No album brought heavy metal into the mainstream quite like Metallica’s “… And Justice For All.” It didn’t hurt that in the golden age of MTV, the anti-war video for “One” was on HEAVY rotation and turned James Hetfield and the rest of the band into household names. But this was still a heavy metal album with all the boxes checked: dark, brooding lyrics; growling vocals; speed-metal guitar riffs; and even double kick drums courtesy of Lars Ulrich. But unlike a lot of previous metal albums, which tended to dive into the dark and sinister for the sake of being dark and sinister, “Justice” was the thinking man’s metal album with songs about loss of freedom, inequality, and, of course justice. But there was still just enough of the songs about death and anger and genocide for any headbanger to enjoy.

References in this Epipod:

You can buy or stream …And Justice For All by Metallica online at iTunes, Spotify, YouTube, and Amazon. 

 

They were like nothing we had seen or heard before. From the opening growls of “Welcome to the Jungle” to the pop sensibilities of “Sweet Child O’ Mine” and the anthemic “Paradise City,” Guns N’ Roses was the next generation’s answer to Led Zeppelin. And “Appetite for Destruction” pulled back the curtain on the debauchery and insanity that was L.A. and the Sunset Strip in the mid-1980s. Sure, they used hairspray … but mainly just to light a Molotov cocktail to set fire to hair metal. Axl, Slash, and the boys would go on to sell a mere 30 million copies of “Appetite.” And they left a path of destruction in their wake.

References in this Epipod:

You can buy or stream Appetite for Destruction by Guns N’ Roses online at iTunes, Spotify, YouTube, and Amazon.