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lördag 10 mars 2018

10 Bands & Albums That Defined The Late 2000's Metal Scene For Me

Lately I've been on a nostalgia binge, listening to some specific bands from my late teens back in the years 2007-2009. The thing with my music listening is that I'm a "genre dweller" - I get in mood for a specific genre which I will listen to for a few months straight. I don't know why that is, but it's how my musical mind and cravings work since forever.

So why the late 2000's? It was a very special time with many unique experiences, dark as colorful ones. Without diving too deep into details, let's just say I was in my best teen years (17-19), playing in a band, havings fun with friends, seeing girls, playing video games and, of course, listening to a lot of metal. Naturally some bands just left a deeper mark than others, seeing as my music often works as a soundtrack for life.

This time period was also where I had finally left my comfort zone. Back in 2006 I was what I call an "ass-tight conservative metalhead", meaning I only listened to specific metal and/or bands. My thing was strictly sticking to 80's metal only. Mostly because it was, and still is, the number one metal sound I love and consume.

Another thing, however, was my distaste for modern metal during the 2000's. I just thought there were too many whiny emo bands and inseparable metalcore bands at that time. I ended up judging the entire metal scene for being that way. Around 2007 things started to change for me as some modern bands started to go more "old school" or "real metal". It opened my mind up to new bands and music that I had previously ditched.

With that said, here are 10 bands that defined the late 2000's for me, specifically the years 2007-2009, and what albums that I first discovered and/or loved the most by these bands respectively. Let's go!


  • Machine Head
Album: The Blackening

As far as I can recall, Machine Head was probably the first modern metal band to help me break out of my conservative view on metal music. The funny thing about it, however, was that it wasn't their then-new album The Blackening that did it - it was their debut album Burn My Eyes. My love for Pantera at the time made me dig into the early Machine Head stuff, which later led me to their newer material.

My buddy Big D played The Blackening back at his place when I visited at some point and I noticed the thrashy riffing and great soloing. After that, I was hooked. The band as a whole has been kind of hit-or-miss for me, as I really can't stand their nu metal phase, but their early as well as latter day stuff is definitely something I'm a fan of.


  • Cavalera Conspiracy
Album: Inflikted

I have fond memories of this project and release getting unleashed upon all of us. The much anticipated reunion between the Cavalera brothers was probably one of the biggest hypes of 2008. My buddy Big D and I, who were huge Cavalera-era Sepultura fans, were ecstatic about it. When the album's debut single "Sanctuary" dropped, I remember hitting play for the first time and we just lost our shit.

These days I can feel like this particular album, or even the project as a whole, maybe wasn't as good as I initially thought it was. The years haven't been as kind to it as it's been to lots of other releases from that era. Inflikted and Soulfly's Conquer were the last "Max Cavalera albums" I truly enjoyed. Ironically, however, the modern Sepultura has surpassed Max's projects during this decade, which is something I never thought would happen back in 2008.


  • DragonForce
Album: Ultra Beatdown

I was probably one of very few people who never got into the whole Guitar Hero craze that strongly defined the mid-to-late 2000's. Nonetheless did I know DragonForce from that particular franchise. I don't recall much regarding of what I initially thought about them, but when I discovered the Ultra Beatdown in early 2009 I really fell for the video game-esque album art. I was hooked!

Sure, there were some cheese, wankery and other weird stuff going on in DragonForce's music at the time, but I kind of took a liking to their crazy-sounding Nintendo metal. I'm normally not a fan of power metal (except for Helloween), but something just works very well with DF for me. It's like a beam of pure energy that hits you up and gives you a kick. These days I am a pretty big fan of DF and I even like their current singer even more. The Ultra Beatdown, however, kind of remains a favorite album for me. Whether it's nostalgia speaking or not, I'm not quite sure of.


  • Chimaira
Album: The Infection

I remember hearing Chimaira a few times throughout the mid-2000's as they were somewhat "more metal" than other bands in their genre. I agreed. It wasn't before 2009, however, when the band released their somewhat conflicting album The Infection that I truly took a liking to them. I remember playing the zombie game Left 4 Dead a lot at the time and I thought the album cover reminded me of the game (the music fitted well with the game as well).

I know some fans don't like this album all that much while others love it. It was too slow, too doomy and whatever for some people, but that's what I personally love about it. For me it's just the ultimate Chimaira album, even though I love most of their stuff except for the debut and, to some extent, also the last album Mark Hunter did with all-new members. A very heavy but also sadly overlooked/underrated band within the genre and scene at the time.


  • Strapping Young Lad
Album: Alien

I loved few, if any, modern bands of the mid-2000's as much as I loved SYL. The extreme metal machine by mastermind Devin Townsend had it all - a mix of brutality, melody, atmosphere and humour. I sadly can't recall how I got into the band, but I suppose it was either through my buddy Big D or through Sweden Rock Magazine. When I first listened to Alien, which I'm fairly certain was the first album I heard, I just loved how crushing it sounded.

Throughout the years since I have continued to listen to this band a lot, as well as Devin Townsend's other endeavours. These days I tend to fancy their 1997 album City above all others, but SYL's 2000's material is still some of my favorite brutal metal of all time. It's just a shame that Devin's got bad feelings and memories about that time period in his life, as I think none of his other projects have been quite as kick-ass.


  • Trivium
Album: Shogun

When Trivium burst out on the scene with their 2005 album Ascendancy, I was naturally one of those people who hated it (because I heard "Dying In Your Arms" and thought they were emo af). When I went to see Iron Maiden live in 2006 they had Trivium as their support act. Needless to say I wasn't exactly thrilled about it. Unbeknownst to me, however, they had grown their hair out and just released The Crusade, from which album they mostly picked the songs off.

My concert experience with Trivium changed my mind and I found The Crusade to be quite a decent album, even though the Metallica plagiarism was painfully obvious. But when Shogun later dropped in 2008, things really hit the fan. The album was Trivum going for their equivalent to Machine Head's The Blackening, except with a possibly even better end result. I still love that album to this day and I just find it sad that none of their subsequent albums haven't been nearly as good in my opinion.


  • Megadeth
Album: United Abominations

I was a huge Megadeth since my earliest days of becoming a metalhead but I always tended to stick to their earliest albums (Peace Sells ... But Who's Buying? always being the great favorite). Some of Megadeth's albums, however, always sounded rather mediocre to me, with their late 90's and early 2000's albums coming to mind in particular. The System Has Failed showed great promise but I always felt that Dave wasn't quite "there" yet. Something was still missing.

When United Abominations was coming out I remember being extremely hyped because the cover art looked kick-ass. I also remember hearing "Sleepwalker" some time before the album dropped, solidifying my hype as the much needed return-to-form for the band. The album was everything I wished for. The only downside was the unnecessary re-recording of "A Tout Le Monde". When the band followed up with Endgame in 2009 it was even cooler, but after that they would descend into mediocrity once more.


  • Lamb of God
Album: Wrath

My buddy Alex got me into LoG back in 2008 because he was a big fan of Chris Adler's drumming style (which kind of makes the band in some ways). Since I was listening to a lot of Pantera at the time, the style of LoG's music was a natural fit for me. I remember being kind of lukewarm towards the 2006 effort Sacrament, which I still am to this day, but I really liked 2004's Ashes Of The Wake. Shortly after I started listening to the band, however, they announced Wrath which got me hyped.

I remember the album being marketed as being more "raw" and very aggressive (duh), which I didn't object against. I had a rough time the last few weeks before it dropped, being so hyped it drove me nuts. When the album finally landed on the shelf I went and bought it, played it and got my ass kicked. It became my favorite LoG album and it's managed to uphold that title ever since (VII: Sturm Und Drang came close, though).


  • Devin Townsend Project
Album: Addicted

After listening to SYL for a few years I naturally followed Devin Townsend into his next project, which happened to be his as-of-now defunct Devin Townsend Project. I remember the project initially being intended for four different releases, with Ki being the first and later followed by Addicted, both in 2009. The former never did much for me. I know a lot of people love it, including by buddy Big D, but it's always been too mellow and too instrumental for my taste.

Addicted was a whole nother story. I remember my first few times listening to it, thinking about how it sounded as if SYL had become a pop band. I love 80's pop music and to my ears, Devin's music has always had some strange 80's "undertones" to it. I fell in love with the album except for one or two songs, but the good ones were really great. It remained my favorite DTP release until 2016's Transcendence, which is one of Devin's top-3 most fantastic outputs in my opinion.


  • Dethklok
Album: Dethalbum II

It took me a long time before checking out Metalocalypse. By the time Dethalbum II arrived, I had only watched whatever scenes my buddy Big D had showed me. For two years, however, he had tried to get me into 2007's The Dethalbum but to little avail. I just didn't get the fuzz or like its production style/sound. The successor sounded a whole lot better production-wise and the songs appealed to me a whole lot more.

In a way I find my relationship to Dethklok's music a bit ironic. I didn't like the first album which so many people hyped and praised. The second album seemed to be not as well-embraced, but it was the one I got completely hooked to. Then a few years later the third album arrived, by which time I had watched the show dedicatedly, and I didn't really like that one either (the drums and guitars sounded thin and farty af). The third album also seemed to be more loved than the second one to me. For me, however, nothing comes close to Dethalbum II and it was a damn fine album in my opinion.

söndag 21 februari 2016

Top-10 Best NWoAHM / Metalcore / 2000's Metal Bands

YO:es! I hope y'all doin' alright. I was going through a regular music listening session and thought I'd a list of my ten favorite NWoAHM (New Wave of American Heavy Metal) bands since I've never done that. Simple as that. Now, for those of y'all who don't know, the NWoAHM movement was the metal wave that came in the early 2000's, a.k.a. metalcore (as most people know it) and overall modern and newer metal bands.

These likes will be from the 2000-2010 scene (as there's a huge movement of so called Deathcore going on these days, rather than ol' metalcore), and it does NOT necessarily have to come from the USA. I'm not really a huge fan of the genre as whole compared to, let's say death metal, but there are a bunch of bands that are pretty fuckin' rad, so check this list out, alright?!

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10. The Browning


First one out to kick off this list is The Browning. They're an English band, at least I believe so (not 100 % sure) and they currently have two albums under their belt. Besides having a rather...shitty name, which could be easy to make fun of for elitists, they're pretty unique as far as their sound goes: combining electronic music with groovy death metal stuff. They're even signed to the old death metal label Earache.

Album(s) to check out: all of them (pretty much the same deal).



9. Austrian Death Machine

Some of you might say, "what? An Austrian industrial, ehm, death metal band?", but no. As some others of you probably know, this is Tim Lambesis (of As I Lay Dying fame) side project based around all the amazing quotes and movies of Arnold Schwarzenegger. The sound is pretty laden with thrash, but is probably still more accurately described as thrashy metalcore for the purists. I placed 'em as number nine since the music is not actually THAT good or original, but the Arnold Schwarzenegger themes are fucking awesome and will sure trigger some laughing. This is now on hold though, since the bad boy ex-christian Timmy tried to kill his wife and now most likely receives lots of wood in prison.

Album(s) to check out: "Total Brutal" for music, "Double Brutal" for the themes.



8. Mutiny Within

I like to relate this band's situation to that of all the many glam bands in 1990, just when grunge was right around the corner. These boys unleashed their debut in 2010 just as metalcore was more or less on a steady decline, and the current and still strong retro wave of metal was picking up speed. I loved their self-titled debut and its progressive influences along with some 80's style shredding and power metal vocals.

Unfortunately, they probably came too late and went by mostly unnoticed. They also had shitloads of label troubles and got dropped, disbanded, reformed, put out another album, but I just don't quite like it. It's missing all the essential cores that the debut has, so these days, after hearing how their sophomore album turned out, Mutiny Within could've just remained disbanded for me and left that one debut album to its legacy.

Album(s) to check out: S/T (Mutiny Within)



7. Machine Head

It's up for debate whether or not they should be included or not. They were around in the 90's already, and were well known back then already as well. While I also like their 90's stuff more, they still put out some great albums later on as well, and one of those albums played a very large role in the metalcore movement in the late 00's. While they always had a signature sound, they also constantly progresses and do something new, for better or worse. Personally, I just don't think they ever matched their hardcore-furious groove metal they put out in the 90's, but their post-90's stuff goes from some rather bad to some pretty awesome albums anyway.

Album(s) to check out: "The Blackening", "Burn My Eyes" (90's album, though)



6. God Forbid

A massively underrated band of the 2000's metal scene. God Forbid is another band that was really good, melodic, heavy and aggressive in a nice mix. Their use of multi-vocals also made them sound a bit like Mastodon, which in book is a very cool thing. I would rate them higher than Trivium judging by the albums mentioned below, but unfortunately God Forbid made some not-nearly-as-good albums early on in their career.

Album(s) to check out: "Gone Forever", "Earthsblood", "Equilibrium".



5. Trivium

This band is probably the closest thing to a Metallica type-band in this bunch. They share several similarities as far as music, vocals and album progression goes. Their fan base is pretty torn apart because of this, though maybe in even more camps than Metallica's fan base. Some fans love their early stuff where they looked emo, some people like their middle stuff which was a lot thrashier, and some like their more recent stuff.

I'm not really a regular fan of theirs - I love their thrash stuff, but I do in fact like one of their more recent works a lot as well, though most fans bash it as their shittiest album. I just think that they can be really fucking good when they head into certain styles of metal, but not everything they've done has suited my taste. Yet, their good stuff is so good it puts 'em in the top-5 on my list.

Album(s) to check out: "Shogun", "The Crusade", "Vengeance Falls".



4. Mastodon

Just a bit like Trivium, Mastodon tend to be a roller-coaster when it comes to music. While I still dislike to describe them as that, because it's not really true, I have to admit that I'm less fond/have a harder time listening to some of their stuff than others. Their earlier stuff, particularly their debut, are not-as-interesting to me as their later stuff. While their most recent stuff is a lot more commercial though, I still fucking like it a lot. But Mastodon's finest work is to be found in their middle era.

Album(s) to check out: "Crack The Skye", "The Hunter", "Leviathan".



3. Lamb of God


These guys don't really need a further explanation. If you don't know, then you're either just a fucking poseur or very late to the party.

Album(s) to check out: "Wrath", "VII: Sturm Und Drang", "As The Palaces Burn".



2. DevilDriver

Out of the bands in this list, this one took the longest for me to "understand". I had some hard times getting into their music before most of the other bands, but it wasn't because it was bad or weird or anything. Now I do know why that was, however. DD has this unique kind of guitar vibe/sound that is pretty special. It really forms their sound to what it is, and I just simply wasn't familiar with anything quite like it before, so I didn't understand their music.

Like so many other bands, though, DD has a fan base where people tend to bash some of their more recent albums, while really favoring their early stuff. I think they're actually fucking good all-around - they progress constantly, but it's always DD and at least some interesting stuff to be found on albums. Guitar-wise, when it comes to harmonic shit, DD takes the cream of the crop in this list. I just love their more clean and ballad-esque stuff.

Album(s) to check out: "The Fury Of Our Maker's Hand", "Pray For Villains", "Winter Kills".



1. Chimaira

And so comes #1 - Chimaira, my favorite band of the genre known as either metalcore or NWoAHM. What I truly love about these guys is the bad-ass sound they've got goin' on, and the riffing is fucking hard, sometimes fast and just killer most of the times. The drumming, particularly that of Andols Herrick, is fucking awesome as well - he knows exactly how to put in all the good shite.

The most important thing that makes Chimaira extra special for me is their electronic department. They use quite a lot of atmospheric electronic effects and sounds to enhance their sound, and it also truly pays off. Compared to so many other bands in the genre, it just adds so much more to the music, and that's all what I'm here for. Chimaira is the Faith No More or Type O Negative or Samael or whatever of metalcore to me. I'm not gonna expand on it any further, but they're just exactly my kind of thing.

Album(s) to check out: "The Infection", "Chimaira", "The Impossibility Of Reason".



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BONUS! Worthy of mention but didn't make the list:

  • Himsa
Don't know 'em good enough. Only liked their last album so far, but that is a rather good one though.


  • Bleed The Sky
Their debut is a solid album but I didn't like their second and last one at all. Also, they sound a bit too much like a Chimaira clone, which is what partially make their debut likable to me.


  • Bleeding Through
I actually like these guys quite a lot, but I simply don't have a good enough look into all of their albums and stuff, so I can't do an honest judgment as a whole. Killer goth vibe to groovy hardcore metal!


  • DragonForce
Well, I love their music to be honest, which might come as a surprise to many, "how can anyone like DragonForce?". There are those of us who actually do. However, as they play extreme power metal, I didn't really think the fitted in amongst these other bands, so I decided not to include them. Otherwise they would get a rather high position on this list, but they're too different from the rest of these "hardcore metal" bands, so they will have to do with a "worthy of mention". They certainly are.


  • Amon Amarth
 Just like the case with DragonForce, these fellow kinsmen of mine or one of the hugest metal bands of the last and current decade, and I fucking love 'em too. They've got some of the truly most epic songs ever. But while they're often put together with the other bands in this list, they are in fact not metalcore (or whatever) but melodic death metal, so because of that fact I won't place them on this particular list, other than giving them a worthy mention.

fredag 11 december 2015

Metal fans: why are they all douchebags?

For many years I have wondered why metalheads are like they are. I mean, has it ever occurred to anyone else that most metal fans seem to be impossible do deal with in one way or another? It certainly has to me. While I personally don't think there is anything better than metal music, I certainly cannot fucking stand its fans.

I'm 25 years old and I have been a fan of metal music since I was a small kid (metalhead parents ftw), but you know, I've really been it since I was 12 - that's when I really got an interest in music and a the most notable step out of childhood and into teenage angst. Ever since then, for 13 years, I have met countless metalheads through my different schools, friend circles, concerts, and most notably through my old band. Among all those countless metal fans I ever met throughout the years, I can probably count on just one hand how many I could stand being around for more than a minute or two. Don't fucking ask me why that is.

I'm going to make sort of a list of which types of metalheads that I found the most annoying throughout the years so far, just to clarity which type they are and what the fuck the problem is with them.

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1. Emos

Remember these kids? I certainly do, unfortunately. What is fortunate about them though is that they're mostly gone these days! Being 15 in 2005, I was in the middle of the fucking trend when basically everyone was supposed to be a fucking depressed wreck. Since when was it ever "cool" to feel sad and ill. I mean, just that is enough to prove how fucking stupid that movement was.

I lived in a medium size Swedish city at the time where the emo(tional) scene was really blooming. Walking in my school corridors and around town, there were always a lot of emos to be spotted. They even had this fucking kiosk boutique which they always hanged outside. It was fucking annoying seeing their black fringes everywhere, but what was the most annoying thing about them was how fucking poser they were.

Now, I am a person who look at depression seriously, viewing it as an illness which can most certainly be devastating for the subject. It's not a thing to joke around about or to use as a (posed) lifestyle choice. Yet, most of these fucking kids were cutting their arms and shit. I remember briefly befriending a few of the local emos, all of which were rather middle class or upper middle class kids without any troubles whatsoever. They even admitted to me that the arm cutting was just for show - a pose.

I was so fucking angry and disgusted by these morons. I came from a really rough fucking background with alcoholic and abusive parents, no money, often no food, and so on, but I never sat down, whining and cutting my wrists like a wimp. Yet these kids, who had all I had not, were posing as "depressed and suicidal" teens. Kiss my ass. I'm so fucking glad this trend mostly died out. Now we can (easier) tend to the real depressed people who needs the help and attention.

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2. Posers

Maybe a rather obvious choice, but who doesn't hate pose(u)rs, right? At least I do. Now, let's just be clear on this matter: a poser according to me (and this article) is not a glam fan. Sure, a glam fan can and probably will pose before a camera more than a thrash fan would. However, that is not how I view this shit, like "a glam poser in the eyes of a thrasher". No, thinking like that is also posing in a way. Real posing to me is a person who pose as a metal fan, but does not really listen to or like the music in reality.

Throughout the years I've met a through people like this. It's like, "wow dude, you're a metalhead, right? Right?!". I'm just thinking that if they were real metal fans, they would most certainly know it by my hair, band shirts, battle jacket, leather jacket, and other clothing choices. It's just so fucking obvious some people pretend to like the same music as you, and I just wonder why, what's the point of it?

I'm not the kinda guy who cared whether or not you're a metalhead just like me. Most of my friends are not. It's just so fucking unnecessary to pretend that you like or are something you're not, just to impress (or whatever) on someone else.

I knew a guy some years ago who completely lacked any kind of self-respect, as well as respect for others.
 This guy was what you call a "real attention whore". He would say, do or pretend being anything just to be accepted by other people (often full friend circles of different stereotypes). If he got into these circles, then he would slowly start putting people "in their places", often pretending being waaay smarter than he actually was. In fact, he was not very educated in the matters he pretended being educated in at all. He could also not take it when you put him in his right place, that is telling him his pretentious act is wrong and correct his claims.

Bottom line of all this is: the particular guy I knew for a while, while not the only poser I've met, was the worst example I've ever met. I honestly think he adapted to around 10 different stereotypes, posing as a fan of each one. In a year, he could go between being a hip-hop fan to being a metalhead to being a rich boy-poser to different political sympathizers, and so on. At the end of the day, the guy always loses his friends over and over. No wonder.

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3. Elitists

The last, worst, and definitely most annoying category of douchebag metal fans I know. I also call them "conservative cunts in metal", because that's exactly what they are. Now, let's clear about this once and for all - by conservative in this sense, I don't mean metal fans with any political affiliation, but with solid conservative opinions of the music. Let me give you an example: people who only listen to "trve metal", or "trve kvlt" and all that shit, and think everything else is "false" or "poseur". Now you think "black metal fans", I suppose, but that's not really the right group of metal fans to target in this matter.

As a fan of pretty much all styles of metal besides nu metal, I have seen the ignorance among fans of all styles. People in metal tend to be fucking closed-minded most of the time. Either they just listen to like thrash or death metal, possibly both sometimes, and dis everything else apart from like Iron Maiden and Judas Priest. An example could be: "Lamb of God is fucking gay", and vice versa. I think you get the drift. I've seen this shit over and over. I mean, I can understand if a metalhead has time enough to spend to hate on Justin Bieber or whatever, but why hate metal within metal?

To me, metal music of all kinds except for nu metal are just to similar to hate on one specific sub genre. I mean, it all comes from the same original stew of likes such as Black Sabbath and Deep Purple, just that they developed over time and came with new generations. For instance, fans of 80's metal has always had a lot of hate to spread on New Wave of American Heavy Metal (2000's metal) bands, and them back on fans of the old origin styles. I just don't fucking get it. How can one like, let's say Pantera, but not like a band like Chimaira then? This fucking posing within metal is ridiculous.

Most of the metal fans I ever met were of this kind. Elitist fucking douchebags. We would discuss bands like Slayer and Danzig and have a great time, then all of a sudden I maybe ask if they like Faith No More and they lose their fucking minds. I mean, it's unbelievable how some people's attitude takes a turn because you mention liking a band that is not "80's, trve, good", or whatever. After that, you are fucking marked by them as an unworthy metal fan, and they (perhaps unintentionally) start treating you, as a friend, thereafter as well.

So many people that, in the end, never could accept or let go of the fact that I liked other metal than just thrash or whatever. It became impossible to hang around basically all of them because they, after like a year, still would fucking nag like a bitch about it. I have never been able to take any of that fucking shit, so in the end they all could just piss off. It just so fucking stupid that metal fans should argue about this stuff like it's a kid's sandbox or something. Just because I don't personally like nu metal, I don't go around bashing all the fans of it. I respect peoples' tastes and opinions.

Just fucking listen to the music and have a good time, hopefully together!