![]() Some fans will disagree of course, but this is a case where remastering actually feels like it was more than a promotional copy.Īs for that bass, the live versions of the Justice songs here, as well as the rough mixes and demos, show that there was actually bass in the arrangements. While the lack of bass on that album certainly didn’t affect the band’s growing popularity - with Justice selling 2 million records in the first year of its release and eventually 8 million - it’s certainly a pleasant change to hear the songs in a way that some form of low end can actually be heard. ![]() The remastered Justice does not exactly bring back the bass but it does make it sound less piercing. The bass tracks in Justice are all but inaudible, which has been ascribed to a form of hazing mixed with the other band members’ - vocalist-guitarist James Hetfield, drummer Lars Ulrich, and guitarist Kirk Hammett - sudden loss of one of their own. His replacement was Jason Newstead, a fan of the band and dedicated metal-head whose enthusiasm and sheer presence seemed to irk the other members - then still very young and traumatized - who essentially treated the bass player as a second-rate citizen until he quit in 2001. The oldest of the band members, Burton was the band’s older brother figure as well as the one who introduced non-metal elements into Metallica. Justice was the first album to be written and recorded after the unexpected death of original bassist Cliff Burton, who died in a bus accident during the Puppets tour. Somehow, it feels like the album could not have come out any other way. The song “One” became the band’s first music video and introduced them to a large MTV-worshipping audience which went far beyond their metal underground fan base. It was a gloriously bloated, indulgent, ambitious and angry beast of a record. The themes were getting heavier, with Hetfield’s lyrics addressing political tyranny on the title track and “Eye of the Beholder”, religious fanaticism and familial sorrow on “Dyers Eve”, and most popularly the terrifying idea of being rendered a mute quadriplegic through war on the hit single “One”. Justice continued the progressive rock minded complexity that Masterintroduced but pushed that element much further, losing some of Master’smelodic edge and focusing on a more sprawling experience.Įvery song was a multisuite monstrosity of shape-shifting guitar riffs and rhythms, with track lengths running close to 10 minutes. It can be seen as the peak of the band’s phase-one trajectory as underground metal titans, which included their 1983 debut Kill ‘Em All, 1984’s Ride The Lightning and 1986’s masterful Master of Puppets (arguably the band’s best and one of rock music’s finest moments). For Metallica, the road to becoming one of the world’s biggest musical acts began with … And Justice for All, the band’s fourth album.
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