Kill 'Em All is Metallica's first album, released July, 1983 on Megaforce Records.
The album reaches furious speeds on every track (discounting the Cliff Burton bass solo "(Anesthesia) Pulling Teeth"), a testament to the band's early influences: Diamond Head, Motörhead and Venom, all English bands who combined the heaviness and technicality of Black Sabbath with the speed and aggression of punk rock. This made the band a total anomaly in the early 1980s heavy metal scene in the USA. The band wear their influences on their sleeve, and shades of tracks like Diamond Head's "Dead Reckoning" can be heard in "Seek & Destroy".
Mustaine and Hetfield were infamously opposed on many occasions, with Mustaine later blaming the rivalry on the fact that "there were too many personalities" in the band. These tensions came to a head with a number of things: the first is an alleged fist-fight that broke out between Mustaine and Hetfield, after Mustaine accused Hetfield of kicking his dog. The other was slightly more serious, with Hetfield and Ulrich blaming Dave's firing on his alcohol problem: while Mustaine would vehemently deny this, his struggles with addiction through his later career certainly add some weight to Metallica's claims. Some Megadeth fans have cried foul over this, citing Hetfield's 2001 rehabilitation for alcoholism as hypocrisy, asking why the band didn't send Dave to Alcoholics Anonymous; Mustaine himself addressed this point during a conversation with Ulrich in Metallica's 2004 movie Some Kind Of Monster.
Despite their differences, Mustaine's contribution to the early years of Metallica was not neglected as he received four co-writing credits on Kill 'Em All. One song, "The Four Horsemen" was originally written by Mustaine and titled "The Mechanix". It was performed at many early Metallica shows. Following Mustaine's exit, Hetfield and Ulrich added a mid-paced, melodic middle section. Hetfield also wrote new lyrics and the band renamed it The Four Horsemen. Mustaine kept the faster paced original version of the song, dropped the "The" from the title, and included it on the first Megadeth album, Killing Is My Business... And Business Is Good!. Mustaine's other writing credits are for the songs "Jump in the Fire", "Phantom Lord" and "Metal Militia".
"Whiplash" was released as a US 12" EP, featuring the same tracks as the UK Jump In The Fire EP but also featuring a special "Neckbrace Remix" of Whiplash.
The 1988 re-issue of the album by Elektra Records added the songs "Blitzkrieg" (a cover of a song by the band of the same name) and "Am I Evil?" (the aforementioned Diamond Head song). Both of these Metallica covers were previously released as Garage Days Revisited on the b-side of the Creeping Death EP from the label Music For Nations in 1984.
Metallica albums | 1983 albums | Debut albums | Elektra Records albums
Kill 'Em All | Kill 'Em All | Kill 'Em All | Kill 'em All | Kill 'Em All | Kill 'Em All | Kill 'Em All | Kill 'Em All | Kill 'Em All | Kill 'Em All | Kill 'Em All | Kill 'Em All | Kill 'Em All | Kill 'Em All | Kill 'em All | Kill 'Em All
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Kill 'Em All".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world