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Poll Question: Should Metallica be in the forum?
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Certif1ed View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2008 at 15:44
Originally posted by zafreth zafreth wrote:

so why do not consider Saxon a prog band???
 
 
While "Frozen Rainbow" is undoubtedly on the "Prog" side of metal, the rest of Saxon's output is not - they did not release a single proggy album.
 
Most of the NWoBHM had proggy tendencies - and very similar aspirations, just more "street" than pretentious - we are talking about Prog METAL here, not Prog ROCK - which answers most of your other points, such as they are.
 
To summarise, you've simply compared Metallica's "Kill 'em All" to Prog bands and said that the two are not the same - which is fair enough.
 
What is not fair is that you have once again overlooked Metallica's progressive aspects and contribution to Progressive Metal as a whole. Your critique of "KEA" is of the lyrics, not the music, for example - where you mention the music, it's dismissive - as if Prog has to have variations all the time in sound and style.
 
 
"Guitar Player defines this as a way to play propertly a song, Fast Hard Rock is a more than  a timing of=155 in guitar playing terms...
 
Thrash played at breakneck speed like a timing of = 333, like some Metallica songs and Slayer songs, again  in guitar  playing terms..."
 
 
Presumably it means 155 or 300 BPM?
 
BPM does not define music, and those numbers are spurious - don't believe everything you read in magazines Wink
 
Metallica never hit 333 BPM, even on "Whiplash" or "Damage Incorporated", and I'm not convinced that Slayer did either - although I must confess I've never counted, and Lombardo is damn fast.
 
I think that Cradle of Filth's Nick Barker may have hit that speed - but to the best of my knowledge, CoF are not considered a thrash band despite this achievement.
 
Napalm Death, OTOH.... LOL
 
 
Quote Because are the same old "arguments" ???
 
Same old arguments - which ones are those? I've forgotten - please refresh my memory!


Edited by Certif1ed - August 18 2008 at 15:51
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2008 at 16:01
Prog/non-prog lyrics? That's a new one!

While prog rock often featured philosophical and fantasy lyrics, there are plenty of examples of political subjects (see RIO) and even the old standards of love and girls. Lyrical subjects are too broad in prog to be able to say definitively 'those are prog lyrics, and those are not' - or why not have Peter, Paul and Mary here for 'Puff the Magic Deagon'? There's a bit of clutching at straws here, zafreth.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2008 at 16:05
Well that's about the General definition of prog that we have in the Menu, does Kill em' All fit?????




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2008 at 16:08
 
[/QUOTE]
 
  
To summarise, you've simply compared Metallica's "Kill 'em All" to Prog bands and said that the two are not the same - which is fair enough.
 
ClapClapClap
 
What is not fair is that you have once again overlooked Metallica's progressive aspects and contribution to Progressive Metal as a whole. Your critique of "KEA" is of the lyrics, not the music, for example - where you mention the music, it's dismissive - as if Prog has to have variations all the time in sound and style.
 
 Wait to see my friend...
 
 
 
 
 
[/QUOTE]




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2008 at 16:31
Okayyyy  going futher we found out Ride the Lighting (RTL)  well this album is an improvement in his sound ,the went heavier and a very muscular sound, by the way is my favourite Metallica album for his heavyness.
 
The vocals of Hetfield sounds much gritier to fill the general trend in Heavy Metal underground, saw Slayer example and they sound like a street fighting man, but very monotonous at some times, that fit perfectly with his accelerated heavy metal style but not in prog themes and i return to one of the PA guidelines to prog:
 
  • Unusual vocal styles and use of multi-part vocal harmonies. See Magma, Robert Wyatt, and Gentle Giant.
  •  
     
    So Hetfield failes to meet this PA guide.
     
    In music all the elements are here to name it one of the best Heavy Metal album, but.... the Lyrics are pure Heavy Metal again... let see:
     
    Here's an extract of Ride The Lighting:
    "Guilty as charged
    But damn it, it ain't right
    There is someone else controlling me
    Death in the air
    Strapped in the electric chair
    This can't be happening to me
    Who made you God to say
    "I'll take your life from you!""
     
    What a wonderful message leaves to us!! it's not far from Slayer's Die By The Sword:
     
     "Live by the sword and help to contain
    The helpless minds of you all
    Die by my hand in pools of blood
    Clutch yourself as you fall
    Mindless tyranny, forgotten victims
    Children slaughtered in vain
    Raping the maids, in which they serve
    Only the words of the Lord."

    Well the differrence is very thin they can maybe used to add a chorus to Ride The Lighting.

    It's evident that is a Heavy Metal band...
     
    Continue with the lyrics analysis, found another song that is Heavy Metal and that is Creeping Death,
     
    "Slaves
    Hebrews born to serve, to the pharaoh
    Heed
    To his every word, live in fear
    Faith
    Of the unknown one, the deliverer
    Wait
    Something must be done, four hundred years
    So let it be written
    So let it be done
    I'm sent here by the chosen one
    So let it be written
    So let it be done
    To kill the first born pharaoh son
    I'm creeping death"
     
    Here's is more much elaborate song in the theme  a bible passage in a popular way to sing,but we'll see another's similar group efforts:
    Slayer's Antichist:
     
    "Screams and nightmares
    Of a life I want
    Can't see living this lie no
    A world I haunt
    You've lost all control of my
    Heart and soul
    Satan holds my future
    Watch it unfold

    I am the Antichrist
    It's what I was meant to be
    Your God left me behind
    And set my soul to be free"

    Well  Slayer use another biblical theme this time the advent of the Antichrist, but with a dosis of satanism that i do not like it much, musically the song is more fast than Metallica's but have the guts equally both.

    We move to see some Anthrax Lyrics:

    The Enemy:
    "The plans, of a race gone mad
    A final solution to pass
    All dreams are taken from their lives
    No hope for the young all the old realize

    He is but a solitary man
    Whose prejudice will spread like a flame
    Throughout the land
    He's enslaving those who will be free
    Etching his own name in black
    For all of us to hear and see"

    Well the similitaries are very obvious, don't you think??? Wink

    Moving to Fight Fire With Fire has a simple lyric approach see:
     
    "Do unto others as they have done unto you
    But what in the hell is this world coming to?
    Blow the universe into nothingness
    Nuclear warfare shall lay us to rest "
     
    It might looks to predict, Nuclear Assault efforts!!!
     
    "Fires burning cities down
    Your whole world's destroyed
    Mutants crawl out from the ruins
    To put you to the sword
    Poisoned air in darkened skies
    flows across the land
    Fear and pain they breed despair
    A new Dark age is at hand."
     
    That's Nuclear Assault's After The Holocaust, one year later...
     
    We move to Metalica's From Whom The Bell Tolls lyric:
    "Make his fight on the hill in the early day
    Constant chill deep inside
    Shouting gun, on they run through the endless grey
    On the fight, for they are right, yes, by who's to say?
    For a hill men would kill, why? They do not know
    Suffered wounds test there their pride
    Men of five, still alive through the raging glow
    Gone insane from the pain that they surely know."
    Ok more explicative to the first efforts but, see Anthrax's Lone Justice:
     
    "There's two kinds, of people in the world
    The outlaws, and the lawmen that prevail
    The bounty hunter's job is on the wrong side of the law
    Intentions, of the truth and nothing more."
     
    Wow!!! fits perflectly don't you think?, as a comment i see that Anthrax was in a Metallica- way to write lyrics!!!
     
    And Anthrax are prog????? do your conclusions...
     
    And extract to Fade To Black say these:

    Fade To Black

    Life it seems, will fade away
    Drifting further every day
    Getting lost within myself
    Nothing matters no one else
    I have lost the will to live
    Simply nothing more to give
    There is nothing more for me
    Need the end to set me free

    and the next would fit in the song:

    "Fighting for existence, looking for a way
    The race is getting harder, won't last another day
    Try to make it happen, always on the go
    Can't escape the hours, time will never know".
     
    Well that above are Anthrax's S.S.C./ Stand or Fall, hahaha Metallica's and Anthrax seems to have the general approach to write lyrics, who's copy who's?
     
    And fore sure those lyrics are plain Heavy Metal efforts, not a progressive one...
     
    As an example check overall Grunge lyrics, especially of Soundgarden and PJ... and compare to the lasts ones... as they do not being progressive.
     
    As for the music, Anthrax, Metallica and Slayer have more or less the same schematic music.
    Fast Tempos, incredibly lighting solos, et al. but Slayer be the most brutal...
     
    Well continue to the first celebrate Masterpiece... MOP.
     



     
     
     
     


     
     
     




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    tokenrove View Drop Down
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2008 at 16:55
    I'm committing the cardinal sin here in commenting on this thread without reading all 11 pages of discussion, so flame away if I'm just repeating earlier comments.

    As a long time metalhead, I have to say: no way is Metallica prog! I think of them as a band who took a variety of important ideas in metal, did them really well, and made them accessible to a larger public, rather than strictly innovating. Master of Puppets? What about Awaken the Guardian, or Energetic Disassembly?

    And when did Melissa come out? 1983? We know Mercyful Fate was a big influence on Metallica, and probably a major influence in terms of their proggy elements... I'd much sooner support the addition of King Diamond and Mercyful Fate here than Metallica.

    And by the time And Justice was out, you had Watchtower, Anacrusis, Mekong Delta, among lots of others playing more technical thrash than Metallica.

    Lots of bands were playing faster, harder, and longer, before Metallica, but Metallica just did it really well, and became very popular. Good for them, but don't muddy the waters of metal history. They're no Miles Davis!
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2008 at 17:02
    Originally posted by tokenrove tokenrove wrote:

    I'm committing the cardinal sin here in commenting on this thread without reading all 11 pages of discussion, so flame away if I'm just repeating earlier comments.
     
    No you are not this thread is very "democratical"...Wink

    As a long time metalhead, I have to say: no way is Metallica prog! I think of them as a band who took a variety of important ideas in metal, did them really well, and made them accessible to a larger public, rather than strictly innovating. Master of Puppets? What about Awaken the Guardian, or Energetic Disassembly?
    ClapClapClapClapClap

    And when did Melissa come out? 1983? We know Mercyful Fate was a big influence on Metallica, and probably a major influence in terms of their proggy elements... I'd much sooner support the addition of King Diamond and Mercyful Fate here than Metallica.
    Wow!!, i almost forgot that fine band with the King Diamond vocals!!!! sure they are prog!!! hahahahaha.
     
     

    And by the time And Justice was out, you had Watchtower, Anacrusis, Mekong Delta, among lots of others playing more technical thrash than Metallica.
     
    ClapClapClap

    Lots of bands were playing faster, harder, and longer, before Metallica, but Metallica just did it really well, and became very popular. Good for them, but don't muddy the waters of metal history. They're no Miles Davis!
     
    Well my friend that's the point that some of the Metallica supporters do not going to understand.. see they want to us the non Metallica supporters to write and fundated and motivated reasons or affirmations about why Metallica isn't a prog band...   




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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2008 at 18:39
    Originally posted by zafreth zafreth wrote:

    Here's an extract of Ride The Lighting... What a wonderful message leaves to us!! it's not far from Slayer's Die By The Sword...

    Actually, it's quite far from it.  Despite his support of the death penalty, Hetfield tries to write from perspective of someone who's been convicted wrongfully and sentenced to death.  In the end, though, we see that it's only a dream.  It's not Shakespeare, but then again not much is.  In the end, I don't see any connection to "Die by the Sword."

     
    Continue with the lyrics analysis, found another song that is Heavy Metal and that is Creeping Death...
    Here's is more much elaborate song in the theme a bible passage in a popular way to sing,but we'll see another's similar group efforts.

    Again, your analysis misses the point somewhat.  "Creeping Death" is about the "historical" origin of the Jewish feast of Passover.  Although Hetfield didn't construct a Homerian epic here, he seems to have approached with some thoughtfulness, and at the very least, avoided the puerile, cinematic Satanism penned by Hanneman.

    We move to see some Anthrax Lyrics... Well the similitaries are very obvious, don't you think?

    No, I don't think that there are any similarities here.  Care to specify what these similarities are?  In any case, I don't think that the cited lyrics are terrible.

    Moving to Fight Fire With Fire has a simple lyric approach see:

    Simple, but effective.  The message is clear: mankind needs to dispense with the "eye for an eye" ethic, especially in view of modern WMDs.
     
    We move to Metalica's From Whom The Bell Tolls lyric... Wow!!! fits perflectly don't you think?, as a comment i see that Anthrax was in a Metallica- way to write lyrics!!!

    No, I don't think it "fits perfectly."  Ultimately, you're providing evidence (under the assumption that your interpretations are correct, which they are not) that undermines your argument.  So, other metal bands drew lyrical inspiration from Metallica?  Sounds as if Metallica were vanguards, as if they were progressing
    music.
     
    And fore sure those lyrics are plain Heavy Metal efforts, not a progressive one...

    What would make the lyrics progressive?  Pretentious, pseudo-intellectual ramblings?  Hammill has been criticized of this.  Or perhaps Gabriel's self-conscious silliness?  Anderson's indecipherable enigmas?  Peart's hymns to Rand?  Water's naked simplicity (even he confesses he does not know how he got away with "Breathe")?  The fact is I get something from all of these lyricists.  My point is that if one wants to critical, one can find something about which to be critical no matter how substantive or hairsplitting the criticism is.

     
    As an example check overall Grunge lyrics, especially of Soundgarden and PJ... and compare to the lasts ones... as they do not being progressive.

    Are you referring to "Fade to Black"?  I hope you've never felt that state of mind expressed in the song, but many people have.  According to Metallica, they've received quite a few letters from fans who've written that the song saved their lives, prevented their imminent suicide.  At the risk of appearing mawkish, it's a haunting and dark, yet ultimately beautiful and triumphant song, aurally evocative of the rollercoaster of emotions one feels in those circumstances.  Musically it is not only beyond reproach but it was a daring move to introduce acoustic guitar, and for that matter space, into a thrash record.  Again, sounds like enlarging musical boundaries to me.


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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2008 at 19:11
    Your opinion as biased towards Metallica is perflectly clear... and asumming that you have to cut my original post to point partially the things that fit with the adition to Metallica to PA, well i prefer to listen to the lyricist that you pointed out... as simply as is.
     
    And also to not responding to you then...


    Edited by zafreth - August 18 2008 at 19:30




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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2008 at 19:34
    Originally posted by zafreth zafreth wrote:

    Your opinion as biased towards Metallica is perflectly clear...

    Preference isn't equivalent to bias.  As I previously pointed out, I like a lot of the other thrash bands yet I don't see much justification to include in the archives.  In the case of Metallica, though, there is a cogent argument--which has been repeated too many times already by many others, myself included--for their inclusion.


     and asumming that you have to cut my original post to point partially the things that fit with the adition to Metallica to PA...

    I didn't do anything deceptive or misleading; I just didn't see the point in reposting the lyrics--they're right on the same page in the thread.  Moreover, my use of ellipses should relieve any suspicion of subterfuge.


    Notice, though, that you (and, to be fair, others too) haven't countered any of our points.  You've simply dismissed them and moved on to your next comment.


    well i prefer to listen to the lyricist that you pointed out... as simply as is.

    That's your choice.  Like I said, I enjoy all of those lyricists more or less.  My point was that it's easier to be critical than to find value in something.

    Not entirely irrelevant is Paul Simon's remark that "the lyrics of pop songs are so banal that if you show a spark of intelligence, they call you a poet.  And if you say you're not a poet, then people think you're putting yourself down.  But the people who call you a poet are people who never read poetry."  Ultimately, and despite certain elitist objections, progressive rock (and for that matter, jazz too) is really just clever pop music.  If you want serious music, then visit classical.net instead.




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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2008 at 19:41
    Cheers WinterLight....Cool




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    Alberto Muņoz View Drop Down
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2008 at 20:20
    Originally posted by Easy Livin Easy Livin wrote:

    Just a reminder that M@x has said no to Metallica being added at all.




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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2008 at 23:31

    Zafreth... you're analyzing Metallica's album on their LYRICS???? So now it's LYRICS what determines what is prog and what's not?

    Ok then. I hope you soon delete YES from the archives. Their gibberish lyrics can't be prog. Wink

    Also, just a quick addition to what Certf1ied said about guitar-player's definition: it's quite the POOREST way to describe music I've EVER read. So, according to that magazine, speed and beat per minute is what defines a genre. Excellent! I guess the very slow songs by Morbid Angel are probably soft-rock then, as they're quite slow. I guess some Paganini works are metal, as they're quite fast. Damn!
     
    What about harmony, melody, type of riffing, structures, etc? Can't those factors (among MANY others) help determine what is thrash and what is not better than "speed"????Confused
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2008 at 02:58
    Originally posted by zafreth zafreth wrote:

    (...) i return to one of the PA guidelines to prog:
     
  • Unusual vocal styles and use of multi-part vocal harmonies. See Magma, Robert Wyatt, and Gentle Giant.
  •  
     
    So Hetfield failes to meet this PA guide.
     
    Note the word "guide" Wink
     
    Don't be misled by elements - it's more important to consider elements as part of the whole, and literally hundreds of bands in the archives do not have particularly adventurous vocal styles.
     
     
    And by the way, you didn't post the original "repetitive arguments" - could you remind me of what they are, please, as I can't find them using the Search engine Big%20smile
     


    Edited by Certif1ed - August 19 2008 at 04:17
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2008 at 07:09
    Let's play the lyrics from debut albums game;
     
    Uriah Heep (Gypsy, from "Very 'Eavy, Very 'Umble);
     
    I was only seventeen
    I fell in love with a gypsy queen
    She told me: "Hold on"
    Her father was the leading man
    Said: "You're not welcome on our land"
    And then as a foe, he told me to go
     
    ...Standard rock lyrics - or would be, if they were any good. "And then as a foe he told me to go", indeed...
     
     
    Yes - (Sweetness from The Yes Album)
     
    She brings the sunshine to a rainy afternoon
    She puts the sweetness in and stirs it with a spoon,
    She watches for my moods and never brings me down
    She puts the sweetness in all around
    She knows just what to say to make me feel so
    good inside
    and when I'm all alone I feel I don't want to hide
    Today she bought me in and told me where she'd been
    She put my mind at rest and put the sweetness in
    I'll
    ask her for some time to go and look around
    She puts the sweetness in all around
    She knows just what to say to make a sunny
    day
    And when I'm all alone I really don't feel that way.
    Tell me how would you feel with no
    world of your own
    and nobody to hold, I just can't see the way
    I'm so glad it's today and you're here.
     
    ...rhyming couplet city... quite nasty love song lyrics - nothing to do with Prog values, and incredibly forced - just to get the rhymes. No poetry at all, and nothing added to the pop song lyrical canon, except, maybe, "stirs it with a spoon". Good grief.
     
     
    Renaissance (Kings and Queens from Renaissance)
     
    Kings and Queens are running wild, lonely for each other
    Princes gallant are no more staying under cover
    Jesters' jokes aren't even funny, poking fun at sorrow
    Lords and Ladies hoard their riches fearful for tomorrow
     
    ...faster than you can say "forced rhymes"... these are hardly artful or Prog - but at least they're in the right ballpark, unlike Uriah Heep or Yes, above. I reckon my 5 year-old daughter could come up with something a bit more poetic, though.
     
     
    Then there's Beggar's Opera - responsible for lyrics that are actually worse than anything Spinal Tap dreamt up... I won't post them here, because a) no lyrics site is dumb enough to post them, and b) they're so awful, I won't be responsible for any curled toenails.
     
    Check out "Silver Phoenix" from "Waters of Change" if you think I'm exaggerating for effect - I'm not. It's that bad. Actually, it's worse...
     
     
     
    So the point about Metallica's lyrics was...?


    Edited by Certif1ed - August 19 2008 at 07:22
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2008 at 10:58
    Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

    Originally posted by zafreth zafreth wrote:

    (...) i return to one of the PA guidelines to prog:
     
  • Unusual vocal styles and use of multi-part vocal harmonies. See Magma, Robert Wyatt, and Gentle Giant.
  •  
     
    So Hetfield failes to meet this PA guide.
     
    Well you guys can't let me go, hahaha LOL 
    Note the word "guide" Wink
     
    Don't be misled by elements - it's more important to consider elements as part of the whole, and literally hundreds of bands in the archives do not have particularly adventurous vocal styles.
     
    Ouch
     
    And by the way, you didn't post the original "repetitive arguments" - could you remind me of what they are, please, as I can't find them using the Search engine Big%20smile
     
    Better you going to find yourself...
     




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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2008 at 11:07
    Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

    Zafreth... you're analyzing Metallica's album on their LYRICS???? So now it's LYRICS what determines what is prog and what's not?

    ... and what problem with that??? and now you going to determinate what's right and what's wrong, with the music... excuse me sir, i think that this forum is a open minded and not an inquisitorial one!!!
     
    Ok then. I hope you soon delete YES from the archives. Their gibberish lyrics can't be prog. Wink
     
    Maybe for you... not for me.
     
    Also, just a quick addition to what Certf1ied said about guitar-player's definition: it's quite the POOREST way to describe music I've EVER read. So, according to that magazine, speed and beat per minute is what defines a genre. Excellent! I guess the very slow songs by Morbid Angel are probably soft-rock then, as they're quite slow. I guess some Paganini works are metal, as they're quite fast. Damn!
     
    Sorry your highness... i'm not that accomplished than you.. i took that factor because i can play  in the guitar quite right those Metallica songs and i mean it... the tablature was very clear and when you took your instrument and obvious you can play guitar... volia... the song speacks of itself.
     
    Also you misleading the point,  i did not say that the Guitar Player have the ultimate truth, so as you. in fact nobody has the ultimate truth.
     
    What about harmony, melody, type of riffing, structures, etc? Can't those factors (among MANY others) help determine what is thrash and what is not better than "speed"????Confused
     
    I didn't say that...
     




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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2008 at 11:14
    Originally posted by WinterLight WinterLight wrote:

    Originally posted by zafreth zafreth wrote:


    Not entirely irrelevant is Paul Simon's remark that "the lyrics of pop songs are so banal that if you show a spark of intelligence, they call you a poet.  And if you say you're not a poet, then people think you're putting yourself down.  But the people who call you a poet are people who never read poetry."  Ultimately, and despite certain elitist objections, progressive rock (and for that matter, jazz too) is really just clever pop music.  If you want serious music, then visit classical.net instead.

    No i didn't say that i want serious music and i agree with this quote.
     







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    Alberto Muņoz View Drop Down
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2008 at 11:18
    Originally posted by WinterLight WinterLight wrote:

    Originally posted by zafreth zafreth wrote:



    No, I don't think it "fits perfectly."  Ultimately, you're providing evidence (under the assumption that your interpretations are correct, which they are not) that undermines your argument.  So, other metal bands drew lyrical inspiration from Metallica?  Sounds as if Metallica were vanguards, as if they were progressing
    music.
    And please tell me what is the "correct" interpretation?? You only said that my interpretation aren't correct but no evidence of what is wrong with my interpretation.
     

     





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    WinterLight View Drop Down
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    Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2008 at 13:14
    Originally posted by zafreth zafreth wrote:

    And please tell me what is the "correct" interpretation?? You only said that my interpretation aren't correct but no evidence of what is wrong with my interpretation.


    Actually, I did give you the correct (and by "correct" I mean the Hetfield's intended meaning, which has been documented elsewhere) to "Ride the Lightning", "Creeping Death", and "Fight Fire with Fire."  I admit that I did not bother explicating "For Whom the Bell Tolls" and "Fade to Black," but I'll do it now.  The former is clearly based on Hemmingway's novel of the same name--Hetfield has written a number of songs based on classic literature.  I hinted at the meaning of "Fade to Black" yet I'll specify it here: it discusses the range of emotions one experiences that eventually lead to suicidal thoughts, and closes (in psychological accuracy) in peaceful resolve once the decision has been made.
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