Brahm_K wrote:
Countdown to Extinction is average (though it has better energy and songwriting than Black Album, IMO of course). British Steel similarly has some pretty average songs- a good album, but nowhere near any of Priest's best. Clayman is also not as good an album as any that came before.
Countdown's popularity never fails to baffle me. You see it on so many "Best Metal Albums Of All Time" lists, Symphony Of Destruction is hailed as one of the best Megadeth songs ever by just about everybody, etc. Even though Countdown was more-or-less Megadeth's "sell-out." The songs were stripped down for radio play, the thrash was basically gone, Dave took a more humorous/sarcastic approach with his lyrics, guitar solos were simplified considerably, and it contained Megadeth's first ever ballad (which, contrary to popular belief, was not A Tout Le Monde but Foreclosure Of A Dream). Granted, Countdown's a better album than Black IMO, but I seriously wonder why Megadeth takes absolutely no heat from metal fans for putting out Countdown To Extinction while Metallica takes a lot of heat for putting out The Black Album, Sepultura takes a lot of heat for putting out Chaos AD (which is a MUCH better album than Countdown IMO), etc.
Ironically, many of these people who cannonize Countdown To Extinction are the same people who trash its follow-up Youthanasia, even though that album was really just a logical progression of (and IMO a much better album than) Countdown.
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Thankfully instead they went down the path that caused them to release St. Anger! I also take offense to your statement that Slayer have made the same album for their entire career- if that were true, maybe they'd have released something halfway decent in the last fifteen years.
It always annoys me when people accuse Slayer of "putting out the same album throughout their entire career." Slayer sounds VERY different now than they did during their "classic era" (ie. Reign In Blood through Seasons In The Abyss). Their songs are slower and more groove-oriented, Tom Araya's voice is more growly, they have an obvious nu-metal/metalcore influence in a lot of newer songs, they use B and C# tuning for more than half of their songs (they used to use Eb tuning almost exclusively), etc. I honestly wonder if these people who accuse Slayer of sounding the same after 20 years have ever even HEARD their more recent material.
Anyway, sorry for such a bitter post.