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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The greatest album of all time., 19 Oct 2003
By A Customer
Metallica haven't, let's face it, released a classic album since 1991's Black Album (and some people don't even like that). But the fact remains that Metallica reached their creative peak with only their second album. It is debatable as to whether it has ever been equalled (i.e by Master Of Puppets or the Black Album) but it has certainly never been bettered, by Metallica or any other band.As you may have noticed from the song titles, Ride The Lightning is all about death, in its various guises, with topics from the electric chair (the title track) through war (For Whom The Bell Tolls) to suicide (Fade To Black), amongst others. What really impresses me about Metallica on this album, apart from their musicianship (which is of course outrageously high), is the tact with which they handle the various sensitive issues, from the poignancy of Fade To Black to the desperation and horror of Trapped Under Ice. Opening track Fight Fire With Fire is a fantastic slice of thrash, with a deceptively gentle build-up followed by a rip-roaring thrash riff, some rather morbid lyrics about Armageddon, and an excellent solo. The title track is, again, an emotive thrash song which captures perfectly the dread of Death Row (or at least I expect so, having not recently been on Death Row myself), and the lyrics also give Metallica's thoughts on the injustice of capital punishment. The solo found later on in the song is eardrum-burstingly good, and the pounding thrash riff keeps up the sinister tempo throughout. For Whom The Bell Tolls is one of the true Metallica classics, and one of their most crowd-pleasing numbers in concert. The lyrics are some of Hetfield's most memorable (I, amongst many other Metallica devotees, have often found myself muttering "Men fight for the hill in the early day" at many an inopportune moment) and the da-da-da-daa riff thingy is also quite catchy (in the best, least popsong-chorus kind of way). FWTBT is an odd Metallica track in that it is the first one, prior to St.Anger, not to feature a proper guitar solo, at a time when solos all to often made up 50% of a Metallica song. Fade To Black is my personal faourite Metallica song, with a gentle, poignant intro (later reminiscent of the similarly brilliant Unforgiven), a heart-rending crescendo mid-song, and a late solo to die for. James Hetfield's lyrics and vocal performance make you really believe that he's going to jump of that cliff or pull that trigger, and this, along with the aforementioned musical brilliance, is what makes Fade To Black one of the greatist songs ever written. The album then goes through what could almost be called a mediocre patch, with Trapped Under Ice and Escape. Neither of these songs is bad as such, it's just that neither of them gets close to the brilliance of the other six tracks. When I first got the album I quite liked them, but it seems to me now that they are somewhat generic in their thrashiness. One standout aspect of Trapped Under Ice, however, is the desperation and panic in James Hetfield's voice, and Escape has a decent sing-along chorus. Creeping Death pulls the slight downward spiral back up to scratch however, and is one of Metallica's most exclusively thrash songs. Anyone with basic knowledge of biblical history who hears the lyrics can tell that it's about the Passover, and the lyrics and the key are suitably threatening. The solo is also one of Kirk Hammet's best. The Call Of Ktulu is a fantastic instrumental, and a rare one in that it's actually quite interesting to listen to. The S&M version is actually better (it's the ideal song to augment with strings and horns etc), but this original is still very eerie. Overall the album cannot, from the point of view of a fan of Metallica or quality metal in general, really be faulted, though pedants will no doubt comment on the slight mediocrity of tracks 5 and 6. An excellent place to start a Metallica collection, as it lets you lightly into their thrashier era with subtlty and finesse.
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