just being real.
Patton didn’t run Jim out. There was a huge growing rift between Jim and the rest of the band.
I think it was primarily that Jim belittled Mike a lot, and Patton, being the SOB that he is, decided to fxk with Jim enough that it had to end. Jim's Ted Nugent behavior also contributed to his demise in FNM
Incredible guitar player. Definitely huge part of their sound. Runs a gun shop in home town. Oh, and, STATION!
Forgot about him being in Bill and Ted Bogus Journey!!!!
STATION!!!
STATION
STAAAAAATIOOOON
STATION!!!
The Real Thing was such a different album than what me and my social circle were listening to at the time. In '89, it was all about the hair metal bands. Then this funky ass record dropped and my and my band mates were blown away by it. Falling To Pieces still is one of my favorites to play on guitar.
I saw them at the Cambridge Corn Exchange in Nov 92 on the Angel Dust tour, we met Jim in the pub next door. He was happier in there, with a pint of beer, chatting with us for an hour or two about sports, guitars,... anything other than FNM and we respected that. Lovely bloke. But we weren't surprised that he left the band after that tour, it felt like he'd already checked out as we just chatted.
As a huge FNM fan, I always thought it was unfortunate Jim & the rest of the band couldn't reconcile. His playing was such an integral part of their sound. PS: No mention of courteney love being their singer briefly before Chuck joined?
@@deconstruction3397 He did play all of the guitar parts. That he didn't was a rumor started by Matt Wallace that people still repeat despite Wallace apologizing for it. Jim didn't write as much on this album as he did previously, however he came up with the music for Kindergarten & Jizzlobber.
The bloke is so under rated, especially for what he put in to make FNM what it became.
His look alone is iconic and I remember as a kid when Epic came out, id be looking in magazines and the guy with the red glasses would have me going back to read the article.
If you’re a wrestling fan as well there was an ECW fan that copied his look
@@JoelChavez6121 I think Jim Martin would have made a great wrestling character.
Another great FNM video! I loved the way Jim's locomotive riffs would play off Roddy's ethereal keys...such absolutely inspiring soundscapes
Gould wrote those riffs & showed them to Jim. That’s been verified by everyone in the studio except Jim.
Jim's 2 favorite records were the Dune soundtrack by Toto. And Mr. Bungle's demo for Raging Wrath. He discovered Patton and gave him his big break
You forgot that he joined Infectious Grooves, which is a major oversight on your part.
Saw him at the Whisky with the original Infectious Grooves lineup. Great show!
He was never there pal.
Best album: Introduce Yourself.
(It's a 'The Bends' / 'Ride The Lightning' type thing)
That album never gets the love it truly deserves.
That Kerrang cover: Mr. Big, Deicide, and Therapy?. What a lineup
Jim Martin didn’t like that the band was becoming a “disco” band, as he described it (to which Patton responded “we absolutely want to be a disco band). You could see the tension was high between him and other members in those interviews. It’s a shame that they couldn’t reconcile their differences, because Jim added colorful character to the group, and they were never the same after he left and took his signature style with him.
Martin sounds extremely lucid in his descriptions on exactly what went down. That lends a lot of credibility to what he's saying. He might have been contentious in the group but it sounds like being in the group was a pain in the ass.
I think what happened was that he was an OG metalhead while the other guys were more into the then emerging Alternative scene, supposedly Bordin hated him even back when he was with him and Cliff Burton in a band and reluctantly agreed to let him join FNM on Burton’s advice.
I love Patton, and many place him high-high up on the pedestal, but his antics and immaturity were at its worst during this period of TRT & AD. He was of course 19&up, but for JIm that must've been difficult to deal with after your father's death and all of the unwanted media attention on AD. Then you have to add in the relationship with the other members in the band.
@@Splattermelt he was truly a brat during those days, funnily enough Jim pushed for Patton to join the band after listening to the Raging Wrath of the Easter Bunny demo, but in the end their feud was what triggered his exit from the band.
@@Malum09 Martin coined the nickname "Puffy", which Bordin despised. Maybe that's why he hated him?
@@mikespearwood3914 yup, mostly likely
Faith No More is without a doubt one of my all time favorite bands. I can tell their influence on other bands that also became my favorites. I think they left a lot of good shit on the table with TRT and AD lineup, but egos can get the best of anybody.
Great research here! I love FNM and Martin.. FNM last two albums in the late 90s took me a while to adjust to, but I ended up loving them for what they were.
Even tho Album Of The Year was one of FNM’s best albums the band was never the same without him. The older I get the more I appreciate Chuck Moseley era as well. So many great records even though the band is constantly changing key members that would kill most others
So you e just destroyed your own point
Angel Dust, The Real Thing and King for a Day were all much better records than Album of the Year .. It's a good record, but no way is it even close to their "Best" record. 😂
only fnm album worse than album of the year is sol invictus
@@Fiveash-Art people have their opinions, the records of fnm that I play the most would go angeldust, album of the year, king for a day, in that order.
@@RyanMcCarvill People have their opinions? Really? 👍🏻
Wish he'd get up on stage with them again. Angel Dust wasn't a guitar driven album but what he played was masterful. Smaller and Smaller was so epic!
From what I recall, Jim Martin didn't like the direction FNM was going on with 'Angel Dust'.
And they did the classy early 90's thing of firing him by Fax.
"Be Aggressive, Be, Be Aggressive, A-G-G-R-E-S-S-I-V-E" Love that song. Angel Dust is easily one my favorite Faith No More albums
It's always been hilarious to me that they managed to get away with a metal song about giving submissive oral sex to a guy and include chanting cheerleaders on it. In 1992. I'm not surprised if that made Jim uncomfortable back then. Such a special band, so far ahead of their time.
I have always wondered how they managed to do that. But the kids are just saying be aggressive and go fight win. That's how they did it.
Made it out to be something it isn't.
I'm sure the kids that did it are proud!
I got to see him play with Fang in a small Warehouse show in Benicia California. It was awesome
Jim was a character and that shone through in his guitar playing with FNM. His quirky metal style was a part of their sound as much as Mike Bordin's rhythms were. I was really disappointed when he wasn't part of the reunion. I guess they sensed he still harbored some resentment from the past and decided it wasn't worth it. A grand opportunity missed.
According to them he sent them a contract and they didn’t want any of that for the reunion so they stopped conversations with him.
@@Malum09 In an interview, Roddy, the keyboardist said he made a call to Jim to tell him about the reunion tour and asked if he was interested. Jim said yes and didn't even have a problem playing songs they made after he left. As the conversation ended, Jim made a remark about sending the contract to his fax machine. Roddy interpreted this snide remark as a negative because that was the way FNM fired him. Based on that 1 phone call, they decided not to go with Jim. I think the band was still insecure about the reunion and bringing in a character like Martin made that even more questionable.
Thank you. First time I got to hear Jim's take on the producer and what went on in the studio.
I've heard other members complain about what Matt Wallace was doing in the studio on the Angel Dust sessions too. It's telling that they didn't work with him on the next one.
I remember seeing Jim Martin in the crowd at a Primus, Limbomaniacs, and Dot 3 music engagement in 1991 at The Edge in Palo Alto, California. 🤘
JIM MARTIN, was for ,FAITH-NO-MORE exactly what SLASH is FOR, GUNS-'N'-ROSES. the perfect sound!
Big Jim’s school band project was with Cliff Burton, they even played a Metallica riff way before it was on any album.
The sound definitely suffered without Jim Martin.
GNR, TOOL and Faith No More are my favorite bands!!
Jim's guitar playing without a doubt with a strong part of the real thing an angel dust absolutely fantastic albums and still still carry the weight today
My love for the Flying V started when I saw Epic premiere on MTV.
Still wonder what bridge he used on that
FNM was an absolute powerhouse, right up until the moment Jim Martin departed
I was at Brixton academy for the live dvd
Someone may have already said it here, but Jim was the one that found Mike on Mr. Bugle!
What would King For a Day have been like, with Jim from '95?
I would like to see some TH-cam channel doing the whole album!
Martin carried We Care A Lot and Introduce Yourself. His guitar work was (no pun intended) epic. TRT was probably the most perfect album I've ever heard. I've bought it like 5 or 6 times across different media. AD was incredible, but it took me years to like all of it... still not sure if I do. After Martin left, I pretty much did too. It never sounded the same. His style definitely was defining for the group.
The Real Thing is good, just wish they had trimmed the fat and added Sweet Emotion and The Cowboy Song on it instead of Underwater Love or Woodpecker lol.
I had heard an interview where he totally blamed Mike Patton for taking over the group, not making it fun anymore by changing the nature of the group to being too serious and less punk.
Ironic, because it was Martin that first suggested him as a replacement for Chuck, based on some early Mr Bungle demos. Honestly, as much of a creative genius and talented vocalist as Patton is, he's always been capable of being a bit of an arrogant jerk. But I think blaming any one person for why Jim left the band is foolish. Every single on of them has their own foibles and ideas of what they should be, and they all admit that none of them are great communicators.I think they all contributed to the fractiousness in different ways. Besides the core three of Bill, Puffy and Roddy, they were't long-time friends that grew up together or whatever; they were a weird mix of characters and always had trouble finding the people they wanted to work with. It's truly a miracle they held together long enough to give us so many amazing albums.
basically, he left because he wanted to spend more time on the albums and the label wanted to hurry it along. the rest of the band was okay with it, he wasn't.
the big irony is despite his demeanor as the meathead metal guy, he was by far the weirdest person in the band musically
I saw a FNM video of on outdoor venue where a fan threw a piss jug on stage and Jim poured it on his head. Immediately after dozens of more piss jugs were thrown to the stage.
Weird? You mean dumb.
He was the dumbest guy in the band by a mile.
And lazy.
The thing that i know about Fatso is that he's retires from FNM after dad's death, and began a farmer life in Maxwell Ranch (The final place from our beloved Cliff Burton).
Fatso plays in "Garage Inc" and the 30 anniversary shows from Metallica.
Is it me or does Patton has a way of taking over bands? The situation seems similar with Dead Cross. He stepped in and did the vocals on the finished first album and it was great. The second album seemed like he had a ton of his influence. To me, it was a different animal. Not bad, just notably different, like it's very much a Patton record.
Jim Martin was such a huge part of FNM. He really gave them an edge they never had since. His riffery is on par with James Hetfield, and somewhat similar in feel. They both do some great syncopated stuff I really love, and create some of the biggest riffs ever.
I remember reading about the Guns N Rose's tour that FNM opened on, I think it might have been in Duff or Slash's book, about how Mike Patton would take the stage and run his mouth about how lame Guns N Rose's were. I dont care if people agree with him nor not, it was EXTREMELY rude and unappreciative. I read that Jim Martin and some of the Guns guys had to approach him a few times and say " If we are so lame, why did you take the tour? Tone it down or your off the tour".
Apparently that had no effect and they were kicked off.
That story helps me empathize with Jim Martin. A lot of bullshit to deal with.( I dont think he was fixated on being the trendy " too cool for school" kid, he wanted to play heavy guitar and have fun.)
I like Mike Patton in Mr Bungle but not as much with FNM for some reason
@@leosuniverseHuh? Guns N Roses set you up to be raped?
@@masterknife8423Yep. Chuck was better. It's a shame he couldn't get his shit together.
@@solearesoul Yes, a guy from their camp. Another guy that was part of gnr song writing was tied to another perp that harmed me weeks later. But everyone up in here has issues. Mike was force kissing fan guys face an other conduct. Everyone oked this stuff. No sympathy for us in this buisness,. Everyone has been a mega socio bully to me. Just because of this stuff. I was with the Alice coopers camp starting a kid. They are pedos.
Dude, Jim is awesome!! Dude rocked FNM, and it sucks he left.
Angel Dust is one of the finest albums ever made, period.
They didn't fire him he left
The band wanted it all but couldn't have it
no, the name 'faith no more' came from 'faith no man' the previous name, how would you get this wrong?
I saw Faith No More perform in Bradford Yorkshire, a few days before their incredible recording at Brixton. They were incredible.
It’s Sir James Martin. Show some respect.
Surprise Your Dead is a masterpiece
I have to say, angel dust is probably my favorite album. I do like a great many songs on the real thing but it just seemed a little under polished especially vocally with Patton and musically too. Angel dust did just that and going through the issues I was at that time man that was my go to album to let my anger frustration pain all of it out. It cut deep but helped so much putting that album on almost religiously and blasting the sound as I slam danced around so many days thrashing my condo to let it all out. I was saddened though to see Martin leave after angel dust and that’s when myself I knew it wouldn’t be the same.
I always enjoyed his playing. It had a really strong influence from 70s arena rock. Faith No More was always a band of eclectic influences. And Martin's involvement in early Metallica lore was always an interesting aspect of his story.
Ooohhh...what was that???
I literally have been looking this up on TH-cam and Google the last 3 days stuff about Jim and why he left the band.. I look it up just now and see that 10 minutes ago this video is uploaded.. surrealism at work lol
This is a sign that things are right with you in life. Signs and symbols are for the conscious mind. Synchronicity at its best!!!
To Me, There is No Faith No More Without Big Jim Martin!🤘🏻🔥🔥🔥
This guy could be a stunt double in a Cheech an Chong movie. Oh and he can also be a awesome guitarist in anyone's band.
When faith no mores the real thing came out I knew they were a stellar band.
On that tour I saw them at toads place in Connecticut with circus of power.
We arrived early in the morning to get up front.
I saw jim Martin walk out of the venue and go walking.
I followed behind him and said Jim can I have your autograph.
He said sure and signed my hat and shirt.
He did and then I asked nervously would you like to smoke a joint.
He said he'll yeah.
So in a dirty alley down the block from the venue we smoked.
After that I was so high and Jim says I need ice cream.
So we head out to the street and look for ice cream.
We find a Hagen das store.
We munched hard on ice cream I brought.
We headed back to toads place and he signed all of my friends paper flyers CDs you name it.
He was cool and super nice.
That concert was the best concerts I have ever seen in my life.
I saw Faith No More in 1990 at the Trocadero in Philadelphia. Mike Patton was dancing around on stage and spinning around with the mic stand in his hands. He came within literal inches of hitting Martin in the eye with one of the legs of the mic stand. Like, it caught Martin's hair as it went by. If looks could kill, Mike Patton would've died right there, on the spot. Even from as far away as I was I could see him staring daggers at Patton.
So basically he didn't like Mike Patton that much
@@masterknife8423 more like Patton wanted Spruance in the band and fuck Jim.
Angel Dust is not just the pinnacle of the band’s work, but I consider it one of the best hard rock albums of all time. It’s really a masterpiece.
Rufus brought him to the future, he got stuck there when Dinomolos sent bad robots Bill & Ted back to the past
Angel dust is When Faith No More got ridiculously awesome
Gotta love Big Jim wearing a Fear Factory shirt.....
I am a huge FNM fan and love all their albums, including with Chuck Moseley but Mike Patton is a legend and i listen to all his other bands as well
There is a lengthy documentary on the making of Angle dust. It’s pretty clear in it that his and their musical interests and directions were totally at odds and that Jim HATED what they were they were headed musically. I think he said he wanted to be a straight forward metal band and not make this “weird shit”. I think his leaving was inevitable but the tension and disagreement resulted in something pretty awesome
Jim's departure at the time was my first huge band disappointment (didn't get into Jane's until a year after they broke up). But King was good, and sounds like the band could not continue as it was. Rock on, Jim!
Well Jim martin shoulda never hired Mike Patton kept Chuck if that was the case
It does change the vibe on the riff and guitar parts of King For A Day Fool For A Lifetime. Martin is that good, and was felt in this album..his absence
R.i.p Chuck ❤
Jim got the tone and he got the charisma. He's the only image i have when thinking about FNM guitar player :) Sad he couldn't continue doing this, but hey, he's on one of the best albums ever recorded
It's a weird world when Jim Martin is now in a clown-themed funk metal band and Mr. Bungle is playing thrash again.
That last Mr. Bungle album really caught me off guard. It's so damn good! The Raging wrath of the Easter Bunny demo? I think that's what it's called. So killer, I've got to get a copy if it, thanks for reminding me!
lol, good call.
There's a Behind The Board episode with Matt Wallace discussing Real Thing. A fun listen is you're into the recording stuff.
He went on to be the head of the Faith No More Spiritual and Theological Center.
STATION!
@@ryklatortuga4146 STATION
Don't forget he was also knighted
*STATION!*
I absolutely love angel dust!! I love the real thing as well. But man Angel dust was pure gold! Never knew this much turmoil went down in the making. Mike Patton you’re a musical genius! Jim was a big reason for how awesome those two records were!
awesome guitar player, faith no more was never the same
They were done when he left. He had a unique tone and style that also gave them legitimacy amongst the fans they drew. Their crossover appeal to the early 90s alt music scene was because of the heavy guitars.
"Sir James Martin, head of the Faith No More Spiritual and Theological Center" -Rufus
STATIONNNNNNN!!
Never listened to an album post Martin.
Wow - thank you for this. I always wondered what happened to Jim. I guess it was an illusion (personal) that every guy in FNM had IT MADE after The Real Thing and Angel Dust. It is cool that he moved away and became a pea and pumpkin farmer.