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Borealis
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 06 2005
Location: Neutral Zone
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Points: 599
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Posted: October 05 2005 at 19:23 |
Unless there's a 'Completly not prog' section in PA, they shouldn't be here.
Still wan't to debate that once again? I really am sick of that...
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Vive le Québec libre!...
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Kohllapse
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 14 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 1063
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Posted: October 05 2005 at 23:30 |
Borealis wrote:
Unless there's a 'Completly not prog' section in PA, they shouldn't be here.
Still wan't to debate that once again? I really am sick of that... | I disagree!
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bluetailfly
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 28 2005
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 1383
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Posted: October 05 2005 at 23:40 |
Hey, I appreciate your devotion to "the Maiden," but I have to tell you, I think you're fighting an extremely uphill battle with this one. Genre's are loosely defined boundaries, but they are still that---boundaries.
Iron Maiden fits too closely into another genre. My question to you is, "why do you care if they get recognized as prog or not? What "mantle of authority" does having it classified as "prog rock" add to the band?" They need no help from the prog world. They rock their own world better than any prog band will ever rock the prog world. Revel in that, give them that. And tell the lean-built "Soft Machine" fans that they'll never experience this kind of stuff. And then proceed to play electric guitar out of a distorted practice amp
Edited by bluetailfly
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"The red polygon's only desire / is to get to the blue triangle."
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Kohllapse
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 14 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 1063
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 00:03 |
bluetailfly wrote:
Hey, I appreciate your devotion to "the Maiden," but I have to tell you, I think you're fighting an extremely uphill battle with this one. Genre's are loosely defined boundaries, but they are still that---boundaries.
Iron Maiden fits too closely into another genre. My question to you is, "why do you care if they get recognized as prog or not? What "mantle of authority" does having it classified as "prog rock" add to the band?" They need no help from the prog world. They rock their own world better than any prog band will ever rock the prog world. Revel in that, give them that. And tell the lean-built "Soft Machine" fans that they'll never experience this kind of stuff. And then proceed to play electric guitar out of a distorted practice amp
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Maybe I wasnt clear on what I meant by "I disagree". What I disagree with is saying "completly not prog" I never said they were, if you would have read all of the post in this thread you would know that.I said they could be put in the "Proto prog"
"you're right , you never said they should be put in the "prog metal"category, only that they should be added to the site . With all of the different "genre" categories available i'm sure that they would fit in one of them. "
Edited by Kohllapse
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bluetailfly
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 28 2005
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 1383
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 00:17 |
Kohllapse wrote:
bluetailfly wrote:
Hey, I appreciate your devotion to "the Maiden," but I have to tell you, I think you're fighting an extremely uphill battle with this one. Genre's are loosely defined boundaries, but they are still that---boundaries.
Iron Maiden fits too closely into another genre. My question to you is, "why do you care if they get recognized as prog or not? What "mantle of authority" does having it classified as "prog rock" add to the band?" They need no help from the prog world. They rock their own world better than any prog band will ever rock the prog world. Revel in that, give them that. And tell the lean-built "Soft Machine" fans that they'll never experience this kind of stuff. And then proceed to play electric guitar out of a distorted practice amp
| Perhaps you were unclear on what I meant by "I disagree". What I disagree with is saying "completly not prog" I never said they were, if you would have read all of the post in this thread you would know that.I said they could be put in the "Proto prog"
"you're right , you never said they should be put in the "prog metal"category, only that they should be added to the site . With all of the different "genre" categories available i'm sure that they would fit in one of them. "
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But what you say sort of begs the same question. Why? And I have no real stake in the matter either. I am just honestly wondering why having them seen as "prog-related" matters. I wouldn't want AC/DC classified as prog-related, even though I suppose one could mount an argument for it (a skilled orator). As a Maiden fan, I don't want them to be prog-related. Why throw in with Anderson, Phil Collins, Ambrosia? They don't want to be there; they don't want to be "related" to them.
They want something else.
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"The red polygon's only desire / is to get to the blue triangle."
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Kohllapse
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 14 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 1063
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 00:38 |
bluetailfly wrote:
Kohllapse wrote:
bluetailfly wrote:
Hey, I appreciate your devotion to "the Maiden," but I have to tell you, I think you're fighting an extremely uphill battle with this one. Genre's are loosely defined boundaries, but they are still that---boundaries.
Iron Maiden fits too closely into another genre. My question to you is, "why do you care if they get recognized as prog or not? What "mantle of authority" does having it classified as "prog rock" add to the band?" They need no help from the prog world. They rock their own world better than any prog band will ever rock the prog world. Revel in that, give them that. And tell the lean-built "Soft Machine" fans that they'll never experience this kind of stuff. And then proceed to play electric guitar out of a distorted practice amp
| Perhaps you were unclear on what I meant by "I disagree". What I disagree with is saying "completly not prog" I never said they were, if you would have read all of the post in this thread you would know that.I said they could be put in the "Proto prog"
"you're right , you never said they should be put in the "prog metal"category, only that they should be added to the site . With all of the different "genre" categories available i'm sure that they would fit in one of them. "
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But what you say sort of begs the same question. Why? And I have no real stake in the matter either. I am just honestly wondering why having them seen as "prog-related" matters. I wouldn't want AC/DC classified as prog-related, even though I suppose one could mount an argument for it (a skilled orator). As a Maiden fan, I don't want them to be prog-related. Why throw in with Anderson, Phil Collins, Ambrosia? They don't want to be there; they don't want to be "related" to them.
They want something else. |
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Bryan
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 01 2004
Status: Offline
Points: 3013
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 01:17 |
As Garion already mentioned, Maiden is still under conisderation.
It's a tough call, there's no question that they've influenced tons of
prog-metal bands. My vote is against them though, there are
countless other influential metal bands who've had some very proggy
moments despite being far from prog bands. If we add Maiden, it
opens the door for tons of other non-prog metal bands.
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Lindsay Lohan
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 25 2005
Location: Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 3254
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 03:08 |
Useful_Idiot wrote:
As Garion already mentioned, Maiden is still under conisderation. It's a tough call, there's no question that they've influenced tons of prog-metal bands. My vote is against them though, there are countless other influential metal bands who've had some very proggy moments despite being far from prog bands. If we add Maiden, it opens the door for tons of other non-prog metal bands. |
And you say you have not already done so by including Kamelot, Queensryche and Nightwish?
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Lindsay Lohan
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 25 2005
Location: Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 3254
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 03:15 |
And i see it as important that we maiden to the archives to listen to where most prog-metal bands got their influences from..afterall that is what is the point of the proto-prog genre right
I also see maiden as the first real prog metal band there ever was...and dont bring me Deep Purple,Black Sabbath and Zeppelin and all those...they are bascially just hard rock bands...
And why the obviosly stupid comparisment to AC/DC wich is the least original band on this earth...Britney spears is strikingly more progressive than AC/DC wich is a horrible band that truly goes way beyond the definiton of crap...
Please people listen to a song like forexample The unbelivier and tell me that is not prog...
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Citanul
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 14 2005
Location: South Africa
Status: Offline
Points: 430
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 03:58 |
bluetailfly wrote:
As a Maiden fan, I don't want them
to be prog-related. Why throw in with Anderson, Phil Collins, Ambrosia?
They don't want to be there; they don't want to be "related" to them.
They want something else.
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I'm not so sure about that. I seem to remember reading something
along the lines of Steve Harris wanting to form a prog band, but in the
late 70's there would have been very little support for them, given the
rise of punk. Bruce Dickinson said that with the Chemical Wedding
he wanted to make an album that could stand alongside any prog concept
album, as well as any decent metal album. So, while they're a
metal band, I don't think they would reject the prog idea
completely. Also, Harris and Dickinson are both big Tull fans,
and Maiden did a cover of Cross-Eyed Mary.
Useful_Idiot wrote:
As Garion already mentioned, Maiden is still under conisderation.
It's a tough call, there's no question that they've influenced tons of
prog-metal bands. My vote is against them though, there are
countless other influential metal bands who've had some very proggy
moments despite being far from prog bands. If we add Maiden, it
opens the door for tons of other non-prog metal bands.
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But the same argument could be made against any of the artists in the
Proto-Prog or Prog-Related categories (and in fact has been made in
some cases). Iron Maiden certainly aren't a prog-metal band, but
they've probably had more proggy moments than any other metal band that
isn't considered prog-metal, and that certainly makes them worthy of
inclusion in the Prog-Related category
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Be or be not. There is no question. - Yoda, Prince of Denmark
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Garion81
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: May 22 2004
Location: So Cal, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 4338
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 11:44 |
maidenrulez wrote:
And i see it as important that we maiden to the archives to listen to where most prog-metal bands got their influences from..afterall that is what is the point of the proto-prog genre right
I also see maiden as the first real prog metal band there ever was...and dont bring me Deep Purple,Black Sabbath and Zeppelin and all those...they are bascially just hard rock bands...
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First of you need to read the definiton of proto-prog. It sstates bands that were formed or did the majority of their work prior to 1969. I hardely think Iron Maiden fits into that.
I will bring those other bands because without that foundation you would have no Iron Maiden or any other metal band that came in the 80's.
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"What are you going to do when that damn thing rusts?"
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Lindsay Lohan
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 25 2005
Location: Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 3254
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 13:32 |
Garion81 wrote:
maidenrulez wrote:
And i see it as important that we maiden to the archives to listen to where most prog-metal bands got their influences from..afterall that is what is the point of the proto-prog genre right
I also see maiden as the first real prog metal band there ever was...and dont bring me Deep Purple,Black Sabbath and Zeppelin and all those...they are bascially just hard rock bands...
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First of you need to read the definiton of proto-prog. It sstates bands that were formed or did the majority of their work prior to 1969. I hardely think Iron Maiden fits into that.
I will bring those other bands because without that foundation you would have no Iron Maiden or any other metal band that came in the 80's.
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Yes you got me wrong there...i did not say that maiden should be under PROTO PROG...i said that maiden should be under prog related because they have inspired many PROG METAL BANDS with being the first at what they did.
Because other metal bands at the time where doing ordinarly heavy metal like DEF LEPPARD,JUDAS PRIEST,MOTLEY CRUE AND JUDAS PRIEST maiden was the only Heavy Metal band wich feutured real progressive elements like epic song writing, symphonic structures, intelligent lyrics and so on and so on.
they do just like PROTO PROG bands was the first to be playing PROG-ROCK maiden was the first real PROG METAL band...and i think it is perhaps it is important to have one of the corner stones of the forming of the PROG METAL genre
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Certif1ed
Special Collaborator
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Joined: April 08 2004
Location: England
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Points: 7559
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 14:06 |
Metallica influenced far more (prog) metal bands and redefined the entire metal genre more often and more deeply than Iron Maiden did, and both Rainbow and Dio had many proggy elements.
Just a couple of points worth considering .
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Ed_The_Dead
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 29 2005
Location: Poland
Status: Offline
Points: 4928
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 14:14 |
Hmm... great... I don't even wonna argue anyomore... its pointless...
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Lindsay Lohan
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 25 2005
Location: Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 3254
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 14:49 |
Certif1ed wrote:
Metallica influenced far more (prog) metal bands and redefined the entire metal genre more often and more deeply than Iron Maiden did, and both Rainbow and Dio had many proggy elements.
Just a couple of points worth considering .
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AND MAIDEN INFLUENCED METLLALLICA...think about that
RAINBOW is exactly the same stuff as DEEP PURPLE ie not metal and DIO does not suddenly get proggy because it feutures DIO on vocals and also DIO came later than IRON MAIDEN
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Lindsay Lohan
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 25 2005
Location: Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 3254
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 14:54 |
Ed_The_Dead wrote:
Hmm... great... I don't even wonna argue anyomore... its pointless...
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Yes indeed since nobody is able to get some proper arguments and gets into silly arguments
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Certif1ed
Special Collaborator
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Joined: April 08 2004
Location: England
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 16:14 |
maidenrulez wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
Metallica influenced far more (prog) metal bands and redefined the entire metal genre more often and more deeply than Iron Maiden did, and both Rainbow and Dio had many proggy elements.
Just a couple of points worth considering .
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AND MAIDEN INFLUENCED METLLALLICA...think about that
RAINBOW is exactly the same stuff as DEEP PURPLE ie not metal and DIO does not suddenly get proggy because it feutures DIO on vocals and also DIO came later than IRON MAIDEN
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A different discussion really, but since you bring it up...
There is not much Iron Maiden influence in Metallica's music - but there is a more direct link from Metallica to, say, Dream Theater or just about any band playing metal from the 1990s onwards.
Rainbow has Ritchie Blackmore, but the style of music is different to Deep Purple - less improv and more classical allusions, with mystical themes to some of the lyrics and long song structures every now and again.
Dio's own band continues the fantasy themes to new depths (heights?), with startlingly accurate guitar work, obviously inspired by but not copied from Van Halen, and precision riffing similar to Black Sabbath's "Heaven and Hell" - there is a direct line that is crowned by the voice of RJD that shows a progression from Metal as it was in the 1970s (yes, it did exist back then) through the NWOBHM (New Wave, remember!). Iron Maiden's sound is unique to Maiden (and the rip-off bands like Helloween, etc.) - it is not a general influence on the metal genre, and it has not particularly changed over the years. Each Iron Maiden album sounds unmistakably like an Iron Maiden album, with the same song structures and riff patterns done slightly differently - like AC/DC or Motorhead.
Iron Maiden in 1983 released "Piece of Mind". In my opinion, Dio's "Holy Diver" is a much better album - much stronger all round. "Piece of Mind" was hardly prog... and nor was "The Number of The Beast" or anything Paul DiAnno recorded with IM. Sure there are moments, like "Phantom of the Opera", but Rainbow had been doing proggy things way before then. "Holy Diver" contains many proggy themes, the songs are very well and dramatically structured, and there are moments where the band are each doing their own thing. Note "moments", not entire passages as with bona fide prog. This is something that Iron Maiden lack.
Remember also that RJD was in a band called Elf before he joined Rainbow in 1976 (or was it 5?), so he predates Iron Maiden by a VERY long time! The best Bruce Dickinson can manage is a band called Samson, who were amazing, and put out two very raw-edged metal albums in the late 1970s. "Head On" is well worth checking out. Quite progressive.
Metallica obliterated all of that with a single stroke - aptly named "Kill 'Em All", which rips the pages out of the history book as far as the metal genre is concerned, by introducing the concept of thrash, without succumbing to the undiluted form, unlike most other thrash bands at the time.
Metallica always denied being a thrash band - and they were right. They used thrash techniques to develop a very progressive form of metal right up to "...And Justice For All", whose riffs can be heard virtually verbatim in Dream Theater's early work. As if to underline this, "Kill 'Em All" has fantasy themes in some of the lyrics - indicating prog pretensions. This is underlined by the developing riffs - "Seek And Destroy" has some of the most organically developing riffs in metaldom, and "The Four Horsemen" relates all the material back to itself. A stark contrast to those sad bands who go off at tangents because they cannot think of a way to develop the existing material.
And that's (partly) why Metallica are more progressive than Iron Maiden, and should be considered over IM as prog related.
Think about that
Edited by Certif1ed
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salmacis
Forum Senior Member
Content Addition
Joined: April 10 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 3928
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 16:34 |
I'd say both Iron Maiden and Metallica are progressive personally, but I'm glad to see Samson get a mention- their third album, 'Shock Tactics' is one of the best UK metal albums of all time. Bruce Dickinson gives the vocal performance of his life on it. Dickinson's replacement, Nicky Moore, also had an amazing voice, but to me it was like what happened with Uriah Heep; Samson replaced a theatrical singer (Dickinson in Samson/Byron in Heep) with a bluesy one (Moore in Samson/ John Lawton in Heep) and for some people, it was never the same, though I think both singers in Samson were terrific.
Back on topic-- I think all of Maiden's albums bar the rather straight ahead 'No Prayer For The Dying'- their weakest album, probably- has something progressive on it. I find it very hard to believe that the progressive metal genre could have existed without bands like Maiden, Judas Priest and Metallica. Metallica were also a revolutionary act- certainly nobody had made music quite like theirs, which took the fast tempos of NWOBHM bands to an absolute extreme with hugely complex playing that most NWOBHM bands couldn't match...
The same goes for Megadeth- their music is also very complex, with some extremely tricky time changes and virtuosity, yet keeps the songwriting in check that some progressive metal bands seem to forget about at times.
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Lindsay Lohan
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 25 2005
Location: Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 3254
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 17:52 |
Certif1ed wrote:
maidenrulez wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
Metallica influenced far more (prog) metal bands and redefined the entire metal genre more often and more deeply than Iron Maiden did, and both Rainbow and Dio had many proggy elements.
Just a couple of points worth considering .
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AND MAIDEN INFLUENCED METLLALLICA...think about that
RAINBOW is exactly the same stuff as DEEP PURPLE ie not metal and DIO does not suddenly get proggy because it feutures DIO on vocals and also DIO came later than IRON MAIDEN
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A different discussion really, but since you bring it up...
There is not much Iron Maiden influence in Metallica's music - but there is a more direct link from Metallica to, say, Dream Theater or just about any band playing metal from the 1990s onwards.
Rainbow has Ritchie Blackmore, but the style of music is different to Deep Purple - less improv and more classical allusions, with mystical themes to some of the lyrics and long song structures every now and again.
Dio's own band continues the fantasy themes to new depths (heights?), with startlingly accurate guitar work, obviously inspired by but not copied from Van Halen, and precision riffing similar to Black Sabbath's "Heaven and Hell" - there is a direct line that is crowned by the voice of RJD that shows a progression from Metal as it was in the 1970s (yes, it did exist back then) through the NWOBHM (New Wave, remember!). Iron Maiden's sound is unique to Maiden (and the rip-off bands like Helloween, etc.) - it is not a general influence on the metal genre, and it has not particularly changed over the years. Each Iron Maiden album sounds unmistakably like an Iron Maiden album, with the same song structures and riff patterns done slightly differently - like AC/DC or Motorhead.
Iron Maiden in 1983 released "Piece of Mind". In my opinion, Dio's "Holy Diver" is a much better album - much stronger all round. "Piece of Mind" was hardly prog... and nor was "The Number of The Beast" or anything Paul DiAnno recorded with IM. Sure there are moments, like "Phantom of the Opera", but Rainbow had been doing proggy things way before then. "Holy Diver" contains many proggy themes, the songs are very well and dramatically structured, and there are moments where the band are each doing their own thing. Note "moments", not entire passages as with bona fide prog. This is something that Iron Maiden lack.
Remember also that RJD was in a band called Elf before he joined Rainbow in 1976 (or was it 5?), so he predates Iron Maiden by a VERY long time! The best Bruce Dickinson can manage is a band called Samson, who were amazing, and put out two very raw-edged metal albums in the late 1970s. "Head On" is well worth checking out. Quite progressive.
Metallica obliterated all of that with a single stroke - aptly named "Kill 'Em All", which rips the pages out of the history book as far as the metal genre is concerned, by introducing the concept of thrash, without succumbing to the undiluted form, unlike most other thrash bands at the time.
Metallica always denied being a thrash band - and they were right. They used thrash techniques to develop a very progressive form of metal right up to "...And Justice For All", whose riffs can be heard virtually verbatim in Dream Theater's early work. As if to underline this, "Kill 'Em All" has fantasy themes in some of the lyrics - indicating prog pretensions. This is underlined by the developing riffs - "Seek And Destroy" has some of the most organically developing riffs in metaldom, and "The Four Horsemen" relates all the material back to itself. A stark contrast to those sad bands who go off at tangents because they cannot think of a way to develop the existing material.
And that's (partly) why Metallica are more progressive than Iron Maiden, and should be considered over IM as prog related.
Think about that
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First off Lars Ulrich said that maiden had a huge affect on them and a reason why it does not sound like maiden is because metallica messed it up trying to show the world how fast they can riff their gutiars and how agressive they can sound and the main reason why you dont want maiden to be added is basically because you seem to like metallica, dio and rainbow over maiden and that is fine but you cant use that to back up your argument why it is not progressive. And comparing it to ac/dc shows what a complete moron you are
Obviously rainbow had about two albums with dio before they went totally 80's synth pop and also DIO's song structure is just plain heavy metal as done by judas priest.
All the maiden songs sound the same eh? Ah ok have you heard
Prodigal Son
Blood Brothers
Sign Of the Cross
The Unbelivier
Seventh son of a seventh son
Genghis Khan
Dance Of death
To tame a land
Revelations
Hooks in you
Deja Vu
Another Life
Gangland
Transylvania
Wastin love
Montesegur
Dream of mirrors
The Nomad
Judgement of heaven
How the f**k can you say that these songs sound the same?
I dont care how much metallica is your favorite band...they where not the first PROG METAL BAND ON THE SCENE REMEMBER THAT YOU LITTLE TWAT
Edited by maidenrulez
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TheProgtologist
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin
Joined: May 23 2005
Location: Baltimore,Md US
Status: Offline
Points: 27802
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Posted: October 06 2005 at 18:07 |
Holy crap give it a rest.Garion said it will be decided on soon.
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