Album Review

Score 8.3
Written by Gregory Bradley
Published on 10/31/2003
Soon to grace your ears is a tribute to the OTHER (the first being Iron Maiden band that probably got you all into metal, Metallica. Nobody can deny that at one point, Metallica was their life. They were the height of heaviness, the pinnacle of brutality, and the kings of our beloved genre. On this disc, A Tribute to the Four Horsemen, you can kick back and get all nostalgic thinking of a time when hair was long, “file sharing” consisted of swapping audio cassettes, Kirk Hammet wasn’t addicted to the wah-wah pedal, Lars Ulrich could still make a distinction between drums and garbage cans, Cliff Burton was alive and well, and James Hetfield didn’t know the meaning of “clean vocals”. The track by track review: Primal Fear does a killer rendition of “Seek and Destroy” in a style all their own. For those of you who try and deny the singing prowess of Ralf Scheepers should take note of this cover, it’s done quite well. “Fight Fire with Fire” is done by Therion, a band I’ve never paid much attention to. I’m not sure if they normally don’t do clean vocals, but there are some very good non-clean vocals here, especially at the end when they repeat the song title a few times. Destruction plays a badass version of “Whiplash” in a way that only Destruction can. They even include the line “we’re NOT Metallica” in place of the original, which was excellent. Anthrax does a decent “Phantom Lord”. It sounds somewhat stale for some reason, even though I enjoy it more than Metallica’s original. In a very interesting cover, Sonata Arctica covers “Fade to Black”. I never realized this was a power metal song! It plays surprisingly well, their vocalist does a superb job with his duties. The trademark musicianship of the band makes this one silky-smooth. Everyone’s favorite Metallica song, “Master of Puppets”, is done by Burden of Grief. It’s done pretty much verbatim, with the exception of some thrashy non-clean vocals. Possibly one of the best covers I’ve heard is Dark Tranquillity’s version of “My Friend of Misery”. They couldn’t have picked a better song for their style, it sounds perfect. I’d say it’s one of my favorite covers on the CD. The hit-or-miss “One” is played next by Crematory. The great thing about this cover is the fact that they improved the song, making it light-years better than Metallica’s version! Not only do they add keyboards to the perfect points and great non-clean vocals for the refrains, but they drastically cut down on the bloated length of the song to a lean four minutes or so. It’s my favorite track on this disc, definitely a hit. In an odd sounding cover, In Flames covers “Eye of the Beholder”. The odd thing is that it sounds more like Anthrax than In Flames. Otherwise, it’s a somewhat boring song played somewhat boringly. A proggy version of “Welcome Home (Sanitarium)” is pulled off by Thunderstone. Good musicianship makes for a nice sounding cover to an oft-overlooked song. Definitely the weirdest cover on the album is executed by The Kovenant. In an extremely stylized version of “The Memory Remains”, they actually manage to make this song sound cool. This tribute album is almost worth buying for this song alone, as it’s so unique and an unconventional choice. Sinner plays a painfully awkward “Wherever I May Roam”. Musically it’s fine, but the vocals just aren’t suited to the song and it comes off as somewhat of a failure. Tankard stylishly closes out the album with the quintessential album-ender, “Damage Inc.”. I love the original, but the Tankard version sounds somewhat watered down. While it’s a good cover, it lacks the unbridled lightspeed quality of the original, espeically at my favorite point (the solo after the line “you’ll know just where we come from”). While now they are hardly worthy of a tribute, you still must recognize the fact that Metallica used to be incredible. It's hard to remember a time in which lyrics like “Following our instinct not a trend, Go against the grain until the end” were sincere, but A Tribute to the Four Horsemen might give you a little taste of those long-forgotten days. This is a great collection of covers, worthy of your collection.



Unknown Metalhead
max | posted on 6/2007 | Reply
nothing wicked to say....just want opinions from PRO LEVEL guitarists about what is the absolute best wah-wah pedal for thick metal riffing and overdrive assisted soloing? have a morley i hate and am looking at the clyde by fulltone. saw bad reviews about cry baby/vox 848 units.....which are both made by dunlop.anyone own a teese? thanks !!!
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Blarg | posted on 3/2006 | Reply
What? No cover of "The Four Horsemen"?
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Mauricio | posted on 9/2004 | Reply
necesto oir esto, soy mexicano y me gusta mucho Metallica, necesito escuchar la version de My friend of Misery de Dark Tranqillity.......i nees to hear this, m mexica and i like much Metallica, i need to hear the Dark Tranquillity's cover c ya
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Madman | posted on 11/2003 | Reply
I can't believe I just noticed this now, but I think there might be two different versions of this disc. I looked it up at amazon and found the following different tracks: The Thing That Should Not Be - Primus Harvester Of Sorrow - Apocalyptica Battery - Die Krupps Motorbreath (Live) - Rage I don't think that one had The Kovenant, Tankard, or Thunderstone . . . weird.
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Scott Hall | posted on 11/2003 | Reply
Hi, I totally agree with the substance of your review of the CD, butI couldn't disagree more with your conclusions on Metallica. Metallica was, is and always will be the best heavy metal band in the world. Period. What you guys totally seem to miss is that everyone needs to evolve. And once again Metallica have done so. They are worth every tribute ANYONE wants to do. They go where no one else dares to go, because they're all too afraid of their fans calling themsellouts. That's b/s. I remember a time when people started saying that about Metallica. It was 1988, and again 1990, and so forth. But ask ANY band or anyone into this music what made them get into it. 99% of the time the answer has been, and will be Metallica. Metallica are bigger than anything that heavy metall has ever produced. Show them the respect they deserve. Scott
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Jacksonlefteye | posted on 11/2003 | Reply
this sounds interesting, i'm usually not much for tribute albums (bands actually manage to screw up Metallica songs, i mean COME ON), but i'll have to check this one out, especially the 4-minute version of "One," sounds like a pretty interesting mindfuck hehe i hear you nightstalker, except now i'm a zit-faced adult that listens to underground metal all by myself LOL...ahhh....*sigh*...
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Wrathchild | posted on 11/2003 | Reply
Thank you for the compliment :D
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davefons | posted on 11/2003 | Reply
i read a review of this a while ago-not as good as your's wrath- and downloaded a few tracks. The sonata arctica was strange, no solo just humming. I really wanna hear the dt cover misery now.
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Lee | posted on 11/2003 | Reply
Do a killer cover of "The thing that should not be" suprised it isn't on here.
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Nightstalker | posted on 11/2003 | Reply
sounds interesting. when i was a zit-faced teenager, my friends and i would play our own versions of those songs. it'll be good to hear how they're done professionally.
Unknown Metalhead
ALEX deMUSTAINE | posted on 11/2003 | Reply
I can never be arsed with tribute albums, but I think the Destruction, Sonata Arctica and that Kovenant cover sounds interesting.
Unknown Metalhead
The Dragon | posted on 10/2003 | Reply
I'm not the hugest Metallica fan, but I definitely need to hear this.
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Wrathchild | posted on 10/2003 | Reply
I finally found a reason to use the word "quintessential". :D