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...And Justice for All

Metallica

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iTunes Review

…And Justice For All is so precisely rendered, so expertly conceived, and so flawlessly executed that listening to it is the musical equivalent of watching an Olympic team perform in an event for which it spent years training. Which in a way, it is. …And Justice For All is the kind of album that could only be made by a veteran band with years of recording and playing experience under its belt. The band reacted to the death of bassist Cliff Burton with a demonstration of pure prowess, both as a way of coping with the loss and of convincing themselves and their listeners that they could be just as fierce even without Burton. While the majority of the album is focused and cerebral to the a degree of pure terror, there is one outpouring of emotion with the hit single “One.” Even though the song takes its inspiration from the World War II novel Johnny Got His Gun, Kirk Hammet’s solos and James Hetfield’s tremendous vocal performance reveal an poignant response to Burton’s death. With its next album, the band would further explore the emotional, riff-heavy template of “One,” leaving the rest of …And Justice For All to stand as the insurmountable pinnacle of progressive thrash metal.

Customer Reviews

Awesome! but....

i love this album and metallica, but i hate how One is the most popular song now. I mean, before GH3 the most popular were like Enter Sandman and Master of Puppets. For those of you who started listening to Metallica because of One, good for you, but you should have been listening a long time ago.

The Apogee

...And Justice for All marked a high point in metal music and Metallica's artistic career. From its shocking analogy of a polluted earth to matricide ("Blackened") to the Rashomonesque "Eye of the Beholder" to their somber tribute for their fallen bandmate ("To Live Is to Die"), this album is a stunning tribute to the injured ("One"), cheated ("The Shortest Straw"), and touched ("The Frayed Ends of Sanity") in us all. The music is played by a very tight band at the peak of its musical powers, with lightning rhythmic changes and drumming arrangements that would feel as apt with modern bands such as Lamb of God as it did nearly twenty years ago. As vicious as Slayer's Reign in Blood, as heartfelt as the Beatles' Abbey Road, as adventurous as Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon, this album captured Metallica at its apogee musically, lyrically, and artistically.

ROFL

this album was one of metallica's greatest albums ever First of all, this was one of the only albums that they used a significant amount of double bass and also it was a true thrash metal album, giving slayer and exodus a run for their money. Secondly, it makes you want to go crazy, the music had so much feeling and emotion and anger in it. Lastly, metalllica rocks, i'm a diehard fan, even after saint anger adn alwayss willl be btw if you are going to get this because of guitar hero or rock band, you have no right to be here. stay in ur closet and never come out this is about the music. not the difficulty of it on a set of plastic drums or a peice of crap dinky guitar thing. metallica never should have gone on rock band and guitar hero

Biography

Formed: 1981 in Los Angeles, CA

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '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...
Full Bio

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