Awfully fantastic, that is!! Thrash metal fans are famously meatheady, terrified of change and quickly thrown into tantrums when they don't get what they want. Unlike me, a very intelligent, handsome and smart birb, not afraid of trying new things and appreciating free artistic expression. So in this list I'm uncovering the greatest decade for big thrash bands in terms of interesting sounds created and new avenues explored.
Best thrash is when itβs not really thrash at all
(9, 13, 27, 31 are actually acceptable to be fair, which is weird because they are either divisible by 3 or contain 3 (and 1)β¦ really makes you think π€)
I might have included albums as counter examples that do not have a release date in the 90s, just for clarification purposes here in case you did not understand the complexities of this list.