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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2009 at 14:53
Originally posted by Trademark Trademark wrote:

My feelings about metal in general can be summed up by the following:

"When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things." (1Cor. 13:11)

One of the most negative aspects of the dominance of US culture in the world is the concept of "Perpetual Youth".  It really is OK to grow up.  When I was 15 I enjoyed a lot of the metal of the time.  Now I see it for the juvenile genre it really is.  I understand fully why my Dad laughed his ass off at Black Sabbath when they were on TV.  It really IS funny.  Metal is not dark, evil, sinister, mean or angry; it is not intellectually or emotionally deep, intriguing, or even very interesting.  What it is, is COMEDY to anyone who has managed to achieve a bit of emotional maturity.


I laughed so hard at this statement that I had trouble reading it through.

Not at the opinion itself - you're entitled to it of course - but for stating it as if it is a truth cast in stone....man....you add a few dimensions to terms like conservative and reactionary.

And reminds me of quotes I've seen from the 50's; middle-aged men sat in their ways stating the same kind of opinions-as-facts; at that time with Elvis, Eddie Cochran and Bill Haley as the examples of artists enjoyable by immature soulsonly - while jazz and classical music were the obvious forms of melodic art one needed a mature and adult mind to understand and comprehend ;-)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2009 at 14:47
Originally posted by Trademark Trademark wrote:

My feelings about metal in general can be summed up by the following:

"When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things." (1Cor. 13:11)

One of the most negative aspects of the dominance of US culture in the world is the concept of "Perpetual Youth".  It really is OK to grow up.  When I was 15 I enjoyed a lot of the metal of the time.  Now I see it for the juvenile genre it really is.  I understand fully why my Dad laughed his ass off at Black Sabbath when they were on TV.  It really IS funny.  Metal is not dark, evil, sinister, mean or angry; it is not intellectually or emotionally deep, intriguing, or even very interesting.  What it is, is COMEDY to anyone who has managed to achieve a bit of emotional maturity.

TradeMark, You are one of a kind. 
as i remember you were objected  metal on other thread. Now i'am realy  Angry. how can you say such a nonsense. how can metal be ''juvenile genre '' can you support this statement with some proof.Let me  tell you the answer , you cannot, i how can you tell that you once have listened metal, but you don't listen anymore, once one infects with metal desease ,it is inevitable process, cannot be reversed.it grows more and more(if one realy loves metal, not those like YOU) so want to explore more deeper into genre and finaly came across Prog metal, and stops here. this is the ultimate Quest. Starts digging in prog metal contininuum , and suddenly see there is no coming back , he has reached the pick of metal genre. and he is happy with it. Metal is all the things you'va mentioned , and plus many more. Can you elaborate this thing ''emotional maturity'', i don't get it, on which level of that scale of yours are you, ? which music is emotionaly mature to listen,please   share with us, i'am eager to know, cos right now we metal fans are all immature ones and cannot tell right for wrong, we need someone to enlighten us, messiah to safe us from getting wrong direction towards infinite ambys of Emotional DISASTER  , sooner or later we gonna crush somewhere ,   member above already said he is 51 and loves metal. i'am 24 ,and i'am metal fan,We are kids and don't want to grow up?!!  Metal is not a comedy. the Only one who deserve that epithet  is YOU,  You always say some of the most funniest thing  i've ever heard, but you are tragic comedy .  many people don't like metal , but they don't say this stupid arguments like you why they don't like. right now i'am listening Opeth  - Dirge for november, if that is not emotional, so what to say more.

BTW, what kind of metal have you been listening at the age of 15? and what are you listening most now? just curious. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2009 at 14:37
Not using the quote from Corinthians to back up my position, just as an illustration that "perpetual youth" is not necessarily the best or only way to live.  Adolescence, like other seasons of life, is meant to end.  Most members here gave up Barney at some point, and metal, which is fiercely, even defiantly  adolescent, isn't any different.

What I find juvenile is that you would feel insulted or threatened by an opinion.


Edited by Trademark - March 02 2009 at 14:42
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2009 at 14:36
Originally posted by Trademark Trademark wrote:

My feelings about metal in general can be summed up by the following:

"When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things." (1Cor. 13:11)

One of the most negative aspects of the dominance of US culture in the world is the concept of "Perpetual Youth".  It really is OK to grow up.  When I was 15 I enjoyed a lot of the metal of the time.  Now I see it for the juvenile genre it really is.  I understand fully why my Dad laughed his ass off at Black Sabbath when they were on TV.  It really IS funny.  Metal is not dark, evil, sinister, mean or angry; it is not intellectually or emotionally deep, intriguing, or even very interesting.  What it is, is COMEDY to anyone who has managed to achieve a bit of emotional maturity.


It's a shame that you, with all your (theoretical) knowledge of music, are being deliberately ignorant of what metal has to offer. Well, if it's all just like Black Sabbath to you ... go on and listen to whatever it is you prefer. I shall do the same ... Audio-Surf is already launching, for the next half hour I'll have some fun with Sleepytime Gorilla Museum. Who aren't metal BTW ... not that it matters *to me*.Big smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2009 at 14:32
Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:


To sum it up: If you growl on a few songs: Nothing wrong with it. If you do it all the time: Ridiculous.


Generally I'd say that whenever an artist uses a highly distinctive technique too much, there's a chance that people will grow tired of it. *Contrast* is something that I always look for in music ... but then again that doesn't mean that artists should change style all the time, does it? Every artist is (or should be) unique. If some use growling all the time (or double bass, another technique you don't like), contrast might be achieved by changing other elements of the music.

To sum up my response: If the growling fits the music: nothing wrong with it. If it doesn't: I'm not comfortable with using words like "ridiculous" because I think they're disrespectful to the artist, but I certainly will give lower ratings to such albums.

You still don't seem to get my take on double-bass drumming. I am not objected to it per se; in fact there is a drummer I like very much who plays with two bass drums (he is listed in the "different kind of drum poll I made; see if you can spot him there).
http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=55755&FID=42


No, what I dislike is what most people do with a double bass-drum. They could learn a lot from the man I am talking of, who has a very tasteful way of using them. Of course that's MY taste only; others may disagree.
I am actually thinking of getting a second hi-hat for my kit, by the way. As far as I know nobody has ever done that. Wink. Makes at least as much sense as a double bass drum. I would actually like to take some songs which use excessive double bass-drumming and record them again using two hi-hats instead of two bass drums. Of course other changes would have to happen in the arrangement of the song.
And with growling it is just the same. If it fits, fine; but just as with double bass-drumming people use it to excess.
Since I am a in the culinary business, let me use a culinary metaphor: Double bass drumming is like a spice; use to much of it, and the flavour of the food gets lost; you only taste the spice.


I think you're over-simplifying the matter. My guess is that you generally don't like the aggressiveness of metal, and you can't take it seriously. I don't think there's anything wrong with that, but you can't really expect others to adopt such an extreme point of view. In any genre, if I want some advice I will try to find someone who likes what the genre is about. If I want some extreme metal recommendations I would try to find some one who enjoys growling and/or double bass, and the typical metal topics/lyrics. These persons will not like all the albums the same ... even among those albums which feature growling in every track an expert (as in: having listened to a great deal of albums) will tell you that some are better and some are worse, on some the growling is appropriate on on others not so much, and so on. What I'm trying to say is that your point of view is simply extremely biased. Yet you continue to look down on those who don't share it ... exemplified by your statement that those other drummers "could learn a lot" from the guy who *you* happen to like. I think that's the basic difference between you and me (or more specifically, between our posts): You tell people what's better than their favorite music and artists, I tell people what they might also enjoy. Not that there aren't bands that I don't like and which in my opinion are overrated ... but I don't have to mention it all the time.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2009 at 14:25
Originally posted by Trademark Trademark wrote:

My feelings about metal in general can be summed up by the following:

"When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things." (1Cor. 13:11)

One of the most negative aspects of the dominance of US culture in the world is the concept of "Perpetual Youth".  It really is OK to grow up.  When I was 15 I enjoyed a lot of the metal of the time.  Now I see it for the juvenile genre it really is.  I understand fully why my Dad laughed his ass off at Black Sabbath when they were on TV.  It really IS funny.  Metal is not dark, evil, sinister, mean or angry; it is not intellectually or emotionally deep, intriguing, or even very interesting.  What it is, is COMEDY to anyone who has managed to achieve a bit of emotional maturity.



Well, its an interesting post, I'll give you that.  What is also juvenile is being so blatantly offensive to so many fellow forums users, and trying to use biblical script to back yourself up. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2009 at 12:10
I'm 51 I love metal - I admit it, I never want to grow-up. Your call. Stern Smile
What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2009 at 11:28
My feelings about metal in general can be summed up by the following:

"When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things." (1Cor. 13:11)

One of the most negative aspects of the dominance of US culture in the world is the concept of "Perpetual Youth".  It really is OK to grow up.  When I was 15 I enjoyed a lot of the metal of the time.  Now I see it for the juvenile genre it really is.  I understand fully why my Dad laughed his ass off at Black Sabbath when they were on TV.  It really IS funny.  Metal is not dark, evil, sinister, mean or angry; it is not intellectually or emotionally deep, intriguing, or even very interesting.  What it is, is COMEDY to anyone who has managed to achieve a bit of emotional maturity.


Edited by Trademark - March 02 2009 at 11:50
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2009 at 07:21
Originally posted by Trial and Error Trial and Error wrote:

Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

Originally posted by angelmk angelmk wrote:

many people dislikes metal because of grawls ,screams they cannot see the beauty behind the curtain, although it is very enjoyable curtain , but for some it is barrier , i feel sorry for them  canot see the beauty of Opeth, Meshuggah , Death,  Borknagar,Quo Vadis, .. Other people consider it is too agressive , distortion boders them, but most of them do not know what great music is . 

Ha, distortion does not bother me in the least; nothing like a good ol' distorted guitar to get rocking. And I would have expected distorted guitars to be a main feature of prog metal. Yet sadly I find it ain't so.
The growling is not specific of prog metal, it can be found in other genres of metal too. I personally find it childish and annoying; if that is supposed to be aggressive then the grandmother on my mother's side was a kangaroo. It is a gimmick from a cheap monster movie, in my opinion.
Growling is just a textural technique, Dave Gilmour, Roger Waters and Nick Mason on several Floyd albums, Greg Lake on ITCOTCK is far from being clean vocally and using distortion effects like Captain Bob on Die Lösung, Wendy Carlos on Timesteps and the Beatles on several of their 'psychedelic' songs are just some non-metal examples of distorted/effected vocals that are akin to growling in some metal styles. To me, random plinking on a Xylophone or treated piano is a childish way of making something sound Avant Garde, but misses the point of Avant Garde and to dismiss an entire genre because of it would be in error - used properly, with regard to texture, tonal quality, structure and compositing it is valid and far from being a cheap gimmick and the same is true for distorted vocals in metal. Distorted vocals are the equivalent of distorted guitars, it's just an instrumental technique (and the voice is just as much a musical instrument as a guitar, violin or a piano) and while it may appear prevalent in all metal, it is not, nor is it a defining trait, with many bands in most metal subgenres using clean vocals, or mixing clean and distorted when it fits the music. As with distorted guitar, there are degrees of distortion and tone, some subtle, some aggressive, some dirty and raw - a loud distortion sounds different to a quiet one, a soft distorted voice can sound more menacing and aggressive than a shouty one.
 
The main point of Jake's initial argument is that the spectrum of Metal is broad, encompassing a wide variety of styles and techniques and no single element can be used as an argument or criticism against it in general terms when there are so many examples that can be cited to counter it. If distorted vocals are not to your liking, that is fine and acceptable, but it would be unwise to tar all metal vocalists with the same brush.

What I object to is not the growling itself, it is the being stuck in it. Vocals should fit the lyrics. Maybe the vocals of growlers do fit the lyrics (sorry, I can't understand them), but the only lyrics those growls would be fitting for are in my opinion pretty macabre ones.

Which is exactly the point. The lyrics are in 90% of the cases macabre, which is why the growls are used in the first place. What I think you should complain about is the one sided content of lyrics many bands have, not what vocals they decide to employ to transport them.

This is in fact part of what I complain about.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2009 at 07:05
Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

Originally posted by angelmk angelmk wrote:

many people dislikes metal because of grawls ,screams they cannot see the beauty behind the curtain, although it is very enjoyable curtain , but for some it is barrier , i feel sorry for them  canot see the beauty of Opeth, Meshuggah , Death,  Borknagar,Quo Vadis, .. Other people consider it is too agressive , distortion boders them, but most of them do not know what great music is . 

Ha, distortion does not bother me in the least; nothing like a good ol' distorted guitar to get rocking. And I would have expected distorted guitars to be a main feature of prog metal. Yet sadly I find it ain't so.
The growling is not specific of prog metal, it can be found in other genres of metal too. I personally find it childish and annoying; if that is supposed to be aggressive then the grandmother on my mother's side was a kangaroo. It is a gimmick from a cheap monster movie, in my opinion.
Growling is just a textural technique, Dave Gilmour, Roger Waters and Nick Mason on several Floyd albums, Greg Lake on ITCOTCK is far from being clean vocally and using distortion effects like Captain Bob on Die Lösung, Wendy Carlos on Timesteps and the Beatles on several of their 'psychedelic' songs are just some non-metal examples of distorted/effected vocals that are akin to growling in some metal styles. To me, random plinking on a Xylophone or treated piano is a childish way of making something sound Avant Garde, but misses the point of Avant Garde and to dismiss an entire genre because of it would be in error - used properly, with regard to texture, tonal quality, structure and compositing it is valid and far from being a cheap gimmick and the same is true for distorted vocals in metal. Distorted vocals are the equivalent of distorted guitars, it's just an instrumental technique (and the voice is just as much a musical instrument as a guitar, violin or a piano) and while it may appear prevalent in all metal, it is not, nor is it a defining trait, with many bands in most metal subgenres using clean vocals, or mixing clean and distorted when it fits the music. As with distorted guitar, there are degrees of distortion and tone, some subtle, some aggressive, some dirty and raw - a loud distortion sounds different to a quiet one, a soft distorted voice can sound more menacing and aggressive than a shouty one.
 
The main point of Jake's initial argument is that the spectrum of Metal is broad, encompassing a wide variety of styles and techniques and no single element can be used as an argument or criticism against it in general terms when there are so many examples that can be cited to counter it. If distorted vocals are not to your liking, that is fine and acceptable, but it would be unwise to tar all metal vocalists with the same brush.

What I object to is not the growling itself, it is the being stuck in it. Vocals should fit the lyrics. Maybe the vocals of growlers do fit the lyrics (sorry, I can't understand them), but the only lyrics those growls would be fitting for are in my opinion pretty macabre ones.

Which is exactly the point. The lyrics are in 90% of the cases macabre, which is why the growls are used in the first place. What I think you should complain about is the one sided content of lyrics many bands have, not what vocals they decide to employ to transport them.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2009 at 06:31
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:


To sum it up: If you growl on a few songs: Nothing wrong with it. If you do it all the time: Ridiculous.


Generally I'd say that whenever an artist uses a highly distinctive technique too much, there's a chance that people will grow tired of it. *Contrast* is something that I always look for in music ... but then again that doesn't mean that artists should change style all the time, does it? Every artist is (or should be) unique. If some use growling all the time (or double bass, another technique you don't like), contrast might be achieved by changing other elements of the music.

To sum up my response: If the growling fits the music: nothing wrong with it. If it doesn't: I'm not comfortable with using words like "ridiculous" because I think they're disrespectful to the artist, but I certainly will give lower ratings to such albums.

You still don't seem to get my take on double-bass drumming. I am not objected to it per se; in fact there is a drummer I like very much who plays with two bass drums (he is listed in the "different kind of drum poll I made; see if you can spot him there).
http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=55755&FID=42


No, what I dislike is what most people do with a double bass-drum. They could learn a lot from the man I am talking of, who has a very tasteful way of using them. Of course that's MY taste only; others may disagree.
I am actually thinking of getting a second hi-hat for my kit, by the way. As far as I know nobody has ever done that. Wink. Makes at least as much sense as a double bass drum. I would actually like to take some songs which use excessive double bass-drumming and record them again using two hi-hats instead of two bass drums. Of course other changes would have to happen in the arrangement of the song.
And with growling it is just the same. If it fits, fine; but just as with double bass-drumming people use it to excess.
Since I am a in the culinary business, let me use a culinary metaphor: Double bass drumming is like a spice; use to much of it, and the flavour of the food gets lost; you only taste the spice.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2009 at 05:39
Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:


To sum it up: If you growl on a few songs: Nothing wrong with it. If you do it all the time: Ridiculous.


Generally I'd say that whenever an artist uses a highly distinctive technique too much, there's a chance that people will grow tired of it. *Contrast* is something that I always look for in music ... but then again that doesn't mean that artists should change style all the time, does it? Every artist is (or should be) unique. If some use growling all the time (or double bass, another technique you don't like), contrast might be achieved by changing other elements of the music.

To sum up my response: If the growling fits the music: nothing wrong with it. If it doesn't: I'm not comfortable with using words like "ridiculous" because I think they're disrespectful to the artist, but I certainly will give lower ratings to such albums.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 01 2009 at 18:59
Originally posted by himtroy himtroy wrote:

I just can't stand the "singer" of 98% bands I've heard.

yeah ? what do you listen most, which vocalists are your favourite ones ?!


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 01 2009 at 18:59
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

Originally posted by angelmk angelmk wrote:

many people dislikes metal because of grawls ,screams they cannot see the beauty behind the curtain, although it is very enjoyable curtain , but for some it is barrier , i feel sorry for them  canot see the beauty of Opeth, Meshuggah , Death,  Borknagar,Quo Vadis, .. Other people consider it is too agressive , distortion boders them, but most of them do not know what great music is . 

Ha, distortion does not bother me in the least; nothing like a good ol' distorted guitar to get rocking. And I would have expected distorted guitars to be a main feature of prog metal. Yet sadly I find it ain't so.
The growling is not specific of prog metal, it can be found in other genres of metal too. I personally find it childish and annoying; if that is supposed to be aggressive then the grandmother on my mother's side was a kangaroo. It is a gimmick from a cheap monster movie, in my opinion.
Growling is just a textural technique, Dave Gilmour, Roger Waters and Nick Mason on several Floyd albums, Greg Lake on ITCOTCK is far from being clean vocally and using distortion effects like Captain Bob on Die Lösung, Wendy Carlos on Timesteps and the Beatles on several of their 'psychedelic' songs are just some non-metal examples of distorted/effected vocals that are akin to growling in some metal styles. To me, random plinking on a Xylophone or treated piano is a childish way of making something sound Avant Garde, but misses the point of Avant Garde and to dismiss an entire genre because of it would be in error - used properly, with regard to texture, tonal quality, structure and compositing it is valid and far from being a cheap gimmick and the same is true for distorted vocals in metal. Distorted vocals are the equivalent of distorted guitars, it's just an instrumental technique (and the voice is just as much a musical instrument as a guitar, violin or a piano) and while it may appear prevalent in all metal, it is not, nor is it a defining trait, with many bands in most metal subgenres using clean vocals, or mixing clean and distorted when it fits the music. As with distorted guitar, there are degrees of distortion and tone, some subtle, some aggressive, some dirty and raw - a loud distortion sounds different to a quiet one, a soft distorted voice can sound more menacing and aggressive than a shouty one.
 
The main point of Jake's initial argument is that the spectrum of Metal is broad, encompassing a wide variety of styles and techniques and no single element can be used as an argument or criticism against it in general terms when there are so many examples that can be cited to counter it. If distorted vocals are not to your liking, that is fine and acceptable, but it would be unwise to tar all metal vocalists with the same brush.

I use some even more extreme singing styles myself (you should hear my throat singing, which I interestingly discovered as a child when experimenting my voice and developed to a very high standard before I learned it is a technique used by shamans of certain tribes). What I object to is not the growling itself, it is the being stuck in it. Vocals should fit the lyrics. Maybe the vocals of growlers do fit the lyrics (sorry, I can't understand them), but the only lyrics those growls would be fitting for are in my opinion pretty macabre ones. What annoys me is not the growling per se; that, as you rightly mentioned, is just a technique. But those growlers are pretty much stuck on it; that's what I find annoying. Now either their vocals always fit their lyrics (which, as already mentioned, I don't understand), then it is definitely the lyrics I hate and consider to be childish. If I did such growling (which is perfectly possible), then the lyrics would probably resemble being from a Lovecraft novel or the likes. It is the purported image that goes along with growling which I simply find ridiculous. "Here I am, so very terrifying". Sorry, that only makes me laugh.
Maybe I am doing the growlers an injustice, and this "Here I am, so very terrifying" is not their purpose, but somehow I doubt it.
To sum it up: If you growl on a few songs: Nothing wrong with it. If you do it all the time: Ridiculous.
I use throat singing very rarely; it puts a lot of strain on the vocal chords. It has certain similarities to growling, but there are differences too. Someone who is familiar with throat singing will instantly recognize it when it is being used somewhere. There are many different techniques for it; it is very fun discovering them (well, at least it was for me).
With throat singing you can produce two or more notes at the same time, depending on which technique you use. The following video demosntrates a few of them; you will realize why I compare it to growling:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UJ3BX2tMj1Y&feature=related
A good way of learning throat singing is to repeat "I am" again and again in a singing voice because these sounds are naturally formed back in the throat. Feel how the sounds are being produced there, modify them by changing the position of the lips, blowing up the cheeks and the likes, try to add a rattling noise (careful, this causes A LOT of strain on the vocal chords; not recommended for beginners). As you progress, you will discover those techniques yourself. You can even sing lyrics that way, though it is definitely not easy.
I discovered throat singing by gurgling the melody of German TV sci-fi series "Raumpatrouille" ("Space Patrol") when I was a child, though I had no idea what I was doing then; it simply sounded good (quite spacy, actually). Then one day I heard a radio feature about throat singing and noticed I had done it for years without knowing WHAT I actually was doing when I did it.
Gurgling actually is a good start for throat singing too, like the "I am" method. Be sure you are alone when doing this though; your friends or relatives may think you have gone mad, LOL
Playing a jew harp has many similarities with throat singing, by the way; the way you change the sound of the jew harp is very similar to the way of modulating the tone when throat singing.


Edited by BaldFriede - March 01 2009 at 19:01


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 01 2009 at 17:06
I've never gotten metal.  I hate people who say that an entire genre is "bad music" though, it's just ignorant.  I don't like it, it doesn't mean others do.  But to throw in something, I often times think the heavy music is cool, I just can't stand the "singer" of 98% bands I've heard.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 01 2009 at 16:06
As a response to BaldFriede, how many people do you normally see singing when they are trying to communicate a point, like when they scream? I don't find it a valid argument, since singing is an almost universally accepted musical technique.
 
I'd also like to say that I enjoy deep death growls far more than screams, which tend to get on my nerves. And higher black metal vocals are much better than the annoying lower range ones. IMO of course.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 01 2009 at 16:00
Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

 

To me growling is just another way of expressing emotions, just as you would singing or playing an instrument.
It does take an enormous amount of skill and a great deal of training to be able to growl properly and consistently, otherwise many will find incorrect vocal technique will destroy their vocal chords relatively quickly.
It's not just something decided to do because it was a 'cheap way of sounding different' or something, to many, including myself, it truly is a thing of art and of real skill, no less than singing or playing an instrument well.

Not saying you have to like it of course, but my main point is that some people do find it very expressive and wouldn't have it any other way.

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yes man , that i was willing to say. Bravo. 


Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

 
I do like screaming, but I don't like growling. show me a person that growls like that in real life. nonsense. screaming, however, happens a lot

Is that so? show me a person who screams like to say Mayhem vocalists Dead or Maniac, Abigor vocalist, Kampfar, Gorgoroth,  to name just a few .can you? certainly not;  it doesn't happens normaly exept one is butchered to death ,cut with jigsaw,  i wanted to say that none of screams or growls are usual way of expressing oneself   , it is art , art will remain  .  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 01 2009 at 11:02
Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

Originally posted by angelmk angelmk wrote:

many people dislikes metal because of grawls ,screams they cannot see the beauty behind the curtain, although it is very enjoyable curtain , but for some it is barrier , i feel sorry for them  canot see the beauty of Opeth, Meshuggah , Death,  Borknagar,Quo Vadis, .. Other people consider it is too agressive , distortion boders them, but most of them do not know what great music is . 

Ha, distortion does not bother me in the least; nothing like a good ol' distorted guitar to get rocking. And I would have expected distorted guitars to be a main feature of prog metal. Yet sadly I find it ain't so.
The growling is not specific of prog metal, it can be found in other genres of metal too. I personally find it childish and annoying; if that is supposed to be aggressive then the grandmother on my mother's side was a kangaroo. It is a gimmick from a cheap monster movie, in my opinion.
Growling is just a textural technique, Dave Gilmour, Roger Waters and Nick Mason on several Floyd albums, Greg Lake on ITCOTCK is far from being clean vocally and using distortion effects like Captain Bob on Die Lösung, Wendy Carlos on Timesteps and the Beatles on several of their 'psychedelic' songs are just some non-metal examples of distorted/effected vocals that are akin to growling in some metal styles. To me, random plinking on a Xylophone or treated piano is a childish way of making something sound Avant Garde, but misses the point of Avant Garde and to dismiss an entire genre because of it would be in error - used properly, with regard to texture, tonal quality, structure and compositing it is valid and far from being a cheap gimmick and the same is true for distorted vocals in metal. Distorted vocals are the equivalent of distorted guitars, it's just an instrumental technique (and the voice is just as much a musical instrument as a guitar, violin or a piano) and while it may appear prevalent in all metal, it is not, nor is it a defining trait, with many bands in most metal subgenres using clean vocals, or mixing clean and distorted when it fits the music. As with distorted guitar, there are degrees of distortion and tone, some subtle, some aggressive, some dirty and raw - a loud distortion sounds different to a quiet one, a soft distorted voice can sound more menacing and aggressive than a shouty one.
 
The main point of Jake's initial argument is that the spectrum of Metal is broad, encompassing a wide variety of styles and techniques and no single element can be used as an argument or criticism against it in general terms when there are so many examples that can be cited to counter it. If distorted vocals are not to your liking, that is fine and acceptable, but it would be unwise to tar all metal vocalists with the same brush.
What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 01 2009 at 06:18
Originally posted by Jake Kobrin Jake Kobrin wrote:

I've never been a fan of Chuck Shuldiners vocals to be honest. He's still one of my most respected musicians of all time. 


YESSSSSSS!!! ClapClapClap

Sorry, I overreacted slightly
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 01 2009 at 03:32
I guess that we all perceive music differently. I also couldn't stand growling when I first heard it ... but the same applies to Avant-Garde, Jazz-Fusion or Experimental Electronic stuff. Eventually you *may* develop a taste for it ... or you don't. But depending on the quality of the vocals *and* your personal bias for (or against) the style you might perceive them as cliche and cheesy (or "childish", as BaldFriede put it) or deeply dark and emotional.
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