Rock/Pop
LPレコード

Endgame<限定盤>

4.0

販売価格

¥
7,390
税込
還元ポイント

廃盤

在庫状況 について

フォーマット LPレコード
発売日 2021年11月中旬
国内/輸入 輸入(アルゼンチン盤)
レーベルWea
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 505383740807
SKU 505383740807

構成数 : 1枚

  1. 1.[LPレコード]
    1. 1.
      Dialectic Chaos
    2. 2.
      This Day We Fight!
    3. 3.
      44 Minutes
    4. 4.
      1,320'
    5. 5.
      Bite The Hand That Feeds
    6. 6.
      Bodies Left Behind
    7. 7.
      Endgame
    8. 8.
      The Hardest Part Of Letting Go... Sealed With A Kiss
    9. 9.
      Headcrusher
    10. 10.
      How the Story Ends
    11. 11.
      Nothing Left To Lose

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Megadeth

オリジナル発売日:2009年

商品の紹介

The release of 2009's Endgame brings with it a startling realization: if first-generation thrash metal fans had been polled about which of the genre's "Big Four" -- Metallica, Slayer, Anthrax, and Megadeth -- would prove to be the most resilient and consistently prolific over the next quarter century, the only sure-fire consensus would probably have been "well, anyone but Megadeth!" And yet, 12 studio albums and 150-plus songs later -- more than any of the other three have managed -- that's exactly what's come to pass. It hasn't been easy, and it's rarely been pretty along the way, but despite a few weak efforts, mostly self-inflicted controversy, and no end to verbal diarrhea, none of those other platinum-busting thrash titans have been as productive as Dave Mustaine's bunch -- all of which stands as a testament to the man's stubborn drive to prolong Megadeth's career against all odds, including drug abuse, his unfulfilled vengeance against Metallica, and even a religious reawakening! Of course, one shouldn't overlook the fact that Megadeth have always been a band in name only, thus allowing their leader to cope with voices of dissent by simply showing them the door. The "group" was also broken up for a short spell in the early 2000s while Mustaine recovered from nerve damage to his hands, after which he struggled with inspiration, creative direction, and a never-ending parade of henchmen before finally recovering much of that old Megadeth "mojo" (sonically, lyrically, and even where the cover art was concerned) on 2007's effective return to form, United Abominations. Best of all, this momentum carries on into Mustaine and company's second release for Roadrunner, Endgame, whose title apparently refers to "coming full circle" rather than any sort of goodbye, and finds the latest iteration of Megadeth -- debuting new guitarist Chris Broderick(ex-Nevermore, Jag Panzer) -- working primarily within their technical thrash comfort zone (think Peace Sells through Rust in Peace), with only a few latter-day elements and rare experimental diversions. As such, deceptively simple guitar-shredding master classes like "This Day We Fight!," "1,320" (surprisingly, written about "funny car" racing), and first single "Headcrusher" are cut from the same bloody cloth as "Wake Up Dead" and "Set the World Afire," while politicized rants such as "44 Minutes," "Bite the Hand That Feeds," and the title cut recall old stalwarts like "Peace Sells" and "Holy Wars." And for those who enjoyed Megadeth's early-'90s shift away from incessant thrashing toward the more "civilized" (but pre-sellout) Countdown to Extinction and Youthanasia albums, there are more methodical and melodically sweetened cuts like "Bodies Left Behind," "How the Story Ends," and "The Right to Go Insane." Indeed, the only song here that breaks entirely from vintage Megadeth templates is the elaborately named "The Hardest Part of Letting Go...Sealed with a Kiss," which surely owes its orchestrated string backdrops to the European metal perspective afforded by producer Andy Sneap, and tells a "love story" about entombing one's beloved behind a brick wall a la Edgar Allan Poe's The Cask of Amontillado. This one anomaly notwithstanding, however, Endgame is arguably the least commercially concerned Megadeth album since Rust in Peace some 20 years earlier, and by touching on so many of the favored songwriting styles of those early years, it should not only give their typically opinionated fan base very little to kvetch and moan about, but also throw new fuel upon the flames of Megadeth's unlikely longevity. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
Rovi

かつて〈スラッシュ四天王〉と呼ばれたバンドのなかで、ぶっちゃけ一時は頭ひとつ遅れを取っていた感のあるメガデスだが、ここ数作における充実ぶりはどうだろう。通算12枚目となる本作では、十八番のインテレクチュアル・スラッシュ・メタルにモダンな攻撃性を加え、名作『Rust In Peace』(90年)をも凌駕する凶暴なサウンドを鳴らしている。あえて断言してしまおう、これは2000年代最後のスラッシュ名盤だ!
bounce (C)粟野竜二
タワーレコード(vol.313(2009年08月25日発行号)掲載)

メンバーズレビュー

4件のレビューがあります
4.0
25%
50%
25%
0%
0%
リマスター盤ということで聴いてみたんですが、サウンドが気持ちいいです。バキバキしていてピロピロしていて、最高です。「This Day We Fight!」、「Bite the Hand」が気に入ってます。
2020/05/04 TMさん
0
2ndのInto The Lungs Of Hell的なイントロ1から2への流れはなかなかスリリング!メロディアスな3、狂乱のシンフォニーを彷彿とさせる6、4や9のようなスピードチューン。初期衝動と円熟した現在の一体化を感じさせる傑作だと思います。
2009/09/19 暇人さん
0
デイヴエレフスン&マーティフリードマン&ニックメンザの居ないメガデス■どうしても馴染めない▼彼らが居たから奴が光ったんだから◎
0

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