Metallica Top 10 Songs Free Download
In a little more than a month, Metallica’s Hardwired… To Self Destruct will hit stores. It’s been a while since we heard from the legends -- eight years, in fact, since they released Death Magnetic, marking the longest break between albums in their catalog.
As not only the biggest metal band, but one of the biggest rock bands in 30 years, Metallica has built an impressive catalog. When they played their fan club-only show in New York last month, the entire set (with the exception of two new songs) was taken from 1991’s Black Album and back. With apologies to the four albums that came after, if we were to come up with a list of the best Metallica songs, which we’re about to, it would consist of songs mostly culled from their first five albums. Our selections are:
Mp3Box is one of the best free Mp3 downloads and Mp3Box allows to stream music online and download MP3 files and full albums absolutely at free. Very clear navigation and well design help you to easily find music. From the home page you get top songs, top albums and top artiest songs. The Top 10 Best Metallica Songs From the 1980s. By Paul Elliott (Classic Rock) 2019-01-09T11:00:00Z Classic Rock. There are more famous Metallica songs, such as Enter Sandman and Nothing Else Matters, but Master Of Puppets is the absolute pinnacle of the band’s artistry.
10. Metallica - “Fuel,” Reload
We’ll get this out of the way quickly. Metallica found itself in a weird place over the one-two punch of Load and Reload. Coming off the massive success of The Black Album, the band became even more mainstream (“They cut their hair, man!”) than after their breakthrough album. Neither album was a fan favorite, but songs like “King Nothing,” “Until It Sleeps” and “The Memory Remains” were huge rock radio hits and songs worth mentioning if this were a best-of post-Black Album list. “Fuel,” which kicks off Reload, is a driving rock song about, well, driving. It’s a little cheesy, but all the more fun for it. It even made its way to a Dodge commercial recently.
9. Metallica - “Sad But True,” The Black Album
This is as close to Black Sabbath worship as Metallica got without actually covering the band -- which it did on Garage Inc. The song’s got a stoner-rock swagger to it, and unlike most of their songs, was written in D, a key lower than normal for them. For better or for worse, Kid Rock used the main riff for his song “American Bad Ass” in 2000, and it's a great example of the band slowing down a bit, but not selling out. It’s their seventh most-performed song ever, according to setlist.fm.
8. Metallica - “Orion,” Master of Puppets
This instrumental track from Master of Puppets perhaps sums up the best strengths of what Metallica is: chugging guitar lines, interplay between the two guitarists, several tempo changes, a bass interlude from Cliff Burton (on the album that came out six months before his death) and proof that a Metallica song could be heavy and beautiful at the same time. It’s a natural evolution of Ride the Lightning’s underrated instrumental: the equally mind-blowing “The Call of Ktulu.”
Billboard Top 10 Songs Of The Week
7. Metallica - “For Whom the Bell Tolls,” Ride the Lightning
Beginning with the literal tolling of bells and based on the Ernest Hemingway novel, this battle cry of a doomed soldier is another one of the band’s most-performed songs. With its instantly familiar chromatic descending riff that the band would revisit on “Master of Puppets,” and reminder that time marches on, it was Ride the Lightning’s first straight-ahead rock song after the opening one-two thrash combo of “Fight Fire with Fire” and “Ride the Lightning.”
6. Metallica - “Seek and Destroy,” Kill 'em All
If you’ve seen Metallica live recently, they probably ended their set with this, the first song they ever recorded. While 1983’s Kill ‘em All is regarded as one of the first thrash albums ever, this ninth track on the album draws more from the New Wave of British heavy metal bands that inspired them, and it proved the band could take their foot off the gas a bit and write a straight-ahead headbanger.
5. Metallica - “Creeping Death,” Ride the Lightning
A biblical lesson and a rager at the same time, “Creeping Death” was inspired by the book of Exodus. Written from the point of view of the Angel of Death, the song is about the plagues bestowed on the Egyptians. From the opening riff to the last note, it’s one of the band’s most driving songs, and a highlight of almost every show they play, as the whole audience chants “Die” repeatedly, following a blistering guitar solo from Kirk Hammett.
4. Metallica - “Battery,” Master of Puppets
Another great album opener, Master of Puppets opens with the almost flamenco-like acoustic guitar strums of “Battery.” At 30 seconds in, it becomes apparent that this isn’t going to be a solely acoustic song, and another 30 after that, it turns into one of the most intense songs that the band’s written.
3. Metallica - “One,” …And Justice For All
Taken from …And Justice For All, this was the Metallica song that catapulted the band into the mainstream. A big reason was its video, the first the band ever made. Interspersing footage from the 1971 film Johnny Got His Gun with shots of the band performing, the song (and video) is about a war veteran waking up in a hospital and realizing he’s a paraplegic. It was an instant hit on MTV upon its release in 1989. Then there’s the song, which starts as a ballad, building in intensity until about the 4:30 mark where Lars Ulrich’s double-bass kicks turn the rest of the song into a syncopated thrashfest. Despite performing the song on the 1989 Grammys, they lost the first metal Grammy to Jethro Tull, but won for this song the following year.
2. Metallica - “Master of Puppets,” Master of Puppets
Download Metallica Songs
The title track of Metallica’s third album is a great summation of why Master of Puppets is viewed by many as the band’s peak. Throughout the course of 8:36, the song touches on thrash and classical with several tempo changes, even towards prog. A breakneck rollercoaster of a song, the anti-cocaine song has an instrumental breakdown in the middle that swells into a dual guitar harmony that builds in intensity back to the last verse of the song. It’s an instant classic and the most-played live song of their career.
1. Metallica - “Enter Sandman,” TheBlack Album
Top 20 Songs Of The Week
As if there was any chance there would be another song at #1. The first single from The Black Album was a statement that the Metallica of the '90s wasn’t going to be the same one that they’d been for their first four albums. Trading in …And Justice For All’s muddy mix for the crisp sound of engineer Bob Rock, the first song from their eponymous album was the first full-on mainstream rock anthem the band wrote, and for many old-school fans, the exact moment when they decided they didn’t like Metallica any more. Those diehards wanting another thrash record would have to wait until they returned to their roots with Death Magnetic, but they were supplanted by millions (16.4 and counting) that embraced the band and purchased Black. “Enter Sandman” is almost mandatory at sports arenas. It’s one of the most iconic rock songs ever.
Metallica is an American (California) heavy metal rock band formed in 1981. Metallica was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2009. They were also most notably instrumental in bringing down Napster as an illegal music sharing platform.
Current Band Members: Vocalist/guitarist James Hetfield, Drummer Lars Ulrich, Lead guitarist Kirk Hammett and Bassist Robert Trujillo. Former band members comprised of Lead guitarist Dave Mustaine, Bassists Ron McGovney, Cliff Burton and Jason Newsted. Much to the chagrin of underground fans, Metallica hit the mainstream with the release of their fifth album titled The Black Album.
Check out our list below of the Metallica top 10 songs.
Best Metallica Songs
10. Master Of Puppets
Released in 1986
On Album Master of Puppets
The song is about how drugs control you.
9. Sad But True
Released in 1993
On Album Metallica
The song is most notable for it’s tone – one step down on the 5-string bass down to ‘A standard’.
8. For Whom the Bell Tolls
Released in 1985
On Album Ride the Lightning
The song was inspired by Ernest Hemingway’s 1940 novel For Whom the Bell Tolls about the dishonor of modern warfare and the protagonist’s imminent doom during the bloody Spanish Civil War.
Metallica Top 50 Songs
7. Wherever I May Roam
Released in 1992
On Album Metallica
Did you know the song is used as entrance songs in sports for pro wrestlers, baseball players and sports teams?
6. Turn The Page
Released in 1998
On Album Garage Inc.
The song was originally released by Bob Seger in 1973. The song is about the emotional and social ups and downs of a rock musician’s life on the road.
5. The Unforgiven
Released in 1992
On Album Metallica
The song is about the struggle of a person against the efforts of those who would try and control him.
4. Fade To Black
Released in 1984
On Album Ride the Lightning
The song talks about suicidal feelings.
3. Nothing Else Matters
Released in 1992
On Album Metallica
This song could actually be interpreted as a love song. The song talks about being “so close, no matter how far” – a strong bond even while being apart.
2. Enter Sandman
Released in 1991
On Album Metallica
The songs centers around childhood nightmares.
Top 10 Songs 2019
1. One
Released in 1989
On Album …And Justice for All
One is Metallica’s first Top 40 hit and brought them to mainstream and out from underground. The song’s theme and lyrics are based on the novel Johnny Got His Gun – about a soldier who is hit by a land mine and loses his limbs, eyes, ears and mouth. His mind functions perfectly, however, leaving him trapped inside his own body.