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  • Metallica - Death Magnetic

    Metallica Thrilled About Album Leak
    The Quietus, September 4th, 2008 12:11


    Metallica

    Like King Canute flinging himself at the spume and giving it an amorous rogering, Metallica have come over all joyous that their new album Death Magnetic (read The Quietus' review) has leaked into a French record shop and online before its official release.

    "Listen, we're ten days from release. I mean, from here, we're golden," Lars Ulrich told a US radio station.

    "If this thing leaks all over the world today or tomorrow, happy days. Happy days. Trust me. Ten days out and it hasn't quote-unquote fallen off the truck yet? Everybody's happy.

    "It's 2008 and it's part of how it is these days, so it's fine," he insisted. "We're happy."



    In the Eighties, thrash metal wasn't a scene, it was an arms race: riffs kept speeding up, drum kits got bigger. But with 1991's Black Album, Metallica opted for unilateral disarmament, slowing their tempos, shortening their songs and smelting their chugging guitars and piston-powered drums into armor-plated pop hooks. After that, the band rushed from one reinvention to another, starting with the Southern-rock infusion of 1996's Load and culminating in the muddled, bizarrely produced group-therapy session of 2003's St. Anger. No longer: Death Magnetic is the musical equivalent of Russia's invasion of Georgia — a sudden act of aggression from a sleeping giant.

    Just as U2 re-embraced their essential U2-ness post-Pop, this album is Metallica becoming Metallica again — specifically, the epic, speed-obsessed version from the band's template-setting trilogy of mid-Eighties albums: Master of Puppets, Ride the Lightning and, especially, the progged-out ...And Justice for All. That much is clear from the 90-second mark of Death Magnetic's first track, "That Was Just Your Life," where the band unleashes a barrage of James Hetfield's dutta-duh-duhnt riffing and Lars Ulrich's octuple-time double-bass-and-snare smashing. That long-vanished sound, as essential to Metallica as variations on the "Start Me Up" riff are to the Stones, is all over the album —you wonder how these fortysomething dudes are going to handle playing it live night after night. (Enter chiropractor.)

    Death Magnetic marks the group's split with producer Bob Rock, who helmed every Metallica album from 1991 to 2004 and pushed them toward concision and immediacy — until St. Anger, when he seemed to throw up his hands altogether. (As the 2004 documentary Some Kind of Monster demonstrates, Rock deserved credit for getting any music at all out of a band determined to self-destruct.) New producer Rick Rubin shoves Metallica in the opposite direction: Half of Death Magnetic's tracks are over seven minutes long, with song structures that are not so much "verse/chorus/verse" as "long intro/heavy jam/verse/even heavier jam/chorus/bridge/wild solo/outro."

    This feels like the right move for an era where Guitar Hero is the new rock radio. (Appropriately, the full album will be downloadable for GH play.) And it's not as if Top 40 stations were going to slip in Metallica between Chris Brown and the Jonas Brothers, anyway. These songs rarely feel too long: At their best, they combine the melodic smarts of Metallica's mature work with the fully armed-and-operational battle power of their early days. "The End of the Line" is a freight-train rocker with a ricocheting riff and lyrics about a doomed, drug-addicted star. It builds to a frantic guitar duel between Kirk Hammett and Hetfield, a wah-wah-crazed solo and, finally, a bridge that feels like an entirely new song. And the spectacular "All Nightmare Long" — a thematic sequel of sorts to "Enter Sandman" — combines relentless Master of Puppets guitars with a Black Album-worthy chorus.

    St. Anger was a misguided attempt to recapture the band's mojo by sounding "raw" — but Death Magnetic manages to sound huge, polished and tough. The musicianship feels thrillingly live throughout, and nimble new bassist Robert Trujillo helps, even though he's mostly heard as a distant, ominous rumble. (Has there ever been a more bass-averse band in rock?)

    There's supposed to be a lyrical theme here — something about death — but it's hard to discern. After expanding his lyrical palette on previous albums, Hetfield is now so determined to re-metallize that he pushes toward self-parody: "Venom of a life insane/Bites into your fragile vein," he barks on "The Judas Kiss." The "One"-style half-ballad, half-thrasher "The Day That Never Comes" appears to be yet another tale from Hetfield's rough childhood, complete with the awful pun "son shine."

    But if you ignore the lyrics, Death Magnetic sounds more like it's about coming back to life. Everything comes together on the fan-favorite-to-be "Broken, Beat and Scarred," which manages to channel the full force of Metallica behind a positive message: "What don't kill ya make ya more strong," Hetfield sings, with enough power to make the cliché feel fresh. The aphorism he paraphrases happens to come from Nietzsche's Twilight of the Idols, which is subtitled How to Philosophize With a Hammer. Metallica's philosophizing may get shaky — but long may that hammer strike.


    BRIAN HIATT
    Last edited by Sirotnikov; September 4, 2008, 10:38.

  • #2
    Metallica doesn't need my money, but I know I'm actually going to buy this album. I'll pay a hundred bucks to see them in concert, too.
    Click here if you're having trouble sleeping.
    "We confess our little faults to persuade people that we have no large ones." - François de La Rochefoucauld

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    • #3
      Lars seems to have changed his mind a bit...
      "In the beginning was the Word. Then came the ******* word processor." -Dan Simmons, Hyperion

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      • #4
        So I got, uhm... a preview.

        It sounds interesting.
        Much of the stuff sound really like master / justice days.
        Can't say they are as good, but very similar in style.

        I dislike the new singing style.
        I dislike hammet's new guitar sound. his solos are good but the guitar sound is icky.

        All in all i enjoyed it more when I played with the equalizer and suppressed a bit everything but mid-bass, which made the album sound much more like Justice, and then i found that
        a) the melodies sound much clearer without the over-produced stereo-expanded guitar overdrive
        b) most of the songs really do sound like they were taken from Justice in style.

        Still, only 3 songs that I think are good enough to stand on their own, though none of them are as good as Justice / Puppets songs.

        Also, their single "day that never comes" is pretty mediocre IMO, and will never reach the status of One, or Nothing Else Matters.

        Oh, and Unforgiven III is quite crappy too.

        All in all, a B+.

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        • #5
          The last 3 minutes of "the day that never comes" sound like some schoolboy's first attempts with a guitar. It's awful.
          The first part of the song is pretty decent. Sounds like the older stuff.

          I haven't listened enough to the other songs from the album to comment.
          Quendelie axan!

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          • #6
            listening again to the day that never comes:

            1st part sounds like load/reload
            2nd part sounds a bit like older stuff
            3rd part is very plain

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            • #7
              is it just me, or are the drums F*CKING LOUD?
              I wasn't born with enough middle fingers.
              [Brandon Roderick? You mean Brock's Toadie?][Hanged from Yggdrasil]

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              • #8
                I'm going to pirate it, pass it around and then trash it. They're the main reason for the RIAA being stirred up.
                Life is not measured by the number of breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.
                "Hating America is something best left to Mobius. He is an expert Yank hater.
                He also hates Texans and Australians, he does diversify." ~ Braindead

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                • #9
                  oh god i youtubed a couple of these new songs... Metallica is still stuck in the 20th century.

                  terrible
                  Order of the Fly

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by SlowwHand
                    I'm going to pirate it, pass it around and then trash it. They're the main reason for the RIAA being stirred up.
                    Attached Files

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Sirotnikov

                      Oh, and Unforgiven III is quite crappy too.
                      BS. It's a great song. I just love it (not as great as Unforgiven, but better than Unforgiven 2).

                      All in all, a B+.
                      I agree. An exellent album.

                      +

                      p.s. The day that never comes

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                      • #12
                        Metallica.
                        Serb loving capitalist pig bands.
                        "The issue is there are still many people out there that use religion as a crutch for bigotry and hate. Like Ben."
                        Ben Kenobi: "That means I'm doing something right. "

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                        • #13
                          Best album since the Black Album for sure. Best song would be Suicide & Redemption - not surprisingly entirely instrumental. I'm not sure why they picked the day that never comes as their single: it's the worst song (after that was just your life)
                          "An archaeologist is the best husband a women can have; the older she gets, the more interested he is in her." - Agatha Christie
                          "Non mortem timemus, sed cogitationem mortis." - Seneca

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Sir Og
                            The last 3 minutes of "the day that never comes" sound like some schoolboy's first attempts with a guitar. It's awful.
                            The first part of the song is pretty decent. Sounds like the older stuff.

                            I haven't listened enough to the other songs from the album to comment.
                            Hm the last bit is the best part of the song imo
                            "An archaeologist is the best husband a women can have; the older she gets, the more interested he is in her." - Agatha Christie
                            "Non mortem timemus, sed cogitationem mortis." - Seneca

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                            • #15
                              Death Magnetic sounds really good. Metallica has definately got its jive back. True that its hard to top AJFA or MoP but hey. Death Magnetic is pretty damn good follow up to the Saint Anger tradegy.


                              Granted some of the songs on St. Anger were pretty good. Unnamed feeling and Saint anger mainly. But the best was unnamed feeling. Really touched me as a recovering drug addict.

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