Welcome to another Top Ten Things, here at Enuffa.com! Today I look at the catalog of the biggest metal band in history, the mighty Metallica!
Anyone who knows me at all knows I'm a dyed-in-the-wool Metallica aficionado, and if you've read
Enuffa.com for any length of time you've probably gotten that sense as well. For me the summit of Music Mountain is twofold - there's The Beatles and there's Metallica. Everyone else is just trying to reach the top.
With the release of the band's eleventh album
72 Seasons, it's time to update the album ranking. Enough yakkin', let's get to it!
11. St. Anger
Metallica's much-maligned "therapy" record and its accompanying film
Some Kind of Monster were essentially a document of a band coming apart at the seams and ultimately stitching themselves back together. Recording began in 2001 when internal relations within the group were at an all-time low, and departed bassist Jason Newsted had been temporarily replaced by producer Bob Rock. The album's tone was ugly, messy and raw, reflecting many of the previously unspoken feelings floating around between the remaining band members.
St. Anger was met with much scorn from diehard Metallica fans at the time of its release, and in 2003 I considered it a pretty big disappointment. But over the years I've come to appreciate it from a visceral, emotional standpoint. It was the album the band needed to make in order to come back together and trudge forward. The muddy lack of production, de-tuned guitars, and that awful pinging snare drum helped put to music the state of mind the band was in, illustrating what a bloated monster Metallica had become. With
St. Anger out of their system Metallica would now be free to find themselves again.
Key Tracks: Frantic, My World, Sweet Amber
10. ReLoad
The second half of Metallica's late-90s two-parter, this 76-minute collection featured some of the band's most experimental material. A continuation of the alt-metal sound established with
Load, this album took things a step further, somewhat eschewing Metallica's riff-driven roots for more textural guitar work and unusual instrumentation. Songs like the country-tinged "Unforgiven II" and the Tom Waits-influenced "Low Man's Lyric" (featuring a hurdy-gurdy) pushed the boundaries of what constituted the Metallica sound.
ReLoad definitely includes some B-material ("Better Than You," "Attitude") and a few songs too reminiscent of those on
Load ("Fixxer" is essentially "Outlaw Torn 2"), but it's got a few classics as well, like the driving opener "Fuel," still one of my all-time Metallica favorites.
Key Tracks: Fuel, Carpe Diem Baby, Bad Seed
9. Kill 'Em All
The album that kicked off one of the greatest musical careers of all-time,
Kill 'Em All essentially invented the speed/thrash metal genre, boasting razor-sharp twin rhythm guitars and machine-gun drum blasts. It was the prototype for modern metal records and introduced the world to Hetfield, Ulrich, Hammett and Burton. In my estimation it's still one of the greatest-ever debut albums and certainly one of the most influential. Despite its efficacy however this record hasn't aged as well for me as some of the others. It often feels like Speed Metal 101, as it lacks some of the depth and sophistication Metallica would discover only a few years later. Still there's no denying what a metal milestone
Kill 'Em All proved to be.
Key Tracks: Hit the Lights, The Four Horsemen, Jump in the Fire