V
VonBonfire
Well-known member
I'll see you out there on the field of battle my friend lolI'll take the Live After Death versions of the Di'Anno songs with Bruce singing for the win.
I'll see you out there on the field of battle my friend lolI'll take the Live After Death versions of the Di'Anno songs with Bruce singing for the win.
Yes AJFA is very heavy (but kind of thin production wise) and many good songs, wouldn't know that album (and the albums before that), if it wasn't for the black album. I am like @Soundstorm in that way. Sorry for my ageSad but true is good, but I think they’re most aggressive songs and sounds were on AJFA like Dyers Eve, Blackened or Shortest Straw. One of my favorite songs by them actually is Hit The Lights even though I don’t like the rest of that album much
pretty much the same here! but i might have not discovered it in 1991 more like 1995I was 10 years old when the Black album came out. I had zero expectations or bias as it was the first Metallica I'd ever heard, so I listened with the open mind of a 10 year old kid that I'll never have again. It was the heaviest thing I'd listened to up until then and suffice to say it blew my fucking mind. I listened to it so much that I'm pretty sure that my mom, now in her 60's, still knows every goddamn word to the Black album by heart. I still love listening to it and all of their older material. Hell I even use it as one of my references when mixing and mastering. It was THE turning point album of my life and it forever turned me towards heavier and heavier music.
I get that. It is thin and of course lacking bass lol, but very aggressive sounding. I’m younger than most here too, but still somehow was exposed to their earlier album’s songs first. I was lucky in that way. I learned a lot also from the Guitar Hero Metallica Edition video game LOLYes AJFA is very heavy (but kind of thin production wise) and many good songs, wouldn't know that album (and the albums before that), if it wasn't for the black album. I am like @Soundstorm in that way. Sorry for my age
yeah it's not too bad. It get's all relative after a few minutes.I get that. It is thin and of course lacking bass lol, but very aggressive sounding. ...
why lucky? if you're born in 2000 and love todays music (even current Metallica), you will have hell of a time discovering older music... . I’m younger than most here too, but still somehow was exposed to their earlier album’s songs first. I was lucky in that way. I learned a lot also from the Guitar Hero Metallica Edition video game LOL
Not to mention thrash was dead with the arrival of grunge and other 90's sans real guitar playing material being embraced (apart from AIC, STP and a few other bands)Complicated issue: absolutely amazing production...Strong songwriting with great performances (even from Kirk and Lars)......But not the album that many of us expected or wanted. If you listen to the record (AJFA) that preceded it...Doesn't even sound like the same band in many aspects. That said, strategically it was the right move to put them on the path to becoming the biggest band on the planet.
The black album keeps my personal timeline in order. It came out when I started med school. The day my personal music died. I didn’t re-emerge for 12 years like the geico rock man. I was like the pimp who got out of jail from “I’m gonna get you sucka”.
Load and Reload are a double album master piece . The triaxis abd 2c++ mix on load is so good . The tone on House that Jack Built is killer . Great albumsWas in a cover group where the executive decision was made to play "Sad But True" instead of "For Whom the Bell Tolls".
I'd say the songwriting went downhill with the black album, interesting to see others say the opposite.
Well thankfully I’m older than that lol and haven’t liked much music at all that I recall from the last 15 years or soyeah it's not too bad. It get's all relative after a few minutes.
Hate the production since hardwired though. Can listen too it for long.
why lucky? if you're born in 2000 and love todays music (even current Metallica), you will have hell of a time discovering older music
That’s cool and I totally get it. That would be a monster album for a 10 year old and a great springboard into heavier metal. I’m 54 and was into them since the release of KEA, so the Black Album was quite the disappointment, especially after an album as aggressive and angry as AJFA.I was 10 years old when the Black album came out. I had zero expectations or bias as it was the first Metallica I'd ever heard, so I listened with the open mind of a 10 year old kid that I'll never have again. It was the heaviest thing I'd listened to up until then and suffice to say it blew my fucking mind. I listened to it so much that I'm pretty sure that my mom, now in her 60's, still knows every goddamn word to the Black album by heart. I still love listening to it and all of their older material. Hell I even use it as one of my references when mixing and mastering. It was THE turning point album of my life and it forever turned me towards heavier and heavier music.
Huge shift coming from right after AJFA (for me their best and most distinctive album)That’s cool and I totally get it. That would be a monster album for a 10 year old and a great springboard into heavier metal. I’m 54 and was into them since the release of KEA, so the Black Album was quite the disappointment, especially after an album as aggressive and angry as AJFA.
they definitely alienated one group of people and pushed them away while simultaneously ushering in a new group.I was 10 years old when the Black album came out. I had zero expectations or bias as it was the first Metallica I'd ever heard, so I listened with the open mind of a 10 year old kid that I'll never have again. It was the heaviest thing I'd listened to up until then and suffice to say it blew my fucking mind. I listened to it so much that I'm pretty sure that my mom, now in her 60's, still knows every goddamn word to the Black album by heart. I still love listening to it and all of their older material. Hell I even use it as one of my references when mixing and mastering. It was THE turning point album of my life and it forever turned me towards heavier and heavier music.
Sounds like she was just being sensitive to your feelings instead of saying what she really thinks of the black album.my girlfriend likes For whom the bell tolls, but sad but true is to aggressive for her so i never listen to it when she is around.
You're all a bunch of pussies too, i guess
Absolutely. The mathematical arbitrage was simple: Alienate 30% of your current fans for a 2000% gain in new listeners. From a business standpoint this is not quantum physics. The speed / tempo alone of the the majority of the songs on previous albums insured they would hit a ceiling in terms of popularity. After watching what happened for Motley Crue on Dr. Feelgood, they made a decision to take measures to place them in a position to become an institution in the world of rock music. It worked, but as is often the case; it required compromise and they lost a little of themselves along the way. I still love MetallicA however, and Hetfield is the greatest frontman ever to walk out under the hot lights. Just my opinion.they definitely alienated one group of people and pushed them away while simultaneously ushering in a new group.
Sounds like she was just being sensitive to your feelings instead of saying what she really thinks of the black album.