The remixed and remastered
Megadeth albums released in 2004 aren't your typical cash-ins. They're stark improvements over the originals: group leader
Dave Mustaine did the remixing and remastering himself, making especially significant revisions to the earlier albums, and he includes insightful liner notes for each reissue, including track-by-track commentary for the bonus tracks, as well as lyrics and period photos. The reissue of Rust in Peace improves upon the already impressive original mainly in terms of sound quality. The remixed and remastered production sounds more dynamic and forceful -- important attributes when it comes to thrash metal like this. As far as the album itself goes, there's not much to improve upon. Rust in Peace was great to begin with and was a huge step forward for
Megadeth. The album's predecessor, So Far, So Good...So What!, had been a success, both commercially as well as among the band's then-growing fan base, yet it had its flaws, chiefly in terms of songwriting -- some great songs, some not-so-great songs, an overall sense of inconsistency. Contrarily, Rust in Peace is anything but inconsistent; in fact, if the album has one fault, it's that it's
too consistent, with many songs sounding overly similar to one another. Most notably, Rust in Peace opens with the back-to-back "Holy Wars...The Punishment Due" and "Hangar 18," beyond doubt the most accomplished songs yet recorded by
Megadeth. And wow, these songs sound better than ever here on the reissue! The successive ones aren't big departures from what
Mustaine and company (featuring two new members: guitarist
Marty Friedman and drummer
Nick Menza) accomplish with the album-opening high points, following that trajectory and refusing to relent. As far as reissue goodies go,
Mustaine's liner notes focus on how much he struggled to find a replacement for the "long gone"
Jeff Young (the guitarist
Mustaine had hired for SFSGSW and the subsequent tour), and how skeptical he was of
Friedman initially (the guitarist had sported a half-orange/half-black hairstyle). He also writes of where he came up with the idea for the album title (a bumper sticker) and reflects on
Megadeth's across-the-board success at the time (embarking on the
Clash of the Titans tour with
Slayer and
Anthrax; becoming "one of MTV's darlings"; and enjoying a life of "long hair, tight jeans, tons of chicks and
speed metal at its finest"). Bonus tracks include the previously unreleased "My Creation" and pre-
Friedman demos of a few songs, all of which feature the ax slinging of Peace Sells-era guitarist
Chris Poland. Less than an essential purchase, even for diehards, this reissue of Rust in Peace is nonetheless warranted because of its improved sound quality. ~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide