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Master of Puppets

 
Album Review: Master of Puppets

  • Artist: Metallica
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1986
  • Total Time: 54:51
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Even though Master of Puppets didn't take as gigantic a leap forward as Ride the Lightning, it was the band's greatest achievement, hailed as a masterpiece by critics far outside heavy metal's core audience. It was also a substantial hit, reaching the Top 30 and selling three million copies despite absolutely nonexistent airplay. Instead of a radical reinvention, Master of Puppets is a refinement of past innovations. In fact, it's possible to compare Ride the Lightning and Master of Puppets song for song and note striking similarities between corresponding track positions on each record (although Lightning's closing instrumental has been bumped up to next-to-last in Master's running order). That hint of conservatism is really the only conceivable flaw here. Though it isn't as startling as Ride the Lightning, Master of Puppets feels more unified, both thematically and musically. Everything about it feels blown up to epic proportions (indeed, the songs are much longer on average), and the band feels more in control of its direction. You'd never know it by the lyrics, though -- in one way or another, nearly every song on Master of Puppets deals with the fear of powerlessness. Sometimes they're about hypocritical authority (military and religious leaders), sometimes primal, uncontrollable human urges (drugs, insanity, rage), and, in true H.P. Lovecraft fashion, sometimes monsters. Yet by bookending the album with two slices of thrash mayhem ("Battery" and "Damage, Inc."), the band reigns triumphant through sheer force -- of sound, of will, of malice. The arrangements are thick and muscular, and the material varies enough in texture and tempo to hold interest through all its twists and turns. Some critics have called Master of Puppets the best heavy metal album ever recorded; if it isn't, it certainly comes close. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Battery (Lyrics) James Hetfield, Lars Ulrich Metallica (5:10)
Master of Puppets (Lyrics) Kirk Hammett, James Hetfield, Lars Ulrich, Cliff Burton Metallica (8:38)
The Thing That Should Not Be Kirk Hammett, James Hetfield, Lars Ulrich Metallica (6:32)
Welcome Home (Sanitarium) Kirk Hammett, James Hetfield, Lars Ulrich Metallica (6:28)
Disposable Heroes (Lyrics) Kirk Hammett, James Hetfield, Lars Ulrich Metallica (8:14)
Leper Messiah (Lyrics) James Hetfield, Lars Ulrich Metallica (5:38)
Orion [Instrumental] James Hetfield, Lars Ulrich, Cliff Burton Metallica (8:12)
Damage, Inc. Kirk Hammett, James Hetfield, Lars Ulrich, Cliff Burton Metallica (5:08)

Credits

Metallica (Producer), Metallica (Main Performer), Metallica (Cover Art Concept), Robert Ellis (Photography), Kirk Hammett (Guitar), Kirk Hammett (?), James Hetfield (Guitar), James Hetfield (Arranger), James Hetfield (Vocals), James Hetfield (?), George Marino (Remastering), Flemming Rasmussen (Producer), Flemming Rasmussen (Engineer), Lars Ulrich (Arranger), Lars Ulrich (Drums), Lars Ulrich (?), Michael Wagener (Mixing), Cliff Burton (Bass), Cliff Burton (Vocals (Background)), Cliff Burton (?), Don Brautigam (Illustrations), Ross Halfin (Photography), Peter Mensch (Cover Art Concept)
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Wikipedia: Master of Puppets
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Master of Puppets
Studio album by Metallica
Released March 3, 1986
Recorded September 1985–December 1985 at Sweet Silence Studios in Copenhagen, Denmark
Genre Thrash metal
Length 54:45
Label Elektra, Music for Nations, Vertigo
Producer Metallica, Flemming Rasmussen
Professional reviews
Metallica chronology
Ride the Lightning
(1984)
Master of Puppets
(1986)
…And Justice for All
(1988)
Singles from Master of Puppets
  1. "Master of Puppets"
    Released: 1986
  2. "Battery"
    Released: 1986
  3. "Welcome Home (Sanitarium)"
    Released: 1986

Master of Puppets is the third album by American heavy metal band Metallica. The album was released on March 3, 1986 through Elektra Records and was met with high critical reception. "Puppets" is now considered a classic heavy metal album by fans, critics, and the band members themselves alike.[citation needed] It reached #29 on the U.S. Billboard 200 album chart and was the band's first Gold record for sales of 500,000 copies. This was done without any radio airplay or the release of a single or music video. The album is now 6× Platinum in the U.S.

Master of Puppets marks the last recording by bassist Cliff Burton, who was killed in a bus accident while on tour to promote the album.

Contents

Reception and legacy

According to Allmusic's Steve Huey, Master of Puppets "was the band's greatest achievement." "Some critics have called Master of Puppets the best metal album ever recorded", Huey noted.[1] Master of Puppets has been featured on several "greatest albums of all time" lists. The album is present in a list dubbed "The All-TIME 100 Albums" published by TIME magazine in November 2006.[2] In TIME critic Josh Tyrangiel's opinion, "Metallica didn't bother with hooks or pop discipline" in writing Master of Puppets.[2] IGN rated the album as being at first position in a list of the "Top 25 Metal Albums" issued in January 2007.[3] The album is featured in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die and Q magazine counted it among the 50 heaviest albums of all time. In 2003, the album was ranked number 167 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time. The album has frequently been tagged by critics as "one of the most influential thrash metal albums of all time."[4]

As an early parody of the PMRC's "explicit lyrics" warning labels, many prints of Metallica's 1986 release of Master of Puppets sported an octagonal sticker on the front saying:

"The only track you probably won't want to play is "Damage, Inc." due to the multiple use of the infamous "F" word. Otherwise, there aren't any "Shits", "Fucks", "Pisses", "Sucks", "Cunts", "Motherfuckers" or "Cocksuckers" anywhere on this record."

To celebrate the 20th anniversary of its release, Metallica played the album in its entirety on their Escape from the Studio '06 tour for the first time ever at the Rock am Ring festival on June 3, 2006. These concerts included the first-ever complete performances of the instrumental "Orion" (previously only portions of the song's lengthy middle section had been performed onstage as part of instrumental medleys and bass solos).

The title track was ranked Number 51 in the "The Greatest Guitar Solos" from Guitar World. In 2006, the album was voted the fourth "greatest guitar album of all time" in Guitar World. And the April 5th edition of Kerrang! was dedicated to it, providing readers with the cover album "Master of Puppets: Remastered". In March 2007, the guitar magazine Total Guitar ranked the 100 greatest riffs of all time and the main riff of the album's title track was ranked number one.

"Damage, Inc." is the last of four songs to feature writing from all members of the Cliff Burton-Kirk Hammett era of Metallica.

Every song from this album except "Leper Messiah" and "Damage, Inc." is playable on the music video game Guitar Hero: Metallica. The song "Battery" is featured in the game Rock Band 2.

Personnel

Track listing

# Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Battery"   Hetfield, Ulrich 5:10
2. "Master of Puppets"   Hetfield, Ulrich, Burton, Hammett 8:36
3. "The Thing That Should Not Be"   Hetfield, Ulrich, Hammett 6:33
4. "Welcome Home (Sanitarium)"   Hetfield, Ulrich, Hammett 6:27
5. "Disposable Heroes"   Hetfield, Ulrich, Hammett 8:15
6. "Leper Messiah"   Hetfield, Ulrich 5:42
7. "Orion" (Instrumental) Burton, Hetfield, Ulrich 8:25
8. "Damage, Inc."   Hetfield, Ulrich, Burton, Hammett 5:31
Bonus tracks (iTunes)
# Title Writer(s) Length
9. "Battery" (Live Version) Hetfield, Ulrich 4:53
10. "The Thing That Should Not Be" (Live version) Hetfield, Ulrich, Hammett 7:02

Chart performance

Year Chart Position
1986 The Billboard 200 29
1986 UK Albums Chart 41
2004 Finnish Album Chart[5] 7
2008 Australian ARIA Top 50 Albums Chart 33
2009 Mexico Album Chart 66

Certifications

Country Certification Sales/shipments
United States (RIAA) 6x Platinum[6] 6,812,000
Canada (CRIA) 5x Platinum[7] 500,000
Australia (ARIA) Platinum 70,000
Finland (IFPI) Platinum[8] 57,647

Covers

References


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Master of Puppets" Read more