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Kill 'Em All

Kill 'Em All is the debut studio album by the American heavy metal band Metallica, released on July 25, 1983, through the independent label Megaforce Records. After forming in 1981, Metallica began by playing shows in local clubs in Los Angeles. They recorded several demos to gain attention from club owners and eventually relocated to San Francisco to secure the services of bassist Cliff Burton. The group's No Life 'til Leather demo tape (1982) was noticed by Megaforce label head Jon Zazula, who signed them and provided a budget of $15,000 for recording. The album was recorded in May with producer Paul Curcio at the Music America Studios in Rochester, New York. It was originally intended to be titled Metal Up Your Ass, with cover art featuring a hand clutching a dagger emerging from a toilet bowl. Zazula convinced the band to change the name because distributors feared that releasing an album with such an offensive title and artwork would diminish its chances of commercial success.

Kill 'Em All
Studio album by
ReleasedJuly 25, 1983 (1983-07-25)
RecordedMay 10–27, 1983
StudioMusic America (Rochester, New York)
Genre
Length51:20
LabelMegaforce
ProducerPaul Curcio
Metallica chronology
Kill 'Em All
(1983)
Ride the Lightning
(1984)
Singles from Kill 'Em All
  1. "Whiplash"
    Released: August 8, 1983
  2. "Jump in the Fire"
    Released: January 20, 1984

Metallica promoted the album on the two-month co-headlining Kill 'Em All for One tour with English heavy metal band Raven in the US. The album also generated two singles: "Whiplash" and "Jump in the Fire". Although the initial shipment was 15,000 copies in the US, the album sold 60,000 copies worldwide by the end of Metallica's Seven Dates of Hell European tour in 1984. The album did not enter the Billboard 200 until 1986, when it peaked at number 155, following Metallica's commercial success with its third studio album, Master of Puppets; the 1988 Elektra reissue peaked at number 120. Kill 'Em All was critically praised at the time of its release and has since been regarded as a groundbreaking album for thrash metal, because of its "precise musicianship, which fused new wave of British heavy metal riffs with hardcore punk tempos". It was also retrospectively placed on a few publications' best album lists. The album's musical approach and lyrics were markedly different from rock's mainstream of the early 1980s and inspired a number of bands who followed in a similar manner. It was certified 3× Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in 1999 for shipping three million copies in the United States.

Background and recording edit

 
Lars Ulrich (pictured in 2008) founded Metallica through an advertisement in The Recycler. He picked the band's name from his friend Ron Quintana's list of names for his upcoming magazine. Ulrich suggested Metal Mania, secretly wanting to use Metallica as the band's name.[3]

Metallica was formed in 1981 in Los Angeles by drummer Lars Ulrich and by vocalist/rhythm guitarist James Hetfield. Before settling on a definitive lineup, Metal Blade Records owner Brian Slagel asked Metallica to record a song for the first edition of his Metal Massacre compilation. Hetfield and Ulrich chose "Hit the Lights" from Hetfield's and his childhood friend Ron McGovney's previous band Leather Charm, and recorded it with Hetfield on vocals, McGovney on bass, and temporary guitarist Lloyd Grant. The band's first lineup featured Hetfield, Ulrich, McGovney, and guitarist Dave Mustaine, who was acquired through a newspaper advertisement. The band practiced in McGovney's garage and looked for gigs at local clubs. Metallica's first show was on March 14, 1982, at the Radio City in Anaheim. The nine-song setlist consisted of two originals ("Hit the Lights" and an unfinished version of "Jump in the Fire" from Mustaine's earlier band Panic) and covers of new wave of British heavy metal (NWOBHM) bands such as Diamond Head, Blitzkrieg, Savage, and Sweet Savage. The gig did not go as well as planned, because Mustaine had problems with the guitar distortion pedal, and broke a string during a song. Metallica's second gig was on March 27, 1982, at Hollywood's Whisky a Go Go, opening for Saxon. Although Mötley Crüe was originally scheduled to open the show, the group canceled because of its growing popularity. Metallica recorded a three-song demo to persuade the venue's management to allow the band to open for Saxon. Metallica's third concert was in April 1982, the first time "The Mechanix",[4] written by Mustaine during his tenure with Panic, was played.[5] Mustaine interacted with the fans at Metallica's earliest shows because Hetfield was shy.[6]

To garner attention from club owners, Metallica recorded the Power Metal demo in April 1982, which featured "Motorbreath" in addition to the already-performed originals. The logo, displaying the band's name with the first and last letter drawn larger with sharp serifs and italicized, was designed by Hetfield.[7] The No Life 'til Leather demo was recorded in July 1982, and it created a buzz in the underground tape trading circles.[8] No Life 'til Leather featured a re-recorded version of "Hit the Lights", which appeared on the second pressing of Metal Massacre, in addition to new songs such as "Phantom Lord", "Seek & Destroy", and "Metal Militia". The recording and mastering were financed by Kenny Kane, owner of the punk label High Velocity, and distributed by Ulrich and his friend Pat Scott. [9] Because of tensions with Mustaine, McGovney left the band in December. Ulrich was impressed by Cliff Burton's performance with Trauma at The Troubadour in West Hollywood, and offered to let him join the band.[10] Burton joined on the condition that Metallica would relocate to the San Francisco area.[11] Moving to El Cerrito in February 1983, the band stayed and rehearsed at Exodus manager Mark Whitaker's house, which they called the "Metallica Mansion".[12] Metallica intended to record its debut in Los Angeles on Slagel's independent label on an $8,000 budget ($24,722 in 2023). Slagel could not afford the record, and Ulrich contacted Jon Zazula, a New Jersey record store owner and promoter of heavy metal bands on the East Coast who had already heard No Life 'til Leather. Metallica rented a U-Haul truck and drove to New Jersey in late March,[12] and upon arrival, allowed Zazula to sell copies of No Life 'til Leather to help him found Megaforce Records because no label wanted to finance the album's recording.[13]

 
Dave Mustaine (pictured in 2005) was an early member of Metallica, and co-wrote several songs on Kill 'Em All. His erratic and violent behavior led to his expulsion from the band prior to recording the album.[14]

Hetfield and Ulrich fired Mustaine on the morning of April 11 after a gig in New York, because of his drug and alcohol problems, overly aggressive behavior, and clashes with bandmates.[15] On Whitaker's recommendation, Metallica recruited Kirk Hammett, who played in Exodus and was a one-time student of Joe Satriani. Hammett learned the songs on his flight to New York and started recording the album with Metallica barely a month later. Metallica met producer Paul Curcio at Music America Studios in Rochester, and recorded the album in two weeks.[16] Unable to afford a hotel during the recording sessions, the band members stayed over in people's houses in Rochester and at the Music Factory in Jamaica, Queens, where Anthrax held rehearsals.[17] Curcio had set the studio equipment as if he were recording an ordinary rock band. He thought the initial tapes sounded very distorted and tried to compensate by turning down the knobs.[14] Metallica resented Curcio's involvement, because he seemed uninterested, and had little impact on the sound.[18] Although Zazula wanted Hammett to replicate Mustaine's solos, Hammett's guitar solos on the album were partially based on Mustaine's original solos, with the first four bars of most solos written by Mustaine before his departure.[19] Despite their differences, Mustaine's contributions to the early years of Metallica were still acknowledged, and he received four co-writing credits on Kill 'Em All.[20] Zazula was not pleased with the initial mix because he thought that the drums were too loud, and the guitars were too low in the mix. The remix was done by sound engineer Chris Bubacz, according to Zazula's instructions.[14] The final cost for the record rounded to an estimated $15,000 ($46,354 in 2023), which nearly caused Zazula to go bankrupt. "This was mortgage money I'm spending, not something I've got put by I'm going to invest," he said later.[21] Zazula had a hard time finding a distributor for the record, but he eventually convinced Relativity Records to distribute the album in the US and Canada, and Music for Nations in Europe.[13]

The band intended to title the album Metal Up Your Ass with a cover featuring a hand clutching a dagger emerging from a toilet bowl. However, Zazula convinced them to change the title, because he thought that distributors would not stock it as it was too explicit to display. The final cover featured the shadow of a hand letting go of a bloodied hammer.[22] Burton was credited with coming up with the name Kill 'Em All—referring to timid record distributors, saying, "Those record company fuckers ... kill 'em all!"—as a response to the situation.[18] Ulrich thought Kill 'Em All was a good name, and Zazula agreed.[21] Burton suggested to Gary L. Heard, also responsible for the Metallica photograph on the back cover, to feature a bloodied hammer on the album art. According to Hammett, "Cliff carried a hammer with him everywhere he went. He always had a hammer in his luggage, and he would take it out occasionally and start destroying things."[23] Even though the original title was unused, the band did later release a "Metal Up Your Ass" T-shirt with the proposed artwork.[22] A live bootleg recording of a 1982 performance at the Old Waldorf, titled Metal Up Your Ass (Live), featured the original cover artwork.[12] Original pressings of the album came with an inner sleeve that included pictures and lyrics as well as a silver label on the vinyl. Subsequent pressings had a blank white sleeve and a standard album label. The 1988 reissue re-introduced the lyrics and photos. The original release can be distinguished by the silver labels with the track listing but without track lengths. Every issue produced has had the phrase "Bang That Head That Doesn't Bang". The phrase "Bang That Head That Doesn't Bang" was dedicated to San Francisco fan Ray Burch, known for his headbanging at the band's early shows.[21]

Music and lyrics edit

"Kill 'Em All's lyrics created as much excitement as the band's music. Taken together, the words of the songs on the album form a single theme. It is a concept album that heralds the breakthrough of a new subgenre of metal, its fans, and its leader, Metallica. It is a celebration of metal. It is a call to arms to a new generation of metalheads, many of whom were already armed and ready."

Deena Weinstein, Essays on Debut Albums[7]

Kill 'Em All features intricate riffing reminiscent of the NWOBHM bands played at high velocity. The album is considered crucial in thrash metal's genesis because it introduced fast percussion, low-register chords, and shredding leads to the genre.[24] Hammett played some pentatonic patterns in addition to his breakneck solos.[25] Ulrich adopted a double time snare pattern that would become a mainstay on Metallica's subsequent albums. Hetfield's vocals evolved from the melodic wail on No Life 'til Leather to a rough-edged bark, and the entire band played faster and more accurately on Kill 'Em All.[26] Author Joel McIver described Burton's and Hetfield's performances as nearly virtuosic, highlighting Burton's smooth-sounding bass and Hetfield's precise picking skills.[27] According to journalist Chuck Eddy, the juvenile lyrical approach to topics such as warfare, violence and life on the road gives the album a "naive charm".[28] The musical approach on Kill 'Em All was in contrast to the glam metal bands who dominated the charts in the early 1980s.[29] Because of its rebellious nature and Metallica's street appearance, it appealed to fans who were not into the mainstream of hard rock.[30]

"Hit the Lights" was based on an unfinished Leather Charm song written by Hetfield and Hugh Tanner.[31] Hetfield had brought the majority of the song to Ulrich, and the two worked out different arrangements. Performed at 160 beats per minute, "Hit the Lights" opens with fade-in distorted guitars and a short shriek by Hetfield. The song is driven by the 16th note repeated main riff and the continuous eighth note snare drum hits. The lyrics celebrate heavy metal itself and are sung with short and high-pitched vocals.[32] The song ends with several lengthy guitar solos by Hammett, who performed cleaner and more melodic versions of Mustaine's leads.

"The Four Horsemen" is a revamp of the Mustaine-penned "The Mechanix", which originally had lyrics about having sex at a gas station.[5][34] A modified version of his composition with the original lyrics appeared on Megadeth's debut Killing Is My Business... and Business Is Good! (1985), named "Mechanix". Although Mustaine told Metallica not to use any of his music, Hetfield wrote lyrics about the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse and added a bridge and cleanly picked guitar solo in the middle.[34] Mustaine said the bridge was inspired by the main riff in Lynyrd Skynyrd's "Sweet Home Alabama".[9]

"Motorbreath" was written by Hetfield during his time in Leather Charm and tells about life on the road. The song is based on a four-chord verse and a stop-and-start chorus.[9] The most recognizable parts are Ulrich's drum rolls in each chorus and the riff that accompanies Hammett's solos. Because of its speed, the song requires fast picking by the bassist.[35]

"Jump in the Fire" was the first song ever[36] written by Mustaine, with lyrics about teenage sexual experience.[4] Hetfield's revised lyrics for the album were written from Satan's point of view, describing how the devil watches people killing each other, and is sure they will go to hell for their actions.[37] "Jump in the Fire" was released as a single in the UK in February 1984 to promote a UK tour with Venom.[38] The single featured "Phantom Lord" and "Seek & Destroy" as live tracks, although they are actually studio recordings with fake crowd noise dubbed over them.[39] The single's cover art features an oil painting titled The Devils of D-Day, created by artist Les Edwards in 1978.[40]

"(Anesthesia)-Pulling Teeth" is a bass solo by Burton, accompanied on drums by Ulrich. A staple of Burton's live performances since his high school days in the band Agents of Misfortune,[41] the instrumental track featured Burton's distinctive "lead-bass" style of playing, incorporating heavy distortion, use of wah-wah pedal and tapping.[42] Bubacz introduces the track as "Bass solo, take one",[21] informing listeners that the song was recorded in one take.[43] "(Anesthesia)-Pulling Teeth" was the bass solo that Burton was playing when Hetfield and Ulrich first saw him at a gig.[44] Hetfield stated: "We heard this wild solo going on and thought, 'I don't see any guitar player up there.' We were both counting the strings and I finally turned to Lars and said, 'Dude, that's a bass!' Cliff was up there on stage with his band Trauma with a wah-wah pedal and his huge mop of red hair. He didn't care whether people were there. He was looking down at his bass, playing."[45] For the album version, Cliff Burton insisted on recording this track alone in an empty room, while the studio technicians were downstairs. He made this recording in one take, after about twenty minutes of preparation.[46]

"Whiplash" was the album's first single, issued on August 8, 1983.[47] It features a swift rhythm line of straight 16th notes played at about 200 beats per minute. Hetfield and Burton performed with palm muted technique and precise metronomic control.[48] The lyrics celebrate crowd energy and headbanging.[49] Rock journalist Mick Wall wrote that "Whiplash" signified the birth of thrash metal, stating: "If one wishes to identify the very moment thrash metal arrived spitting and snarling into the world, 'Whiplash' is indisputably it."[21]

"Phantom Lord" is a lyrical nod to devilry. The song begins with a synthesized bass drone and contains a middle section with clean, arpeggiated guitar chords. Written by Mustaine, its central riff is in NWOBHM fashion.[48]

"No Remorse" is a mid-tempo song that suddenly accelerates its tempo in the fifth minute.[51] The song is about not feeling any remorse or sense of repentance during battle.

"Seek & Destroy" was inspired by Diamond Head's "Dead Reckoning"[5] and is the first song Metallica recorded during the Kill 'Em All sessions.[30] Hetfield wrote the main riff in his truck outside a Los Angeles sticker factory where he was working.[5] Because of its simple, one-line chorus, the song became a permanent setlist fixture and a crowd singalong.[13]

"Metal Militia", one of the fastest songs on the album, is about heavy metal's way of life and nonconformity. Mustaine composed the main riff, which emulates a marching army. The song ends with tramping feet and bullet ricochet in a fade-out.[52]

Reception edit

Kill 'Em All received widespread critical acclaim. Bernard Doe of Metal Forces described Kill 'Em All as one of the fastest and heaviest albums ever recorded, and remarked that the album is not for the faint-hearted.[58] Greg Kot of the Chicago Tribune acknowledged it as the "speed metal prototype", but felt the lyrical replication of Judas Priest and the Misfits kept the album short from becoming a classic.[2] In a retrospective review, Billboard praised Kill 'Em All for changing the face of popular music with its unique combination of punk and metal.[30] AllMusic's Steve Huey called it "the true birth of thrash". He praised Hetfield's highly technical rhythm guitar style and said that the band was "playing with tightly controlled fury even at the most ridiculously fast tempos".[53] Rob Kemp, writing in The Rolling Stone Album Guide, credited the album for consolidating the punk rock and heavy metal scenes, but felt that apart from "Seek & Destroy" and "(Anesthesia)-Pulling Teeth", most of the album had the band "trying to look tough" over enthusiastic but unfinished riff-based songs.[61]

Journalist Martin Popoff said Kill 'Em All differentiated from the debuts by Metallica's Bay Area contemporaries because the fans could identify with Hetfield's lyrics and the band's appearance.[25] Spin's Chuck Eddy considered Kill 'Em All the inception of the "extreme metal mania" of the early 1980s. He noted the album did not receive much critical praise at the time of its release but said it aged well and opened the doors for the less commercially successful bands.[28] Although McIver credits Venom's Welcome to Hell (1981) as the first thrash metal album, he acknowledged Kill 'Em All as a major influence on the flourishing American heavy metal scene.[62] Despite its "less-than-perfect" production, Loudwire's Jon Wiederhorn said that Kill 'Em All sounds like an "influential slice of history" and stands on the same level as classic albums by Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden, and Judas Priest.[63]

Kill 'Em All was released on July 25, 1983, by Megaforce with an initial pressing of 15,000 copies.[64] Because of the label's financial restrictions, the album was pressed in batches of 500 copies.[65] Kill 'Em All had sold 17,000 copies in the US by the end of the year.[24] Similarly to punk rock acts, Metallica promoted its material through the tape trading network and independent music magazines such as Metal Forces in the UK and Metal Mania in the US.[66] The album did not enter the Billboard 200 chart until 1986, when it peaked at number 155 following Metallica's commercial success with its third studio album Master of Puppets.[67] The 1988 re-issue on Elektra Records also charted on the Billboard 200, peaking at number 120.[67] It was certified 3× Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in 1999 for shipping three million copies in the United States.[68] Despite being the lowest selling Metallica studio album, it helped the band establish its image and build a fanbase in its inaugural years.[7]

Kill 'Em All, as the first thrash metal album released in the US, had a substantial impact on the emerging scene and inspired numerous bands with its aggression and austere seriousness.[69] Guitarist Kerry King acknowledged Slayer was still finding its sound while Metallica had already determined its image and musical identity. Anthrax guitarist Scott Ian was impressed by the album's heaviness and songwriting and said it influenced him as much as the albums by Iron Maiden. Dream Theater's drummer Mike Portnoy observed that Kill 'Em All surpassed the NWOBHM bands in terms of sheer velocity and cited Burton's bass solo as the album's peak.[29] Guitarist Ulf Cederlund of Swedish black metal band Morbid cited "Motorbreath" and "Metal Militia" as songs that influenced him as a young musician.[70] Kill 'Em All was ranked at number 35 on Rolling Stone's list of The 100 Greatest Albums of the '80s.[71] Additionally, the album placed at number 54 on "The 100 Best Debut Albums of All Time"[72] and again at number 35 on "100 Greatest Metal Albums of All Time",[73] two lists compiled by the same magazine. Kerrang! listed the album at number 29 among the "100 Greatest Heavy Metal Albums of All Time".[74] In 2010, Consequence of Sound ranked it number 94 among its "Top 100 Albums Ever".[citation needed]

Touring edit

In late July 1983, Metallica embarked on the two-month Kill 'Em All for One tour with British co-headliners Raven. The tour name melded the titles of the albums the two bands were promoting: Metallica's Kill 'Em All and Raven's All for One, both released on Megaforce. The two groups met in Zazula's home two days before the tour began and traveled in the same vehicle throughout the tour with five roadies and sound engineer Whitaker. The tour was set to conclude with three shows in San Francisco, thus Hetfield painted "No Life 'til Frisco" on the Winnebago tour bus. The tour had a few poorly attended gigs, such as a performance at the Cheers club in Babylon, New York, attended by some 50 people. After the conclusion of Kill 'Em All for One in early September, Metallica returned to El Cerrito to work on new material. Seven weeks after the tour ended, Metallica booked a number of performances at Bay Area clubs, the first a Halloween gig at the Keystone in Palo Alto. At the Country Club in Reseda, the group debuted "Fight Fire with Fire" and "Creeping Death", along with an early version of "The Call of Ktulu", then titled "When Hell Freezes Over". Three days later, at a gig at The Stone in San Francisco, Metallica premiered "Ride the Lightning", the title track from the upcoming album. In December, Metallica went on a short tour in the Midwest and eastern United States with a three-man road crew: Whitaker, guitar technician John Marshall, and drum technician Dave Marrs. The concert of January 14, 1984, in Boston, was canceled because the band's equipment was stolen the night before.[75]

In February, Metallica embarked on its first European trek with Twisted Sister, supporting Venom's Seven Dates of Hell tour.[76] The tour was sponsored by Metallica's UK distributor, Music for Nations, who released the "Jump in the Fire" EP for that occasion. The first show was at the Volkshaus in Zurich on February 3.[77] At the Aardschok Festival in Zwolle on February 11, Metallica played in front of 7,000 people, its largest audience at the time. The tour stretched through countries such as Italy, Germany, France, and Belgium, culminating in two sold-out shows at the Marquee Club in London.[78] After concluding the Seven Dates of Hell tour, Metallica headed to Sweet Silence Studios in Copenhagen to record its sophomore album Ride the Lightning.[79] By the end of the tour, Kill 'Em All had sold 60,000 copies worldwide and Metallica began to gain international recognition.[65] On June 8, 2013, at the Orion Festival, billed as the fictional band Dehaan, Metallica played the album in its entirety for the first time ever to mark the 30 year anniversary of the album.

Track listing edit

Original release edit

All lyrics written by James Hetfield, except where noted. The bonus tracks on the 1988 re-release were originally recorded as B-sides for the "Creeping Death" single in 1984, later known as Garage Days Revisited, and would later appear on the compilation album Garage Inc. (1998). The bonus tracks on the digital reissue was recorded live at the Seattle Coliseum, Seattle, Washington, on August 29, 1989, and also appeared on the live album Live Shit: Binge & Purge (1993).

Side one
No.TitleMusicLength
1."Hit the Lights"
4:17
2."The Four Horsemen"
7:13
3."Motorbreath"Hetfield3:08
4."Jump in the Fire"
  • Hetfield
  • Ulrich
  • Mustaine
4:41
5."(Anesthesia) – Pulling Teeth"Cliff Burton[80]4:14
6."Whiplash"
  • Hetfield
  • Ulrich
4:08
Side two
No.TitleMusicLength
7."Phantom Lord"
  • Hetfield
  • Ulrich
  • Mustaine
5:01
8."No Remorse"
  • Hetfield
  • Ulrich
6:26
9."Seek & Destroy"
  • Hetfield
  • Ulrich
6:54
10."Metal Militia"
  • Hetfield
  • Ulrich
  • Mustaine
5:11
Total length:51:20
Bonus tracks (1988 Elektra reissue)[81]
No.TitleLyricsMusicLength
11."Am I Evil?" (Diamond Head cover)Sean Harris7:50
12."Blitzkrieg" (Blitzkrieg cover)Brian Ross
  • Ross
  • Ian Jones
  • Jim Sirotto
3:37
Total length:62:47
Bonus tracks (digital reissue)[81]
No.TitleMusicLength
11."The Four Horsemen" (live)
  • Mustaine
  • Hetfield
  • Ulrich
 
12."Whiplash" (live)
  • Hetfield
  • Ulrich
 

2016 deluxe edition edit

In 2016, the album was remastered and reissued in a limited edition deluxe box set with an expanded track listing and bonus content. The deluxe edition set includes the original album on vinyl and CD, a picture disc with the original "Jump in the Fire" single tracklist, four CDs of interviews, rough mixes, and live recordings recorded from 1983 to 1984, and a DVD of a live concert in Chicago.[82]

Personnel edit

Credits are adapted from the album's liner notes.[20]

* Jason Newsted – bass, backing vocals on the digital reissue bonus tracks

Production

  • Paul Curcio – production
  • Jon Zazula – executive producer
  • Chris Bubacz – engineer
  • Andy Wroblewski – assistant engineer
  • Jack Skinner – mastering
  • Bob Ludwig – mastering (Elektra reissue)
  • George Marino – 1995 remastering
  • Howie Weinberg – 2016 remastering
  • Metallica, Mark Whitaker – production on the Elektra reissue bonus tracks
  • Jeffrey "Nik" Norman – engineer on the Elektra reissue bonus tracks
  • Mike Gillies – mixing on the digital reissue bonus tracks

Artwork

  • Gary L. Heard – front and back cover design photos
  • Kevin Hodapp – inner sleeve photos
  • Shari & Harold Risch – graphics, design, and layout

Charts edit

2023 chart performance for Kill 'Em All
Chart (2023) Peak
position
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[91] 54
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[92] 17
Hungarian Physical Albums (MAHASZ)[93] 33
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[94] 31

Certifications edit

Region Certification Certified units/sales
Argentina (CAPIF)[95] Platinum 60,000^
Australia (ARIA)[96] Platinum 70,000^
Canada (Music Canada)[97] Platinum 100,000^
Germany (BVMI)[98] Gold 250,000
Poland (ZPAV)[99] Platinum 20,000
United Kingdom (BPI)[100] Gold 100,000*
United States (RIAA)[102] 3× Platinum 4,500,000[101]

* Sales figures based on certification alone.
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

References edit

  1. ^ "How Metallica Transformed Metal With 'Kill 'Em All'" July 14, 2022, at the Wayback Machine. Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved May 14, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Kot, Greg (December 1, 1991). "A Guide to Metallica's Recordings". Chicago Tribune. from the original on September 27, 2013. Retrieved July 28, 2013.
  3. ^ Pillsbury 2006, p. 17.
  4. ^ a b McIver 2014, Chapter 3: 1981–1982.
  5. ^ a b c d "Prime Cuts: Metallica's James Hetfield and Kirk Hammett Critique Key Songs in the Band's Harsh, Noble History". Guitar World. August 4, 2014. from the original on January 31, 2018. Retrieved June 9, 2015.
  6. ^ Gulla 2009, p. 101.
  7. ^ a b c Weinstein 2013.
  8. ^ Popoff 2013, p. 20.
  9. ^ a b c McIver 2014, Chapter 6: 1982.
  10. ^ Popoff 2013, p. 22.
  11. ^ Popoff 2013, p. 21.
  12. ^ a b c Winwood & Brannigan 2013, Chapter 2: Hit the Lights.
  13. ^ a b c Dome & Wall 2011, Chapter 1: Kill 'Em All.
  14. ^ a b c Winwood & Brannigan 2013, Chapter 3: Jump in the Fire.
  15. ^ McIver 2009, p. 73.
  16. ^ McIver 2009, p. 88.
  17. ^ Popoff 2013, p. 30.
  18. ^ a b McIver 2009, p. 89.
  19. ^ Uhelszki, Jaan (September 11, 2008). "Metallica Week: Kirk Hammett interview". MusicRadar. from the original on July 2, 2015. Retrieved June 7, 2015.
  20. ^ a b Kill 'Em All liner notes. Megaforce Records. 1983.
  21. ^ a b c d e Wall 2010, Chapter 5: Long-Haired Punks.
  22. ^ a b Popoff 2013, p. 34.
  23. ^ Uhelszki, Jaan (September 11, 2008). "Kirk Hammett on Metallica's Kill 'Em All". Music Radar. from the original on March 25, 2021. Retrieved October 12, 2016.
  24. ^ a b Gulla 2009, p. 102.
  25. ^ a b Popoff 2013, p. 35.
  26. ^ McIver 2014, Chapter 8: 1982–1983.
  27. ^ McIver 2009, p. 96.
  28. ^ a b Eddy, Chuck (July 25, 2013). "Metallica's Kill 'Em All, the Album to Credit and/or Blame for 'Extreme Metal' Mania, Turns 30". Spin. from the original on June 10, 2015. Retrieved June 7, 2015.
  29. ^ a b Smith, Ben (July 25, 2013). "Metallica's Kill 'Em All Turns 30". VH1. from the original on May 20, 2021. Retrieved May 20, 2021.
  30. ^ a b c Stingley, Mick (July 25, 2013). "Metallica's 'Kill 'Em All' at 30: Track-By-Track". Billboard. from the original on May 14, 2021. Retrieved February 7, 2014.
  31. ^ Nalbandian, Bob (January 1997). "Lloyd Grant interview". Shockwave. Retrieved July 29, 2023. "Hit The Lights" was composed by James and one of his friends. I remember the day I went over to Lars' house , he said, "Check out this song" and he played me "Hit The Lights". We were both into that heavy kind of shit. He wanted me to play some guitar leads on it but I couldn't make it over to Ron McGovney's house to do the recording so James and Lars brought the 4-track over to my apartment and I did the solo on a little Montgomery Ward amp." - Lloyd Grant
  32. ^ Pillsbury 2006, p. 9.
  33. ^ McIver 2009, p. 90.
  34. ^ a b Pillsbury 2006, p. 194.
  35. ^ McIver 2009, p. 91.
  36. ^ "Megadeth's Dave Mustaine: My Life in 15 Songs". Rolling Stone. January 11, 2017. from the original on May 13, 2022. Retrieved May 13, 2022.
  37. ^ Irwin 2009, p. 25.
  38. ^ . Metallica.com. Archived from the original on April 4, 2011. Retrieved June 17, 2013.
  39. ^ Brannigan, Paul (February 27, 2015). "Your Guide to Our Rare Metallica Posters". Metal Hammer. from the original on July 9, 2015. Retrieved July 8, 2015.
  40. ^ Wagner 2010, p. 121.
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Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Kill 'Em All at Discogs (list of releases)
  • Metal Up Your Ass at Discogs (bootleg release featuring the original cover concept for Kill 'Em All)

kill, other, uses, disambiguation, debut, studio, album, american, heavy, metal, band, metallica, released, july, 1983, through, independent, label, megaforce, records, after, forming, 1981, metallica, began, playing, shows, local, clubs, angeles, they, record. For other uses see Kill Em All disambiguation Kill Em All is the debut studio album by the American heavy metal band Metallica released on July 25 1983 through the independent label Megaforce Records After forming in 1981 Metallica began by playing shows in local clubs in Los Angeles They recorded several demos to gain attention from club owners and eventually relocated to San Francisco to secure the services of bassist Cliff Burton The group s No Life til Leather demo tape 1982 was noticed by Megaforce label head Jon Zazula who signed them and provided a budget of 15 000 for recording The album was recorded in May with producer Paul Curcio at the Music America Studios in Rochester New York It was originally intended to be titled Metal Up Your Ass with cover art featuring a hand clutching a dagger emerging from a toilet bowl Zazula convinced the band to change the name because distributors feared that releasing an album with such an offensive title and artwork would diminish its chances of commercial success Kill Em AllStudio album by MetallicaReleasedJuly 25 1983 1983 07 25 RecordedMay 10 27 1983StudioMusic America Rochester New York GenreThrash metal 1 speed metal 2 Length51 20LabelMegaforceProducerPaul CurcioMetallica chronologyKill Em All 1983 Ride the Lightning 1984 Singles from Kill Em All Whiplash Released August 8 1983 Jump in the Fire Released January 20 1984Metallica promoted the album on the two month co headlining Kill Em All for One tour with English heavy metal band Raven in the US The album also generated two singles Whiplash and Jump in the Fire Although the initial shipment was 15 000 copies in the US the album sold 60 000 copies worldwide by the end of Metallica s Seven Dates of Hell European tour in 1984 The album did not enter the Billboard 200 until 1986 when it peaked at number 155 following Metallica s commercial success with its third studio album Master of Puppets the 1988 Elektra reissue peaked at number 120 Kill Em All was critically praised at the time of its release and has since been regarded as a groundbreaking album for thrash metal because of its precise musicianship which fused new wave of British heavy metal riffs with hardcore punk tempos It was also retrospectively placed on a few publications best album lists The album s musical approach and lyrics were markedly different from rock s mainstream of the early 1980s and inspired a number of bands who followed in a similar manner It was certified 3 Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America RIAA in 1999 for shipping three million copies in the United States Contents 1 Background and recording 2 Music and lyrics 3 Reception 4 Touring 5 Track listing 5 1 Original release 5 2 2016 deluxe edition 6 Personnel 7 Charts 8 Certifications 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksBackground and recording edit nbsp Lars Ulrich pictured in 2008 founded Metallica through an advertisement in The Recycler He picked the band s name from his friend Ron Quintana s list of names for his upcoming magazine Ulrich suggested Metal Mania secretly wanting to use Metallica as the band s name 3 Metallica was formed in 1981 in Los Angeles by drummer Lars Ulrich and by vocalist rhythm guitarist James Hetfield Before settling on a definitive lineup Metal Blade Records owner Brian Slagel asked Metallica to record a song for the first edition of his Metal Massacre compilation Hetfield and Ulrich chose Hit the Lights from Hetfield s and his childhood friend Ron McGovney s previous band Leather Charm and recorded it with Hetfield on vocals McGovney on bass and temporary guitarist Lloyd Grant The band s first lineup featured Hetfield Ulrich McGovney and guitarist Dave Mustaine who was acquired through a newspaper advertisement The band practiced in McGovney s garage and looked for gigs at local clubs Metallica s first show was on March 14 1982 at the Radio City in Anaheim The nine song setlist consisted of two originals Hit the Lights and an unfinished version of Jump in the Fire from Mustaine s earlier band Panic and covers of new wave of British heavy metal NWOBHM bands such as Diamond Head Blitzkrieg Savage and Sweet Savage The gig did not go as well as planned because Mustaine had problems with the guitar distortion pedal and broke a string during a song Metallica s second gig was on March 27 1982 at Hollywood s Whisky a Go Go opening for Saxon Although Motley Crue was originally scheduled to open the show the group canceled because of its growing popularity Metallica recorded a three song demo to persuade the venue s management to allow the band to open for Saxon Metallica s third concert was in April 1982 the first time The Mechanix 4 written by Mustaine during his tenure with Panic was played 5 Mustaine interacted with the fans at Metallica s earliest shows because Hetfield was shy 6 To garner attention from club owners Metallica recorded the Power Metal demo in April 1982 which featured Motorbreath in addition to the already performed originals The logo displaying the band s name with the first and last letter drawn larger with sharp serifs and italicized was designed by Hetfield 7 The No Life til Leather demo was recorded in July 1982 and it created a buzz in the underground tape trading circles 8 No Life til Leather featured a re recorded version of Hit the Lights which appeared on the second pressing of Metal Massacre in addition to new songs such as Phantom Lord Seek amp Destroy and Metal Militia The recording and mastering were financed by Kenny Kane owner of the punk label High Velocity and distributed by Ulrich and his friend Pat Scott 9 Because of tensions with Mustaine McGovney left the band in December Ulrich was impressed by Cliff Burton s performance with Trauma at The Troubadour in West Hollywood and offered to let him join the band 10 Burton joined on the condition that Metallica would relocate to the San Francisco area 11 Moving to El Cerrito in February 1983 the band stayed and rehearsed at Exodus manager Mark Whitaker s house which they called the Metallica Mansion 12 Metallica intended to record its debut in Los Angeles on Slagel s independent label on an 8 000 budget 24 722 in 2023 Slagel could not afford the record and Ulrich contacted Jon Zazula a New Jersey record store owner and promoter of heavy metal bands on the East Coast who had already heard No Life til Leather Metallica rented a U Haul truck and drove to New Jersey in late March 12 and upon arrival allowed Zazula to sell copies of No Life til Leather to help him found Megaforce Records because no label wanted to finance the album s recording 13 nbsp Dave Mustaine pictured in 2005 was an early member of Metallica and co wrote several songs on Kill Em All His erratic and violent behavior led to his expulsion from the band prior to recording the album 14 Hetfield and Ulrich fired Mustaine on the morning of April 11 after a gig in New York because of his drug and alcohol problems overly aggressive behavior and clashes with bandmates 15 On Whitaker s recommendation Metallica recruited Kirk Hammett who played in Exodus and was a one time student of Joe Satriani Hammett learned the songs on his flight to New York and started recording the album with Metallica barely a month later Metallica met producer Paul Curcio at Music America Studios in Rochester and recorded the album in two weeks 16 Unable to afford a hotel during the recording sessions the band members stayed over in people s houses in Rochester and at the Music Factory in Jamaica Queens where Anthrax held rehearsals 17 Curcio had set the studio equipment as if he were recording an ordinary rock band He thought the initial tapes sounded very distorted and tried to compensate by turning down the knobs 14 Metallica resented Curcio s involvement because he seemed uninterested and had little impact on the sound 18 Although Zazula wanted Hammett to replicate Mustaine s solos Hammett s guitar solos on the album were partially based on Mustaine s original solos with the first four bars of most solos written by Mustaine before his departure 19 Despite their differences Mustaine s contributions to the early years of Metallica were still acknowledged and he received four co writing credits on Kill Em All 20 Zazula was not pleased with the initial mix because he thought that the drums were too loud and the guitars were too low in the mix The remix was done by sound engineer Chris Bubacz according to Zazula s instructions 14 The final cost for the record rounded to an estimated 15 000 46 354 in 2023 which nearly caused Zazula to go bankrupt This was mortgage money I m spending not something I ve got put by I m going to invest he said later 21 Zazula had a hard time finding a distributor for the record but he eventually convinced Relativity Records to distribute the album in the US and Canada and Music for Nations in Europe 13 The band intended to title the album Metal Up Your Ass with a cover featuring a hand clutching a dagger emerging from a toilet bowl However Zazula convinced them to change the title because he thought that distributors would not stock it as it was too explicit to display The final cover featured the shadow of a hand letting go of a bloodied hammer 22 Burton was credited with coming up with the name Kill Em All referring to timid record distributors saying Those record company fuckers kill em all as a response to the situation 18 Ulrich thought Kill Em All was a good name and Zazula agreed 21 Burton suggested to Gary L Heard also responsible for the Metallica photograph on the back cover to feature a bloodied hammer on the album art According to Hammett Cliff carried a hammer with him everywhere he went He always had a hammer in his luggage and he would take it out occasionally and start destroying things 23 Even though the original title was unused the band did later release a Metal Up Your Ass T shirt with the proposed artwork 22 A live bootleg recording of a 1982 performance at the Old Waldorf titled Metal Up Your Ass Live featured the original cover artwork 12 Original pressings of the album came with an inner sleeve that included pictures and lyrics as well as a silver label on the vinyl Subsequent pressings had a blank white sleeve and a standard album label The 1988 reissue re introduced the lyrics and photos The original release can be distinguished by the silver labels with the track listing but without track lengths Every issue produced has had the phrase Bang That Head That Doesn t Bang The phrase Bang That Head That Doesn t Bang was dedicated to San Francisco fan Ray Burch known for his headbanging at the band s early shows 21 Music and lyrics edit Kill Em All s lyrics created as much excitement as the band s music Taken together the words of the songs on the album form a single theme It is a concept album that heralds the breakthrough of a new subgenre of metal its fans and its leader Metallica It is a celebration of metal It is a call to arms to a new generation of metalheads many of whom were already armed and ready Deena Weinstein Essays on Debut Albums 7 Kill Em All features intricate riffing reminiscent of the NWOBHM bands played at high velocity The album is considered crucial in thrash metal s genesis because it introduced fast percussion low register chords and shredding leads to the genre 24 Hammett played some pentatonic patterns in addition to his breakneck solos 25 Ulrich adopted a double time snare pattern that would become a mainstay on Metallica s subsequent albums Hetfield s vocals evolved from the melodic wail on No Life til Leather to a rough edged bark and the entire band played faster and more accurately on Kill Em All 26 Author Joel McIver described Burton s and Hetfield s performances as nearly virtuosic highlighting Burton s smooth sounding bass and Hetfield s precise picking skills 27 According to journalist Chuck Eddy the juvenile lyrical approach to topics such as warfare violence and life on the road gives the album a naive charm 28 The musical approach on Kill Em All was in contrast to the glam metal bands who dominated the charts in the early 1980s 29 Because of its rebellious nature and Metallica s street appearance it appealed to fans who were not into the mainstream of hard rock 30 Hit the Lights was based on an unfinished Leather Charm song written by Hetfield and Hugh Tanner 31 Hetfield had brought the majority of the song to Ulrich and the two worked out different arrangements Performed at 160 beats per minute Hit the Lights opens with fade in distorted guitars and a short shriek by Hetfield The song is driven by the 16th note repeated main riff and the continuous eighth note snare drum hits The lyrics celebrate heavy metal itself and are sung with short and high pitched vocals 32 The song ends with several lengthy guitar solos by Hammett who performed cleaner and more melodic versions of Mustaine s leads nbsp The Four Horsemen source source The Four Horsemen is based on a galloping tremolo picked riff and double bass drum triplets Its multipart concept preceded the more complex song structures Metallica applied on subsequent albums 33 Problems playing this file See media help The Four Horsemen is a revamp of the Mustaine penned The Mechanix which originally had lyrics about having sex at a gas station 5 34 A modified version of his composition with the original lyrics appeared on Megadeth s debut Killing Is My Business and Business Is Good 1985 named Mechanix Although Mustaine told Metallica not to use any of his music Hetfield wrote lyrics about the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse and added a bridge and cleanly picked guitar solo in the middle 34 Mustaine said the bridge was inspired by the main riff in Lynyrd Skynyrd s Sweet Home Alabama 9 Motorbreath was written by Hetfield during his time in Leather Charm and tells about life on the road The song is based on a four chord verse and a stop and start chorus 9 The most recognizable parts are Ulrich s drum rolls in each chorus and the riff that accompanies Hammett s solos Because of its speed the song requires fast picking by the bassist 35 Jump in the Fire was the first song ever 36 written by Mustaine with lyrics about teenage sexual experience 4 Hetfield s revised lyrics for the album were written from Satan s point of view describing how the devil watches people killing each other and is sure they will go to hell for their actions 37 Jump in the Fire was released as a single in the UK in February 1984 to promote a UK tour with Venom 38 The single featured Phantom Lord and Seek amp Destroy as live tracks although they are actually studio recordings with fake crowd noise dubbed over them 39 The single s cover art features an oil painting titled The Devils of D Day created by artist Les Edwards in 1978 40 Anesthesia Pulling Teeth is a bass solo by Burton accompanied on drums by Ulrich A staple of Burton s live performances since his high school days in the band Agents of Misfortune 41 the instrumental track featured Burton s distinctive lead bass style of playing incorporating heavy distortion use of wah wah pedal and tapping 42 Bubacz introduces the track as Bass solo take one 21 informing listeners that the song was recorded in one take 43 Anesthesia Pulling Teeth was the bass solo that Burton was playing when Hetfield and Ulrich first saw him at a gig 44 Hetfield stated We heard this wild solo going on and thought I don t see any guitar player up there We were both counting the strings and I finally turned to Lars and said Dude that s a bass Cliff was up there on stage with his band Trauma with a wah wah pedal and his huge mop of red hair He didn t care whether people were there He was looking down at his bass playing 45 For the album version Cliff Burton insisted on recording this track alone in an empty room while the studio technicians were downstairs He made this recording in one take after about twenty minutes of preparation 46 Whiplash was the album s first single issued on August 8 1983 47 It features a swift rhythm line of straight 16th notes played at about 200 beats per minute Hetfield and Burton performed with palm muted technique and precise metronomic control 48 The lyrics celebrate crowd energy and headbanging 49 Rock journalist Mick Wall wrote that Whiplash signified the birth of thrash metal stating If one wishes to identify the very moment thrash metal arrived spitting and snarling into the world Whiplash is indisputably it 21 nbsp Seek amp Destroy source source The song opens with thin mid register guitars The last two sections 5 50 onward feature palm muted riff in low E Since 2004 Seek amp Destroy serves as the closer on Metallica s live set 50 Problems playing this file See media help Phantom Lord is a lyrical nod to devilry The song begins with a synthesized bass drone and contains a middle section with clean arpeggiated guitar chords Written by Mustaine its central riff is in NWOBHM fashion 48 No Remorse is a mid tempo song that suddenly accelerates its tempo in the fifth minute 51 The song is about not feeling any remorse or sense of repentance during battle Seek amp Destroy was inspired by Diamond Head s Dead Reckoning 5 and is the first song Metallica recorded during the Kill Em All sessions 30 Hetfield wrote the main riff in his truck outside a Los Angeles sticker factory where he was working 5 Because of its simple one line chorus the song became a permanent setlist fixture and a crowd singalong 13 Metal Militia one of the fastest songs on the album is about heavy metal s way of life and nonconformity Mustaine composed the main riff which emulates a marching army The song ends with tramping feet and bullet ricochet in a fade out 52 Reception editProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 53 Chicago Tribune nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 Collector s Guide to Heavy Metal9 10 54 Encyclopedia of Popular Music nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 55 The Guardian nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 56 Kerrang nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 57 Metal Forces10 10 58 Pitchfork8 6 10 59 Q nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 60 The Rolling Stone Album Guide nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 61 Kill Em All received widespread critical acclaim Bernard Doe of Metal Forces described Kill Em All as one of the fastest and heaviest albums ever recorded and remarked that the album is not for the faint hearted 58 Greg Kot of the Chicago Tribune acknowledged it as the speed metal prototype but felt the lyrical replication of Judas Priest and the Misfits kept the album short from becoming a classic 2 In a retrospective review Billboard praised Kill Em All for changing the face of popular music with its unique combination of punk and metal 30 AllMusic s Steve Huey called it the true birth of thrash He praised Hetfield s highly technical rhythm guitar style and said that the band was playing with tightly controlled fury even at the most ridiculously fast tempos 53 Rob Kemp writing in The Rolling Stone Album Guide credited the album for consolidating the punk rock and heavy metal scenes but felt that apart from Seek amp Destroy and Anesthesia Pulling Teeth most of the album had the band trying to look tough over enthusiastic but unfinished riff based songs 61 Journalist Martin Popoff said Kill Em All differentiated from the debuts by Metallica s Bay Area contemporaries because the fans could identify with Hetfield s lyrics and the band s appearance 25 Spin s Chuck Eddy considered Kill Em All the inception of the extreme metal mania of the early 1980s He noted the album did not receive much critical praise at the time of its release but said it aged well and opened the doors for the less commercially successful bands 28 Although McIver credits Venom s Welcome to Hell 1981 as the first thrash metal album he acknowledged Kill Em All as a major influence on the flourishing American heavy metal scene 62 Despite its less than perfect production Loudwire s Jon Wiederhorn said that Kill Em All sounds like an influential slice of history and stands on the same level as classic albums by Black Sabbath Iron Maiden and Judas Priest 63 Kill Em All was released on July 25 1983 by Megaforce with an initial pressing of 15 000 copies 64 Because of the label s financial restrictions the album was pressed in batches of 500 copies 65 Kill Em All had sold 17 000 copies in the US by the end of the year 24 Similarly to punk rock acts Metallica promoted its material through the tape trading network and independent music magazines such as Metal Forces in the UK and Metal Mania in the US 66 The album did not enter the Billboard 200 chart until 1986 when it peaked at number 155 following Metallica s commercial success with its third studio album Master of Puppets 67 The 1988 re issue on Elektra Records also charted on the Billboard 200 peaking at number 120 67 It was certified 3 Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America RIAA in 1999 for shipping three million copies in the United States 68 Despite being the lowest selling Metallica studio album it helped the band establish its image and build a fanbase in its inaugural years 7 Kill Em All as the first thrash metal album released in the US had a substantial impact on the emerging scene and inspired numerous bands with its aggression and austere seriousness 69 Guitarist Kerry King acknowledged Slayer was still finding its sound while Metallica had already determined its image and musical identity Anthrax guitarist Scott Ian was impressed by the album s heaviness and songwriting and said it influenced him as much as the albums by Iron Maiden Dream Theater s drummer Mike Portnoy observed that Kill Em All surpassed the NWOBHM bands in terms of sheer velocity and cited Burton s bass solo as the album s peak 29 Guitarist Ulf Cederlund of Swedish black metal band Morbid cited Motorbreath and Metal Militia as songs that influenced him as a young musician 70 Kill Em All was ranked at number 35 on Rolling Stone s list of The 100 Greatest Albums of the 80s 71 Additionally the album placed at number 54 on The 100 Best Debut Albums of All Time 72 and again at number 35 on 100 Greatest Metal Albums of All Time 73 two lists compiled by the same magazine Kerrang listed the album at number 29 among the 100 Greatest Heavy Metal Albums of All Time 74 In 2010 Consequence of Sound ranked it number 94 among its Top 100 Albums Ever citation needed Touring editIn late July 1983 Metallica embarked on the two month Kill Em All for One tour with British co headliners Raven The tour name melded the titles of the albums the two bands were promoting Metallica s Kill Em All and Raven s All for One both released on Megaforce The two groups met in Zazula s home two days before the tour began and traveled in the same vehicle throughout the tour with five roadies and sound engineer Whitaker The tour was set to conclude with three shows in San Francisco thus Hetfield painted No Life til Frisco on the Winnebago tour bus The tour had a few poorly attended gigs such as a performance at the Cheers club in Babylon New York attended by some 50 people After the conclusion of Kill Em All for One in early September Metallica returned to El Cerrito to work on new material Seven weeks after the tour ended Metallica booked a number of performances at Bay Area clubs the first a Halloween gig at the Keystone in Palo Alto At the Country Club in Reseda the group debuted Fight Fire with Fire and Creeping Death along with an early version of The Call of Ktulu then titled When Hell Freezes Over Three days later at a gig at The Stone in San Francisco Metallica premiered Ride the Lightning the title track from the upcoming album In December Metallica went on a short tour in the Midwest and eastern United States with a three man road crew Whitaker guitar technician John Marshall and drum technician Dave Marrs The concert of January 14 1984 in Boston was canceled because the band s equipment was stolen the night before 75 In February Metallica embarked on its first European trek with Twisted Sister supporting Venom s Seven Dates of Hell tour 76 The tour was sponsored by Metallica s UK distributor Music for Nations who released the Jump in the Fire EP for that occasion The first show was at the Volkshaus in Zurich on February 3 77 At the Aardschok Festival in Zwolle on February 11 Metallica played in front of 7 000 people its largest audience at the time The tour stretched through countries such as Italy Germany France and Belgium culminating in two sold out shows at the Marquee Club in London 78 After concluding the Seven Dates of Hell tour Metallica headed to Sweet Silence Studios in Copenhagen to record its sophomore album Ride the Lightning 79 By the end of the tour Kill Em All had sold 60 000 copies worldwide and Metallica began to gain international recognition 65 On June 8 2013 at the Orion Festival billed as the fictional band Dehaan Metallica played the album in its entirety for the first time ever to mark the 30 year anniversary of the album Track listing editOriginal release edit All lyrics written by James Hetfield except where noted The bonus tracks on the 1988 re release were originally recorded as B sides for the Creeping Death single in 1984 later known as Garage Days Revisited and would later appear on the compilation album Garage Inc 1998 The bonus tracks on the digital reissue was recorded live at the Seattle Coliseum Seattle Washington on August 29 1989 and also appeared on the live album Live Shit Binge amp Purge 1993 Side oneNo TitleMusicLength1 Hit the Lights HetfieldLars Ulrich4 172 The Four Horsemen HetfieldUlrichDave Mustaine7 133 Motorbreath Hetfield3 084 Jump in the Fire HetfieldUlrichMustaine4 415 Anesthesia Pulling Teeth Cliff Burton 80 4 146 Whiplash HetfieldUlrich4 08 Side twoNo TitleMusicLength7 Phantom Lord HetfieldUlrichMustaine5 018 No Remorse HetfieldUlrich6 269 Seek amp Destroy HetfieldUlrich6 5410 Metal Militia HetfieldUlrichMustaine5 11Total length 51 20 Bonus tracks 1988 Elektra reissue 81 No TitleLyricsMusicLength11 Am I Evil Diamond Head cover Sean HarrisHarrisBrian Tatler7 5012 Blitzkrieg Blitzkrieg cover Brian RossRossIan JonesJim Sirotto3 37Total length 62 47 Bonus tracks digital reissue 81 No TitleMusicLength11 The Four Horsemen live MustaineHetfieldUlrich 12 Whiplash live HetfieldUlrich 2016 deluxe edition edit In 2016 the album was remastered and reissued in a limited edition deluxe box set with an expanded track listing and bonus content The deluxe edition set includes the original album on vinyl and CD a picture disc with the original Jump in the Fire single tracklist four CDs of interviews rough mixes and live recordings recorded from 1983 to 1984 and a DVD of a live concert in Chicago 82 Personnel editCredits are adapted from the album s liner notes 20 James Hetfield vocals rhythm guitar Kirk Hammett lead guitar Cliff Burton bass Lars Ulrich drums Jason Newsted bass backing vocals on the digital reissue bonus tracksProduction Paul Curcio production Jon Zazula executive producer Chris Bubacz engineer Andy Wroblewski assistant engineer Jack Skinner mastering Bob Ludwig mastering Elektra reissue George Marino 1995 remastering Howie Weinberg 2016 remasteringMetallica Mark Whitaker production on the Elektra reissue bonus tracks Jeffrey Nik Norman engineer on the Elektra reissue bonus tracks Mike Gillies mixing on the digital reissue bonus tracksArtwork Gary L Heard front and back cover design photos Kevin Hodapp inner sleeve photos Shari amp Harold Risch graphics design and layoutCharts editYear Chart Peakposition1988 US Billboard 200 83 1201993 Australian Albums Chart 84 552004 Finnish Albums Chart 85 19French Albums Chart 85 149Swedish Albums Chart 86 282007 Finnish Albums Chart 85 122008 Spanish Albums Chart 85 70Swiss Albums Chart 85 652011 Swedish Albums Chart 86 392012 French Albums Chart 85 1802016 German Albums Chart 87 58Spanish Albums Chart 85 82US Billboard 200 83 662017 Spanish Albums Chart 85 472018 Spanish Albums Chart 85 552019 French Albums Chart 88 1792021 Polish Albums ZPAV 89 13US Top Rock Albums Billboard 90 182023 chart performance for Kill Em All Chart 2023 PeakpositionAustrian Albums O3 Austria 91 54German Albums Offizielle Top 100 92 17Hungarian Physical Albums MAHASZ 93 33Swiss Albums Schweizer Hitparade 94 31Certifications editRegion Certification Certified units salesArgentina CAPIF 95 Platinum 60 000 Australia ARIA 96 Platinum 70 000 Canada Music Canada 97 Platinum 100 000 Germany BVMI 98 Gold 250 000 Poland ZPAV 99 Platinum 20 000 United Kingdom BPI 100 Gold 100 000 United States RIAA 102 3 Platinum 4 500 000 101 Sales figures based on certification alone Shipments figures based on certification alone Sales streaming figures based on certification alone References edit How Metallica Transformed Metal With Kill Em All Archived July 14 2022 at the Wayback Machine Ultimate Classic Rock Retrieved May 14 2022 a b c Kot Greg December 1 1991 A Guide to Metallica s Recordings Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on September 27 2013 Retrieved July 28 2013 Pillsbury 2006 p 17 a b McIver 2014 Chapter 3 1981 1982 a b c d Prime Cuts Metallica s James Hetfield and Kirk Hammett Critique Key Songs in the Band s Harsh Noble History Guitar World August 4 2014 Archived from the original on January 31 2018 Retrieved June 9 2015 Gulla 2009 p 101 a b c Weinstein 2013 Popoff 2013 p 20 a b c McIver 2014 Chapter 6 1982 Popoff 2013 p 22 Popoff 2013 p 21 a b c Winwood amp Brannigan 2013 Chapter 2 Hit the Lights a b c Dome amp Wall 2011 Chapter 1 Kill Em All a b c Winwood amp Brannigan 2013 Chapter 3 Jump in the Fire McIver 2009 p 73 McIver 2009 p 88 Popoff 2013 p 30 a b McIver 2009 p 89 Uhelszki Jaan September 11 2008 Metallica Week Kirk Hammett interview MusicRadar Archived from the original on July 2 2015 Retrieved June 7 2015 a b Kill Em Allliner notes Megaforce Records 1983 a b c d e Wall 2010 Chapter 5 Long Haired Punks a b Popoff 2013 p 34 Uhelszki Jaan September 11 2008 Kirk Hammett on Metallica s Kill Em All Music Radar Archived from the original on March 25 2021 Retrieved October 12 2016 a b Gulla 2009 p 102 a b Popoff 2013 p 35 McIver 2014 Chapter 8 1982 1983 McIver 2009 p 96 a b Eddy Chuck July 25 2013 Metallica s Kill Em All the Album to Credit and or Blame for Extreme Metal Mania Turns 30 Spin Archived from the original on June 10 2015 Retrieved June 7 2015 a b Smith Ben July 25 2013 Metallica s Kill Em All Turns 30 VH1 Archived from the original on May 20 2021 Retrieved May 20 2021 a b c Stingley Mick July 25 2013 Metallica s Kill Em All at 30 Track By Track Billboard Archived from the original on May 14 2021 Retrieved February 7 2014 Nalbandian Bob January 1997 Lloyd Grant interview Shockwave Retrieved July 29 2023 Hit The Lights was composed by James and one of his friends I remember the day I went over to Lars house he said Check out this song and he played me Hit The Lights We were both into that heavy kind of shit He wanted me to play some guitar leads on it but I couldn t make it over to Ron McGovney s house to do the recording so James and Lars brought the 4 track over to my apartment and I did the solo on a little Montgomery Ward amp Lloyd Grant Pillsbury 2006 p 9 McIver 2009 p 90 a b Pillsbury 2006 p 194 McIver 2009 p 91 Megadeth s Dave Mustaine My Life in 15 Songs Rolling Stone January 11 2017 Archived from the original on May 13 2022 Retrieved May 13 2022 Irwin 2009 p 25 Jump in the Fire Metallica com Archived from the original on April 4 2011 Retrieved June 17 2013 Brannigan Paul February 27 2015 Your Guide to Our Rare Metallica Posters Metal Hammer Archived from the original on July 9 2015 Retrieved July 8 2015 Wagner 2010 p 121 Wall 2010 Chapter 3 Leather On Your Lips Pillsbury 2006 p 200 McIver 2009 p 92 Popoff 2013 p 36 McIver 2009 p 48 Metallica s Kill Em All the stories behind every song loudersound com July 25 2022 Retrieved March 26 2023 Whiplash Metallica com Archived from the original on May 2 2011 Retrieved June 17 2013 a b McIver 2009 p 94 Harrison 2011 p 59 Pillsbury 2006 p 18 McIver 2009 p 95 Nys 2009 p 43 a b Huey Steve Metallica Kill Em All AllMusic Archived from the original on May 13 2021 Retrieved July 13 2013 Popoff 2005 p 222 Larkin 2006 p 725 Mongredien Phil April 17 2016 Metallica Kill Em All Ride the Lightning review metal giants early years revisited The Guardian Archived from the original on April 17 2016 Retrieved April 17 2016 Heatley Lester amp Roberts 1998 p 119 a b Doe Bernard August 1983 Metallica Kill Em All Metal Forces Archived from the original on August 9 2013 Retrieved August 9 2013 Reyes Kulkarni Saby April 13 2016 Metallica Kill Em All Ride the Lightning Album Review Pitchfork Archived from the original on August 31 2021 Retrieved August 31 2021 Metallica Kill Em All CD Universe Archived from the original on November 30 2021 Retrieved July 28 2013 a b Kemp 2004 p 538 McIver 2014 Chapter 5 The Truth About Thrash Metal Wiederhorn Jon May 10 2015 32 Years Ago Metallica Entered the Studio to Record Kill Em All Loudwire Archived from the original on May 10 2021 Retrieved June 9 2015 Popoff 2013 p 33 a b McIver 2009 p 106 McIver 2009 p 85 a b Whitburn Joel 2001 Top Pop Albums Record Research p 578 ISBN 9780898201475 American album certifications Kill Em All Recording Industry Association of America RIAA Archived from the original on September 14 2012 Retrieved January 6 2014 Kahn Harris 2007 p 3 Kahn Harris 2007 p 56 100 Best Albums of the Eighties Metallica Kill Em All Rolling Stone November 16 1989 Archived from the original on July 13 2013 Retrieved July 28 2013 100 Best Debut Albums of All Time Metallica Kill Em All Rolling Stone Archived from the original on August 24 2013 Retrieved October 5 2013 Grow Kory June 21 2017 100 Greatest Metal Albums of All Time Rolling Stone Wenner Media LLC Archived from the original on August 10 2017 Retrieved June 21 2017 Russell Xavier January 21 1989 Metallica Kill Em All Kerrang Spotlight Publications Ltd 222 Winwood amp Brannigan 2013 Chapter 4 Seek amp Destroy Popoff 2013 p 39 McIver 2014 Chapter 10 1983 1984 McIver 2009 p 111 McIver 2009 p 109 https www metallica com songs anesthesia pulling teeth html a b Kill Em All Metallica com Archived from the original on June 27 2021 Retrieved August 25 2021 Kill Em All Remastered Deluxe Box Set Metallica com Metallica Blackened Recordings Archived from the original on December 17 2019 Retrieved March 29 2020 a b Metallica Chart history Billboard Archived from the original on May 11 2013 Retrieved May 30 2015 Ryan Gavin 2011 Australia s Music Charts 1988 2010 PDF ed Mt Martha Victoria Australia Moonlight Publishing p 185 a b c d e f g h i Metallica Kill Em All in German Hung Medien Archived from the original on December 11 2014 Retrieved May 30 2015 a b swedishcharts com Metallica Kill Em All swedishcharts com Archived from the original on December 6 2019 Retrieved January 27 2020 Metallica Longplay Chartverfolgung in German musicline de Archived from the original on October 22 2017 Retrieved April 12 2017 Metallica Kill Em All ultratop be Archived from the original on November 20 2020 Retrieved January 27 2020 Oficjalna lista sprzedazy OLiS Official Retail Sales Chart OLiS Polish Society of the Phonographic Industry Retrieved August 5 2021 Metallica Chart History Top Rock Albums Billboard Retrieved February 9 2021 Austriancharts at Metallica Kill Em All in German Hung Medien Retrieved November 15 2023 Offiziellecharts de Metallica Kill Em All in German GfK Entertainment Charts Retrieved November 10 2023 Album Top 40 slagerlista fizikai hanghordozok 2023 45 het MAHASZ Retrieved November 16 2023 Swisscharts com Metallica Kill Em All Hung Medien Retrieved November 12 2023 Discos de Oro y Platino in Spanish Camara Argentina de Productores de Fonogramas y Videogramas Archived from the original on August 20 2011 Retrieved January 10 2021 ARIA Charts Accreditations 1996 Albums PDF Australian Recording Industry Association Retrieved August 17 2022 Canadian album certifications Metallica Kill Em All Music Canada Retrieved March 28 2014 Gold Platin Datenbank Metallica Kill Em All in German Bundesverband Musikindustrie Retrieved May 25 2019 Wyroznienia Platynowe plyty CD Archiwum Przyznane w 2021 roku in Polish Polish Society of the Phonographic Industry Retrieved July 29 2021 British album certifications Metallica Kill Em All British Phonographic Industry Retrieved March 28 2014 Young Simon March 9 2023 Here are the astonishing US sales stats for every Metallica album Metal Hammer Archived from the original on March 11 2023 Retrieved March 12 2023 American album certifications Metallica Kill Em All Recording Industry Association of America Retrieved March 28 2014 Bibliography editDome Malcolm Wall Mick 2013 Metallica The Music and the Mayhem Omnibus Press ISBN 978 0 85712 721 1 Gulla Bob 2013 Guitar Gods The 25 Players Who Made Rock History ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 35806 7 Harrison Thomas 2011 Music of the 1980s ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 36600 0 Heatley Michael Lester Paul Roberts Chris eds 1998 The Encyclopedia of Albums Dempsey Parr ISBN 978 1 84084 031 5 Irwin William 2009 The Search Goes On Christian Warrior Buddhist In Irwin William ed Metallica and Philosophy A Crash Course in Brain Surgery John Wiley amp Sons pp 16 28 ISBN 978 1 4051 6348 4 Kahn Harris Keith 2007 Extreme Metal Music and Culture on the Edge Berg Publishers ISBN 978 1 84520 398 6 Kemp Rob 2004 Metallica In Brackett Nathan Hoard Christian David eds The New Rolling Stone Album Guide Simon amp Schuster pp 538 539 ISBN 0 7432 0169 8 Larkin Colin ed 2006 Encyclopedia of Popular Music Vol 5 4th ed Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 531373 9 McIver Joel 2009 To Live Is to Die The Life and Death of Metallica s Cliff Burton Omnibus Press ISBN 978 1 906002 24 4 McIver Joel 2014 Justice for All The Truth About Metallica Omnibus Press ISBN 978 1 78323 123 2 Nys Thomas 2009 Through the Mist and the Madness Metallica s Message of Nonconformity Individuality and Truth In Irwin William ed Metallica and Philosophy A Crash Course in Brain Surgery John Wiley amp Sons pp 41 52 ISBN 978 1 4051 6348 4 Pillsbury Glenn 2006 Damage Incorporated Metallica and the Production of Musical Identity Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 97374 8 Popoff Martin 2005 The Collector s Guide to Heavy Metal The Eighties Vol 2 Collector s Guide Publishing ISBN 978 1 894959 31 5 Popoff Martin 2013 Metallica The Complete Illustrated History Voyageur Press ISBN 978 0 7603 4482 8 Wagner Jeff 2010 Mean Deviation Four Decades of Progressive Heavy Metal Bazillion Points Books ISBN 978 0 9796163 3 4 Wall Mick 2010 Enter Night A Biography of Metallica Orion Publishing Group ISBN 978 1 40911 297 6 Weinstein Deena 2013 Metallica Kills In Plasketes George ed Please Allow Me to Introduce Myself Essays on Debut Albums Ashgate Publishing Ltd pp 149 56 ISBN 978 1 472 40280 6 Winwood Ian Brannigan Paul 2013 Birth School Metallica Death Vol 1 Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 29416 9 External links editOfficial website nbsp Kill Em All at Discogs list of releases Metal Up Your Ass at Discogs bootleg release featuring the original cover concept for Kill Em All Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kill 27Em All amp oldid 1206222004, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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