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Metallica - ...And Justice for All (CD)

Album Details: ...And Justice for All

Release Date:05/05/1993
Label:Elektra / Wea
UPC:075596081221

Other Available Formats: ...And Justice for All

User Reviews: ...And Justice for All

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    AND JUSTICE IS NOT RAPED

    By snacks  Mar 12, 2004 | 1 out of 1 found this ...And Justice for All review helpful

    Pros: EVERYTHIN

    Cons: NUTHIN

    METALLICA'S BEST ALBUM EVER! ITS 16 YEARS OLD AND LOTS OF PEOPLE STILL BUY IT!!!! SO WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR BUY DA BEST METALLICA ALBUM, NO BEST METAL ALBUM, NO BEST ALBUM EVER!!!!!!!!!!

  • Overall:

    Metallica

    By jordank  Jul 6, 2006

    Pros: Everything

    Cons: nothing

    METALLICA in my mind are the GODS of rock, always being who they are neverything else, always true to themselves. The AND JUSTICE FOR ALL albam is perhaps one of there greatest acomplishments. Both Kick your ass hard and also something you can relate... too. In my own opion this is the best albam they have prouduced. So if you dont have this albam I suggest get it. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: ...And Justice for All

  • All Music Guide

    The most immediately noticeable aspect of ...And Justice for All isn't Metallica's stillgrowing compositional sophistication or the apocalyptic lyrical portrait of a society in decay. It's the weird, bonedry production. The guitars buzz thinly, the drums click more than pound, and Jason Newsted's bass is nearly inaudible. It's a shame that the cold, flat sound obscures some of the sonic details, because ...And Justice for All is Metallica's most complex, ambitious work; every song is an expanded suite, with only two of the nine tracks clocking in at under six minutes. It takes a while to sink in, but given time, ...And Justice for All reveals some of Metallica's best material. It also reveals the band's determination to pull out all the compositional stops, throwing in extra sections, oddnumbered time signatures, and dense webs of guitar arpeggios and harmonized leads. At times, it seems like they're doing it simply because they can; parts of the album lack direction and probably shoul...d have been trimmed for momentum's sake. Pacingwise, the album again loosely follows the blueprint of Ride the Lightning, though not as closely as Master of Puppets. This time around, the fourth song once again a ballad with a thrashy chorus and outro gave the band one of the unlikeliest Top 40 singles in history; "One" was an instant metal classic, based on Dalton Trumbo's antiwar novel Johnny Got His Gun and climaxing with a pulverizing machinegun imitation. As a whole, opinions on ...And Justice for All remain somewhat divided: some think it's a slightly flawed masterpiece and the pinnacle of Metallica's progressive years; others see it as bloated and overambitious. Either interpretation can be readily supported, but the band had clearly taken this direction as far as it could. The difficulty of reproducing these songs in concert eventually convinced Metallica that it was time for an overhaul. - Steve Huey, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Metallica

Metallica was easily the best, most influential heavy metal band of the '80s, responsible for bringing the music back to Earth. Instead of playing the usual rock star games of metal stars of the early '80s, the band looked and talked like they were from the street. Metallica expanded the limits of thrash, using speed and volume not for their own sake, but to enhance the... Read more