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Metallica

Metallica Album: “...And Justice for All [Japan Bonus Track]”

Metallica Album: “...And Justice for All [Japan Bonus Track]”
Album Information :
Title: ...And Justice for All [Japan Bonus Track]
Release Date:1998-06-30
Type:Unknown
Genre:Rock, Hard Rock, Metal
Label:Sony
Explicit Lyrics:Yes
UPC:4988009615653
Customers Rating :
Average (4.6) :(859 votes)
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645 votes
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120 votes
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46 votes
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19 votes
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29 votes
Track Listing :
1 Blackened Video
2 …And Justice for All Video
3 Eye of the Beholder Video
4 One Video
5 Shortest Straw
6 Harvester Of Sorrow Video
7 Frayed Ends of Sanity
8 To Live Is To Die Video
9 Dyers Eve Video
10 Prince
David (California) - August 05, 2003
24 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
- BEST METAL ALBUM IN EXISTENCE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

This is without a doubt (in my opinion) not only the best Metallica album in existence, but It is the best metal album in existence.

BLACKENED- Like previous first Metallica tracks, it slowly builds into absolute mayhem as James screams anti-war lyrics. Lars stays busy, and really shines on this song. This is my favorite Metallica song of all time.

AND JUSTICE FOR ALL- This is by far one of the most sophisticated, intricate, and complex metal songs ever. Clocking in at over nine minutes, this song takes you on the ride of your life, and when its finally over, you are left, shocked at what you just heard. You cannot count the changes in pace/tone on one hand in this song. This is definately a song that Kirk shines on.

EYE OF THE BEHOLDER- Another awesome song with some great lyrics. "You can do it your own way, as long as its done just how i say."

ONE- The first Metallica song with a video made for it. Also one of their best songs of all time. Goes from semi-ballad like to all out headbanging thrash metal. In the last few minutes you cannot help but headbang.

SHORTEST STRAW- Great overall song with some awesome riffs and drum kicks. The chorus fits perfectly into the tone/atmosphere that the song creates.

HARVESTER OF SORROW- Slower, more violent song about how people who are abused as children sometimes bring that abuse to the generation following theres. One of my favorite songs on the album.

FRAYED ENDS OF SANITY- Great headbanging song, you will headbang, just because the rhythm of the song begs you to. Great all around song with awesome riffs and great vocals.

TO LIVE IS TO DIE- This song is an ode to Metallica's late bassist Cliff Burton. Though its an instrumental, its incredibly heavy and works into a heavy ballad style song.

DYERS EVE- This song and BLACKENED are the fastest songs on the album. Lars shows what he's made of in this song, and you can't help but give him props for being able to play drums as fast as he does on this song. The song is about parents to dictate to their children, and do not offer encouragement.

IF YOU DO NOT HAVE THIS ALBUM, BUY IT!!!!!!!!!!!

Campbell Roark "tri-zeta" (from under the floorboards and through the woods...) - November 02, 2005
20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
- The End of an Era...

Epic. This is the line of demarcation... The toe in the dirt scrawling out the line bewteen fans of the old-school thrash Metallica and their more pop-conscious fans of the new. It's also my favorite Metallica CD, I find it to be their most consistently BADASS. Epic riffs, sprawling density; the songs are allowed to take up as much time and aural texture as is needed ("...And Justice For All" and "To Live Is To Die," both clock in at just under 10 minutes).

This one: Exceptionally well-paced, a tad thinly recorded, brutal sonic delivery. Killer legendary tracks. Thematically unified, this would be Metallica's most socially-driven release as most, if not all, of the tracks seem to deal (in some way) with ostracism, petty-tribal-hates, the plight of those passed-over, those forgotten, those stepped on or kicked out of the way... James's vitriol is unleashed in full! No sleepers, no skippers.

Something I don't see noted in here much: the drums! Lars really pounds the living soul out of himself on this one. There's more variety and interesting bass-drum fill work on this one than previous (and following) releases. It almost sounds like a different drummer at times. Early Metallica skin-work always comes off as a tad marginal... That's probably because I don't know anything about drums beyond digging double-bass-kicks. This one brings them aplenty.

...From the melodic building electric drone of the first track "Blackened," (which infectiously sets the tone for the what is to come), to the take-no-prisoners thrash mayhem of "Dyers Eve," a blistering and acerbic closer.

Some high points: The parts in "Eye Of The Beholder" When James starts howling "Independence, Liberty! FREEEEEDOM!" he comes off like a metal Braveheart, Plus it has one of all-time fave screechy "wong-wong--wong-WONG-WAAAAAHHH!!!!! blast-off" solos.

The chorus of "...And Justice..." is just killer. "Justice is rrraped, justice is DONE!" Recalling, "Master of Puppets" with its "pulling your strings, justice is done," line... Loss of Power/Control being an oft-recurrent major theme in the Metallica corpus.

I'm not gonna gush on and on about how slick the transistions are in "One," from the softer melodic poignance to all out thrash-insanity, seeing as how everybody knows the tune in question. But it does never seem to get old, at least to these ears.

The instrumental "To Live is to Die," is better than prior instrumental tracks (yes, there I said it- someone had to); the snakey blues-metal solo is sick, and then there's the dynamic shifting in the song...

Love the "Oh-EEE-OH," chorus opening off "Frayed Ends of Sanity," that could've sounded kitschy and dumb but the guys pull it off making it the only time anyone has referenced "The Wizard of Oz," in an ominous manner.

Nitpicking: As many other reviewers have noted- You can't hear the bass. As in: at all. It's just not there. These tunes are bassless accusations, mwah-hah-hah... Given how awful James, Lars and Kirk treated Jason for something like the first 4 years he was with them; maybe this is but one more sign of that... Still, as I think Jason is an interesting metal bassman (a rare breed) I wish there were more low-end theory on this classic... Maybe when it gets the remaster in however many years, they'll crank up the BOOM... Which remindeth me, O my brothers- completely off the topic at hand: AVOID AT ALL COSTS THE NEW MEGADETH REMASTERS; the vocals are unbelievably bad. I know, I listened. I suffered so that you don't have to: we all know Mustaine was never an able crooner to begin with (not that his chosen mode of expression demands that) but... wow. They're just plain awful, the new vox. You want to tell yourslef, "Hey it ain't that bad, but that tiny part of your soul that knows spit from spinola just keeps nudging you saying, "Dude... Umm... Dude... Just turn it off."

Back to Metallica: This one catches some flak from most fans I think, despite the fact that those who dig on this one dig the holy hell out of it.

Oh... This is perhaps the best weight-lifting CD ever. The tracks ably segue into each other so well... Great for maintaining consistent anger and power output for multiple sets of squats and deadlifts.

Stewart Wilson "Stewpot" (UK) - April 09, 2006
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
- ...AND JUSTICE FOR ALL EXCEPT JASON

This album always produces very differing opinions amongst Metallica fans. Some say it was their best work, some say it signalled the band entering a downward spiral and heading into the mainstream. Some fans turned against the band altogether after they released 'the video they said they would never make' for the song 'One'. Lots of question marks hang over the quality of production on this record. The guitars sound very over-processed, Lars' bass drums convey more of a click sound than the thump we are used to hearing. However, the main source of discussion is the distinct absence of Jason Newsted's bass. Those who know Metallica will know that Newsted was a new addition to the band for this record; previous bassist Cliff Burton died shortly after the recording of 'Master Of Puppets'. But if you were to listen to '...And Justice For All', you wouldn't have thought that Metallica had even found a replacement as the bass is buried so deep beneath the guitars that it is almost unrecogniseable. Some of the songs contain such complex tempo changes and disjointed rhythms that the band found it particularly hard to replicate any of them on stage. The tracks are much longer than ever before, two of them are over 9 minutes long and only two are less than 6 minutes long. However, all this aside...I still believe this to be Metallica's greatest album to date.

The album opens with 'Blackened', and an atmospheric opening which was actually recorded backwards. After the build-up, James Hetfield displays the song's main riff before Lars Ulrich comes in with a lightning-fast drumbeat. Kirk Hammett's solo in this one is also guaranteed to impress. The title track then follows. This epic is almost ten minutes long and the lyrics are the key focus here; James Hetfield lets his feelings be expressed regarding America's judicial system. 'One' is the highlight of the album and a music video was released for it in the following year. It starts with a clean guitar intro, which builds up throughout the song and eventually transforms into an onslaught of thrash metal for the last couple of minutes. The concept is haunting in this track. Hetfield sings about a solider who is bombed in the war and loses all of his senses but can still feel the pain as he is kept on a life support machine. Ulrich's machine gun drumming is absolutely stunning, Hetfield's vocals are overwhelmingly passionate and Kirk Hammett's atmospheric guitar solo is voted the 7th best of all time. In comparison, the following three tracks can become slightly boring...but all the passion of the album is regained in the instrumental track 'To Live Is To Die'. This song was written as a tribute to former bassist Cliff Burton; a poem that he wrote is spoken by Hetfield towards the end of the song. The middle section is probably one of the most emotional things I have ever heard...Hetfield's guitar solo is extremely heartfelt. Then the atmospheric melody kicks in which builds and builds until the song returns to its original riff and the poem is spoken. Perhaps this represents the band's journey from complete agony and despair, to picking themselves back up and surging on just as Cliff would have wanted them to. If Cliff could have heard this, he would have been proud...it is very reminiscent of the track 'Orion' from Master Of Puppets. The last track, 'Dyers Eve' is the fastest song on the album and contains some of the best lyrics ever written by frontman Hetfield as he tells the painful story of his childhood, and cries out for his parents' guidance: "I'm in hell without you, cannot cope without you two...shocked at the world that I see, innocent victim please rescue me..."

I had the chance to listen to this album all the way through for the first time in a while recently, and it inspired me to write a review about it. It is, in my opinion, the greatest collection of songs ever released, and if you haven't heard it then you must buy it and give it a listen because nothing, absolute nothing beats it. This album is why Metallica are the greatest band of all time.

mike g "mrperfect231" (indianapolis, indiana United States) - November 26, 2004
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
- last great metallica cd

this is the last great metallica cd afterwards producer bob rock wanted to make thier next album black more radio friendly and thus began metallicas sellout for dollars campaign this cd is still the standard for heavy metal in my opinion songs like eye of the beholder and harvester of sorrow simply rock and i dont see how they say the production values wernt good maybe as a guitarist i have a diffrent view of good but to me its the best sounding distortion on any metallica album very heavy yet smooth kirk hammet was using mesa boogies with ada preamps back then these days he trys doing every old song with 1 marshall amp and though it sounds similar its really muddy and lacks projection the guitar solos the lyrics everything about this cd is a masterpiece and makes you sad to realize how great metallica once was stained korn any of todays metal bands dont come close to the complexity and creativity of metallicas old stuff buy this cd today====update apon lookin at my review i noticed how lame i sound saying very heavy yet smooth please forgive my dorkness

Ren Hoek (Sherrard, IL USA) - February 22, 2006
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
- Terrible Production hurts would could be Metallica's best.

I'm not going to go through and talk about each song because I think you're old enough to listen to the snipets on here and judge for yourself which is a good track and which is a bad track. What I am going to do though, is tell you a little about this dark and strangely mixed CD. First off, this is Metallica's fourth full length ablum and the first not to featured revered bassist Cliff Burton (RIP). Filling in for him is former Float Sam and Jetsam bassist Jason Newsted. This CD is quite different from other Metallica albums and sadly is the begining of the end. How is it different? The songs are much more longer and more complex than those on previous albums and for the most part are generally slower (except for the classic "Blackened", the last few minutes of "One" and the 200 miles an hour "Dyers Eve", which is the fasted song Metallica have done) These songs are chocked full of time signiture and riff changes and are LONG. Two clock in at over nine minutes and the shortest songs are still five minutes long, which isn't a bad thing (unless you have ADD)The compostions are far more complex than other Metallica and have a heavy classical influence, especially the title track. One of the first things you'll notice when listening to this is hey! where's the bass? Sadly Jason is buried deep with in the mix through out the album. It's almost as if Metallica was sending a message to the word. A message like, Cliff was such a huge part of us and he left a massive whole in us that no one can ever fill. Which is a shame because Newstead has some great basslines. The lyrics are a high point of this album and show that a great deal of thought went into them. James' voice is at its best imho - growly and angry with just a touch a raspiness. Some of Kirk solos are really interesting and just a joy to listen too. While Lars has never been a great drummer, I fully enjoy his drumming on this album. Even better than his drumming is the sound of his kit, which is perfect imo: the clicky big sounding kick drum and the tight warm sounding snare.

Pros: Metallica are at the top of their game lyrically and musiclly. Kirk plays some of the best solos of his career. The composition work is much more complex and better than anything else Metallica has done. Lars' playing and James' vocie are at their respective best.

Cons: Horrible production hurts this album. For the most part Jason is buired so far into the mix that you really have to strain yourself to hear him and in some spots he is more or less completely inaudible. But its not just the lack of bass, its as if someone chopped the whole CD off at about 5,000 hertz.

Long songs might put some people off. Some of the songs are weaker than others.

Final word: This really should be about a 4.5 but the horrid production, I feel, hurts it too much to warrent a 5. But this is really one of Metallica's best and probably my personal favorite of theirs. If you like Metallica at all this should be in your collection.

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