Rust In Peace – Paul Hanson

Rust In Peace
Capitol Records, 1990
Reviewed by Paul Hanson
Published on Jun 21, 1998

Headlining the bill for Hanson Concert Day #1 is Megadeth. Since

Cryptic Writings was taken, I’ll focus on the band’s 1990
release
Rust In Peace.

This album hit me right as I was desperate for an alternative to
the 80s metal. It was the first Megadeth album I heard and, for
that reason, probably my favorite. It impressed me from song one to
the end.

There’s an aura that comes from my speakers when I spin this
disc. Sure, Nick Menza and David Ellefson are holding down the
rhythm section. But it was the guitars (and I’m a retired drummer)
that make me see this as the band’s finest hour. Disc opener “Holy
Wars . . . The Punishment Due” is a dizzying display of ability.
Remember, I was just discovering the genre. After 1:30 of
impressive chops, Mustaine comes in.

And what lyrics! “Brother will kill brother.” That’s the lyrical
content I had heard about: “Megadeth is about death” I was told by
my friends. While no song here is a dud, I point to “Poison Was The
Cure,” “Lucretia” and “Tornado Of Souls” as this disc’s highest
points. “Poison” is an upbeat thrasher, almost punk-style
aggression. Nick Menza is killer on his snare drum intro solo
fill.

“Lucretia” gets a big nod for its structure. The song builds to
its verse groove with fluidity and heaviness.

“Tornado Of Souls” strikes me as being one of several blueprints
for the thrash metal genre. A simple (well, simple for Megadeth)
riff collapses into shouts of rejection: “Who’s to say what’s for
me to say.” And then, Mustaine brings the song to a chilling
conclusion when he sings:

My poison fills your head

As I tuck you into bed

You feel my fingertips

You won’t forget my lips

You’ll feel my cold breath

It’s the kiss of death.

All in all, this disc has not lost its relativity to heavy metal
in the 1990s. I’m hoping when I see them in concert tonight,
they’ll pull a couple of songs from this album like “Lucretia” and
“Tornado Of Souls.”

And if they play a cover of Black Sabbath’s “Paranoid” (recorded
for a Black Sabbath tribute disc), I’ll definitely be giving the
concert the same grade as this album.

Rating: A

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