Review: Megadeth - Greatest Hits - Back To The Start
Published June 29, 2005
How does one go about reviewing a "best of" or "greatest hits" album? Doesn't everyone already know what the songs sound like? Sure, you could go on about which songs the band chose. You could even give your opinion on which songs "should have" been on the album. That is not the case with this album. Dave Mustaine did something I don't think I've ever seen before. He let the fans decide what songs were on the album.
Since the fans know best what they want on an album criticizing the song selections would be like explaining how we all voted for the wrong singer in American Idol. It would be like biting the media hand that feeds you. What I can do is give you a run down on the album art, copy quality and pretty much anything else that pops into my head.
Before we get to that we should provide the song list. This list is all-important since the Megadeth fans did it:
1. Holy Wars...The Punishment Due
2. In My Darkest Hour
3. Peace Sells
4. Sweating bullets
5. Angry Again
6. A Tout Le Monde
7. Trust
8. Kill The King
9. Symphony Of Destruction
10. Mechanix
11. Train Of Consequences
12. Wake Up Dead
13. Hangar 18
14. Dread And The Fugitive Mind
15. Skin O' My Teeth
16. She-Wolf
17. Prince Of Darkness
Did everybody get that? They packed seventeen of the best fan-picked songs into one single disk. I was expecting more like 12-15 but 17 of Megadeth's greatest are well worth it. I was impressed with how strong they have stayed throughout the near twenty years in the industry. I can think of another band that started in the same timeframe that wasn't able to keep their sound nearly as well as Megadeth has. They've stood strong through it all.
To get into the history of the band one needs only to look at the band member list for these tracks. Most of the band members in Megadeth tend to be expendable. Only two band members have stayed to full course, Dave Mustaine and David Ellefson. For an example of how rocky the band employment is I provide this list from the CD's liner notes:
Dave Mustaine: vocals, lead & rhythm guitars [all tracks]
Chris Poland: lead & rhythm guitars [tracks3, 10 & 12]
Jeff Young: lead & rhythm guitars [track 2]
Marty Friedman: lead & rhythm guitars [tracks 1, 4-9, 11, 13 & 15-17]
Al Pitrelli: guitars [track 14]
David Ellefson: bass & bkg vocals [all tracks]
Gar Samuelson: drums [tracks 3, 10 & 12]
Chuck Behler: drums [track 2]
Nick Menza: drums [tracks 1, 4-7, 9, 11, 13, 15 & 16]
Jimmy Degrasso: drums [tracks 8, 14 & 17]
A different band member for each one of their albums. I guess this guarantees the lineup will always stay fresh? I'm sure there's probably a long, rock & roll soap opera explanation for each of the rotating band members but I'm not going to speculate as to exactly what transpired. I will speculate that this will probably be the last album you see from Megadeth. From what I hear this album completes the contract with the Capitol Records and, since injuring his arm in 2002, believes it better to pursue other options in the music industry. Of course, I could be mistaken on all of this. It's just rumor-mill stuff.
- Review: Megadeth - Greatest Hits - Back To The Start
- Published: June 29, 2005
- Type: Review
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Music: Classic Rock and Oldies, Music: Hard Rock, Music: Metal, Music: Rock, Review
- Writer: Jeremy H. Bol
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Comments
"A different band member for each one of their albums. I guess this guarantees the lineup will always stay fresh? I'm sure there's probably a long, rock & roll soap opera explanation for each of the rotating band members but I'm not going to speculate as to exactly what transpired."
Well, actually the line-up was unchanged for 4 studio albums [Rust In Peace, Countdown To Extinction, Youthanasia and Cryptic Writings]. The line up read -
Dave Mustaine: vocals & guitars
Marty Friedman: Lead
David Ellefson: Bass
Nick Menza: Drums










Only two band members have stayed to full course, Dave Mustaine and David Ellefson.
And, unfortunately, due to a falling out, Ellefson jumped ship last year before The System Has Failed was finished.
Did you happen to get the set with the DVD? I'd like to know if it's worth investing the extra money for the handful of live stuff (good picture, sound quality, etc.)