The Immortal Emokid wrote:
Brahm_K wrote:
The Immortal Emokid wrote:
finally, it's a classic because I says so and if you dare say something else I'll hunt you down & spank you until you agree
!

I'm liking this...
But concerning the discussion, my problem is that, as a thrash fan, I can't honestly say that Master of Puppets pushed any boundaries and that it only really became that popular because Metallica had good publicity. Your assertion that the classic albums are the most popular ones sounds more like pop music mentality than metal mentality. In any case, this is a pretty dumb debate.
Brahm, I was there in 1986 when MoP came out... I can tell you it only had the publicity it deserved (an by publicity I mean a lot of articles, reviews, interviews etc... metal back then wasn't as marketed as it is now).
and you had to be there when Kill'Em All was released in 1983... I was ! We all felt a breath of fresh air from this album and its "followers" (Slayer, Anthrax mostly... Megadeth & Exodus came later... 1985 :roll: ) and Metallica were the first to reach our hands and it was soooooo good !
when Ride The Lightning came out we were still pretty excited with KEA so we ate the album as if it was as good as its predecessor which he wasn't while containing some very good songs (Fight Fire With Fire, Creeping death, Fade to Black, For Whom the Bells toll, The Call of Cthulu).
then we had to wait 2 FVKKING YEARS to get another release by that fucking leading thrash band (that's what almost everybody thought of them back then).... and the scene had grown bigger and stronger, yet, Metallica BLEW US ALL with their 3rd album... on about 50 metalheads I knew back then only two or three had negative remarks on the album (mainly due to the production)... does it say we were all deaf, dumb & blind , was Metallica another marketed pseudo metalband sent by the big corporations ? NO ! Metallica were 4 kids, crazed on NWOBHM and punk rock (which was pretty big in California back then) who wanted to mix both in a super-powerful new mix : and they did ! and THRASH WAS BORN ! and Metallica has a big part of the credit in this !
so regardless objections you might have on their quality from your "modern perspective", it doesn't change the FUCKING FACT : Metallica 83/86 ( some would say 88 ) ARE ABSOLUTE METAL CLASSICS !!! :twisted:
I'll take your word for it since you were there, but I still believe there to be a huge drop in quality between Kill'Em All/Ride the Lightning and this, and I therefore believe that if people are going to fellate any Metallica album, it should be one of those two. And bands like Exodus and Overkill were formed even before Metallica... Metallica basically just got a record deal first (because of Lars), and although they are among the pioneers of thrash, they are in no way the only pioneers, nor did they have a larger role than say, Exodus, Overkill, Slayer, or Megadeth (for as we know, Dave Mustaine wrote a good deal of Kill'Em All anyway). And I still can't consider this a classic. Maybe there's something wrong with me, but I just don't get it. This album is composed of two excellent thrash songs (Battery, MoP), two average thrash songs (Disposable Heroes, Damage Inc.), one incredible instrumental (Orion), two boring songs that become all right at some point (Leper Messiah, Sanitarium) and an incredibly boring, plodding and generally terrible song (The Thing That Should Not Be). What makes this so much better than hundreds of other thrash albums? Why is it better than Victims of Deception, Darkness Descends, Coma of Souls, Eternal Nightmare, History of a Time to Come? Hell, why is it better than Metallica's first two albums? Please explain to me why all these albums were basically ignored in favour of this one. What makes this one so awesome?