NUinID said:
Nothing wrong with any of this music. What is it with you tried and true heavy metal guys?
Many of us "tried and true heavy metal guys" have taken so much sh*t from those inviduals that listen to "normal" music, that we've become a bit defense...
Not to mention, there is more talent in most metal bands than 90% of regular bands due to the virtuousity involved in playing music such as this...
What's "normal" music. I like a lot of heavy metal, but I am not aways in the mood for it. I never turn the channel when the Carpenters come on the radio. Karen Carpenter had one of the most soothing voices I have ever heard. So did Patsy Cline. I like to listen to Nat "King" Cole sing also. Sometimes I listen to big band music. I grew up listening to it with my dad.
You don't have to defend Metal to me, but I guess what I am saying is that I don't understand why so many hard core metal fans feel like they have to make metal a superior music form, it's not, it is just a different style. There are ton of great guitar players that never play that style and you know it.
I never thought I would get into a anthropological discussion about metal, but here it goes...
From what I've seen Metal draws those that don't necessarily "fit in" or "aren't cool". It's a form of music that people hold close to their hearts because they feel that it's theirs, due to the lyrical content and the aggression of the music. When I was a kid listening to those metal and hardcore bands gave me a sense of belonging, that I was still an outsider, but there were other outsiders that I could identify with. Case in point is one of my favorite albums by D.R.I., "Dealing With It". There are so many songs about not liking your school, your parents suck, grown ups are out to f*ck with you, and that life can suck, that a pissed off teenager can identify with. I've had a chance to talk to the guys in D.R.I., and told them that, that album should be issued to every pissed off 15 year old boy.
It's not that it's a superior form of music, the common misconception that it's just noise, but the fact that some of the best musicians on the planet play in metal bands. Stealing a line from a journalist, if Richard Wagner was alive now, he'd have been in Deep Purple...