Fade to Bluegrass: The Bluegrass Tribute to Metallica, Vol. 2
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Master of Puppets
- Thing That Should Not Be
- Memory Remains
- Creeping Death
- For Whom the Bell Tolls
- Harvester of Sorrow
- To Live Is to Die
- Sad But True
- Frantic
- Welcome Home (Sanitarium)
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #67248 in Music
- Released on: 2006-01-31
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: .24 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
From out of the metal storm rides Iron Horse, the Alabama bluegrass band with the passion to match Metallica song for song. Fade to Bluegrass Volume II is a hand-picked collection of Metallica hits, restrung and refined into beautiful acoustic jams. Reeling fiddles, blazing banjos and the sweetest harmonies prove that bluegrass and metal have more in common than meets the ear -- they’re both on a mission to connect fans to the music that moves them.
From the Artist
You can’t spell "metal" without Metallica. For over twenty years, they’ve set the platinum standard for high-velocity ferocity, with their chainsaw guitars, machine gun drumming, and in-your-face tales of society’s outcasts. Brilliantly assured musicians, Metallica has forced critics and fans to accept and finally to love their brand of hard-thrash rock. Their songs have become classics, driven by riffs that stick to the insides of our skulls, long after we’ve pressed the eject button in a spasm of metal-ized satisfaction.
Customer Reviews
A Mighty Fine Pickin' 'n A-Singin'!
"Fade to Bluegrass Volume II: The Bluegrass Tribute to Metallica" is, by any account, a very well-done experiment into the musical reassignment craze going around these days. Taking the hard, energetic, fast metal of one of the most well-known musical acts ever, and translating them to a slower, pluckier form of music known as Bluegrass.
Where "Fade to Bluegrass Volume II" succeeds is in breathing some new life into some slightly-aged tracks from 10+ years ago in some cases, as well as giving a new face to more recent tracks that might've been passed over because of the album they were on. But, where "Fade to Bluegrass Volume II" fails is in its grace; the original "Fade to Bluegrass" album is an all-time favorite of mine, and the tracks on it were not only well-done, but changed to bring familiarity and freshness to them, whereas a few of the tracks on Volume II feel... alien. A good example being the track "To Live is to Die". Originally a sweeping, epic, sorrow-filled song in rememberance of fallen bassist Cliff Burton, the version found on this Bluegrass translation is a short, under-four-minute li'l ditty with the once-spoken verse now being sung the whole way through. And while this does what the album sets out to do - takes these songs and give a new spin on them - it ends up hurting more than helping, as the original and translated versions bear little semblance to each other, and therefore hurting the overall feel of the product.
Most of this album is very, very good. But, there's just something lacking in this Volume that was present in the first. It's very difficult to put it in words, it's something aural, perhaps the feel that perhaps a couple of these tracks were rushed through without putting enough consideration into how to turn them from pounding metal to plucking bluegrass, and leaving the end result with a bit more to be desired.
An Excellent combination of the two genres
If you like either Bluegrass or Metallica, you will love this cd. It is just as good, if not better than the first volume. All the songs are good, but my favorite has to be the rendition of "Welcome Home (Sanitarium).
So, we needed TWO VOLUMES of this?!
This is supply-side economics runamok.
The only downside here is that CMH didn't use a larger sample size to test the theory. They should have pressed 6.5 billion of these, one for every man, woman, and child on the planet.
Although the sales would have still been ZERO, they would have given much entertainment to all the poor folks in Africa. True, you can't eat a CD, but they can be used for things like, killing ants (via sun reflection), battlefield signaling (via sun reflection), palm tanning (again, via sun reflection), etc. Of course one could actually play them in a CD player, but why chance burning up the motors in a perfectly good CD player?
All kidding aside, the musicians are decent, and the singing isn't bad, but when is CMH going to wake up and start producing BLUEGRASS AGAIN? I mean, PLEEEEEASE---METALLICA? M-E-T-A-L-L-I-C-A ?!



