Free Speech for the Dumb - Metallica, Maloney, Garry
It's Electric - Metallica, Harris, Sean
Sabbra Cadabra - Metallica, Butler, Geezer
Turn the Page - Metallica, Seger, Bob
Die, Die My Darling - Metallica, Danzig, Glenn
Loverman - Metallica, Cave, Nick
Mercyful Fate - Metallica, Diamond
Astronomy - Metallica, Bouchard, Albert
Whiskey in the Jar - Metallica, Traditional
Tuesday's Gone - Metallica, Collins, Allen
The More I See - Metallica, Molaney
Track Listings (16) - Disc #2
Helpless - Metallica, Harris, Sean
The Small Hours - Metallica, Holocaust [1]
The Wait - Metallica, Killing Joke
Crash Course in Brain Surgery - Metallica, Bourge, Tony
Last Caress/Green Hell - Metallica, Danzig, Glenn
Am I Evil? - Metallica, Harris, Sean
Blitzkrieg - Metallica, Jones
Breadfan - Metallica, Bourge, Tony
The Prince - Metallica, Harris, Sean
Stone Cold Crazy - Metallica, Deacon, John [Queen
So What - Metallica, Anti Nowhere League
Killing Time - Metallica, Sweet Savage
Overkill - Metallica, Clarke, Eddie [2]
Damage Case - Metallica, Clarke, Eddie [2]
Stone Dead Forever - Metallica, Clarke, "Fast" Eddi
Too Late Too Late - Metallica, Clarke, Eddie
This double-disc, all-covers release could come to represent a vital turning point for Metallica. While disc 2 is a straightforward collection of every cover the group have recorded in its 16-year history, disc 1 comprises... more » 11 new selections drawn from the oeuvres of such exciting and diverse artists as U.K. punks Discharge and nefarious Australian Nick Cave. The heavier songs, such as the Mercyful Fate medley, Black Sabbath's "Sabbra Cadabra," and the Misfits' "Die Die My Darling," prove that nobody delivers a crunching riff better than these metal veterans. But it is vocalist-guitarist James Hetfields's confident approach toward the likes of Cave's "Loverman" and Bob Seger's "Turn the Page" that delivers the most electricity; here his raw, heartfelt vocals are largely untouched. Given that the recharged group spent only three weeks in the studio recording these tracks, it appears that these guys have remembered the value of studio spontaneity over laborious pontificating. Hopefully, that mindset will resurface in future projects. --Steffan Chirazi« less
This double-disc, all-covers release could come to represent a vital turning point for Metallica. While disc 2 is a straightforward collection of every cover the group have recorded in its 16-year history, disc 1 comprises 11 new selections drawn from the oeuvres of such exciting and diverse artists as U.K. punks Discharge and nefarious Australian Nick Cave. The heavier songs, such as the Mercyful Fate medley, Black Sabbath's "Sabbra Cadabra," and the Misfits' "Die Die My Darling," prove that nobody delivers a crunching riff better than these metal veterans. But it is vocalist-guitarist James Hetfields's confident approach toward the likes of Cave's "Loverman" and Bob Seger's "Turn the Page" that delivers the most electricity; here his raw, heartfelt vocals are largely untouched. Given that the recharged group spent only three weeks in the studio recording these tracks, it appears that these guys have remembered the value of studio spontaneity over laborious pontificating. Hopefully, that mindset will resurface in future projects. --Steffan Chirazi