DaPaul a écrit :
Stop les 'Load' c'est de la connerie, etc...
Puis arrêtez de vous branler sur les 4 premiers albums, ils sont bon c'est sûr mais y'a pas que ces 4 albums dans la vie.
Citation:
5 Ks
Words: Ian Winwood
"SO LET IT BE WRITTEN, THERE'S LIFE IN THE OLD GOD'S YET.
IT SEEMS almost blasphemous to say this, but there are some fans who are tired of watching Metallica play master of Puppets year after year, just as there are people who aren't really holding out anything stronger than faint hope for Death magnetic, the bands 9th studio album and first since 2003.
After 27 years, a hundred million sales, countless concerts and an unfortunate episode where they went mad, what possible motivation can there now be for this group to make an effort? No metal band will ever again come to equal their success. The game's over; Metallica won.
In ways that matter, Death Magnetic is an amazing album; not just for its music, but for what it achieves; the effort it must have taken, the focus it attains and maintains for almost 80 minutes and for the demands it makes of the listener. But the best thing about this 10 song set is not how heavy it is (although it is) nor its complexity (which is plenty complex) but simply this: when Death Magnetic's dominating flurry really begins to fly, Metallica once again sound like one of the most exciting bands in the world.
With its eight minute songs, its thrash-tastic bookends (That was just your life and My Apocalypse) a lengthy instrumental (Suicide & Redemption) and nothing much in the way of singles; it's no wonder that Metallica's new album is being compared to their glorious past. But this isn't quite correct. If Master of Puppets were released today it would sound old and clunky, just like so many older bands did when that album emerged,frothing and gnashing its way into the mainstream. Twenty two years later Metallica have somehow managed to harness their talent and instinct into a modern metal album that makes a mockery of the modern competition. It's one thing to have riffs that are as fast as the purring of a cat, it's quite another to compile 150 of these riffs and meld them into a song-based album that sustains itself from start to end.
In 2008 the Bay Area Thrashers may be thrashing again, but the key ingredient of Death Magnetic is the skill with which it releases its thunder, its sense of flow, its understanding that power is nothing without control.
An age ago, this band claimed that life consisted of Birth, School, Metallica, Death. A generation on, it still does.