Did they get their name from Castlevania II: Belmont's Revenge? If so, that's auto awesome.FightThePower said:Now I'll be honest and say I don't really like Metal, but I've noticed that for some reason on every internet gaming forum I go on or look at, Metal is by a country mile the most popular music genre, and this place is no exception. Despite my general dislike of the genre, it doesn't make me angry - just curious (after all, music taste is subjective).
Metal isn't dominating the radio stations, so why is this the case? I don't want to attribute all gamers to one taste because that's ignorant; since I know next to nothing about Metal I'd like to know what characteristics of the genre appeal to you and what, if any, connection do you see to the fact you're a gamer? Is there a connection or is it just a massive coincidence and I don't visit enough forums?
I always thought being gamers would make people more inclined to like electronic/8-bit music like the video below so I find this quite interesting.
Historically, perhaps. There's no shortage of fans of electronic genres - but the face of gamerdom has changed to include alot of people with more varied interests.FightThePower said:I always thought being gamers would make people more inclined to like electronic/8-bit music like the video below so I find this quite interesting.
I enjoy all kinds of music, from Ayumi Hamasaki (Jpop, explores various genres) to Tupac (old [good] rap). I also listen to a fair bit of classical, smooth jazz, you name it. To me, music is a beautiful thing, and every genre is simply a different way to convey music's beauty.Daveman said:Well, on here there are lots of clever people and university studies have shown that people with higher IQs tend to prefer either classical or metal music.
I never said it is more expanding than other genres, did I?YuheJi said:Aren't all genres expanding? If you compare anything from jazz to hip hop that is being produced today, to what was being produced, say, twenty years ago, you will hear major differences. Jazz has moved from things like Acid and Afro-Cuban jazz in the eighties to the rise in popularity of Smooth Jazz in the 1990s and 2000s. East Coast hip hop, with an emphasis in lyrical dexterity was commmon in the eighties, and has inspired the expansion of the genre into the West Coast, and into the South with crunk. What about metal is more "ever expanding" than other genres?Dommyboy said:Because it's an ever expanding genre. Pretty simple reason in a way.
I picked all metal bands for my top ten ,but love bands like AC/DC the dead kennedys the Jimi hendrix experience and The likes of Melvins and Nirvana ,i just listen to them often enough to feel that they honestly deserve a place in my top ten (though Hendrix probably does in retrospect)AllHailTheAltmer said:. But it disturbs me when I see threads like "Top 10 Favourite Bands", and there will always be a handful of people who pick only metal bands for their top ten. That is just madness.
I hope one of those two is Eminem because I love that guy.Akai Shizuku said:I enjoy all kinds of music, from Ayumi Hamasaki (Jpop, explores various genres) to Tupac (old [good] rap). I also listen to a fair bit of classical, smooth jazz, you name it. To me, music is a beautiful thing, and every genre is simply a different way to convey music's beauty.Daveman said:Well, on here there are lots of clever people and university studies have shown that people with higher IQs tend to prefer either classical or metal music.
Rap, however, has devolved into a primitive and mindless perversion which promotes little that is good for society. I'm not saying all rap is bad (there are certainly about two rappers who are an exception), but that's the way it is.
If this was a thread about avant-garde, experimental or noise styles people would equally be discussing what they feel are the merits of that particular art form.Marbas said:Maybe not now, but eventually. Or, you can market it as Avant-garde metal and be a little unconventional with song structure.You cannot replicate the sound of a guitar being skillfully played by using a computer. You can sample someone playing it or have a digital sounding MIDI voice make noise vaguely resembling a guitar.
That is not what the person I linked is doing. For one thing, he builds his own...noisemakers. There are also no drums involved. Secondly, please provide actual evidence instead of just saying you are qualified to make that judgment call.As someone who has played guitar and piano for years and produces albums of many different genres for a living, I think I am somewhat qualified to opine that becoming proficient at metal requires a lot more musical talent and skill than learning to program loops in Reason and putting a distortion effect and some noise filters onto some drum samples, as the person in that link you posted is doing.
Prove it.more complex but it's often of much higher energy and is generally more passionate than most other music.
What I'm saying to both of you boils down to this, prove it. All you're doing is grandstanding.
As for complexity, it isn't that important, Noise, as a genre completely unbound by musical convention, has the most complex songs of any genre in the world because there are no rules. As such, it can be as complex or minimal as it likes. That doesn't mean the more complex songs are better or have anything better about them. Complexity is not its' own reward.
Word. Such an amazing band.Lord Thodin said:Dunno, id prefer to listen to Sigur ros when playing CoD4. It'd help me concentrate better