A spotty 21-year-old James Hetfield howls ‘Flash before my eyes, now it’s time to die’. The year is 1984. It’s the album’s title track. No prizes for guessing what ‘Ride The Lightening’ is about. There’s a shiny electric chair on the album’s cover for God's sake!
If debut ‘Kill em All’ was a furiously fast paced statement of intent, then ‘Ride the Lightening’ sees Metallica take the thrash metal genre to a whole new level.
Lars Ulrich’s drumming is frenetic yet so intensely focused that the double-bass roles seamlessly augment Hetfield’s violent riffage. The snare is so dry it has you gasping for water.
Rhythm-section other half Cliff Burton pumps his bass like a heavy calibre oozy throughout. Just listen to those belches on ‘Trapped Under Ice’ and the 9-minute horror instrumental ‘The Call of Ktulu’. It’s arguably the best mixed Metallica album – the bass riffage is clearly distinguishable throughout. Next album, ‘Master of Puppets’ maybe the bands seminal work, but it’s so damn heavy Hetfield and Burton are basically at one – aurally at least. Then Burton died in that crash and bass took a back-seat in the Metallica sound.
Lead guitarist Kirk Hammett departs from the pentatonic speed-blues soloing of ‘Kill em All’ to a rawer more haunting model attack. And where would metal be now, without the awesome guitar harmonies that feature throughout the album? They perfectly complement the move to longer more symphonically arranged pieces.
‘Fade to Black’ and ‘Creeping Death’ are the album’s classic groundbreaking compositions. The former was the first thrash metal ballad and the latter the nihilistic clarion call to metal heads the world over. For 20 years a Metallica set-list without ‘Creeping Death’ was like the arrival of the four horsemen without the apocalypse!
Ride the Lightening is when the Metallica sound was born. No such coherent force could be heard on early 80’s Slayer or Megadeth albums. It wouldn’t be until 1986 when ‘Reign in Blood’ and ‘Peace Sells, but who’s buying’ would be released and by then of course the brutal intensity of Metallica’s ‘Master of Puppets’ was all-powerful.
Seven albums later, Metallica have been through a lot – MTV success with ‘One’, chart success with their eponymous album, an arty 90’s phase and a struggle to adjust to the disparate metal scene of the nought’ies. But last year’s ‘Death Magnetic’ sees Metallica back to thrashing good form. Death is undoubtedly their best muse. Ironically, thrash metal is never more alive than when death is in the air.
If debut ‘Kill em All’ was a furiously fast paced statement of intent, then ‘Ride the Lightening’ sees Metallica take the thrash metal genre to a whole new level.
Lars Ulrich’s drumming is frenetic yet so intensely focused that the double-bass roles seamlessly augment Hetfield’s violent riffage. The snare is so dry it has you gasping for water.
Rhythm-section other half Cliff Burton pumps his bass like a heavy calibre oozy throughout. Just listen to those belches on ‘Trapped Under Ice’ and the 9-minute horror instrumental ‘The Call of Ktulu’. It’s arguably the best mixed Metallica album – the bass riffage is clearly distinguishable throughout. Next album, ‘Master of Puppets’ maybe the bands seminal work, but it’s so damn heavy Hetfield and Burton are basically at one – aurally at least. Then Burton died in that crash and bass took a back-seat in the Metallica sound.
Lead guitarist Kirk Hammett departs from the pentatonic speed-blues soloing of ‘Kill em All’ to a rawer more haunting model attack. And where would metal be now, without the awesome guitar harmonies that feature throughout the album? They perfectly complement the move to longer more symphonically arranged pieces.
‘Fade to Black’ and ‘Creeping Death’ are the album’s classic groundbreaking compositions. The former was the first thrash metal ballad and the latter the nihilistic clarion call to metal heads the world over. For 20 years a Metallica set-list without ‘Creeping Death’ was like the arrival of the four horsemen without the apocalypse!
Ride the Lightening is when the Metallica sound was born. No such coherent force could be heard on early 80’s Slayer or Megadeth albums. It wouldn’t be until 1986 when ‘Reign in Blood’ and ‘Peace Sells, but who’s buying’ would be released and by then of course the brutal intensity of Metallica’s ‘Master of Puppets’ was all-powerful.
Seven albums later, Metallica have been through a lot – MTV success with ‘One’, chart success with their eponymous album, an arty 90’s phase and a struggle to adjust to the disparate metal scene of the nought’ies. But last year’s ‘Death Magnetic’ sees Metallica back to thrashing good form. Death is undoubtedly their best muse. Ironically, thrash metal is never more alive than when death is in the air.
Oh, 1984... the difficult mid-eighties. I don't know much about thrash metal, except that I don't like it much. But my two favourite bands released strong albums in that year: Iron Maiden's "Powerslave", and Queen's "The Works". How about a blog post on one of those, Oscar?
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