Reload (Remastered)

Metallica

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Sale - Sale price $52.99 CAD Regular price
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Sale - Sale price $21.99 CAD Regular price
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Sale - Sale price $413.99 CAD Regular price
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Description

ReLoad (Remastered) is Metallica’s 2026 reissue of their 1997 seventh studio album, presented as the latest installment in the band’s ongoing campaign to remaster and expand their catalog. Originally produced by Bob Rock as the follow‑up to the five‑times‑platinum Load, ReLoad pushed Metallica further into a hard‑rock groove that drew on blues, country, and classic rock as much as thrash, yielding fan‑favorite tracks like Fuel, The Memory Remains (featuring Marianne Faithfull), The Unforgiven II, Carpe Diem Baby, and Fixxxer. The 2026 remaster, handled by Reuben Cohen at Lurssen Mastering under executive producer Greg Fidelman, presents the 13‑track album in newly polished form on standard CD, cassette, and 180‑gram double vinyl, with a slightly wider, clearer soundstage that highlights its looser riffing, thick midrange guitars, and Hetfield’s more developed vocal style.

Beyond the core album, ReLoad (Remastered) comes in several expanded configurations that turn it into a deep archival set from the band’s “alternative” late‑’90s era. The 3‑CD expanded edition adds a disc of “Shadowcast” rarities—demos, riffs, session takes, rough and alternate mixes—and a disc of selected live tracks from 1997–98, packaged with an embossed cover and a 36‑page booklet. The super‑deluxe box set goes much further: 15 CDs, five LPs (including the remastered album on 180‑gram vinyl and the triple‑LP Live At Ministry Of Sound ’97), a 7-inch single of The Memory Remains backed with For Whom The Bell Tolls (Haven’t Heard It Yet Mix), four DVDs of behind‑the‑scenes and live footage, and a 128‑page book loaded with photos, Rorschach test cards, posters, lyric sheets, and replica tour passes, totaling 301 tracks—245 previously unreleased. Critics looking back nearly three decades later often argue that ReLoad has aged better than Load, hearing in this era a more relaxed, exploratory Metallica whose willingness to stretch beyond strict thrash conventions becomes fully apparent through the remaster and its sprawling bonus material.

ReLoad (Remastered) is Metallica’s 2026 reissue of their 1997 seventh studio album, presented as the latest installment in the band’s ongoing campaign to remaster and expand their catalog. Originally produced by Bob Rock as the follow‑up to the five‑times‑platinum Load, ReLoad pushed Metallica further into a hard‑rock groove that drew on blues, country, and classic rock as much as thrash, yielding fan‑favorite tracks like Fuel, The Memory Remains (featuring Marianne Faithfull), The Unforgiven II, Carpe Diem Baby, and Fixxxer. The 2026 remaster, handled by Reuben Cohen at Lurssen Mastering under executive producer Greg Fidelman, presents the 13‑track album in newly polished form on standard CD, cassette, and 180‑gram double vinyl, with a slightly wider, clearer soundstage that highlights its looser riffing, thick midrange guitars, and Hetfield’s more developed vocal style.

Beyond the core album, ReLoad (Remastered) comes in several expanded configurations that turn it into a deep archival set from the band’s “alternative” late‑’90s era. The 3‑CD expanded edition adds a disc of “Shadowcast” rarities—demos, riffs, session takes, rough and alternate mixes—and a disc of selected live tracks from 1997–98, packaged with an embossed cover and a 36‑page booklet. The super‑deluxe box set goes much further: 15 CDs, five LPs (including the remastered album on 180‑gram vinyl and the triple‑LP Live At Ministry Of Sound ’97), a 7-inch single of The Memory Remains backed with For Whom The Bell Tolls (Haven’t Heard It Yet Mix), four DVDs of behind‑the‑scenes and live footage, and a 128‑page book loaded with photos, Rorschach test cards, posters, lyric sheets, and replica tour passes, totaling 301 tracks—245 previously unreleased. Critics looking back nearly three decades later often argue that ReLoad has aged better than Load, hearing in this era a more relaxed, exploratory Metallica whose willingness to stretch beyond strict thrash conventions becomes fully apparent through the remaster and its sprawling bonus material.

ReLoad (Remastered) is Metallica’s 2026 reissue of their 1997 seventh studio album, presented as the latest installment in the band’s ongoing campaign to remaster and expand their catalog. Originally produced by Bob Rock as the follow‑up to the five‑times‑platinum Load, ReLoad pushed Metallica further into a hard‑rock groove that drew on blues, country, and classic rock as much as thrash, yielding fan‑favorite tracks like Fuel, The Memory Remains (featuring Marianne Faithfull), The Unforgiven II, Carpe Diem Baby, and Fixxxer. The 2026 remaster, handled by Reuben Cohen at Lurssen Mastering under executive producer Greg Fidelman, presents the 13‑track album in newly polished form on standard CD, cassette, and 180‑gram double vinyl, with a slightly wider, clearer soundstage that highlights its looser riffing, thick midrange guitars, and Hetfield’s more developed vocal style.

Beyond the core album, ReLoad (Remastered) comes in several expanded configurations that turn it into a deep archival set from the band’s “alternative” late‑’90s era. The 3‑CD expanded edition adds a disc of “Shadowcast” rarities—demos, riffs, session takes, rough and alternate mixes—and a disc of selected live tracks from 1997–98, packaged with an embossed cover and a 36‑page booklet. The super‑deluxe box set goes much further: 15 CDs, five LPs (including the remastered album on 180‑gram vinyl and the triple‑LP Live At Ministry Of Sound ’97), a 7-inch single of The Memory Remains backed with For Whom The Bell Tolls (Haven’t Heard It Yet Mix), four DVDs of behind‑the‑scenes and live footage, and a 128‑page book loaded with photos, Rorschach test cards, posters, lyric sheets, and replica tour passes, totaling 301 tracks—245 previously unreleased. Critics looking back nearly three decades later often argue that ReLoad has aged better than Load, hearing in this era a more relaxed, exploratory Metallica whose willingness to stretch beyond strict thrash conventions becomes fully apparent through the remaster and its sprawling bonus material.

ReLoad (Remastered) is Metallica’s 2026 reissue of their 1997 seventh studio album, presented as the latest installment in the band’s ongoing campaign to remaster and expand their catalog. Originally produced by Bob Rock as the follow‑up to the five‑times‑platinum Load, ReLoad pushed Metallica further into a hard‑rock groove that drew on blues, country, and classic rock as much as thrash, yielding fan‑favorite tracks like Fuel, The Memory Remains (featuring Marianne Faithfull), The Unforgiven II, Carpe Diem Baby, and Fixxxer. The 2026 remaster, handled by Reuben Cohen at Lurssen Mastering under executive producer Greg Fidelman, presents the 13‑track album in newly polished form on standard CD, cassette, and 180‑gram double vinyl, with a slightly wider, clearer soundstage that highlights its looser riffing, thick midrange guitars, and Hetfield’s more developed vocal style.

Beyond the core album, ReLoad (Remastered) comes in several expanded configurations that turn it into a deep archival set from the band’s “alternative” late‑’90s era. The 3‑CD expanded edition adds a disc of “Shadowcast” rarities—demos, riffs, session takes, rough and alternate mixes—and a disc of selected live tracks from 1997–98, packaged with an embossed cover and a 36‑page booklet. The super‑deluxe box set goes much further: 15 CDs, five LPs (including the remastered album on 180‑gram vinyl and the triple‑LP Live At Ministry Of Sound ’97), a 7-inch single of The Memory Remains backed with For Whom The Bell Tolls (Haven’t Heard It Yet Mix), four DVDs of behind‑the‑scenes and live footage, and a 128‑page book loaded with photos, Rorschach test cards, posters, lyric sheets, and replica tour passes, totaling 301 tracks—245 previously unreleased. Critics looking back nearly three decades later often argue that ReLoad has aged better than Load, hearing in this era a more relaxed, exploratory Metallica whose willingness to stretch beyond strict thrash conventions becomes fully apparent through the remaster and its sprawling bonus material.

ReLoad (Remastered) is Metallica’s 2026 reissue of their 1997 seventh studio album, presented as the latest installment in the band’s ongoing campaign to remaster and expand their catalog. Originally produced by Bob Rock as the follow‑up to the five‑times‑platinum Load, ReLoad pushed Metallica further into a hard‑rock groove that drew on blues, country, and classic rock as much as thrash, yielding fan‑favorite tracks like Fuel, The Memory Remains (featuring Marianne Faithfull), The Unforgiven II, Carpe Diem Baby, and Fixxxer. The 2026 remaster, handled by Reuben Cohen at Lurssen Mastering under executive producer Greg Fidelman, presents the 13‑track album in newly polished form on standard CD, cassette, and 180‑gram double vinyl, with a slightly wider, clearer soundstage that highlights its looser riffing, thick midrange guitars, and Hetfield’s more developed vocal style.

Beyond the core album, ReLoad (Remastered) comes in several expanded configurations that turn it into a deep archival set from the band’s “alternative” late‑’90s era. The 3‑CD expanded edition adds a disc of “Shadowcast” rarities—demos, riffs, session takes, rough and alternate mixes—and a disc of selected live tracks from 1997–98, packaged with an embossed cover and a 36‑page booklet. The super‑deluxe box set goes much further: 15 CDs, five LPs (including the remastered album on 180‑gram vinyl and the triple‑LP Live At Ministry Of Sound ’97), a 7-inch single of The Memory Remains backed with For Whom The Bell Tolls (Haven’t Heard It Yet Mix), four DVDs of behind‑the‑scenes and live footage, and a 128‑page book loaded with photos, Rorschach test cards, posters, lyric sheets, and replica tour passes, totaling 301 tracks—245 previously unreleased. Critics looking back nearly three decades later often argue that ReLoad has aged better than Load, hearing in this era a more relaxed, exploratory Metallica whose willingness to stretch beyond strict thrash conventions becomes fully apparent through the remaster and its sprawling bonus material.

Details
detail icon barcode
Barcode :
0810083963501 0810083963495 0810083963464 0810083963549 0810083963525
detail icon publisher
Publisher :
Blackened Recordings Blackened Recordings Blackened Recordings Blackened Recordings Blackened Recordings
detail icon genre
Genre :
Metal
Product Dimensions
detail icon width
Length x Width x Height :
6 x 5.2 x 0.5 in 6 x 5.2 x 0.5 in 12.5 x 12.5 x 0.5 in 2.76 x 4.41 x 1.3 in 12.5 x 12.5 x 1 in
detail icon weight
Weight :
340 g 90 g 500 g 60 g 2750 g

Reload (Remastered)

Metallica

Sale - Sale price $36.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $36.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Sale - Sale price $21.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $21.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Sale - Sale price $52.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $52.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Sale - Sale price $21.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $21.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Sale - Sale price $413.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $413.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Description

ReLoad (Remastered) is Metallica’s 2026 reissue of their 1997 seventh studio album, presented as the latest installment in the band’s ongoing campaign to remaster and expand their catalog. Originally produced by Bob Rock as the follow‑up to the five‑times‑platinum Load, ReLoad pushed Metallica further into a hard‑rock groove that drew on blues, country, and classic rock as much as thrash, yielding fan‑favorite tracks like Fuel, The Memory Remains (featuring Marianne Faithfull), The Unforgiven II, Carpe Diem Baby, and Fixxxer. The 2026 remaster, handled by Reuben Cohen at Lurssen Mastering under executive producer Greg Fidelman, presents the 13‑track album in newly polished form on standard CD, cassette, and 180‑gram double vinyl, with a slightly wider, clearer soundstage that highlights its looser riffing, thick midrange guitars, and Hetfield’s more developed vocal style.

Beyond the core album, ReLoad (Remastered) comes in several expanded configurations that turn it into a deep archival set from the band’s “alternative” late‑’90s era. The 3‑CD expanded edition adds a disc of “Shadowcast” rarities—demos, riffs, session takes, rough and alternate mixes—and a disc of selected live tracks from 1997–98, packaged with an embossed cover and a 36‑page booklet. The super‑deluxe box set goes much further: 15 CDs, five LPs (including the remastered album on 180‑gram vinyl and the triple‑LP Live At Ministry Of Sound ’97), a 7-inch single of The Memory Remains backed with For Whom The Bell Tolls (Haven’t Heard It Yet Mix), four DVDs of behind‑the‑scenes and live footage, and a 128‑page book loaded with photos, Rorschach test cards, posters, lyric sheets, and replica tour passes, totaling 301 tracks—245 previously unreleased. Critics looking back nearly three decades later often argue that ReLoad has aged better than Load, hearing in this era a more relaxed, exploratory Metallica whose willingness to stretch beyond strict thrash conventions becomes fully apparent through the remaster and its sprawling bonus material.

ReLoad (Remastered) is Metallica’s 2026 reissue of their 1997 seventh studio album, presented as the latest installment in the band’s ongoing campaign to remaster and expand their catalog. Originally produced by Bob Rock as the follow‑up to the five‑times‑platinum Load, ReLoad pushed Metallica further into a hard‑rock groove that drew on blues, country, and classic rock as much as thrash, yielding fan‑favorite tracks like Fuel, The Memory Remains (featuring Marianne Faithfull), The Unforgiven II, Carpe Diem Baby, and Fixxxer. The 2026 remaster, handled by Reuben Cohen at Lurssen Mastering under executive producer Greg Fidelman, presents the 13‑track album in newly polished form on standard CD, cassette, and 180‑gram double vinyl, with a slightly wider, clearer soundstage that highlights its looser riffing, thick midrange guitars, and Hetfield’s more developed vocal style.

Beyond the core album, ReLoad (Remastered) comes in several expanded configurations that turn it into a deep archival set from the band’s “alternative” late‑’90s era. The 3‑CD expanded edition adds a disc of “Shadowcast” rarities—demos, riffs, session takes, rough and alternate mixes—and a disc of selected live tracks from 1997–98, packaged with an embossed cover and a 36‑page booklet. The super‑deluxe box set goes much further: 15 CDs, five LPs (including the remastered album on 180‑gram vinyl and the triple‑LP Live At Ministry Of Sound ’97), a 7-inch single of The Memory Remains backed with For Whom The Bell Tolls (Haven’t Heard It Yet Mix), four DVDs of behind‑the‑scenes and live footage, and a 128‑page book loaded with photos, Rorschach test cards, posters, lyric sheets, and replica tour passes, totaling 301 tracks—245 previously unreleased. Critics looking back nearly three decades later often argue that ReLoad has aged better than Load, hearing in this era a more relaxed, exploratory Metallica whose willingness to stretch beyond strict thrash conventions becomes fully apparent through the remaster and its sprawling bonus material.

ReLoad (Remastered) is Metallica’s 2026 reissue of their 1997 seventh studio album, presented as the latest installment in the band’s ongoing campaign to remaster and expand their catalog. Originally produced by Bob Rock as the follow‑up to the five‑times‑platinum Load, ReLoad pushed Metallica further into a hard‑rock groove that drew on blues, country, and classic rock as much as thrash, yielding fan‑favorite tracks like Fuel, The Memory Remains (featuring Marianne Faithfull), The Unforgiven II, Carpe Diem Baby, and Fixxxer. The 2026 remaster, handled by Reuben Cohen at Lurssen Mastering under executive producer Greg Fidelman, presents the 13‑track album in newly polished form on standard CD, cassette, and 180‑gram double vinyl, with a slightly wider, clearer soundstage that highlights its looser riffing, thick midrange guitars, and Hetfield’s more developed vocal style.

Beyond the core album, ReLoad (Remastered) comes in several expanded configurations that turn it into a deep archival set from the band’s “alternative” late‑’90s era. The 3‑CD expanded edition adds a disc of “Shadowcast” rarities—demos, riffs, session takes, rough and alternate mixes—and a disc of selected live tracks from 1997–98, packaged with an embossed cover and a 36‑page booklet. The super‑deluxe box set goes much further: 15 CDs, five LPs (including the remastered album on 180‑gram vinyl and the triple‑LP Live At Ministry Of Sound ’97), a 7-inch single of The Memory Remains backed with For Whom The Bell Tolls (Haven’t Heard It Yet Mix), four DVDs of behind‑the‑scenes and live footage, and a 128‑page book loaded with photos, Rorschach test cards, posters, lyric sheets, and replica tour passes, totaling 301 tracks—245 previously unreleased. Critics looking back nearly three decades later often argue that ReLoad has aged better than Load, hearing in this era a more relaxed, exploratory Metallica whose willingness to stretch beyond strict thrash conventions becomes fully apparent through the remaster and its sprawling bonus material.

ReLoad (Remastered) is Metallica’s 2026 reissue of their 1997 seventh studio album, presented as the latest installment in the band’s ongoing campaign to remaster and expand their catalog. Originally produced by Bob Rock as the follow‑up to the five‑times‑platinum Load, ReLoad pushed Metallica further into a hard‑rock groove that drew on blues, country, and classic rock as much as thrash, yielding fan‑favorite tracks like Fuel, The Memory Remains (featuring Marianne Faithfull), The Unforgiven II, Carpe Diem Baby, and Fixxxer. The 2026 remaster, handled by Reuben Cohen at Lurssen Mastering under executive producer Greg Fidelman, presents the 13‑track album in newly polished form on standard CD, cassette, and 180‑gram double vinyl, with a slightly wider, clearer soundstage that highlights its looser riffing, thick midrange guitars, and Hetfield’s more developed vocal style.

Beyond the core album, ReLoad (Remastered) comes in several expanded configurations that turn it into a deep archival set from the band’s “alternative” late‑’90s era. The 3‑CD expanded edition adds a disc of “Shadowcast” rarities—demos, riffs, session takes, rough and alternate mixes—and a disc of selected live tracks from 1997–98, packaged with an embossed cover and a 36‑page booklet. The super‑deluxe box set goes much further: 15 CDs, five LPs (including the remastered album on 180‑gram vinyl and the triple‑LP Live At Ministry Of Sound ’97), a 7-inch single of The Memory Remains backed with For Whom The Bell Tolls (Haven’t Heard It Yet Mix), four DVDs of behind‑the‑scenes and live footage, and a 128‑page book loaded with photos, Rorschach test cards, posters, lyric sheets, and replica tour passes, totaling 301 tracks—245 previously unreleased. Critics looking back nearly three decades later often argue that ReLoad has aged better than Load, hearing in this era a more relaxed, exploratory Metallica whose willingness to stretch beyond strict thrash conventions becomes fully apparent through the remaster and its sprawling bonus material.

ReLoad (Remastered) is Metallica’s 2026 reissue of their 1997 seventh studio album, presented as the latest installment in the band’s ongoing campaign to remaster and expand their catalog. Originally produced by Bob Rock as the follow‑up to the five‑times‑platinum Load, ReLoad pushed Metallica further into a hard‑rock groove that drew on blues, country, and classic rock as much as thrash, yielding fan‑favorite tracks like Fuel, The Memory Remains (featuring Marianne Faithfull), The Unforgiven II, Carpe Diem Baby, and Fixxxer. The 2026 remaster, handled by Reuben Cohen at Lurssen Mastering under executive producer Greg Fidelman, presents the 13‑track album in newly polished form on standard CD, cassette, and 180‑gram double vinyl, with a slightly wider, clearer soundstage that highlights its looser riffing, thick midrange guitars, and Hetfield’s more developed vocal style.

Beyond the core album, ReLoad (Remastered) comes in several expanded configurations that turn it into a deep archival set from the band’s “alternative” late‑’90s era. The 3‑CD expanded edition adds a disc of “Shadowcast” rarities—demos, riffs, session takes, rough and alternate mixes—and a disc of selected live tracks from 1997–98, packaged with an embossed cover and a 36‑page booklet. The super‑deluxe box set goes much further: 15 CDs, five LPs (including the remastered album on 180‑gram vinyl and the triple‑LP Live At Ministry Of Sound ’97), a 7-inch single of The Memory Remains backed with For Whom The Bell Tolls (Haven’t Heard It Yet Mix), four DVDs of behind‑the‑scenes and live footage, and a 128‑page book loaded with photos, Rorschach test cards, posters, lyric sheets, and replica tour passes, totaling 301 tracks—245 previously unreleased. Critics looking back nearly three decades later often argue that ReLoad has aged better than Load, hearing in this era a more relaxed, exploratory Metallica whose willingness to stretch beyond strict thrash conventions becomes fully apparent through the remaster and its sprawling bonus material.

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