Recent Blog Posts
Fri Jan 9, 12:00 AM
Thu Jan 8, 8:00 PM
Thu Jan 8, 3:13 PM
Thu Jan 8, 8:20 AM
Thu Jan 8, 2:44 PM
Thu Jan 8, 2:42 PM
Thu Jan 8, 7:00 AM
Wed Jan 7, 11:56 AM
Recent Articles
Heartwarming end-of-the-world tales and others
The best local albums of 2008
The year's highlights came from the Southern Hemisphere, the rage within, and the mouths of babes
No related articles found
National Features >
Westword
In life and death, tattoo artist Kauri Tiyme made her mark.
By Alan Prendergast
Village Voice
Amy Neustein never could resist going public with her family dramas.
By Elizabeth Dwoskin
Houston Press
A visit with the hurricane victims that a country forgot.
By John Nova Lomax
Metallica
Published on September 24, 2008 at 9:46am
Metallica didn't commit its biggest sin when it exposed its dirty laundry in gory, self-indulgent detail in the 2003 film Some Kind of Monster. No, Metallica disgraced itself 12 years earlier on the wretched "Black Album," when it abandoned the thrash-metal art form it helped invent. Then the band insultingly claimed that its fans had grown weary of the epic-length song format that had, until then, been a part of its legend. Now, almost 20 years after the fact, Metallica finally seems to have gotten the point: that (hello!) the people who originally bought into the band — and paved its road to superstardom — actually like the long songs. Death Magnetic, with only one tune clocking in at under six and a half minutes, sees Metallica cramming riffs aplenty into each number as if to make up for lost time. At producer Rick Rubin's urging, the whole thing sounds, tone-wise, like the 1986 landmark Master of Puppets. But is it too late to help the band win back some respect? Only time can tell. Undeniably, Metallica sounds more energized and hungry than it has in two decades. If the band hadn't been underutilizing its strengths so badly since '88, it wouldn't have backed itself into the corner it's clearly trying to get out of on Death Magnetic. With that said, expect these songs (especially "Cyanide," "Suicide and Redemption," and "All Nightmare Long") to go over well live.