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Topic ClosedShould Metallica be in the forum?

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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 26 2008 at 03:36
Originally posted by LeInsomniac LeInsomniac wrote:

 

I mean, if I approach some friends of mine and say to them: Metallica was/isa progressive-metal band, do you really think I wont be laughed in the face by them (even though they dont listen to much prog-rock, but sure know Metallica?)
 
There's a difference between Prog Rock and Prog Metal - this is important, and T's post in the main forum goes quite a long way into explaining this.
 
With the information that's coming out of the discussions, you should be able to amaze your friends that they hadn't spotted the progressiveness of Metallica before (it's really easy to miss stuff in their early output as it's so dense). That'll put an end to the laughter Wink 
 
Originally posted by LeInsomniac LeInsomniac wrote:

 
(...)
but you're making me doubt my foundations of rock and progressive music.
 
You should ALWAYS question what you think you know. You might be surprised at some of the answers!
 
 
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 26 2008 at 07:07
Yeah, you're right, I read as well T's post, and he made absolute sence; and Mike is right, maybe people here are too much attached to that idea that only "textbook-prog" may be added here, and so was I. Not anymore; I heard AJFA and I had forgotten my rule number one in music: REALLY hear what Im listening. Sure its not full out fledged prog-metal, but I can hear those characteristics that I didn'thad noticed before, and I even don't know why, but for now on, you won't see me against the idea of Metallica being added to PAThumbs%20Up Hope you can get what you want!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 26 2008 at 11:26
^ I think the important thing is to not forget that something doesn't sound like "textbook-prog" once its added. IMO that's what genres should be used for ... to indicate the differences of style. For prog metal this was partially achieved by splitting the genre in three parts ... one of them (Progressive Metal) contains *mostly* bands which are closer to what I would call "textbook-progmetal". I guess that of those three genres Metallica have most in common with the bands listed as "Tech/Extreme Prog Metal", but of course many of the "traditional" prog metal bands also make use of Thrash elements. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2008 at 06:20
I think the greater problem is letting to many bands enter. With this kind of situations and the Prog Related section it can happen something like this: hm that band has a bit of something to do with prog lets ad it, but then the other band is quite similar lets ad it to, oh why not create a genre. And if someone finds out that most music in the world has a tiny bit to do with prog, they'll all be on PA archives.
 
  But I think the solution is simple. From what I understood, old Metallica can be considered more Prog Metal and new Metallica more Trash. If so many people want Metallica to be on PA and in fact they have a couple of progressive albums : add them and then the people who find some albums Progressive will rate those albums high and the people who find soem albums Trash will rate them really low. Not beacause Trash is bad or good but beacause Metallica would be added to PA as a prog band and albums with lack of progressivness would fail in being well rated.
 
 I think bands are added to PA if they fufill the requirements, if most or half their music is Trash and the other is Prog, I think Metallica fans would be a little disapointed because they would se most or half Metallica's albums being rated with 1 or 2 stars because those albums didnt fufill the requirements of PA (all this assuming people dont rate the albums due to their taste but due in fact to PROG)


Edited by fil karada - September 07 2008 at 06:21
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 07 2008 at 06:56
Originally posted by fil karada fil karada wrote:

I think the greater problem is letting to many bands enter. With this kind of situations and the Prog Related section it can happen something like this: hm that band has a bit of something to do with prog lets ad it, but then the other band is quite similar lets ad it to, oh why not create a genre. And if someone finds out that most music in the world has a tiny bit to do with prog, they'll all be on PA archives.
We do not add related to Prog Related bands. It really is as simple as that.
Originally posted by fil karada fil karada wrote:

 
  But I think the solution is simple. From what I understood, old Metallica can be considered more Prog Metal and new Metallica more Trash. If so many people want Metallica to be on PA and in fact they have a couple of progressive albums : add them and then the people who find some albums Progressive will rate those albums high and the people who find soem albums Trash will rate them really low. Not beacause Trash is bad or good but beacause Metallica would be added to PA as a prog band and albums with lack of progressivness would fail in being well rated.
That's Thrash, not Trash. Earlier Metallica albums were more Thrash and more Progressive than their later ones.
 
Originally posted by fil karada fil karada wrote:

 
 I think bands are added to PA if they fufill the requirements, if most or half their music is Trash and the other is Prog, I think Metallica fans would be a little disapointed because they would se most or half Metallica's albums being rated with 1 or 2 stars because those albums didnt fufill the requirements of PA (all this assuming people dont rate the albums due to their taste but due in fact to PROG)
That is always a risk - they of course will review and rate the albums based upon their own judgement and criteria, but this is also true of Genesis albums like Invisible Touch and We Can't Dance.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2008 at 02:29

I've found an article that gives the strongest possible argument for Metallica as not only Prog-Related, but Prog Metal (and gives the same argument for Iron Maiden, interestingly!); http://headbangersblog.mtv.com/2008/02/18/guest-blog-dream-theater-drummer-mike-portnoy-pledges-allegiance-to-one-nation-under-prog/

The paragraph in question is a little way down and reads;
 
"For just a little while there, in the early ’90s, Dream Theater seemed to be the posterboys for a whole new wave of PROG. But shhh… I’ll let you in on a little secret: we weren’t the first post-metal band to perform this hybrid of styles!! As much as I love taking the credit for combining prog and metal (like the man who first decided to put peanut butter and jelly together), if you look closely at metal circa 1985, Iron Maiden were playing 13 minute epic songs like “Rime Of The Ancient Mariner” and covering Jethro Tull, Metallica were playing long songs with odd time signatures and abrupt meter changes — and so were bands like Helloween, Mercyful Fate, King Diamond and Fates Warning. Then, there were bands like Queensryche, which was combining the power of Judas Priest with the theatrics of Queen."
 
 
...although maybe we don't want to consider Helloween too seriously...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2008 at 04:33
...So Cert, in reality how long do you expect the debate to last? Ten out of ten for tenacityThumbs%20Up
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2008 at 04:42
Ah yes, Mike Portnoy. The guy who thinks Lamb of God is the best metal band out there (besides Dream Theater, of course)... Dead
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2008 at 05:05
I love Lamb of God ... but currently I'd prefer Nevermore for the title of "best metal band".Clap
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2008 at 05:49
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

I love Lamb of God ... but currently I'd prefer  Nevermorefor the title of "best metal band".Clap
(Off topic content warning).

Same for me, my absolute favorite metal band right now, a band that has pushed boundaries without ever being a full on prog metal band, has to be pretty awesome.

I also like Lamb Of God and, but I can understand why some people don't like it.... although I don't understand the bashing of LoG in that post. People are free to like it, and even if you don't like LoG, it's undeniable they are band that were different enough to stand out from the crowd.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2008 at 07:52
I quite like LoG, but I think they wear their influences a bit strongly ontheir sleeves.
 
Nevermore are quite cool - pity they nicked their album title from the Magic Mushroom Band http://www.discogs.com/release/448626 Tongue
 
 
The debate has shifted - it's no longer IF, it's WHERE - and personally, I could care a lot more about labels, so no real debate from me - just discussion now.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2008 at 07:56
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

I've found an article that gives the strongest possible argument for Metallica as not only Prog-Related, but Prog Metal (and gives the same argument for Iron Maiden, interestingly!); http://headbangersblog.mtv.com/2008/02/18/guest-blog-dream-theater-drummer-mike-portnoy-pledges-allegiance-to-one-nation-under-prog/

The paragraph in question is a little way down and reads;
 
"For just a little while there, in the early ’90s, Dream Theater seemed to be the posterboys for a whole new wave of PROG. But shhh… I’ll let you in on a little secret: we weren’t the first post-metal band to perform this hybrid of styles!! As much as I love taking the credit for combining prog and metal (like the man who first decided to put peanut butter and jelly together), if you look closely at metal circa 1985, Iron Maiden were playing 13 minute epic songs like “Rime Of The Ancient Mariner” and covering Jethro Tull, Metallica were playing long songs with odd time signatures and abrupt meter changes — and so were bands like Helloween, Mercyful Fate, King Diamond and Fates Warning. Then, there were bands like Queensryche, which was combining the power of Judas Priest with the theatrics of Queen."
 
 
...although maybe we don't want to consider Helloween too seriously...


What the hell? "Post metal?Confused And Helloween? Yeah, let's not take them too seriously in this context either, things will get confusing if we doConfused

Anyway....

Well I wont argue with Metallica being a major influence on Metallica... but is it really an argument for Metallica being prog metal (which I believe they were) ? I musn't be reading the interview the same way you did.
Do we have a piece of the definition of prog metal here with this paragraph? Hmmmm....


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2008 at 08:06
I can see Cert and MikeEnRegalia viewing this thread... stop keeping me in suspense and post a replyLOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2008 at 08:34
In this case, consensus is probably the strongest argument;
 
Although I'm straw-manning here, which is something I disapprove of, and leads to different people having different views of what the term "Post Metal" means, for example - it is nevertheless widely held that Dream Theater were the first Progressive Metal band (with options given to Queensryche and Fates Warning).
 
Portnoy is acknowledging that this really is not the case - and that's the point here. The fact he mentioned Maiden and Metallica was convenient, really. The fact he also mentioned Helloween was a bit of a credibility blow, but nevertheless, that is detail, and Portnoy is a member of Dream Theater - even if he is just the drummer.
 
/edits on second thoughts, Helloween's first album, "Walls of Jericho" is an entirely different animal to their later Mickey Mouse "Keeper of the 7 Keys" nonsense - Kai Hansen had some amazing ideas, including the Classically-styled shifting pedal points of high-speed "thrashed" rhythm guitar with the Iron Maiden style twin leads over the top. 
 
If you think about it, bands like DragonForce are just a modern interpretation of that album, which is now 22-3 years old, and revolutionary at the time (like so many metal albums from that period): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onFoZS5gdx0. That's probably what Portnoy was getting at.
 
 
The point is that Dream Theater weren't first to use their underlying compositional approach, and the band know it. That doesn't lessen their place in history any more than it lessens King Crimon's, it simply means that historians need to look elsewhere, because the history books have been re-written by people who don't know the history or understand the music.
 
King Crimson, of course, were not the first Progressive Rock band, and ITCOTCK is a landmark, rather than the first Prog album - but an important and significant landmark it remains. Bands such as Spooky Tooth don't currently get the credit they deserve (except on Wikipedia, where they're rightly listed as a Progressive Rock band), but they were all over the original Progressive (rock) Music scene - and so it goes on.
 
Where does it stop?
 
Well, a working definition will help this, because much "Proto-Prog" is amazingly close to the real thing - closer, in some cases, than the supposed bona fide article. It's quite useful that there is almost nothing prior to 1967 that can be considered Progressive Rock, but there is no such clear date for Metal because there are very few complete histories of the genre: 
 
Those that exist tend to focus on either the most popular/obvious bands or the author's favourites - or both - leaving out many that made significant contributions to the development of the genre.
 
Like I said, it's no big deal to me how Metallica are categorised. It's what they actually did that's more important, and that was to re-invent Heavy Metal (more than once) and bring it into the heart of the mainstream - something no other band managed - and without significant airplay until THAT video, which was hardly an all-guns-blazing attempt at a hit single, even if it was all-guns-blazing.
 
 
Here's another article, and words from another drummer;
 
 
"Justice obviously was a huge record for us. ... We took the Ride the Lightning and Master of Puppets concept as far as we could take it," drummer Lars Ulrich reflected. "There was no place else to go with the progressive, nutty, sideways side of Metallica, and I'm so proud of the fact that, in some way, that album is kind of the epitome of that progressive side of us up through the '80s."
 
 


Edited by Certif1ed - September 08 2008 at 09:10
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2008 at 08:54
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

 
Nevermore are quite cool - pity they nicked their album title from the Magic Mushroom Band http://www.discogs.com/release/448626 Tongue
 who in turn nicked it from Timothy Leary... Wink
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2008 at 08:59
^ wow, that was fast!LOL

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

I quite like LoG, but I think they wear their influences a bit strongly ontheir sleeves.
 
Nevermore are quite cool - pity they nicked their album title from the Magic Mushroom Band http://www.discogs.com/release/448626 Tongue
 
 
The debate has shifted - it's no longer IF, it's WHERE - and personally, I could care a lot more about labels, so no real debate from me - just discussion now.


I think that maybe both named their album after the book by Timothy Leary:

http://www.amazon.com/Politics-Ecstasy-Leary-Timothy/dp/1579510310

Smile


Edited by MikeEnRegalia - September 08 2008 at 09:00
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2008 at 09:20
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ wow, that was fast!LOL

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

I quite like LoG, but I think they wear their influences a bit strongly ontheir sleeves.
 
Nevermore are quite cool - pity they nicked their album title from the Magic Mushroom Band http://www.discogs.com/release/448626 Tongue
 
 
The debate has shifted - it's no longer IF, it's WHERE - and personally, I could care a lot more about labels, so no real debate from me - just discussion now.


I think that maybe both named their album after the book by Timothy Leary:

http://www.amazon.com/Politics-Ecstasy-Leary-Timothy/dp/1579510310

Smile


Yes, I believe that is indeed what the album is named after.

Hehe, I wonder if the Nevermore appreciation thread is still around... I'll have a look.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2008 at 09:52
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

I've found an article that gives the strongest possible argument for Metallica as not only Prog-Related, but Prog Metal (and gives the same argument for Iron Maiden, interestingly!); http://headbangersblog.mtv.com/2008/02/18/guest-blog-dream-theater-drummer-mike-portnoy-pledges-allegiance-to-one-nation-under-prog/

The paragraph in question is a little way down and reads;
 
"For just a little while there, in the early ’90s, Dream Theater seemed to be the posterboys for a whole new wave of PROG. But shhh… I’ll let you in on a little secret: we weren’t the first post-metal band to perform this hybrid of styles!! As much as I love taking the credit for combining prog and metal (like the man who first decided to put peanut butter and jelly together), if you look closely at metal circa 1985, Iron Maiden were playing 13 minute epic songs like “Rime Of The Ancient Mariner” and covering Jethro Tull, Metallica were playing long songs with odd time signatures and abrupt meter changes — and so were bands like Helloween, Mercyful Fate, King Diamond and Fates Warning. Then, there were bands like Queensryche, which was combining the power of Judas Priest with the theatrics of Queen."
 
 
...although maybe we don't want to consider Helloween too seriously...



Wow ... one minute, please. I'm currently at work and I hate to see how discussion proceeds and I don't have the time to participate. So here are a few short comments from the office:

About the pink bits you highlighted:

a) I basically agree with what he's saying there. However, we should keep in mind that the songs which he's talking about are scattered over these artists' albums, which means that even if those songs can be called "prog" (which I agree to and am doing on my website which allows to rate/tag in such detail) ... even if that is the case then the full albums show a different picture, as they also contain many "regular" songs.

b) Notice that he mentions "odd time signatures" and "abrupt meter changes" as one of the signature elements.Smile

I'm quite pleased with the bands he lists ... most of them are strong candidates for prog-related metal, even Fates Warning if you only consider their pre-Perfect Symmetry phase. I know that you would rather see some of those bands as fully fledged prog, but I simply think that they had too many non-prog tracks on their albums.Embarrassed


Edited by MikeEnRegalia - September 08 2008 at 11:32
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2008 at 11:03
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

I've found an article that gives the strongest possible argument for Metallica as not only Prog-Related, but Prog Metal (and gives the same argument for Iron Maiden, interestingly!); http://headbangersblog.mtv.com/2008/02/18/guest-blog-dream-theater-drummer-mike-portnoy-pledges-allegiance-to-one-nation-under-prog/

The paragraph in question is a little way down and reads;
 
"For just a little while there, in the early ’90s, Dream Theater seemed to be the posterboys for a whole new wave of PROG. But shhh… I’ll let you in on a little secret: we weren’t the first post-metal band to perform this hybrid of styles!! As much as I love taking the credit for combining prog and metal (like the man who first decided to put peanut butter and jelly together), if you look closely at metal circa 1985, Iron Maiden were playing 13 minute epic songs like “Rime Of The Ancient Mariner” and covering Jethro Tull, Metallica were playing long songs with odd time signatures and abrupt meter changes — and so were bands like Helloween, Mercyful Fate, King Diamond and Fates Warning. Then, there were bands like Queensryche, which was combining the power of Judas Priest with the theatrics of Queen."
 
 
...although maybe we don't want to consider Helloween too seriously...
 
Cert may i ask something?? thanks. what are the goal to put Metallica in PA?, What are your motivations to add Metallica in PA, if are any other pages that you can write your thoughts or reviews??
 
Do not understand why are you so eager in this???




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 08 2008 at 11:06
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

 
King Crimson, of course, were not the first Progressive Rock band, and ITCOTCK is a landmark, rather than the first Prog album - but an important and significant landmark it remains. Bands such as Spooky Tooth don't currently get the credit they deserve (except on Wikipedia, where they're rightly listed as a Progressive Rock band), but they were all over the original Progressive (rock) Music scene - and so it goes on.
 
 
 
Yeah, Spooky Tooth a very good band , they deserve to be in PA.




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