Broken, Beat & Scarred

"Broken, Beat & Scarred"

CD 1 cover
Single by Metallica
from the album Death Magnetic
Released April 3, 2009
Format Digi-collectors pack, CD Maxi single
Genre Heavy metal
Length 6:25
Label Warner Bros., Mercury
Writer(s) James Hetfield, Kirk Hammett, Robert Trujillo, Lars Ulrich
Producer Rick Rubin
Metallica singles chronology
"All Nightmare Long"
(2008)
"Broken, Beat & Scarred"
(2009)
"The View"
(2011)
Alternative covers
CD 2 cover
DVD cover

"Broken, Beat & Scarred" is the forty-fifth single by American heavy metal band Metallica, and the sixth from their ninth studio album, Death Magnetic, released on April 3.[1]

Hetfield and Lars Ulrich argued at length over the title of this song. Hetfield said that he did not like the title, but Ulrich was "very adamant" that it should be called "Broken, Beat & Scarred."[2]

On March 19, Metallica's website announced "Broken, Beat & Scarred" as the next single from the album. The single was released in two formats - a digi-collectors edition and a maxi single.

Contents

Music video

On March 26, the official video for "Broken, Beat & Scarred" premiered on Metallica.com. The video features the band performing the song live on the Death Magnetic tour. It was directed by Wayne Isham, who has previously worked with the band on several videos including Cunning Stunts.[3]

Track listing

  1. "Broken, Beat & Scarred" - 6:25
  2. "Broken, Beat & Scarred" (Live) - 7:33
  3. "The End of the Line" (Live) - 7:38
  1. "Broken, Beat & Scarred" - 6:25
  2. "Stone Cold Crazy" (Live) - 3:06
  3. "Of Wolf and Man" (Live) - 4:25
  1. "Broken, Beat & Scarred" (Promo video)
  2. "The Day That Never Comes" (Promo Video)
  3. "Death Magnetic Electronic Press Kit" - 17:25
  1. "Broken, Beat & Scarred" - 6:25
  2. "Broken, Beat & Scarred" (Live) - 7:33
  3. "The End of the Line" (Live) - 7:38
  4. "Stone Cold Crazy" (Live) - 3:06
  5. "Of Wolf and Man" (Live) - 4:25

All live versions recorded at the O2 Arena on September 15, 2008 at the "Death Magnetic" release event.[1]

Chart performance

Chart (2009) Peak
position[4][5][6]
Australian ARIA Singles Chart 75[7]
Austria Singles Top 75 74
Dutch Top 40 25
Finland Singles Chart 4
France Singles Top 100 36
German Singles Top 100 35
US Billboard European Hot 100 67
US Billboard Rock Songs 32
US Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks 15
US Billboard Heritage Rock 18

Incorrect credits

The CD maxi single which was released in Australia, New Zealand, and Southeast Asia, was found to have incorrect information in the credits. The band said that no one from the band or their management had been able to see the artwork before it was released, and it was the fault of the record company. The band said that the singles would be pulled from the stores and another batch was made available. They described the old version as a collector's item for fans who had already bought it.[8]

Release details

Date Country/Region Format[1]
April 3, 2009 Europe (except France) Digi-collectors edition
South America CD Maxi single
April 6, 2009 France Digi-collectors edition
April 13, 2009 Southeast Asia CD Maxi single
Australia
New Zealand

Personnel

Metallica
Other personnel

References

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