|
Metallica, Death Magnetic, and the
Glory Days of Heavy Metal
by Reg Seeton
After checking out Metallica's newly released Death Magnetic,
I've had it up to my eyeballs with the twenty year schoolyard
shouting match fans have had over old Metallica and new
Metallica. Thankfully, with the release of Death Magnetic,
Metallica has finally put an end to the debate once and for all.
Death Magnetic is not only an album that sees the band return to
their Metal and Thrash roots as much as they possibly could over
two decades removed from Kill 'Em All, but it's also a 10-song
release that gives fans much more than what they bargained for,
this one included. As I write this article, I'm listening to
Death Magnetic in its entirety for the fourth time and can
safely say it ranks as one of Metallica's best albums.
Initial
Reaction to Death Magnetic:
After checking out Death Magnetic for the first time, I set
my headphones on my desk and reflected on Metallica's return to
form. From start to finish, Death Magnetic simply gets better
with each song. The most surprising aspect of the album is that
the first single, "The Day That Never Comes", is the weakest
song on the roster yet it still kicks ass. There's not one
Metallica fan who could convince me "Cyanide", "The End of the
Line", "Broken, Beat & Scarred", or "My Apocalypse" aren't as
aggressive, tight, and explosive as their early songs. Each song
is completely in the "Battery" and "Four Horsemen" wheelhouses
with roots in the Black album and heavy layers of Ride the
Lightning. Listen to "My Apocalypse" a couple of times and
you'll understand why a lot of naysayers are eating their words.
To those who continue to whine about how Metallica has never
been nearly as great their early days... Grow up already! The
days of Kill 'Em All, Ride the Lightning, Master of Puppets, and
And Justice for All are gone. They're never coming back, and
I'll tell you why...
A Changing of the Guard:
Metallica's sound, songwriting, and style could never ever be
the same as their early days because Heavy Metal and Thrash died
a sudden death with the emergence of Grunge. The dark, epic and
melodic anthem aspects of metal (ie: Fade to Black,
Sanitarium... even most of Iron Maiden's tunes) gave way to a
more uneven and experimental alternative Seattle sound from
bands like Nirvana, Soundgarden, Pearl Jam, and Alice in Chains.
Don't the fans of Metallica's early years get it by now? Very
few bands of the traditional Heavy Metal and Thrash eras
survived. Many once unstoppable Monsters of Rock of the glory
days of Heavy Metal were kicked to the wayside somewhere in time
(Iron Maiden nod for those who care) around 1990, with several
fading into obscurity and many never to be heard from again.
Dio, Dokken, Sepultura, Exodus, Saxon, King Diamond, Napalm
Death, Kings X, Merciful Fate... the list goes on and on into
Venom, W.A.S.P. and more. They were all amazing, but the times
changed. As a new era of hard and heavy riffs emerged in the
'90s amd '00s, bands like Cannibal Corpse, Nine Inch Nails,
White Zombie, Korn, Deftones, and Slipknot can hardly be called
traditional Heavy Metal in the same light as he bigger bands of
the '80s. Alternative, Industrial, and "Nu" Metal, sure.
The first concert I ever attended was back in the mid-80s at
a 20,000 seat arena to see Iron Maiden on their Peace of Mind
tour. Ten years later, after front man Bruce Dickinson left the
band only to be replaced by Blaze Bayley, I bought tickets to
Iron Maiden who were playing at a venue that held 2000 at max
capacity. It was a stark reminder that Metal was dead and how
far the mighty had fallen. Yet Metallica was still alive and
kicking at one of the best live outdoor gigs I've ever seen when
they played headliner to The Ramones and Soundgarden at
Lollapalooza. Although the controversial decision to include
Metallica on the tour marked the beginning of the end for the
Alt-Indie flavored Lollapalooza, there they were in the thick of
the hottest tour of the '90s.
Survival of the Fittest:
While most of the Metal bands from the glory days can be
found in the "where are they now graveyard", bands like Slayer,
Megadeth, Pantera, Judas Priest, and Iron Maiden didn't have an
easy time of staying relevant over the past twenty years.
Although we said goodbye to Pantera's Dimebag Darrell a few
years ago, they somehow found a way to survive throughout the
'90s and into the '00s. Hell, even Lemmy and Motorhead survived.
So too has Metallica, only they've survived as the top heavy
metal band in the world in the past 20 years despite the many
transformations they've undergone. Some changes were good and
some were bad, but Metallica has been selling out the same
stadiums and arenas as they were as openers in the glory days of
Heavy Metal. It wasn't Dokken, Dio, Megadeth, Maiden or
Sepultura headlining Lollapalooza at a time when Metal and
Thrash were dead, it was Metallica.
The fact that Metallica has been giving fans new music for
the past two decades since the death of Heavy Metal, have also
found a way to stay relevant in a vastly different music
landscape, and are still releasing #1 selling albums with Death
Magnetic is something fans should be thankful for. When you stop
for a second and think about it after listening to Death
Magnetic, it's truly amazing.
The Past Meets the Future:
The more I listen to songs like "Cyanide", "All Nightmare
Long", and "The Unforgiven III", Death Magnetic should have been
a follow up to the Black album. But at that time, Heavy Metal
and Thrash were dead. So would Metallica have died, too? It's
certainly highly possible since the evidence is there with other
bands of the era. If anything, Metallica has never been
predictable. Can you fault a band for trying to adapt to the
many changes in music over the years? Although Metallica purists
loath Load and Reload, even St. Anger, would a Master of Puppets
sound have worked for the band from 1990 to 2008? Should James
Hetfield and Lars Ulrich have been forced to write songs as if
they were 18 years old when none of us are the same as we were
in high school? As its original fan base grew up and entered
adulthood, so did the members of Metallica.
Death Magnetic is as close as we're going to get to
revisiting the past and Metallica's reign during the glory days
of Heavy Metal and Thrash. But how does Death Magnetic shape up
now that metal-heads of all ages have had time to digest the
goods? In simple terms, it's already my pick for album of the
year.
-- Reg Seeton
|