10. "House of Pain" - Faster Pussycat

Director: Michael Bay

9. "Roots Bloody Roots" - Sepultura

Director: Thomas Mignone

8. "Born With A Tail" - The Supersuckers

Director: Rocky Schenck

7. "Dragula" - Rob Zombie

Director: Rob Zombie

6. "You Can't Bring Me Down" - Suicidal Tendencies

Director: Simeon Soffer

According to Riki, a few videos almost made the list, but fell just short. "Making this list was not easy, because there is also Alice in Chains that wasn't put in. And I wanted to put in a Biohazard video, and I wanted to put in Slipknot's ' Wait And Bleed ,' which was 1999. And maybe Danzig videos. And although I can't say I'm the biggest Marilyn Manson fan, ' The Beautiful People ' was an incredible video."

5. "Liar" - Rollins Band

Director: Anton Corbijn

4. "Sweating Bullets" - Megadeth

Director: Wayne Isham

3. "Walk" - Pantera

Director: Paul Anderson





"Because I don't like it! Metallica is one of the biggest metal bands in the world. Metallica is phenomenal. I love Metallica. This last Metallica album [2016's Hardwired...to Self-Destruct], I'm a huge fan of. And, of course, I'm a fan of the first three or four records of Metallica. But even though 'Enter Sandman' made such an impact - and that's really what took them from ...And Justice for All to being the biggest metal band there is - I actually thought 'Johnny Got His Gun." You may be wondering why Riki did not select arguably the most popular metal video of the '90s (or all-time, for that matter!), Metallica's " Enter Sandman ." Riki explained its absence."Because I don't like it! Metallica is one of the biggest metal bands in the world. Metallica is phenomenal. I love Metallica. This last Metallica album [2016's], I'm a huge fan of. And, of course, I'm a fan of the first three or four records of Metallica. But even though 'Enter Sandman' made such an impact - and that's really what took them fromto being the biggest metal band there is - I actually thought ' One ' was a better video, even though it's just clips from [the 1971 film]."

2. "Seasons In The Abyss" - Slayer

Director: Gérard Di Puglia

1. "November Rain" - Guns N' Roses

Director: Andy Morahan

If you think I just picked Faster Pussycat because Taime was my friend, my roommate, my partner in the Cathouse, it wasn't just that. That video, the subject was very personal to Taime - it was about a father not being there, at a time when a lot of people were writing, "Let's party, let's get girls, let's do all this."He came out with a video that was a really strong video and a really strong subject matter. It was their biggest hit, and I definitely felt that was just a great video. I think the lyrics are great in it, as well.Sepultura was such a big, important band during theera. Heavy metal was always international, but not as much back then.This video is great - they had a Brazilian indigenous tribe. They had a lot visuals that are native to Brazilian culture, and it really showed that here's this Brazilian metal band paying homage to their home country.Even though I don't think we ever played that video on, it was definitely a rock video and was the first time I had ever seen the Supersuckers. The video was such a cool, fun, tongue-in-cheek, low-budget rock video from such a great band. It's pretty much just them playing rock n' roll with a couple of visuals of the devil, and the lyrics are all tongue-in-cheek. That just made me a huge Supersuckers fan.This was right when Rob Zombie went solo, and he made the video himself. You've got Dragula - the car from- and it is filmed in very '70s/monster movie-type filters. It's just a good, goofy, fun, rock song.I thought Rob Zombie just did a really good job on showing the type of person he is. It was his start that I knew of, of producing. He's always been a great artist - not only musically, but painting, and capturing that whole feel of that '70s monsters/exploitation. And I think he really did that well in that video for "Dragula."This is the first time that Suicidal Tendencies really had a budget to make a video - it was when they were crossing over from that punk rock band in Venice to being a really big metal band. It showed Mike Muir's a little psycho, a little bit scary, a little bit tough.Robert Trujillo was on bass at the time. It's just a great song, and it was just when Suicidal Tendencies was starting to make it past that level of the punk rock band to being a big-drawing metal band.That video, it's pretty much nothing but Henry. He talks and puts on glasses and wears a cop outfit. But there's just so much attitude in that song, especially during the spoken parts. I just think that's such a great video, and it really shows his attitude and his interpretation of the song. That is just a great video, great song.If ever there was a song that shows Dave Mustaine's attitude, it's that song and that video, because it's just Dave arguing with Dave! Dave versus Dave versus Dave in the video. In a cell, in a small room, Dave talking to himself.I've always loved that video, and there's so much "Dave Mustaine attitude" in the video and in the song.It was hard for me to pick a Pantera video, but for kids who never saw Pantera live - so many new fans never got to see Pantera live - it just shows what a dynamic band that was. It's everybody in the band, not just Dime or Phil. The whole band is just so strong and heavy, and such a killer live band. And in the "Walk" video, you really see that.There was not a band that was requested more onthan Slayer. Slayer, to me, was the epitome of theband. You walk into any metal show and kids are going to yell, "SLAYER!"They shot that one in Egypt, and that was right at the beginning of Desert Storm, so it wasn't necessarily the safest time to be overseas. "Seasons In The Abyss" visually is just a great video, and it's just such a great song.Even though this isn't what you would call a "metal song" or a "heavy song," you have to put "November Rain" by Guns N' Roses as the #1 video. And it's not just because I'm in it for a second!They spent $1.5 million on that video - that was the most anybody had ever paid on a promo video. They had to build a church for Slash to play in the desert, and they had these helicopters to shoot it. And Axl with the emotional scene and the crying. I'm not sure what the whole thing is about, but I just think that it is such a huge video.I was there for a lot of the shooting of the video, and there were so many locations and churches and desert and the Pantages Theatre in Hollywood. It was just a big video.