Metallica? |
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progismylife
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 19 2006 Location: ibreathehelium Status: Offline Points: 15535 |
Posted: May 16 2007 at 14:34 | |||
*throws stone* |
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The T
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 16 2006 Location: FL, USA Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
Posted: May 16 2007 at 14:42 | |||
*it hits the wall of irrationality and gets back to the legendary poster, hits him in the head and causes him to fall down, lose conciousness, and, un-able to poast for days and days, his record goes down the drain, now merely a memory, this once master-poster*...
and all of this for not agreeing to the most evident of truths: Metallica deserves a spot. Edited by The T - May 16 2007 at 14:43 |
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mystic fred
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 13 2006 Location: Londinium Status: Offline Points: 4252 |
Posted: May 16 2007 at 14:46 | |||
Metallica?.....in suggest new bands? ...well at least this makes a change from some of those obscure european bands with un-pronouncable names, god bless 'em...
shall i pass this one up to Jody, then...?
or will they join Black Sabbath on the "rejected" list?
Edited by mystic fred - May 16 2007 at 14:51 |
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Prog Archives Tour Van
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paolo.beenees
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 30 2007 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 1136 |
Posted: May 16 2007 at 15:40 | |||
That's the point, T. For the same reason I would remove also the Iron Maiden (and I like them, and know that they play a complex and epic kind of music): if you accept them as "prog related" and would welcome Metallica, you open the way to any advantgarde/complex/epic metal band: Celtic Frost's dark obsessions, Mercyful Fate's complex textures and rythm shifts, King Diamond's neo-gothic concept albums, Manowar's epics... You're right: this would become a metal site. Therefore, weren't it better if we keep this site as it is?
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enteredwinter
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 05 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 501 |
Posted: May 16 2007 at 17:18 | |||
Whoa, hold on there a second. Black album ... prog? I agree on the sentiment that MOP and AJFA give strong arguments for inclusion, but the Black album is really some of the least-proggiest music I've ever heard. Relatively short verse-chorus-verse songs lacking the complexity of their peak, no concept throughout the album as can be seen to some degree in MOP and AJFA ... really now, your argument that they should be included is strong, don't kill it with a "Black album is prog" argument that makes very little sense (IMO). Also, in terms of musical answers favoring "yes", note that my original post, as well as paolo's post above this one, as well as some others, either imply or outright state that people who know Metallica's music are uncomfortable with the slipperly slope this will lead us into ... i.e. downhill towards ProgAndMetalArchives. |
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Atavachron
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: September 30 2006 Location: Pearland Status: Online Points: 65248 |
Posted: May 16 2007 at 18:50 | |||
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heyitsthatguy
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 17 2006 Location: Washington Hgts Status: Offline Points: 10094 |
Posted: May 16 2007 at 18:57 | |||
the flaw I see in this is that they influenced the METAL side of prog-metal, not the PROG side. True, they have a few dramatic changes throughout albums like MOP, and And Justice for All is pretty close to a prog album, but not enough for inclusion on this site, IMO. We can't go adding every band that influenced prog, otherwise we're going to be adding classical composers and early rock acts that have only a vague connection to prog |
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debrewguy
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 30 2007 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 3596 |
Posted: May 16 2007 at 21:28 | |||
So we can't add Uriah Heep ? |
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"Here I am talking to some of the smartest people in the world and I didn't even notice,” Lieutenant Columbo, episode The Bye-Bye Sky-High I.Q. Murder Case.
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heyitsthatguy
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 17 2006 Location: Washington Hgts Status: Offline Points: 10094 |
Posted: May 16 2007 at 21:43 | |||
http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=1157 |
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Certif1ed
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 08 2004 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 7559 |
Posted: May 17 2007 at 03:20 | |||
One of the points is that they introduced a whole new sound to metal - which in itself is progressive.
However, there ARE significant progressive aspects to the music itself, in all 5 of the basic areas - which is what Prog Metal bands have since buit on;
1. Rhythm - this is the principal area in which Metallica were so progressive - and I agree with The T - right up to and including the Black album.
Although the latter is extremely pared down compared to it's predecessors, it cleverly blends in thrash rhythms with "straight" rhytms that are pure metal. Metallica distilled metal music and made it pure by stripping out the last remains of "swing" - the main ingredient that differentiates metal from rock in a rhythmic sense.
Metallica's approach to rhythm uses the broadest palette of any thrash band in the 1980s; much broader than any metal or "standard" rock band previously. Even Lars, while not the best drummer on the planet ever, drove the rhythm section with a sensitivity that added new range and dynamic to metal, varying the speed and intensity in a manner that's surprisingly subtle. Yes. Subtle.
2. Melody - if we ignore Hetfield for just one moment... (actually, he's not so bad!), Metallica brought new approaches to metal melodies in the guitar riffs, bass lines and solos - which was facilitated by the new approach to riffing. Metallica's melodies are strong, instantly recognisable as their own, and frequently have a modal flavour that I think of as Egyptian ("Creeping Death" is the strongest example). The guitar solo in "Master of Puppets" blew my mind the first time I heard it (on the day the album came out). Hammett may never have been the greatest, but his solos are constructed - composed - from technical building blocks that are easily identified. This compostition (definitely not bluff!!!) is far more rigorous than that of most earlier metal bands (especially Maiden) - as far as I can tell, Michael Schenker stands almost alone in this approach before Metallica. /edit... I just thought of a very few more - but they're still the exception rather than the rule.
3. Timbre - Metallica changed sound for every album, and not all of it was engineering. "Ride The Lightning" has the definitive Prog-Metal sound (minus a few tweaks for clarity), and the next 3 built on that (even if the production on "AJFA" sucks badly...). Their approach to the textures in the music is what Prog Metal is built on - the lights and shades of "Fade to Black" and "Call of Cthulu", for example, rivalled Iron Maiden's lights and shades. This would seem to be one of the very roots of Prog Metal.
4. Harmony. OK, so "KEA" started out with an overdose of Sabbath-esque tritones. "RTL" enters Iron Maiden territory on more than one occasion - but I'm sure (and this is only from memory) that there's modal harmony on there. "MOP" and "AJFA" definitely feature modal harmony - which is a significant portion of the Prog in Prog Metal.
5. Form. While it's true that Iron Maiden did interesting things with form, most of what they did was add twiddly bits between sections. This is not to belittle what they did, just to illustrate the difference. Metallica added sections to the standard song form like building blocks - a bit inelegant and lacking in grace, but totally suited to metal. Not only that, but they varied sections, such that the same riff may feature a different drum pattern, or a riff is changed by a few notes to construct a new one. This is a fundamental feature of Progressive ROCK - an approach that may be found in Genesis "The Musical Box".
In short, Metallica stand alone as a significant if not crucial influence on Prog Metal, just as the Beatles do for Prog Rock (after all, no-one's suggesting we add the Rolling Stones!). Edited by Certif1ed - May 17 2007 at 03:25 |
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The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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Certif1ed
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 08 2004 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 7559 |
Posted: May 17 2007 at 07:03 | |||
Silly me - I forgot to include verifiable examples - here we go;
Clear evidence of an extended structure, there is twin guitar soloing of at least the sophistication of Iron Maiden, if not more so - note that the use of the thrash technique is for dramatic effect only, not as a mindless basis for the entire song. Note also the contrasting rhythmic sections, and lack of clear verse and chorus. I suspect use of melodic modes from the "Egyptian" sound that flavours the piece, but can't be bothered at this point to analyse to that depth.
OK, the verse riff is "stolen" from Bleak House's "Rainbow Warrior", but the light/heavy structure is clear, as are the clear melodies and variation of riff in order to build a dramatic structure. The "thrash" section is subtle, with off-kilter rhythmic variants - and I for one hear the influence of this song very strongly in Dream Theater's early work.
No need for explanation.
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The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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Snow Dog
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 23 2005 Location: Caerdydd Status: Offline Points: 32995 |
Posted: May 17 2007 at 07:09 | |||
Who wants to write the Bio?
Edited by Snow Dog - May 17 2007 at 07:09 |
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Certif1ed
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 08 2004 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 7559 |
Posted: May 17 2007 at 07:29 | |||
3 guesses...
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The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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debrewguy
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 30 2007 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 3596 |
Posted: May 17 2007 at 12:10 | |||
And to think I thought Metallica ripped the riff for Sanitarium from their song Fade to Black >>>/ |
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"Here I am talking to some of the smartest people in the world and I didn't even notice,” Lieutenant Columbo, episode The Bye-Bye Sky-High I.Q. Murder Case.
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Certif1ed
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 08 2004 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 7559 |
Posted: May 17 2007 at 12:48 | |||
Metallica did the riff a favour... http://www.truemetal.org/battle/remasters1.html (scroll down a bit).
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The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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The T
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 16 2006 Location: FL, USA Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
Posted: May 17 2007 at 13:42 | |||
I just want to point out aganin the fact that all the answers going for the YES are "slightly" more in-depth and musical than those going for the NO. And I'm not trying to say all nay-sayers are irrational or something, no. But it's very easy to understand a few reasons for this:
Metallica were THE band that really exemplified what metal was in the 80's-90's, and for many adults or almost-adults, it was THE enemy as it was the main carrier of "noise, destruction, violence and suicide" into their houses (let's not forget the Fade to Black thing)... While Slayer, Megadeth and the such were not known by most not-young people (had they known Slayer's "christian"lyirics, oh my God), Metallica was the frontman, the metal band that meant everything that was wrong in the world at that time. Even going past the stupid make-up and alcohol-womanizing antics of the hair-bands, Metallica was much more of a "threat" because it was a more SERIOUS one, a more REAL one. Whereas the hair-bands were so ridiculous that all their "depravation" was seen as another act, the true metal acts were so... real, you could see your boy, your cousin, your neighbour dressed just as an everyday youngster, maybe with no flash, maybe slightly darker than others, but in the end it was REAL, hence the DANGER was real. Many people, even young people not used to "dark" persons, were immediately turned off by metal, and Metallica, though hardly the most violent or "dangerous" band, was without a doubt the most popular, and its name became a synonym with chaos and violence. If your son came with a record from Poison in his hand, the parents would say "oh, crazy young stuff, he'll get over it", the reaction for the same kid having a copy of Master of Puppets with its weird cover full of crosses and red colors (believe me, the connection between the art and the title track and its lyrics doesn't show at first sight) would be of worry. That's just ONE of the reasons for Metallica being rejected so swiftly (and I'm not saying any of you fall into this category, but many could. Even at a subconscious level, that name means infamy).
Also, the name itself: Metallica. There's really no much to question about it. Whereas even names like Celtic Frost convey picturesque ideas that can be more easily related to art, or even a name like DEATH which could be seen as a meaningful, deep name, METALLICA is just a declaration of principles:this band plays METAL. It doesn't have any artsy ring to it, no abstract, painting-like name like Dream Theater, even Iron Maiden (which maybe many not know is not really named after a beautiful, humane device, but a torture one)....these names leave some place to the imagination... METALLICA doesn't. It's clear as water, red as hell: METAL. There can't be no "prog" in such a band, how can a band be progressive if their name doesn't create thousands of possible pictures in my brain?
Yesterday I heard AJFA and while it may be true that the production is so-so (the drums sound like in-your-face cardboard boxes, whilst the bass is almost absent), that album is THE album for metal, even for my band, DT. Without AJFA, there wouldn't have been a I&W, as much as it is painful for me to acknowledge that. ()... The title track itself should warrant the band its inclusion. Even an erratic drummer as Lars Ulrich plays incredibly... well in this album, with his weird, unique (there's hardly any other drummer whom I could recognize as easily as him), crash-cymbal with snare-drum, following-the-guitar-with-the-drums style, enhances the music. The structures, the riffing, the turning of violence into a coherent musical entity....
DEATH is here. Why? Because they play very technical metal. They play riff after riff after riff, no matter how well they connect to each other, but it SOUNDS progressive because the riffs are difficult and the speed and pace at which they change is amazingly difficult to follow, with some weird-sounding off-key bass notes here and there, some 1200 mph double-bass drumming...... But in the end, they're here BECAUSE THEY KNOW HOW TO CHANGE FROM RIFF TO RIFF IN NO TIME. There's not much more than that.
Metallica was THE school of riffing. And the school of HOW TO CREATE A DYNAMIC STRUCTURE with them. One where everything seems glued together coherently, not just by... glue.
Anyway, as long as you don't take THE DREAM out of PA....
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cuncuna
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 29 2005 Location: Chile Status: Offline Points: 4318 |
Posted: May 17 2007 at 13:46 | |||
I just... NO. |
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¡Beware of the Bee!
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Philéas
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 14 2006 Status: Offline Points: 6419 |
Posted: May 17 2007 at 14:36 | |||
Well, if Iron Maiden are "progressive" enough for the archives, I can't see how Metallica aren't.
The best idea, however, would be to remove the Prog Related and Proto-Prog categories. Edited by Philéas - May 17 2007 at 14:36 |
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akin
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 06 2004 Location: Brazil Status: Offline Points: 976 |
Posted: May 17 2007 at 17:42 | |||
There were some pretentious affirmations by some people for the
inclusion of Metallica in the site as if they were the only in
condition to judge whether Metallica is prog or not but the facts speak
for themselves, since Metallica was never relationed with prog apart
for these discussions. Some arguments are correct, but the way you are
talking will lead to nothing because people will accuse you of
fanboyism as they unfortunately made to other Collabs that eventually
quit just because they supported the addition of controvertial acts.
Yes, I've heard all their albums (apart for Crap Anger) and I own some of them. I listened many times Master Of Puppets (I used to own a somewhat beaten up record that I later exchanged for better records). I own a cassette from And Justice for All. And I see that there are some elaborated parts in a few songs. Not only in those albums, but in their first two (Kill 'Em All & Ride the Lightning). Even their later albums that people don't like (Load, Reload) have some fine arrangements. Cliff Burton introduced them to a more musical approach in metal, teaching them how to compose in a "classical" way. They are not pure thrash metal and I wouldn't even call them thrash. But from this to prog is the same situation of thousands of bands. They have, let's say, 10 more or less prog songs in their career as many artists. The other argument is the influenced, but the influences are the same of Black Sabbath or Hendrix or Miles Davis or Coltrane or John Cage or Stockhausen or Bach or Beethoven to prog. Of course the fans of prog-metal defend their influence on prog-metal as huge and many fans of fusion defend Davis and Coltrane influences on fusion as huge. The most prog Metallica can be is Prog Related, because compared with Iron Maiden or Led Zepelin, for example, they are at the same level. So if this is the matter, the right thing is to lobby with the owners, because they are who authorize these controvertial additions to the site. |
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Snow Dog
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 23 2005 Location: Caerdydd Status: Offline Points: 32995 |
Posted: May 17 2007 at 17:46 | |||
Not neccesarily so. Admin can also decide on a Prog Related addition.
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