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Overview of Heavy Metal

Some regard any loud rock music as heavy
metal. In reality there are a multitude of heavy metal styles and subgenres.
Heavy metal is a wide umbrella characterizing a style of music that is
generally loud and aggressive. There are genres that are very melodic and
mainstream, and other genres that are extreme and underground. Here's a brief
overview of heavy metal and its many styles.
The term "heavy metal" was first
used in a musical sense in the '60s song "Born To Be Wild" by
Steppenwolf when they referred to "heavy metal thunder." Although there
are debates, many consider groups like Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin and Deep
Purple to be the first heavy metal bands but some claim that Judas Priest were
the first Heavy Metal band and that anything previous was Heavy Rock. For those
not around in the 60s and 70s this is a very fine distinction. From these early
bands, the style evolved and branched into many different genres and subgenres.
Heavy metal remains a vital force in music
today, with sellout concert tours and CDs selling impressive numbers of copies
without any radio airplay or MTV exposure.
The backbone of heavy metal is the electric
guitar. You can't have metal without at least one guitarist, and many bands have
two or more. Certain genres have some quiet and mellow parts, but most metal is
loud, intense, fast and aggressive. The vocal styles in heavy
metal range from melodic singing to aggressive singing to unintelligible
screaming, depending on the genre.
In the late 1970s there was just
traditional heavy metal. Shortly after it evolved and splintered into many
different styles and subgenres. As time has gone on, there are literally
hundreds of subgenres and Heavy Metal stands for its number of styles.
Avant Garde Metal
Also called experimental metal, it's characterized by unusual and
nontraditional instruments and song structures.
Examples: Arcturus, Dog Fashion Disco, Mr. Bungle,
Peccatum, Vintersorg
Black Metal
Characterized by high-pitched raspy vocals and pagan/satanic
lyrical imagery. Symphonic black metal is a subgenre that uses keyboards
and is more melodic.
Examples: Bathory, Burzum,
Emperor, Mayhem, Venom
Celtic Metal
A combination of heavy metal and Celtic music with lyrics
focusing on Celtic mythology.
Examples: Cruachan, Geasa,
Waylander
Death Metal
An extreme form of the genre that uses distorted guitars and a growling vocal
style sometimes described as "cookie monster" vocals.
Examples: Cannibal Corpse, Death, Deicide, Morbid Angel
Doom Metal
A genre that uses slower tempos and emphasizes gloomy,
melancholy and atmospheric music. There are numerous subgenres of doom,
including drone, epic, industrial, sludge and stoner.
Examples: Candlemass, Pentagram, Saint Vitus, Solstice
Gothic Metal
A combination of the darkness and melancholy of goth rock with heavy metal. The lyrics tend to be
epic and melodramatic. This is a genre that uses a lot of male/female vocal
combinations with the male vocalist generally using more aggressive vocals and
the female singing in an ethereal soprano.
Examples: Lacuna Coil, Leaves Eyes, Theatre Of Tragedy, Tristania.
Grindcore
This is a genre influenced by thrash metal and death metal. It takes its name
from the sound of the atonal guitar riffs combined with blast beats from the
bass drum. The vocals are similar to death metal.
Examples: Carcass, Napalm Death, Nasum, Pig
Destroyer, Terrorizer
Hair Metal
Also called pop metal and hairspray metal, this genre is very melodic and mass
appeal. Some of the most commercially successful and critically despised bands
came from this genre. They wore a lot of makeup and had huge teased hair, thus
the name. They received a lot of radio airplay and chart success in the late
'80s and early '90s until grunge rock destroyed it.
Examples: Poison, Ratt, Warrant, Winger, White
Lion
Metalcore
This genre is currently very popular and combines heavy metal with hardcore.
They use the musical style of heavy metal, especially melodic death metal, and
the shouting vocal style of hardcore. are also heavily utilized.
Examples: As I Lay Dying, God Forbid, Killswitch
Engage, Shadows Fall
New Wave Of
British Heavy Metal (NWOBHM)
This genre has influenced almost all metal that has followed it. These were the
metal pioneers that took the original sound of groups like Black Sabbath and
took out the rock and blues influences to make the traditional metal sound that
we're familiar with today.
Examples: Def Leppard,
Nu-Metal
Combining heavy metal riffs with hip-hop influences and rapped lyrics, this
genre became very popular in the late '90s through the early 2000's and then
fell from favor. There are a few bands of this style still doing well, although
most have come and gone.
Examples: Korn, Limp Bizkit,
Papa Roach, Slipknot
Power Metal
A very melodic form of metal that utilizes soaring guitars and strong vocals,
usually in a higher register. It's also an epic style, with long songs and many
lyrics about mythology, fantasy and metaphysical topics. Most power metal bands
also have a keyboardist.
Examples: Blind Guardian, Fate's Warning, Helloween,
Jag Panzer
Progressive Metal
A mixture of heavy metal and progressive rock, this genre utilizes many of the
characteristics of avant-garde and power metal. The song structures are
complex, using many time signatures and key changes and are usually long. The
lyrics are epic and often progressive metal albums are concept albums,
utilizing a main theme that runs throughout.
Examples: Dream Theater, Evergrey, Fates Warning, Queensryche
Thrash Metal
This genre evolved from NWOBHM and became heavier and more extreme. It's
characterized by fast guitar and double bass drum with aggressive but
understandable vocals. Some of the most popular bands in metal started as
thrash bands, although most evolved as they went along.
Examples: Anthrax, Megadeth, Metallica,
Slayer
Heavy Metal Chronology
Heavy metal is one of the newer genres of
music. Most experts put its beginnings in the late '60s and early '70s. Since
that beginning, metal has grown and evolved, spawning a multitude of genres and
subgenres. In the '80s some heavy metal became mainstream, but throughout the
years it been mainly an underground phenomenon. Even though most people have
heard of Def Leppard or Judas Priest, the huge
majority of metal bands are unknown to the mainstream. Here's a heavy metal
timeline:
Late 1960's - Early 1970's
The birth of heavy metal. Groups like Black Sabbath,
Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple are considered to be the first heavy metal bands
but this description is retrospective.
Late 1970's
The rise of the New Wave Of British Heavy
Metal Bands like Iron Maiden and Judas Priest become very popular. The term
Heavy Metal is now in general use.
1978
Van Halen
released their debut album. This began the Los Angeles/Sunset Strip scene, and
many bands would come out of this era, including Motley Crue
and Quiet Riot. The so called "hair bands" like Poison, Warrant and Ratt came from that scene as well.
See the mountains darken yonder
Black sun rising, time is running out
In line with the
cyclic nature of History,
we are knocked out
of our complacency as a
period of calm and
stability is swept away by
higher forces which we
cannot control.
1979
The German band Accept releases their
self-titled debut album. They are considered to be the first European power
metal band.
1980
AC/DC lead singer Bon Scott dies and is
replaced by Brian Johnson. Also Led Zeppelin drummer John Bonham dies.
1981
Venom's first album was released, beginning
the genre of black metal.
Thrash
metal titans Metallica, Slayer and Anthrax form.
1982
Quiet Riot's Metal Health becomes
the first heavy metal album to top the
Paul
Di'Anno is replaced by Bruce Dickinson as the lead
singer for Iron Maiden.
1983
Metallica
releases Kill 'Em All, which would begin the
rise of the genre of thrash metal.
Queensryche's self-titled debut is
released. They are considered the first progressive metal band, combining
progressive rock and heavy metal. Later groups like Dream Theater and Fates
Warning would help popularize the genre.
1986
Candlemass
releases Epicus Doomicus
Metallicus, the genre-defining doom metal album.
Metallica bassist Cliff Burton is
killed in a bus accident and former Flotsam and Jetsam member Jason Newsted takes his place in the band.
1987
Death releases Scream Bloody Gore,
pioneering the death metal genre.
Napalm
Death releases their debut album Scum. They are considered by many to be
the first grindcore band.
Death will be their acquisition
Raining Blood by
Slayer from the Album Reign in Blood
A Dweller on the
Threshold (past self)
waits on the lowest
rung of the Astral Plane
to settle the
account of a past life with a
current self which now
hopes to make
1989
The science fiction blockbuster film Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure is released. The film is about two aspirational
time travelling Heavy Metal Guitarists, whose music will eventually lead to the
solution of all the world’s problems. Air guitar also figures strongly in the
film.
1991
Metallica's
self-titled "black" album becomes the first thrash metal album to hit
number one.
Nirvana
releases Nevermind, beginning grunge
music that would wipe the "hair bands" off the popular charts.
1993
Swedish
Heavy Metal Band Morgana Lefay
release The Secret Doctrine, an album on which many of the tracks contain
Theosophical ideas. This album is still available. Morgana
Lefay still exists but the line up has changed.
1994
Korn releases their self-titled
debut album, beginning the genre of nu-metal. Other
bands like Limp Bizkit would popularize the genre in
the late '90s and early 2000's.
1996
Ozzfest
begins. The traveling summer metal tour was started by Ozzy
Osbourne. The first year included bands like Slayer,
2003
MTV2 brings back the heavy metal show
"Headbanger's Ball."
2004
"Dimebag"
Darrell Abbott of the band Damageplan and formerly Pantera was shot and killed while performing on stage in
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