One song i dislike from "Re Load" is "Fuel", never liked it, never will... Agreed that St. Anger is shit, i was also a first day buyer (DVD version and all...) :/
One song i dislike from "Re Load" is "Fuel", never liked it, never will... Agreed that St. Anger is shit, i was also a first day buyer (DVD version and all...) :/
Here's how I think I'd do it. Maybe not this exact order, but these are definitely the songs I'd keep on; roughly 75/25 in Load's favor. They dodged a bullet when they decided to not release a double album.
1. Ain't My Bitch
2. 2 X 4
3. The Memory Remains
4. The House Jack Built
5. King Nothing
6. Hero of the Day
7. Bleeding Me
8. Where the Wild Things Are
9. The Unforgiven II
10. Ronnie
11. Mama Said
12. Until It Sleeps
13. Low Man's Lyric
14. The Outlaw Torn
Even though the black album isn't complete shiite, Metallica still pretty much died to me after Justice. It's not so much that they went to a thrash band (honestly, how many more heavy albums could they have made with themes of war, drugs, etc.) to a hard rock band so much that the music just flat out blows. And James Hetfield attempted to do more singing along with the HEY YEAHHAHHH! crap. I'm still befuddled at how much more popular they get even though so many of their fans bitch about them... yet still follow them.
Bizarre.
The Memory Remains is the best thing this band ever achieved musically post Black Album both audio and video wise. I don't even like this band and find them grossly boring and overrated (also the worst of the "Big 4" thrash bands of the 80's/90's) but this song is excellent and has aged well. The music video is phenomenal as well.
Also for the record, I never liked anything this band has done either for the most part. Not a fan of even the 80's albums. I just don't care for them. So me saying this is a big compliment. Just my two cents anyways.
Last edited by Space Suicide; 09-17-2015 at 09:39 PM. Reason: spelling
Fun fact about that video, they all wore shades because they all had their eyes closed so they wouldn't get nauseous on that rig.
Kind of annoying that they are not just releasing standard remastered reissues of both albums, in the $15.00 range.
Is there a single disc edition for KEA? Can't seem to find it on amazon.
RE: Load and ReLoad. Some fans may have complained, but still, Metallica were arguably the biggest rock band in the late 90's.
It might end up taking over the original Amazon listing. The vinyl edition on that page is for "Pre-Order" and the CD is "Temporarily Out Of Stock". Metallica.com confirms that there are 3 editions for these remasters (CD/Vinyl/Box Set).
Has anyone heard the KEA or RTL remasters? Thoughts?
These few lines from the Dynamic Range Database are accurate:
It's the standard 6-11 DR that we've come to expect nowadays from releases; I personally prefer these over the 1994/95 George Marino remasters. The digitizing of the cassettes for the bonus material turned out rather well, the deck being a Nakamichi MR-2. The main thing here, though, is the availability of the two albums digitally in 24/96.I have the original CD(s) from 1987/88 and also the 1995 Remaster(s). This is about the same loudness as the 1995 Remaster but it definitely has more punch and dynamics. It's not a wall of sound like the 1995 Remaster.
well, it seems the 24bit and standard CD of KEA are both DR8, so probably not much to expect either way... sure beats DM though
Are they doing the post-Black Album stuff too?
More importantly, have they moved past their dickishness and allow us to actually HEAR Jason Newsted's bass lines? I can't remember where I read it recently but the producer or guy who recorded it said that Jason laid down amazing bass lines for it that no one has heard because he was forced to turn them down all the way.
Oh yea I'm sure they will turn the bass up this time. But even Newstead says that he doesn't care because that album accomplished what it needed to do.
And justice for all is my first Metallica record and my favorite.
I'd like to see a Load/Reload edition, where one of the extra discs is a whittled down version of the best songs from each disc (maybe include alternate takes, mixes, etc. to set itself apart from the original recordings). Bruce Springsteen sort of did that for his special edition of The River where one of the discs was a single-LP version.
Justice is probably their best, but damn do I love Master of Puppets.
No way. AJFA is way too repetitive and bloated. There isn't a single unnecessary note on MOP.
Puppets is classic up and down the tracklist, but AJFA will always be closest to my heart. It has some of my favorite Metallica songs: Blackened, One, Dyer's Eve.