Megadeth...
Megadeth is an American heavy metal band from Los Angeles, California, formed in
1983. Founded by Dave Mustaine and Dave Ellefson following Mustaine's
departure from Metallica, the band has since released twelve studio albums, six live albums, two EPs, twenty
six singles, thirty-two music videos, and three compilations.
As a pioneer of the American thrash metal movement, Megadeth rose to international fame in the 1980s, but
experienced numerous line-up changes, due partly to the band's notorious substance abuse problems. From 1983 to
2002, Mustaine and bassist Dave Ellefson were the only continuous members of the band. After finding sobriety and
securing a stable line-up, Megadeth went on to release a string of platinum and gold albums, including the
platinum-selling landmark Rust in Peace in 1990 and the Grammy nominated, multi-platinum Countdown to
Extinction in 1992. Megadeth disbanded in 2002 after Mustaine suffered a severe nerve injury to his left
arm. However, following extensive physical therapy, Mustaine reformed the band in 2004 and released The
System Has Failed, followed by United Abominations in 2007; the albums debuted on the
Billboard Top 200 chart at #18 and #8, respectively. Megadeth, along with their new lead guitarist Chris
Broderick, released their twelfth studio album, titled Endgame, on September 15, 2009,
which debuted at number 9 on the Billboard 200.

Megadeth is known for its distinctive instrumental style, often featuring dense, intricate passages and trade
off guitar solos. Mustaine is also known for his "snarling" vocal style, as well as his recurring lyrical themes
including politics, war, addiction, personal relationships, and the occult.
Megadeth has had commercial success worldwide and has sold near 25 million albums,[1] with six consecutive
albums being certified platinum in the USA. The band has also received great critical acclaim with seven
consecutive Grammy nominations for Best Metal Performance. In the band's 24 active years, Megadeth has had 20
official members, with Dave Mustaine remaining as the driving force, main songwriter, and sole original member
following the end of his musical partnership with David Ellefson in 2002, due to personal disagreements. In the
mid-late 1980s, Megadeth became one of the "Big Four of Thrash," along with Metallica, Slayer, and Anthrax, who
were responsible for creating, developing and popularizing the thrash metal sub-genre

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