Metallica -
Metallica
Enter Sandman - you might think as a fan of more than just Metallica's hits that I would be sick of this song, or perhaps even dislike it...you would be wrong. This song is amazing. I love so very many things about Enter Sandman, not the least of which is the structure of the song itself. It's not at all hard to see how this song vaulted them to a new level of fame
Sad But True - speaking of hit songs...this is one I actually am sick of...it's not a bad song but, The Thing that Should Not Be and For Whom the Bell Tolls have both been here, done it, and done it better
Holier Than Thou - big fan of this song...it has a bite and a punch to it that is undeniable while maintaining a hook
The Unforgiven - this song is quite simply put AMAZING. everything (and i mean EVERYTHING) in this song works to perfection.
Wherever I May Roam - once upon a time, I loved this song...it's not at all a bad track, but i think this one's a victim of overplaying...
Don't Tread on Me - great song. hops along nicely
Through the Never - the middle of this song is what clinches its awesomeness to me...
Nothing Else Matters - this is a decent song, and i always like to see solos from Hetfield, but i feel like this is the first (though it wouldn't be the last) time Hetfield pushed a song that had personal meaning to him onto an album without really considering whether it was right for the album or right for Metallica. In this case, it actually is, but there are future examples where it's not (and the weird part is, one of those songs is actually a song i really like...just not on its album...we'll get there though)
Of Wolf and Man - I used to listen to this song every single Monday morning through speakers in my locker to get myself amped up for the week. great track
The God that Failed - there's some cool stuff happening here...i always listen for the shotgun-cocking that you can hear in the background
My Friend of Misery - Jason Newstead claims he started working on this song thinking it was going to be the instrumental for the album. it would have been better off that way...the bass line that starts the song is really cool (and would provide for some neat bass solos in live shows later on) but the song itself is nothing special
Struggle Within - this song just doesn't quite click for me. there's nothing wrong with it, especially being one of the thrashier songs on the album, but something about it just seems a little off
The Black Album is a watershed moment for Metallica, its fans, and the musical world as a whole and with so much weight riding on it, it's kind of a surprisingly uneven record. The highs (Enter Sandman, Unforgiven) are positively meteoric, showing a band that has matured without losing sight of itself...capable of great things while staying true to the young rebels that first started playing together ten years previously...
the lows, however, (My Friend of Misery, Struggle Within) feel like straight-up filler material, and with a run-time of over an hour and twelve tracks, it's somewhat surprising that one or two of these weaker tracks wasn't left off
As an album, it's a very good if not great offering.
It is a foreshadower of some less-than-awesome records to come but its importance cannot be overstated.
I would bet money that more than three quarters of people who have come to Metallica since 1991 have done so through this album.
It was my first Metallica album and it's a wonderful bridge to the places Metallica would go and had gone. You can take a step or two back to Justice or Puppets or forward to Load/ReLoad or Death Magnetic and feel right at home with this band.
The only albums it doesn't bridge with well are Kill 'Em All and St. Anger.
To this day, I offer up either The Black Album or Master of Puppets to people curious about who/what Metallica is. Puppets is for people who are already metal fans, but this album is a gateway drug of sorts...
