Metallica Re-Loaded: 245 unreleased tracks and a deluxe box set | Music | Entertainment
Metallica. Load Remastered. To date Metallica have sold up more than 163 million album sales which, if youâre counting, is more than double Oasisâs total. The Los Angeles band built up an enormous worldwide following with their brutal and intense brand of no-mercy thrash metal. Their 1983 debut album Kill âEm All went multi-platinum and subsequent releases sold even more. But Load was different. Released in 1996, their sixth studio album put the mainstream cat among the headbanging pigeons. Suddenly the masters of âharder-fasterâ extremities were exploring new directions, as they moved from the awesome wallop of the Master Of Puppets era to a simpler, more melodic heavy metal sound.
As well as an abundance of bluesy southern rock, Load also finds singer, rhythm guitarist and prime songwriter James Hetfield embracing country on the underwhelming ballad Mama Said and soft rock Americana on Hero Of The Day. Some hardcore fans saw Load as a calculated sellout rather than a natural progression, but numbers like opener Ainât My Bitch and King Nothing were concrete-hard metal stompers. The emotional eight-minute-plus epic Bleeding Me became a live set favourite and the longer, heavier The Outlaw Torn was even more effective. This deluxe reissue of the album has been remastered by award-winning Reuben Cohen, with producer Greg Fidelman overseeing, improving the sound quality and making the listening experience more immersive. But critics who felt Loadâs real problem was it was over-stuffed with uneven songs might baulk at the deluxe box set which packs in a whopping 245 never-before-released tracks, including demos, rough mixes, and live material. Available as a 180g 2xLP release, as well as on CD, cassette and digitally, the limited edition set also packs in mid-90s TV appearances, patches, posters, guitar picks, lyric sheets, a 128-page book, and more.
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Blood Sweat & Tears. What Goes Up. The 32-track âBest ofâ comp celebrates the New York jazz-rockers who broke big in the late 60s with numbers like their soulful cover of Brenda Hollowayâs Youâve Made Me So Very Happy. Their own Spinning Wheel from 1968 still crops up on film and TV soundtracks. Driving brass is jubilantly in evidence on songs like Lucretia Mac Evil, the lively tale of a âbackseat Delilahâ.Â
Van Morrison. Remembering Now. He might be a cantankerous codger, but Van the Manâs 47th studio album reminds us why heâs still one of the giants of UK music. Opening with the sublime Down To Joy, these 15 tracks show Vanâs tireless ability to craft songs rich with warmth, heart, and humanity. Post break-up number Cutting Corners is another corker. Heâs back to writing love songs. Donât stop.
Cynthia Erivo. I Forgive You. Best known as Elphaba in Wicked south Londoner Cynthia conjures up magic of her own on her 2nd solo album. I Forgive You is a four-chapter study of an evolving relationship, encompassing soul, heartfelt ballads and of course nods to musical theatre. Her powerful expressive voice comes to the fore on numbers like What You Want. She Said is the most carefree.Â