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Death Magnetic

Metallica

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Reseña de álbum

Call Death Magnetic Kirk Hammett's revenge. Famously browbeaten into accepting Lars Ulrich and producers Bob Rock's dictum that guitar solos were "dated" and thereby verboten for 2003's St. Anger — a fraught recording chronicled on the 2004 documentary Some Kind of Monster — Metallica's lead guitarist dominates this 2008 sequel, playing with an euphoric fury not heard in years, if not decades. This aesthetic shift isn't because Hammett suddenly rules the band: powerless to add solos to St. Anger, he couldn't reinstate them without the blessing of Ulrich and James Hetfield, the politburo of Metallica. The duo suffered some combination of shame and humility in the wake of the muddled St. Anger and Monster, convincing these two unmovable forces to change direction. They ditched longtime producer Rock — who'd helmed every album since 1991's breakthrough blockbuster Metallica — in favor of Rick Rubin, patron saint of all veteran rockers looking to reconnect with their early spark. Rubin may be the go-to producer for wayward superstars but as the producer of Slayer, he's also rooted in thrash, so he understands the core of Metallica's greatness and gently steers them back to basics on Death Magnetic.

Of course, Metallica's basics are pretty complex: intertwined guitar riffs, frenetic solos, and thunderous double-bass drums stitched together as intricate seven-minute suites. Metallica slowly weaned themselves away from labyrinthine metal during the '90s, tempering their intensity, straightening out riffs, spending nearly as much time exploring detours as driving the main road, all the while losing sight of their identity. This culminated in the confused St. Anger, a transparent and botched attempt at returning to their roots, crippled by the chaos surrounding the departure of bassist Jason Newsted. With all their problems sorted out in public — including replacing Newsted with Robert Trujillo, who acquiesces to the Metallica custom of being buried far, far in the mix — the group embraces every gnarled, ugly thing they eschewed in the years since "Metallica." Death Magnetic bounces the band back to the days before Bob Rock, roughly sounding as if it could come after ...And Justice for All. Such a deliberate revival of the glory days can be tricky, as it could make a group seem stuck in the past — or, just as badly, they can get essential elements wrong — but Death Magnetic is a resounding success because they hunker down and embrace their core strengths, recognizing that their greatest asset is that nobody else makes noise in the same way as they do.

That's the pleasure of Death Magnetic: hearing Metallica sound like Metallica again. Individual songs and, especially, Hetfield's lyrics — less the confessional ballast of St. Anger, more a traditional blend of angst and terror — are secondary to how the band sounds, how they spit, snarl, and surge, how they seem alive. Metallica isn't replicating moves they made in the '80s, they're reinvigorated by the spirit of their early years, adding shading they've learned in the '90s, whether it's the symphonic tension of "The Unforgiven III" or threading curdled blues licks through the thrash. Listening to the band play, it's hard not to thrill at Metallica's mastery of aggression and escalation. There is no denying that the band is older and settled, no longer fueled by the hunger and testosterone that made their '80s albums so gripping, but on Death Magnetic older doesn't mean less potent. Metallica is still vitally violent and on this terrific album — a de facto comeback, even if they never really went away — they're finally acting like they enjoy being a great rock band.

Reseñas de clientes

Discrepo

Me parece que voy a ser el único en discrepar (de momento). Justo porque hablamos de Metallica hay que pedirles lo máximo. Me parece un álbum correcto y punto. Algunos cortes se hacen pesados, con riffs muy semejantes y sin apenas cambios sustanciales de ritmo (lo que antes era la marca de la casa). No vale acelerar, decelerar o alargarse sobre un mismo riff. Muchas de las canciones podían haberse quedado en 5 minutos, no era necesario irse a los 9 minutos (esto ya se apreciaba en el St. Anger). Hammett vuelve a los solos, cierto, pero ninguno termina de aportar el feeling que imprimió en cualquier álbum de los 80. Demasiado recorrido de mástil sin sentido en algunos solos. La batería de Lars sigue haciendo aguas. ¿Dónde quedó aquél batería que sorprendía con sus contratiempos? ¿Qué hay de aquélla batería compacta y potente que aportaba la contundencia necesaria a la banda? Sinceramente, el sonido y la simplicidad de algunos de los dibujos del doble bombo y la caja resultan sonrojantes. No entiendo como tardando en grabar y mezclar DM más de una año vuelve a salir un sonido tan lamentable, casi, como el de St. Anger. Ciertamente, desde hace tiempo se les nota faltos de ideas que les hagan sobresalir o volverse a posicionar de donde nunca debieron salir. Las estructuras se repiten una y otra vez. Es de agradecer que vuelvan conceptualmente a los orígenes, pero querer comparar este disco con el Master, Ride o AJFA me parece demasiada gloria para tan poco presente. Un consejo: si alguien quiere oír algo realmente potente, de una densidad y complejidad técnica sustancial, escuchad "The Formation of Damnation", lo último de Testament. Ellos no defraudan. Se repiten, si, pero no defraudan.

No tengo palabras

La verdad es que no sé que decir, sólo que hacía tiempo que no flipaba escuchando un disco la primera vez. Que aprendan esos grupos nuevos, que salen en los 40 principales y dicen llamarse heavies. Aprender niñatos!!!.

Vuelve el metal

Señores. VUELVE EL METAL y vuelve mas fuerte que nunca un discazo que la espera a sido larga pero a valido la pena. Y demuestran que siguen siendo los numeros unos.

Biografía

Fecha de formación: Los Angeles, CA, 1981

Género: Rock

Años de actividad: '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

Metallica was easily the best, most influential heavy metal band of the '80s. Responsible for bringing the genre back to Earth, the bandmates looked and talked like they were from the street, shunning the usual rockstar games of metal musicians during the early '80s. Metallica also expanded the limits of thrash, using speed and volume not for their own sake, but to enhance their intricately structured compositions. The release of 1983's Kill 'Em All marked the beginning of the legitimization of heavy...
Biografía completa
Death Magnetic, Metallica
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  • 9,99 €
  • Géneros: Rock, Música, Hard rock, Metal
  • Publicado: 09/09/2008

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