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Megadeth - World Needs a Hero (CD)

Album Details: World Needs a Hero

Release Date:05/15/2001
Label:Sanctuary Records
UPC:060768450325

Other Available Formats: World Needs a Hero

User Reviews: World Needs a Hero

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Megadeth hasn't left the building...

    By Scratch n Sniff  Feb 25, 2005

    Pros: Dave brought back that Deth feel...

    Cons: Some songs too short...

    Well, I didnt know what to think about this album when I first heard it...except THAT IT ROCKS WAY BETTER THAN RISK!! Good job Megadeth for putting out an awesome metal album, the world did need a hero, but I dont know if this was the album to do it,... but a damn good try....keep'em coming Dave! Read more Less

  • Overall:

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    Music:

    Better than Risk

    By Damien  Jun 13, 2003

    Its a decent album and has it moments, better than risk but not like their old stuff

Pro Reviews: World Needs a Hero

  • All Music Guide

    After leaving Capitol and losing longtime guitarist Marty Friedman, Megadeth felt that a retooling was in order. Risk had been the culmination of their move toward commercial accessibility, so much so that the album engendered a backlash among fans. So, they attempted to craft a more metallic record with The World Needs a Hero, going so far as to resurrect early-years mascot Vic Rattlehead for a gory cover that just screams heavy metal. And The World Needs a Hero does indeed prove to be the band's heaviest offering in quite some time, certainly much more so than Risk. In fact, fans who just want to hear the group play straight-up metal will probably find this their best album since Rust in Peace or Countdown to Extinction -- and Dave Mustaine tries to conjure memories of both. "Return to Hangar" is a sequel to Rust's prog-thrash classic "Hangar 18"; the new lyrics are in the same meter, but recited over a much simpler riff (shades of Metallica's "Unforgiven II," anyone?). Album closer ..."When" nicks riffs from Metallica's "Am I Evil?" cover; meanwhile, "Dread and the Fugitive Mind" (which first appeared on Capitol Punishment) has a growly recitation and stop-start riff straight out of "Sweating Bullets." These tracks point up the album's biggest problem: Too much of the material feels like rehashed Megadeth Lite. Most cuts are taken at medium-to-slow tempos, and Mustaine's production is still pretty radio-friendly, which means that the group never quite kicks up the fury or flash of past glories. As a result, the aggression Mustaine tries to whip up for his trademark lyrical melodramas often sounds forced, especially on the banal breakup drama "1000 Times Goodbye." The World Needs a Hero is as professional as one would expect, but the album as a whole never quite catches fire, leaving it feeling too much like Megadeth-by-numbers; one can't help but wonder if the group has many ideas left. - Steve Huey, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Megadeth

After he left Metallica in 1983, guitarist/vocalist Dave Mustaine formed the thrash metal quartet Megadeth. Though Megadeth followed the basic blueprint of Metallica's relentless attack, Mustaine's group distinguished themselves from his earlier band by lessening the progressive rock influences, adding an emphasis on instrumental skills, speeding the tempo up slightly, ... Read more