Sunday, 6 April 2014

Pearl Jam Top 50

When Grunge was king and Nirvana were the band of the moment, I was always a Pearl Jam man.  I can't remember when or where I first heard 'Alive' but it was the first song I heard and as you can see below, arguably the best.  I remember getting the 'Even Flow' white vinyl 12" on my 14th birthday and acting out the Eddie Vedder stagedive from my settee for a friend at my birthday party, winding myself in the process.  My white T-shirt with the cartoon version of the band on the front used to get a lot of comments, usually from strangers.....Pearl Jam are that kind of band.

'Ten' is one of my all-time favourite albums, pure and simple, and the A-side is still one of the best first halves to any album ever.  'Vs' kept up the pace to an extent with another array of great songs, but following that their press policy, spat with Ticketmaster and the general decline of the grunge movement following the death of Kurt Cobain turned them into a different band.

'Vitalogy' was like the bridge album, still holding onto some of the qualities that made them successful, but also a more stripped-down approach.  In my opinion this marked the shift from the Stone Gossard/Jeff Ament stranglehold on songwriting to Eddie Vedder becoming band leader.  The high quality of Stone's songs on 'Ten' in particular, coupled with his further involvement in his side-project Brad and a lower share of the songwriting later on suggest to me that he lost interest.  If that's true it was a shame (no Brad pun intended).  Subsequent albums were patchy, but still had their fair share of outstanding songs.  It seemed like on the whole they were content to produce albums that sounded like you were just dropping into their practice room, sometimes with great results, sometimes exactly how that sounds.

'Binaural' for me was a big return to form, with some real quality songs, but then it fell away again, the 'By Era' chart reflecting this.  I haven't long since owned 'Lightning Bolt' as I write this, but the fact that two of the songs made it into this chart already also gives me hope for the future.  All of that said, listening to the 50 songs listed below proves that Pearl Jam are an incredibly vital band and one that I had the pleasure of growing up with.

1. Alive
2. Better Man
3. Rearviewmirror
4. Black
5. Given to Fly
6. Jeremy
7. Even Flow
8. Porch
9. Nothingman
10. Go
11. Once
12. Animal
13. Yellow Ledbetter
14. Spin the Black Circle
15. State of Love and Trust
16. Why Go
17. I Got ID
18. Daughter
19. Nothing As It Seems
20. Light Years
21. Just Breathe
22. Garden
23. Corduroy
24. Thumbing My Way
25. Blood
26. Rats
27. Leash
28. Whipping
29. Glorified G
30. Not for You
31. Brain of J
32. Dissident
33. Hail Hail
34. Off He Goes
35. Insignificance
36. Last Exit
37. Release
38. Do the Evolution
39. Lightning Bolt
40. Getaway
41. Save You
42. Thin Air
43. Habit
44. WMA
45. Deep
46. Who You Are
47. Life Wasted
48. Got Some
49. Last Kiss
50. Alone

By Era
Ten 13
Vs 10
Vitalogy 7
No Code 4
Yield 3
Binaural 4
Riot Act 2
Pearl Jam 1
Backspacer 2
Lightning Bolt 2
Other 2

By Songwriter (Music only)
Vedder/Abbruzzese/Ament/Gossard/McCready 16
Vedder 10
Gossard 7
Ament 5
Gossard/Ament 2
McCready 2
McCready/Ament 2
Covers 1
Gossard/Irons 1
Gossard/Vedder/Ament/McCready 1
McCready/Ament/Cameron/Gossard/Vedder 1
Vedder/Gossard/Ament/McCready/Krusen 1
Vedder/McCready/Gossard 1

or alternatively

Eddie Vedder 14.2
Stone Gossard 12.7
Jeff Ament 10.9
Mike McCready 7.2
Dave Abbruzzese 3.2
Covers 1
Jack Irons 0.5
Dave Krusen 0.2
Matt Cameron 0.2

Sunday, 9 March 2014

Senseless Things Top 50

I had already heard a few Senseless Things songs, in fact my brother had the 'Got it at the Delmar' cassette single, which he later gave to me along with his blue Pop Kid shirt.  But when 'Easy to Smile' came out I had a new favourite band.  I went back slightly and bought 'The First of Too Many', also on cassette, and it was just as good.  It wouldn't be much longer before 'Hold it Down' was on its way, followed by the 'Empire of the Senseless' album, by which time they definitely were my favourite band (although the Manics' 'Gold Against the Soul' tipped the balance in their favour shortly after).

If it wasn't enough to have the songwriting and singing of Mark Keds, the leads and harmonies of Ben Harding and the Animal-from-the-Muppets drumming of Cass Browne, the Senseless Things had their secret weapon in the bass-playing talents of Morgan Nicholls.  I've never really heard anyone play in his particular style before or since, there were similarities with others but he was quite unique and once he had inspired me to give up trying to be any good on the guitar, I took up the bass and started playing as much like he did as I could.

Their sound changed over the years from the teenage angst (in a fun way) and scratchy punk of 'Postcard CV', to the shinier, effervescent 'The First of Too Many', to the rockier 'Empire of the Senseless' and finally the loose-limbed swansong 'Taking Care of Business', which, while being a really good album, the title probably described how the band saw making it before they split.  I followed Jolt and 3 Colours Red for their relatively short durations (never really got into Delakota), but nothing was like the band they came from.  Listening back to these songs now they are still one of my all-time favourite bands, and if you haven't heard them before and like a good tune you could do a lot worse than going and discovering them.

1. Easy to Smile
2. Tangled Lines
3. Got it at the Delmar
4. Should I Feel It
5. Too Much Kissing
6. Everybody's Gone
7. Can't Remember
8. Too Much Like I Know You
9. Is It Too Late?
10. Hold it Down
11. 16.18.21
12. Primary Instinct
13. Teenage
14. Something to Miss
15. Trevor
16. Someone in You
17. Homophobic Asshole
18. Standing in the Rain
19. Wrong Number
20. Girlfriend
21. Any Which Way
22. Radio Spiteful
23. Ex-Teenager
24. Touch Me on the Heath
25. Back to Nowhere
26. Leo
27. Best Friend
28. Keepsake
29. Christine Keeler
30. Laura Lamorna
31. It's Cool to Hang Out with your Ex
32. Ice Skating at the Milky Way
33. Watching the Pictures Go
34. Just One Reason
35. Cruel Moon
36. Tell Me What's on your Mind
37. Shoplifting
38. Page 3 Valentine
39. Tempting Kate
40. Say What You Will
41. Runaways
42. Fishing at Tescos
43. 19 Blue
44. Lip Radio
45. Marlene
46. Wanted
47. In Love Again
48. When You Let Me Down
49. Drunk and Soppy
50. Passions Out of Town

By Era
Postcard CV 12
The First of Too Many 12
Empire of the Senseless 11
Taking Care of Business 9
Others (inc. non-album singles and Peel Sessions) 6

Saturday, 1 March 2014

Record Collection by Country?!?!

Well, I've threatened it a few times but now I've only gone and done it.  Going through my albums and making a tally of how many came from each country makes for quite interesting reading.  Certain bands from smaller (or less musically renowned) countries that have had a lot of albums out may skew the numbers slightly, as will countries synonymous with certain movements and genres, but it's my list so that's fine.  Without further ado, here we go:

1. USA 292
2. England 231
3. Wales 50
4. Sweden 43
5. Norway 29
6. Finland 28
7. Brazil 24
8. Holland 17
9. Germany 11
10. Italy 10
11. Canada 6
12. Australia 3
= Ireland 3
= Scotland 3
= Switzerland 3
16. Northern Ireland 2
= Portugal 2

Numbers correct as at 1st March 2014

Just for the record, different versions counted more than once, probably why Wales did so well with my various Manics album formats!  Scandinavia did pretty well for itself with its varied metal bands, while Sepultura, Soulfly, The Gathering and Lacuna Coil all bumped their countries up the list.  Not a great showing from Scotland, Northern Ireland and Ireland though.

Europe and North America unsurprisingly dominated, with South America charting in the shape of Brazil and Australia also sneaking in there.  Now if I can only buy some albums by African and Asian bands I could make it truly global!!  Maybe Dragonforce could count on that score?  Members and ex-members from Hong Kong, South Africa, New Zealand, Ukraine, France....and they were counted as English!

Top marks to anyone who can get Antarctica in there too....Sonata Antarctica?  Emperor (Penguins)?  I'll get me coat....


Saturday, 22 February 2014

Beneath Utopia.....(Music Career part 3)

In March and April 1996, when I really should have been swotting up for my A levels, I finally felt happy enough with my musical "skills" to branch out into playing metal.  The first song that I wrote was called 'The Last to Die' - it was about war, it sounded like Bolt Thrower and I put on my best Karl Willetts voice complete with Brummie accent, noticing any pattern yet?  After deciding on the suitably metal name of Oakenshield, another 5 songs were recorded with a similar sound and listening to them today I can safely say that, while being a little generic, they stand the test of time pretty well.  'Something You Can't Have', which had the same general rhythm as Carcass' 'Corporal Jigsore Quandary', is still a particular favourite.  My cover art, based on the Hero Quest board game, maybe not so good.


It only took until August and September of the same year to follow those songs up with a full album, 'Something to Fear'.  By then I was incorporating influences from my other favourite bands of the moment, such as Fear Factory, Paradise Lost and mid-90s Napalm Death, but still the over-riding influence was Bolt Thrower.  I'm actually less keen on this album I think, although there are still some decent songs.  Maybe quality control was an issue.


About a year after that I decided to send some of my songs to Metal Hammer for review in the Demos section....a name change was required.  During 1997 I recorded a host of metal songs in different styles under different names, two songs each, to experiment basically.  I had Post Mortem who sounded like My Dying Bride, Whirlwind (Megadeth), Carnage (grindcore), Download (Korn) and Beneath Utopia (Cradle of Filth).  Now that last one is a good name I thought, what would be lurking underneath the perfect world?  Musically speaking, exactly the kind of stuff that I was playing.  None of the other band names went any further (I would find out later that some of them were already bands), but Beneath Utopia was now the new, improved name of Oakenshield.


So, I sent my demo of Beneath Utopia, and also my pop punk band Spraypaint, to Metal Hammer and to my surprise they actually reviewed both of them!  Both got 4/10 in the October 1997 issue, which was probably fair in retrospect, but there were some encouraging comments in the reviews.  I got a bit of interest, with a feature in a zine called Zeitgeist and a couple of songs (one from each band) played on French radio!  Maybe fame was around the corner?


It wasn't obviously, but I pressed on regardless.  From July 1998 through to May 1999 (my final year at university) I recorded the songs that would become 'Underdog'.  They were definitely the best songs I had recorded so far and I was keen to push them out as far as they could go.  The sound still wasn't amazing, which hindered things in comparison to other bands, but it was decent enough.  The next national exposure was through a new section in Kerrang! for unsigned bands called Scumscene, I think I was in either the first or second edition of that in the March 4 2000 issue.  I have the magazine buried somewhere but rather than spend hours digging it out I have a copy of what was written:

PARADISE UNDERGROUND
BENEATH UTOPIA are a one-man operation, fronted and indeed, backed and middled by Ian Lipthorne.  He's looking to appear on any fresh talent compilation albums anyone might be planning, and he describes his sonics as: "The brutality of Napalm Death wrapped up in 'Draconian Times'-era Paradise Lost."  If you bung Ian a blank tape plus £1 p&p, you'll receive an hour's worth of Paradise..., which strangely includes a metal version of A-ha's 'The Sun Only Shines On TV'.  

They could at least have got my name right, it's not difficult.  In the September 2 2000 issue of Kerrang! I managed to get featured again, as Scumscene was coming to the end of its stint in the magazine.

EAR BASHING
ONE-MAN project BENEATH UTOPIA is currently recording new material, which, threatens main-and-only-man Ian Lipthorpe, "sounds like the aural equivalent of being battered with a blunt and a sharp instrument at the same time".  Ouch!  Ouch!  For Beneath Utopia's previous demo - which Ian likens to the further shell-like bruising of Napalm Death meets Paradise Lost - why not send a blank tape and an SAE to the following address:

As you can imagine this was good news for me, getting your name in a national magazine once would have been good, 3 times was awesome.  The Scumscene features got me in touch with Dan, the guitarist of Stoke band Razorwire, who was putting together a series of compilations called Kill Your Management.  Over the years I appeared 3 times - vol. 2 in 2001, vol. 5 in 2004 and vol. 7 in in 2006.  Nothing really came of them other than getting the name out there, but it was fun to be a part of it all.


Around this time I was also asked to join a local band of college kids whose guitarist was leaving, after the singer heard my songs and liked them.  I guested on vocals on one song at three local pub gigs in Middlesbrough before joining....for one rehearsal.  They split up after that, but I had already realised from that one rehearsal that band life (as in playing with other people) is not for me.


In the meantime I had recorded and pressed my first CD, 'The World is Beautiful, Just Don't Look Down' (copies are still available!), in 2002 and I was very happy with how it came out.  The previous sound was still present and correct but an element of the first Raging Speedhorn and Haunted albums had crept in as they were big favourites at the time of recording.  I also pressed up some 4-track samplers to send out to magazines, labels etc.  This time it was Terrorizer who answered the call, printing two 6.5/10 reviews (Jan/Feb 03 and Mar 03 issues), which may as well have been 10/10 to me, again well chuffed with the exposure.  The second review had some rather bizarre reference points, which certainly weren't intentional, but it was interesting to see journalistic opinions.

 

The next album was a long time in the making, eventually emerging 6 whole years after the last one.  My brother moved out of the family home, taking his instruments and recording equipment with him, but I had a job by then so I gradually built up my own stock of instruments as well as a 24 track studio for recording.


Those 24 tracks, and the fact I was no longer recording on tape, made a vast difference to the sound.  I could record more than two tracks of guitar, I had room for keyboards, backing vocals, clean vocals, and I took full advantage.  The new drum machine made things clearer and more realistic, the 6 string bass increased the bottom end where required, rhythm guitar duties were always taken on by the Washburn flying V, leaving my favourite guitar to play, the black Ibanez, covering lead guitar and solos.  The 12 string of the triple neck was used sparingly for quieter moments.  By the way, using different guitars makes me feel like a different member of the band, therefore putting extra effort into being that person....weird I know.


'The Forgotten Art of Saying No' took me from 2006 to 2008 to record as I perfected the sound during evenings, weekends and holidays.  Even the songwriting process changed, one song 'Numb' was written entirely in my head on the bus to and from work over a period of weeks.  I then had to figure out how to play what I was hearing in my head, culminating in one sound being created with one hand playing keyboards and the other hand operating a pitchshifter pedal to create a rising crescendo!  Unlike last time when the CDs were pressed and designed locally, this time round the cover art was designed by a Finn living in Washington, USA, whose speciality was usually unreadable spiky black metal logos, and the CDs were pressed in Swindon!


I also collaborated with another person for the first time under the Beneath Utopia name, the lyrics and melodies for 'Lost in Winter's Sorrow' being written by my friend Elizabeth, then in Texas.  The original plan was for the song to be a male/female duet, but recording constraints meant that didn't work out.  The song was written when she sang a verse and a chorus to me over the internet, which I recorded and pieced the music around.  The haunting, much more accessible outcome was a big change from the usual BU sound.  Overall the sound was more accessible generally though, Paradise Lost references could be heard, as well as The Haunted, Cradle of Filth, Dark Funeral and Iron Maiden - all bands with a lot more melody to their sound than my previous influences like Bolt Thrower, Napalm Death and Raging Speedhorn.  Also, with effects, I could mask my clean singing to make me sound half decent!

I was busy networking and recruiting fans at this time through MySpace, which led to my first (and so far only) interview with a New York based zine, as well as putting the word out through compilations again.  'Numb' featured on an American compilation, 'Under Mournful Moonlight' (which I was never given a copy of) and a CD given away with UK-based Empty Playground magazine issue #5, while 'Settle for Less' was included on a Brazilian metal compilation, 'Tunnel of Death', being the only UK band alongside Brazilian, Portuguese and American bands.


I also collaborated with my Portuguese friend and singer/songwriter Antonieta in Dark Souls, playing guest guitar on most songs on her 2008 album 'Winter', which even spawned a video for the song 'Sunrise'.  My performance and general setting left a lot to be desired....


As for what's next, I'm still pretty much unknown, currently writing and recording some new songs, one has been hanging around for years now waiting to be finished....some day the new album will come.....probably.

Sunday, 16 February 2014

Prolific Teenage Years.....(Music Career part 2)

So, after two years and 24 "releases" between me and my brother Peter recorded on an old tape recorder, he finally bought himself a 4-track Portastudio.  Not only did our sound improve, but the amount of songs we wrote and recorded over the next two years was massive, over 50 "releases" (I keep putting it in quotes as we never actually released any of them, with the odd exception of a few which were copied for anyone that wanted one).

The date was August 1995 and I was just starting my second year at college, therefore with free periods, evenings and weekends I had plenty of time for writing songs and recording them.  At that time my main concerns were Pyf Belly Machine (mainly indie and pop punk) with my brother and Marvin (pop punk), which was me solo, although I was about to start branching out.  In 1991 when I started getting into music properly I was an indie kid who liked a bit of rock and the odd metal song (incidentally Europe's 'The Final Countdown' was my third ever 7").  By 1995 it had turned on its head - I was now a metal fan who liked a bit of rock and indie and for me the mid 90s were dominated by Pantera, Sepultura and Machine Head plus the more extreme Earache bands Bolt Thrower, Carcass, Napalm Death etc.  I needed an outlet for my more extreme leanings....

But first came the inaugural four-track recordings, a double whammy of new Pyf Belly Machine albums, 'Lummon' and 'Buy This Or The Seal Gets It'.  The latter album containing quite possibly my finest cover art.  The 4 tracks usually worked like this: I had no bass amp, so I would plug into an old stereo and hit record and play my bassline in full, this would be played into the 4 track - track 1.  Track 2 was me playing (keyboard) drums over the top of this, track 3 was my brother playing guitar and track 4 was for the vocals (and occasional solo if required).  Of course we could now mix the volumes of the various instruments and everything was a million times better.

 

Highlights were the jangly 'Surfing Boy', the rockier, groovier 'Fob Off' which featured lyrics from the dictionary of all places, and a cover of 'Blame it on the Boogie'.....more on that later.  The next release to surface, however, was my first foray into heavier territory and a new project called Uranium.  It was meant to be my version of Nine Inch Nails, but without any kind of technology to speak of I was scuppered from the start.  The result was a set of OK rock songs, not bad for a first effort, with the odd attempt at keyboards to make it sound a little bit industrial.  There were also covers of '...For Victory by Bolt Thrower, 'Sanctified' by NIN and 'The Last Time' by Paradise Lost thrown in to make up the numbers.  This also marked me getting back into being a proper guitarist again after being predominantly a bassist before.

Marvin also got a new lease of life and after previously writing some fairly average songs, the new sound bucked my ideas up and allowed me to go all out on my bass-driven pop punk, writing undoubtedly my best songs to date on 'Getting Serious' and 'Easier Said than Done' over a period of 6 months.  Shame about the whining teenage lyrics though.  I'm still quite proud of the guitar sound, breakneck basslines and overall feel of the best Marvin songs of that time, great memories (I later renamed Marvin for public consumption, choosing Spraypaint inspired by the Manics' 'Stay Beautiful'.

  

Another new band who appeared in April 1996 were The Personnel.  Their songwriting consisted of coming up with random song titles, which would be exchanged between lyricists, who would then write down the first things that came into their heads with no thought towards song structure or melody.  The music was then recorded and a host of vocalists would bring the songs to life.  The debut EP 'Geese' featured the likes of 'Bakers', 'Dogs', 'Cassocks' and 'Excremential Air Freshener'.  Did I mention the songs usually last between 15 and 60 seconds?  Quite possibly the best band there has ever been.  You can hear some of their songs (the ones marked as THE PERSONNEL obviously) by clicking here.


At the same time as The Personnel were finding their feet, another new band came into being.  I finally decided to have my own metal band and, against all my better judgement, decided on the name Oakenshield.  The name would later change into Beneath Utopia when I decided to unleash my songs onto the world, but Oakenshield/BU will be the subject of part 3 of this blog in more detail.

So, from August 1995 through to the end of 1997 there were 9 Pyf Belly Machine albums, 3 Marvin albums, 3 Uranium albums and 2 Oakenshield albums, mixed in with releases by The Personnel and various other side projects.  They covered various genres including an instrumental guitar EP by Lengthwise, a catchy but bonkers set of songs by Brouhaha and a grunge album under the name of Vein which contained some of my favourite songs from the ones I've written.

But the highlight of all this activity was undoubtedly some outside recognition in the form of an appearance on a compilation tape.  My brother occasionally used to order what we would call "benefit tapes", raising funds for some cause or other, and we put forward our version of 'Blame it on the Boogie' not thinking that it might actually be accepted.  But it was and so, among respected underground punk bands such as Oi Polloi, Bob Tilton, Baby Harp Seal, Wat Tyler and J Church, came a couple of teenagers singing in falsettos along to a guitar-based Jackson 5 cover.  We had probably never heard the original at the time, we actually covered the Big Fun version and never even bothered finding out the real words, singing "We spent the night in Bristol" for one line. It never got us anywhere but we felt kind of famous in our own little world.


Incidentally we also recorded a cover of Gina G's Eurovision classic 'Ooh Aah Just a Little Bit', which I managed to inadvertently add a Steve Harris bassline to.  We also sounded like the most Northern people ever while singing it.  Other notable covers over the years were Pyf Belly Machine's 'Not Superstitious' (Leatherface) and 'From Out of Nowhere' (Faith No More) plus Marvin versions of 'Mean Machine' (Sugar Ray), various Senseless Things songs and 'Biscuits for Smut' (Helmet).

After 1997, things slowed down recording-wise.  Beneath Utopia was my main concern, getting some mainstream magazine attention, and The Personnel still appeared every now and again, but the prolific college years were over, replaced with the slightly less prolific university years and the arid desert of the working years.  At some point the old bands probably will record some new material, but as to when who knows.....

Sunday, 12 January 2014

Faith No More Top 50

I wasn't sure whether to go with Faith No More as a top 50 given that they only had 6 studio albums, therefore the majority of their songs would end up in the chart somewhere.  But as a teenager I always considered them my third favourite band (after the Manics and the Senseless Things), so quality was never in question.

As with the other two bands they all had one member that I considered set them apart from other more run of the mill bands - the lyrics and propaganda of Richey Edwards, the bass of Morgan Nicholls and the keyboards of Roddy Bottum.  They weren't exactly a standard rock band without Roddy, in particular the rhythm section of Bill Gould and Mike Bordin were uniquely in tune with each other, but he definitely gave them something extra.

Even though I had heard 'Epic' somewhere along the line, 'Angel Dust' was the first FNM album I bought and it was one of those where hearing it as a 14 year old made it not seem as mad as it would be hearing it later on.....the innocence of youth!  Still my favourite of their albums (as shown in the 'By Era' chart), repeated listens reveal plenty of things you hadn't appreciated earlier on.

In reality comparing the songs was very difficult - you had the first two albums fronted by Chuck Mosely, the breakthrough of 'The Real Thing' which was different again, 'Angel Dust' where everything took a slightly darker turn, followed by the stylistically all over the place 'King for a Day...' and the more patchy comeback of 'Album of the Year'.  All had their gems, all had their detours into weird and wonderful unfamiliar genres, some of them worked and some of them didn't but they were definitely never boring.

This chart doesn't have the same depth of quality that the other charts I've compiled have had, but then there was a lot more to choose from in those cases so a slightly unfair comparison.  I think they may have slipped down the pecking order from third favourite band, but there will always be a place in my favourites list for a band as awkward as I am......

1. Midlife Crisis
2. Ashes to Ashes
3. Epic
4. Ugly in the Morning
5. From Out of Nowhere
6. Digging the Grave
7. Everything's Ruined
8. Introduce Yourself
9. Jizzlobber
10. Faster Disco
11. A Small Victory
12. Land of Sunshine
13. Cuckoo for Caca
14. Ricochet
15. Falling to Pieces
16. What a Day
17. We Care a Lot
18. Last Cup of Sorrow
19. The Real Thing
20. Another Body Murdered
21. Crack Hitler
22. Caffeine
23. Kindergarten
24. Woodpecker From Mars
25. Be Aggressive
26. Chinese Arithmetic
27. Anne's Song
28. Smaller and Smaller
29. Zombie Eaters
30. R n' R
31. The Gentle Art of Making Enemies
32. Pristina
33. Mark Bowen
34. Get Out
35. Surprise! You're Dead!
36. Collision
37. Evidence
38. Malpractice
39. Midnight Cowboy
40. Got That Feeling
41. Mouth to Mouth
42. I Started a Joke
43. Spirit
44. Just a Man
45. The Crab Song
46. As the Worm Turns
47. The Morning After
48. Greed
49. Arabian Disco
50. Blood

By Era
We Care a Lot 5
Introduce Yourself 8
The Real Thing 8
Angel Dust 12
King For a Day...Fool For a Lifetime 9
Album of the Year 6
Others 2

Sunday, 1 December 2013

Metallica Top 50

Like with the Iron Maiden chart I did previously, Metallica were a band I was familiar with from the many singles released from the Black album, but I had never bought an album until much later.  In fact I saw them for the first time headlining Reading Festival in 1997 before owning any albums and was surprised that I actually recognised a lot of their set.  Following the hottest act around at the time, an 'Antichrist Superstar'-era Marilyn Manson, was no mean feat given they had supposedly gone off the boil, but it's safe to say I was impressed.

It wasn't long before I bought the Black album on cassette, followed by the latest album, 'Reload', and then filled in the gaps from there.  It was a strange time to get into them properly, there were plenty of people saying they had sold out, they weren't as good as the old days etc. etc.  Listening to the older albums you could immediately pick out the timeless classics, obvious from the entries in this chart, but you could also say the impact of some of the albums or songs was lost to me as a latecomer, 'Kill 'Em All' especially sounding fairly primitive when compared to the later albums, something that wouldn't be as pronounced if I'd have heard it at the time when there would have been no modern albums to compare it to.

But that's the same when revisiting any band you were too young to listen to the first time around, eventually the songs take root in your head and you forget about everything else.  So, the earlier albums win out on the whole, but there are probably more entries from later albums than a lot of fans might include.  'Load' may be the album that I consider their weakest overall, but the 4 songs in the chart are of the highest quality.  And I might get some stick for having more songs from 'St Anger' than 'Master of Puppets' but that's just what I think!  I would still consider 'Master of Puppets' their third best album behind 'Metallica' and 'Ride the Lightning'.  All healthy debate as always!

1. For Whom the Bell Tolls
2. Master of Puppets
3. Blackened
4. Wherever I May Roam
5. Sad but True
6. Battery
7. One
8. Nothing Else Matters
9. Enter Sandman
10. Fade to Black
11. Whiplash
12. Through the Never
13. Damage Inc
14. Fuel
15. St Anger
16. Ride the Lightning
17. Creeping Death
18. The Unforgiven
19. Ain't My Bitch
20. The Four Horsemen
21. King Nothing
22. Of Wolf and Man
23. Fight Fire with Fire
24. The Unforgiven II
25. Bleeding Me
26. The Call of Ktulu
27. Metal Militia
28. Hit the Lights
29. Turn the Page
30. The Outlaw Torn
31. Some Kind of Monster
32. That Was Just Your Life
33. All Nightmare Long
34. The Memory Remains
35. Frantic
36. Don't Tread on Me
37. The Unnamed Feeling
38. Sweet Amber
39. Holier than Thou
40. The Frayed Ends of Sanity
41. The God that Failed
42. Welcome Home (Sanitarium)
43. Dyers Eve
44. Motorbreath
45. Last Caress/Green Hell
46. My Friend of Misery
47. Carpe Diem Baby
48. The Shortest Straw
49. Prince Charming
50. To Live is to Die

By Era
Kill 'Em All 5
Ride the Lightning 6
Master of Puppets 4
...And Justice For All 6
Metallica 11
Load 4
Reload 5
Garage Inc 2
St Anger 5
Death Magnetic 2