This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 150.108.235.xxx (talk) at 15:51, 25 February 2002. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 15:51, 25 February 2002 by 150.108.235.xxx (talk)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Black metal is a subset of heavy metal rock music. Black metal generally consists of heavily distorted, extremely fast guitar playing, screamed vocals, and fast drumming. Repetition is used to great effect, with some songs being quite simple. An abraded, very low-fidelity recording style is common. This genre of metal frequently uses overtly Satanic lyrics in which bands emphasize blasphemy against Christianity and other occult themes. There has been some appeal in recent years between black metal and various right-wing nationalist movements in certain countries.
The immediate ancestors of modern black metal are bands like Celtic Forst and Venom. The movement is often said to have reached its current form with the recordings of Bathory in the late 80's and early '90's. From there, Norwegian bands such as Darkthrone, Burzum, Mayhem, and Immortal popularized the style to an underground audience. Mass media attention came when the only member of Burzum murdered the guitarist of Mayhem. By the last few years of the 90's, it seemed that the movement was dying, when commercially oriented bands such as Dimmu Borgir using classical-sounding keyboards began to hit European airwaves. Far from the rough, DIY sounds of the earlier Norwegian bands, these bands employed polished sounds suitable for mass audiences favorable to heavy metal.
However, since the mid 90's, an Eastern-European black metal scene has been developing. Bands from these former Iron Curtain lands are recording albums with perhaps more primitive fury than the Norwegians ever acheived. Most of these bands are buried deep into the underground scene, but are being heard by more and more fans of the original, non-symphonic style of black metal ala Darkthrone. Many of these bands emphasize the pagan roots of their countries, occasionally injecting elements of indiginous folk music into their recordings. The Latvian band Skyforger is an excellent example of this.
There are a relatively small number of American bands playing Black Metal (sometimes called USBM bands). As of yet, this movement has not taken a particularly clear form, but more well know groups are Judas Iscariot (sounding very much like Darkthrone) and Averse Sefira (death metal influenced).
Reference
- Michael Moynihan, Lords of Chaos (Feral House 1997?)