Posts Tagged ‘metal culture’

A merry and most headbangable International Day of Slayer to all!

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

This is the album you should be playing today

Today, June 6th, is International Day of Slayer. Many dedicated people, among them the fearsome IDoS task force, have worked to make this event the biggest yet.

You may ask, if interested (and damn you if you’re not), what can one do to celebrate and fully enjoy this day? Easy: by incommodating your parents/neighbours/girlfriend/dog all day long, playing your favorite Slayer(s) album(s) at maximum volume.

But I feel that what’s been said is enough, and we shall preach no more. Today, blast yer speakers through the boundaries of hell! NO APPARENT MOTIVE, JUST KILL AND KILL AGAIN!!

Links:

Comprehensive Slayer history @ slayerized.com

Facts you probably didn’t know about Slayer, also @ slayerized.com

mp3 and FLAC bootlegs (in case some of you poseurs don’t have a Slayer album handy for today):

Slayer – Live 1984-1992

Slayer – Violent Brains – Live in Netherlands – May 28th, 1985

Slayer 1985-06-20 Blue Moon Circus, Oberhausen (soundboard – FLAC)

Slayer – Slayer – October 4, 1990 – Rheingoldhalle – Mainz, Germany FLAC:
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4

Slayer – Live Dead (Unreleased)
Part 1
Part 2

Slayer Backing Tracks – bass and drum tracks to the first five albums (Unspeakably cool resource. I think instead of Slayer I’m going to be playing along “Chemical Warfare” all day on the guitar >:-] )

June 6 Slay-in – Hessian meeting at Madison, Wisconsin for IDoS

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

Madison hessians will hold a Slay-In in their local city for this year’s International Day of Slayer. The delightful event will take place at the Library Mall located at one end of State St. (walking to the opposite side of where the Wisconsin State Capitol Building is located).


Ver Hessian meeting for IDoS (June 6, 2009) en un mapa más grande

The event’s organizer will be “Jim Necroslaughter”. His contact e-mail is vilekyle1[@]gmail[.]com. The Slay-in will take place from 10 AM to 4 PM this June 6. If you’re a Wisconsin hessian, be there, and show your support for Slayer and the metal subculture.

The people behind this have also created a Facebook group to let everyone know of any changes.

Needless to say, if you’re assembling a Slay-in in your local city / town for this Most Holy Day of Hessians Everywhere, and want us to help you promote it, use the Hessian contact form to get in touch with us and we’ll ask you the details of the meeting in order to post it here.

We wish the people at Madison the best of lucks for this glorious day!!

Motivation – what makes metal musicians write music?

Saturday, May 9th, 2009

Musicians are basically storytellers, like writers are. In literature, great works are deemed so not just for their superior arrangement of elements (i.e. how “beautiful” or “organized” a certain piece is), but by how well they tell a central message or idea which the artist tries to communicate to his audience.

Putting aside the need to earn a living, I think there are four great motives for writing, at any rate for writing prose. (…) They are:

orwell19841. Sheer egoism. Desire to seem clever, to be talked about, to be remembered after death, to get your own back on the grown-ups who snubbed you in childhood, etc., etc. (…)

2. Æsthetic enthusiasm. Perception of beauty in the external world, or, on the other hand, in words and their right arrangement. (…)

3. Historical impulse. Desire to see things as they are, to find out true facts and store them up for the use of posterity.

4. Political purpose.—Using the word ‘political’ in the widest possible sense. Desire to push the world in a certain direction, to alter other peoples’ idea of the kind of society that they should strive after. Once again, no book is genuinely free from political bias. The opinion that art should have nothing to do with politics is itself a political attitude.

“Why I Write?” by George Orwell

In the above quote, the english author George Orwell indicates that writers have a special urge to fulfill their purpose, which also goes with a kind of appreciation for aesthetics that surpasses the experience of most people. All of that concentrated towards a goal: to express thoughts that go beyond the individual, a concern towards society or the world as a whole.

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New book declares that Metal should be recognized as a significant cultural movement

Friday, April 24th, 2009

Despite its distracting academic jargon, Steve Waksman’s This Ain’t the Summer of Love: Conflict and Crossover in Heavy Metal and Punk (University of California Press) pinpoints an underappreciated truth: While elite critics have championed punk as the vanguard of pop cultural revolution, “the emergence of metal has never been treated as a historically significant event.” Punk struck the intellectuals as properly conceptual and arty; metal just seemed like brutal noise for brutes.

Waksman, who teaches music and American studies at Smith College, retells the history of pop music from 1970 to the present. His topics range from the depth and richness of Motörhead’s pioneering thrash to the genre- (and gender-) bending theatricality of Alice Cooper and David Lee Roth. The two quick-and-noisy musical arts communities, separated by the critics, have mingled and cross-pollinated on their own, helping to create today’s dynamic and delightful world of self-chosen, mix-and-match subcultures and musical identities.

Reason: The Phony War between Punk and Metal

Punk, despite its abrasive nature, was a genre that stayed within the margins of popular music and so it got quickly recognized as a revolution in popular culture. Metal, on the other hand, and despite using templates from pop music, such as its instrumentation, was outside the frame of modern culture from day one, both sonically and ideologically. As its concepts and musicality are simply too “out there” for most modern people to understand, it remains a misunderstood child of its time.

Not for long, though. For Metal, it will take more time than it took for punk to get proper credit as a true artform, but eventually recognition will take place, as its historical importance as the first true counterculture movement of the modern times is too strong to be denied, naysayers be damned.