Difference between revisions of "Heavy metal music"

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===Suicide and Violence===
 
===Suicide and Violence===
  
Besides Satanic criticism, Heavy Metal music has been known to promote violence, sex and suicide among youths. Glamorization of suicide can be observed in songs such as ''"Suicide Solution"'' by Ozzy Osbourne <ref> [http://www.metrolyrics.com/suicide-solution-lyrics-ozzy-osbourne.html Suicide solution lyrics] </ref> and ''"Fade to Black"'' by Metallica, <ref> [http://www.encycmet.com/songs/srfade2b.shtml Fade to Black is about suicide]</ref> while violence is promoted in songs like ''"Take No Prisoners"'' by Megadeth <ref> [http://www.actionext.com/names_m/megadeth_lyrics/take_no_prisoners.html Take no prisoners lyrics] </ref> and ''"Die by the Sword"'' by Slayer. Metal songs with violent lyrics have shown to lead to an increase of the amount of violent thoughts and actions within the listener.<ref>[http://www.apa.org/releases/violentsongs.html Violent Music Lyrics Increase Aggressive Thoughts and Feelings, According to new Study]</ref> Riots after Heavy Metal concerts are a regular, expected occurence. <ref> [http://www.memoryarchive.org/en/Guns_'n_Roses_Riot,_1991 Guns N Roses Riot] </ref>
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Besides Satanic criticism, Heavy Metal music has been known to promote violence, sex and suicide among youths. Glamorization of suicide can be observed in songs such as ''"Suicide Solution"'' by Ozzy Osbourne <ref> [http://www.metrolyrics.com/suicide-solution-lyrics-ozzy-osbourne.html Suicide solution lyrics] </ref> and ''"Fade to Black"'' by Metallica, <ref> [http://www.encycmet.com/songs/srfade2b.shtml Fade to Black is about suicide]</ref> while violence is promoted in songs like ''"Take No Prisoners"'' by Megadeth <ref> [http://www.actionext.com/names_m/megadeth_lyrics/take_no_prisoners.html Take no prisoners lyrics] </ref> and ''"Die by the Sword"'' by Slayer. Metal songs with violent lyrics have shown to lead to an increase of the amount of violent thoughts and actions within the listener.<ref>[http://www.apa.org/releases/violentsongs.html Violent Music Lyrics Increase Aggressive Thoughts and Feelings, According to new Study]</ref> Riots after Heavy Metal concerts are a regular, expected occurence. <ref> [http://www.memoryarchive.org/en/Guns_'n_Roses_Riot,_1991 Guns N Roses Riot] </ref> <ref> [http://www.deftone.com/archives/2002/11/guns_n_roses_vancouver_riot Another Guns N Roses riot] </ref>
  
 
==Etymology==
 
==Etymology==

Revision as of 19:36, September 7, 2008

Heavy metal is an Anti-Christian [1] musical genre that was developed mainly in the United States of America and the United Kingdom, heavy metal is primarily noted for an emphasis on distortion, palm muting, aggressive lyrical content, bass-heavy sounds, as well as the influence of blues scales and classical structures. Heavy Metal has also spawned numerous sub genres which omit or improve upon standard technique, or invent new one altogether, giving heavy metal as a genre an impressive variety of styles and sounds. Heavy metal's origins are both rooted in the cultural upheavals that occurred during the 1960s, such as the conflict in Vietnam and the reevaluation and mass rejection of previous social schema, and the enormous influence of bands such as The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Led Zeppelin, and Black Sabbath that are regarded as proto-metal as well as hard rock. Other musical influences include psychedelic rock, blues rock, and the still developing progressive rock genre. Though heavy metal initially borrowed heavily from the blues in terms of playing style, this was later largely discarded by future metal acts such as Judas Priest.

The first style of rock which grew from this was distorted blues sound created by San Francisco based psychedelia band, Blue Cheer, whose influence on electric blues bands could be seen from Cream to Jimi Hendrix to ZZ Top. The second style was progressive rock, which in 1968 was led by English band King Crimson, combining jazz, classical, experimental, psychedelic and folk music. The precursor to this sound was The Beatles, arguably the first band to leave the standard rock format, creating longer song structures, many of which were narrative or neo-operatic. This was the main inspiration for later bands such as Camel, Genesis and Yes.

By 1969, the influence of these seminal artists had saturated those parts of the public consciousness which were focused on rock music as a developing art form, and contributed to the explosion of hard rock by, for example, Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple and the so-called "proto-metal" of Black Sabbath. This year is now seen as the watershed moment in the development of what soon became heavy metal.

Black Sabbath originally began as an electric blues outfit named "Earth", but after discovering there was already a band using that name, changed to Black Sabbath after the 1964 Boris Karloff movie of the same name. Developing a new sound that was born both out of a change in attitude and the loss of lead Guitarist Tony Iommi's finger tips, Black Sabbath are largely credited with developing the more heavily distorted and crunchy elements that later became staples of the heavy metal style.

1970s

In 1973 the leading exponents of heavy metal were undoubtedly Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, and Black Sabbath, each having a technical prowess and a compositional inventiveness unseen before in mainstream popular music. This era also marked the beginnings of Satanic imagery and of the spectacular, energetic live shows which became a hallmark of later heavy metal spin offs. Led Zeppelin's guitarist Jimmy Page had a strong personal fascination with the occult, while many of Black Sabbath's lyrics dealt with it as well. Unlike many future bands, however, Black Sabbath never claimed to be Satanic. Singer Ozzy Osbourne claims that they were actually looking for a way to tap into the success and popularity of the horror genre, where people willingly paid to see a movie or read a novel intended solely to frighten them; to do so, they began to purposely write dark, ominous songs in an attempt to be music's answer to horror films.

Live shows were becoming bigger and more theatrical, notably Led Zeppelin's "rock till you drop" performances lasting two hours, and Alice Cooper's colossal shows following in the American tradition of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus, promising "The Greatest Show On Earth". Cooper's shows featured boa constrictors, horrific freak-show mannequins, and dramatic fake-beheading scenes. Other key artists that emerged at this time included High Tide, Black Cat Bones, Black Widow, Uriah Heep, UFO and Blue Oyster Cult, and glam rockers Kiss. Each of the four members of Kiss took the on-stage persona of a cartoon-like character using elaborate face make-up and a science fiction style clothing. Another American band, Aerosmith, took the basic R 'n' B and rock 'n' roll structures of bands such as the Faces and Rolling Stones and transformed them into a new harder form. The late 70s saw a decline in the popularity of heavy metal, as the Punk movement, beginning in 1976, dominated the musical counterculture.

1980s

During the early 1970s three British bands were formed that would arguably become the most dramatically influential of the genre during the 1980s: Judas Priest, Motorhead, and Iron Maiden. The 1980s also gave rise to the American thrash metal movement with notable bands being Metallica, Megadeth, Anthrax, and Slayer. During the 1980s glam metal also became very popular with bands including Twisted Sister, Def Leppard, and Stryper.

Criticism

Due to its association with the counter culture movement and the more extreme forms that it has taken over the years, heavy metal has faced criticism from parents groups, school administrators, politicians, music critics, and religious organizations.

A musicologist wrote:

The development of heavy metal music in the '60s and its continuing popularity through the '70s, '80s, and '90s coincides, for one thing, with the period of the greatest popularity horror films and books have ever known. Both mark a transitional moment in our history: the end of Pax Americana; new economic crises; de-industrialization, the decline of unions and the rise of low-pay service jobs; revelations of corrupt leadership; powerful social movements challenging dominant policies on race, gender, ecology, and consumer rights; new challenges to the stability of social institutions such as the family; and redefinitions of political themes such as freedom. Much of the culture of the past twenty years has functioned to restore the sense of security undermined by these disruptions. Heavy metal, like horror films, has provided ways of producing meaning in an irrational society. [2]

Satanism

Many bands create giant props of Satan for their concerts accompanied with flames and fireworks in order to recreate the conditions of Hell. Metal songs that promote Satanism include "By Demons Be Driven" by Pantera, [3] [4] and "The Conjuring" by Megadeth.[5] [6] Bands such as Mudvayne even heavily alter their appearance so that they physically resemble Satan himself.

The "Devil-Horns" hand signal is a common gesture made in metal culture. This is done by placing your ring, and middle finger together along with your thumb and then raising your index and pinky fingers. This is done to look like the horns of Satan.

Some individuals become so immersed in the Heavy Metal culture that the vehemently deny the obvious correlation between Heavy Metal and Satanism.

Anti-Christianity

Anti-Christian sentiments are quite common amongst the extreme metal sub genres, especially in the Scandanavian black metal scene. Metal bands that claim to be Christian are criticized for making Un-Christian sounding music, or faking Christianity to sell records or corrupt young Christians. Supporters of Christian metal often deny the inherently violent natures of heavy metal music and overlook the fact that Jesus would not want Christians to channel these negative emotions.

Suicide and Violence

Besides Satanic criticism, Heavy Metal music has been known to promote violence, sex and suicide among youths. Glamorization of suicide can be observed in songs such as "Suicide Solution" by Ozzy Osbourne [7] and "Fade to Black" by Metallica, [8] while violence is promoted in songs like "Take No Prisoners" by Megadeth [9] and "Die by the Sword" by Slayer. Metal songs with violent lyrics have shown to lead to an increase of the amount of violent thoughts and actions within the listener.[10] Riots after Heavy Metal concerts are a regular, expected occurence. [11] [12]

Etymology

The term was first used in a musical context by Canadian rock band Steppenwolf in their 1968 hit record[13] Born To Be Wild, which contained the line: "I like smoke and lightning, heavy metal thunder..." The song received worldwide exposure the following year when it was used in the soundtrack of the 1969 counterculture movie Easy Rider. However, the phrase "heavy metal" had previously been used in 1962 by William Burroughs in his novel The Soft Machine,[14] which contained a character named "Uranian Willy, the Heavy Metal Kid". In 1964, he used it to describe mass technological destruction to the point of biological toxicity in his novel Nova Express.[15]

References

  1. Hatred of Jesus Christ
  2. Dr. Robert Walser, Professor of Musicology, Dartmouth College - author of Running With the Devil: Power, Gender, and Madness in Heavy Metal Music
  3. By Demons Be Driven lyrics
  4. Rock music: Devil's advocate
  5. The Conjuring lyrics
  6. Rock music: Devil's advocate
  7. Suicide solution lyrics
  8. Fade to Black is about suicide
  9. Take no prisoners lyrics
  10. Violent Music Lyrics Increase Aggressive Thoughts and Feelings, According to new Study
  11. Guns N Roses Riot
  12. Another Guns N Roses riot
  13. Billboard Hot 100 singles chart: highest position #2
  14. ISBN-10: 0802133290 ISBN-13: 978-0802133298
  15. ISBN-10: 0802133304 ISBN-13: 978-0802133304

See Also

Black Metal