Go back to the 90s and show them how to record music correctly. Then and only then will i listen to 90s death....unless its death except for their albums with poor quality even
I've been on a big Sabaton kick lately. I never would have guessed I like this band, clean vocals really not my thing, but these guys write catchy songs. The lyrical content and subject matter is interesting too. They clearly know their history.
metal blade bands i like: btbam revocation the ocean black dahlia murder bolt thrower goatwhore behemoth metal blade bands that could definitely be worse: allegaeon cannibal corpse cattle decapitation as i lay dying (lol) flotsam and jetsam's best were on there decent label, it's not like we're talking roadrunner here
You guys are just jealous I got to grow up in the heyday of metal and you got stuck with nu-metal, metalcore and rap metal.
eh the popularity of hip-hop and indie kind of insulates metal people and i dont really mind it. i imagine there were a lot of people who "loved metal" during burnttatertot's day but really were listening to some shit like Wasp it also provides me some entertainment when my friends argue about which indie dork is the best guitar player
i'm bored at work pick one of these things: jason becker doesn't get als jimi hendrix doesn't die chuck schuldiner doesn't die team becker
Was watching some old live Pantera videos on youtube, and got to where they played Domination in Moscow in '91. The next recommended one was Metallica doing Enter Sandman at the same concert. Holy fuck at that crowd. How incredible would it be to play in front of that many people? It seriously looks like there's a million fucking people there.
Origin was really good. RoS got to play like 2 songs because of a local band that wouldnt quit playing and technical difficulties.
I thought The Onion only did satire. WASHINGTON—Saying that any further endeavors of technical skill and imagination were pointless, experts at the Smithsonian Institution reportedly questioned Monday why new art was still being produced after the pinnacle of aesthetic and creative potential was reached in 1990 with Megadeth’s fourth studio album, Rust In Peace. “As the unquestioned apex of the entire history of the creative arts, Rust In Peace is the finest and last necessary piece of human expression—but it’s almost as though current so-called artists are completely oblivious to Dave Mustaine’s blistering, transcendent guitar work on ‘Hangar 18,’” said Smithsonian curator of contemporary art Joanna Marsh, gesturing dismissively in the direction of a massive self-portrait by photorealist Chuck Close, completed in 2000. “It’s not just incredibly disrespectful to keep making art; in many ways, it’s actually quite sad. The deluded people churning out this worthless garbage just can’t seem to reconcile themselves to the fact that their pathetic little sculptures and films and novels and whatnot will always pale in comparison to the brilliantly inspired, heart-stopping tempo shift halfway through ‘Holy Wars… The Punishment Due.’” At press time, a spokesperson from the Centre Pompidou in Paris confirmed the museum’s plans to throw out the contents of an entire wing and leave a massive, pure white space where the track “Lucretia” will be played on loop at full volume. http://www.theonion.com/article/humanity-still-producing-new-art-though-megadeths--50983
that Grave Pleasures song on that Radio Fenriz podcast got me going down the rabbit hole. apparently they formed out of some broken up band called Beastmilk and their album is kind of cool. not metal, though. some kind of scandinavian punk rock. this was the song on the podcast
It sounds like Ghost, U2 and The Cure had a retarded child. Just kidding, it sounds better than all three of those, especially Ghost.