I love it when an animation comes together. I didn't expect it to sync with the music so well, but it does like The Dark Side of the Moon and The Wizard of Oz. Here's Futanari RaeLynn showing off her soles and other assets. #feet#footfetish#futanari
This post inspired me to revisit Metallica's entire studio discography. I'm up to Death Magnetic so far, hearing it for the first time and I would definitely add it to this stack. It's the greatest comeback album since Maiden 2000. It has all of the virtuosity and complex sophistication of Justice and all of the production polish, catchiness and excellent vocals of The Black Album. I'd like The Black Album more if it wasn't the follow up to the Thrash-Prog masterpiece that was And Justice for All. It has start-to-finish bangers but feels like slow-motion Metallica by comparison, which isn't fair because there are riffs on Don't Tread on Me and The Struggle Within that I'd have a very hard time learning to play. Load was pretty garbage. Reload had a couple of 5/5 tracks. St Anger was actual garbage but in the best possible way because it was actually UNDER-commercialized. James and Lars showed up for work and played fast even if the producer didn't (did Kirk even play on the album? There are no guitar solos at all. Not one). What surprised me the most was how much I liked Kill-em All. Those guys were 19-21 when that was recorded and James' voice hadn't fully changed yet and the vocals are pretty bad, but the playing is so tight and the guitar riffs are amazing. The three follow ups took things to a whole other level, but the debut is a solid stand-alone piece of work. I guess what I like most about Metallica are the harmonized melodic guitar solos that are prominent on Lightning, Puppets, Justice and Magnetic. It seems like they ultimately learned what really gets the fans going. Trujillo was a great hire. He studied with and is influenced by Steven Wilson and may be a big reason why Death Magnetic is 10x the album that St Anger was.
This post inspired me to revisit Metallica's entire studio discography. I'm up to Death Magnetic so far, hearing it for the first time and I would definitely add it to this stack. It's the greatest comeback album since Maiden 2000. It has all of the virtuosity and complex sophistication of Justice and all of the production polish, catchiness and excellent vocals of The Black Album. I'd like The Black Album more if it wasn't the follow up to the Thrash-Prog masterpiece that was And Justice for All. It has start-to-finish bangers but feels like slow-motion Metallica by comparison, which isn't fair because there are riffs on Don't Tread on Me and The Struggle Within that I'd have a very hard time learning to play. Load was pretty garbage. Reload had a couple of 5/5 tracks. St Anger was actual garbage but in the best possible way because it was actually UNDER-commercialized. James and Lars showed up for work and played fast even if the producer didn't (did Kirk even play on the album? There are no guitar solos at all. Not one). What surprised me the most was how much I liked Kill-em All. Those guys were 19-21 when that was recorded and James' voice hadn't fully changed yet and the vocals are pretty bad, but the playing is so tight and the guitar riffs are amazing. The three follow ups took things to a whole other level, but the debut is a solid stand-alone piece of work. I guess what I like most about Metallica are the harmonized melodic guitar solos that are prominent on Lightning, Puppets, Justice and Magnetic. It seems like they ultimately learned what really gets the fans going. Trujillo was a great hire. He studied with and is influenced by Steven Wilson and may be a big reason why Death Magnetic is 10x the album that St Anger was.
@QTRBlackGarrett They're not CASTING her as Ben Franklin, though that would still be preferable to Odyssey casting. The threads were on point. She put a lot of work into it.