St Anger
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St Anger

Original price was: £24.00.Current price is: £7.20.

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Description

Metallicas first new material in over five years arrived after a flurry of non-musical activity that included a much-publicized spat over Internet file sharing, the departure of bassist Jason Newsted, and a lengthy stay in rehab for James Hetfield that suspended the recording of a new album indefinitely. Hetfield returned to the fold in late 2001. Still without a bass player, Lars Ulrich, Kirk Hammett, and their newly sober frontman recruited longtime producer Bob Rock to man Newsteds spot, and creation of the album commenced in May 2002. St. Anger arrived a year later as a punishing, unflinching document of internal struggle taking listeners inside the bruised yet vital body of Metallica, but ultimately revealing the alternately torturous and defiant demons that wrestle inside Hetfields brain. St. Anger is an immediate record. Written largely in the first person, it never warns of impending doom, doesnt struggle with claustrophobia, and has care neither for religions safety nor its hypocrisy. (The religious symbolism of its title and artwork seems only to function as a metaphorical device.) Lacking the heavy metal baggage of these past themes, Metallica is left to ponder only itself and its singers psychosis, and delivers its diagnosis on slabs of speed metal informed with years of innovation and texture. The record exists as it ends. As the lockstep thrash of the eight-plus minute All Within My Hands tumbles toward its final gasp, Hetfield is explicit in his aims. I will only let you breathe my air that you receive, he seethes. Then well see if I let you love me. Ulrichs drums sputter in fits and starts, but the guitars are already dying, shutting down as Hetfield stabs at the microphone. Kill kill kill kill kill, he screams, and you have to check the wall for a splatter radius. Its a brutal, ugly end to an album that switches on like a bare light bulb in an underground cave. It blasts each corner with harsh, unfiltered light for 75 minutes, until the bulb is shattered with a combat boot, leaving disquieting after-images exploding on the backs of your eyelids. Frantic is driven forth by a snare drum that just may be made of iron, Hammett and Hetfields guitars eschewing separate parts in favor of a roaring tag-team approach. A hint of the bands mid-90s nod to alternative drifts in during a bridge, but its quickly swallowed alive by the songs muscular groove, never to be heard from again. St. Anger, the single, marks the first appearance of a vocal technique that lurks in the shadows throughout the album. As Hetfield groans, I feel my world shake/Its hard to see clear, he seems manipulated by an unseen force, flickering like bad reception. Its unsettling, and startlingly effective. Hetfields psyche is on trial throughout, and though he often expresses confusion and anger over his struggle (Some Kind of Monster and especially Dirty Window, in which he becomes both judge and jury), the mechanistic rhythms of the band seem to give him strength. Shoot Me Again another seven-minute epic becomes Hetfields sneering answer to himself. It lurches into gear, juxtaposing a deceptively soothing verse with a dirty guitar line that explodes in the songs titular money shot. The resonating cymbal cracks during its stops and starts are particularly satisfying, as you can imagine the members of Metallica facing each other in a circle, jamming the songs jagged melody down the throat of a solitary microphone. St. Anger isnt a comeback, and its not a throwback.

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