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Wizard/TRueStar View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: FORMER METAL HEADS
    Posted: December 11 2004 at 16:15

I've noticed some of you mentioning your past/present interest in "metal". I was a simialar case until i discovered TDSOTM and after seeing a Pink Floyd cover band twice.  From there i was a PF-aholic for like a year! Then i found Todd Rundgren and Rush. Then i found this site whall looking for Utopia downloads on the internet. I downloaded "Utopia Theme" and then i became addicted to this website and now listen to soo many different bands comparitively.  I could have lived being a Pink Floyd whore but this is much better

What's your storie former/current metalhead?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2004 at 16:22
i listen to a lot of metal still, and have moshing hair. i first start out mostly listening to britpop, indie as well as marilyn manson, slipknot, metallica etc. then i got into tool which eventually led me onto prog. now most of my cds are prog including 21 floyd albums. i have also discovered dream theater, opeth etc. i have tonnes of metal and prog and they go together reli well too
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2004 at 16:53

Black Sabbath, Zep, Hendrix, Purple were my starting point in metal.

These days I dont find Heavy metal as satisfying as prog.

I would say I have seen every pre 1980 major metal band. I actually saw Scorpions & Motorhead in Bolton.Those were the days.




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2004 at 16:56

I used to be a major metal head. Started in around 83' when I was 11. Went from "quiet Riot" (I was 11 OK) to Motley Crue and Def Leppard. At 14 I discoverd Iron Maiden, and Judas priest. During all these times I thought I was listning to the heaviest stuff there was. Then in 86' I started to immerse myself in speed/thrash metal, Metallica, Slayer, Megadeth, Exodus, Overkill etc. After a few years of this I went on to punk mainly because of the lyrics.

I can't remember where I first heard prog. I think my brother turned me on to it. HE was a big Rush head. I started first with bands like fates warning and dream theater and then went backwards. In 1995 I met Ed Macan the author of Rocking the Classics: English Progressive Rock and the Counterculture. We formed Hermetic Science with Don Sweeney and recorded an album in 96.

Michael

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2004 at 17:44
Before I entered seriously in the world of prog, I used to listen to a lot of death and thrash metal bands : Obituary (Cause of death), Death, Sepultura, Anthrax ('Schizophrenia' completely blew me away at the time I bought it), Suicidal tendencies, Voivod (the early years), Slayer ('Reign in blood', 'Hell awaits' and 'South of heaven'), Annihilator, Cancer, Fear factory, Carcass... A friend of mine in school helped me discover most of the above-mentioned bands and I quickly became addicted to listening to this extreme kind of metal. However I always had problems with the most extreme form of metal, namely black metal (apart from maybe Bal-Sagoth, which give an operatic side to their music by the use of pompous keyboards). I was also very fond of NWOBHM bands like Iron Maiden ('Seventh son of a seventh son' is IMHO their masterpiece) and Def Leppard (I still regard 'Pyromania' as a great hard-rock album). Metallica was also a great discovery, with the mind-blowing Burton's bass playing (and Newsted is also astonishing on '...and justice for all'). The first time I heard bands like Dream Theater, Angra or Queensryche, I didn't like them at all, mainly because of the high-pitched vocals that annoyed me a bit (remember I used to listen to cookie monster growling vocals). Then, when my interest for prog grew, I came back to these artists and began to appreciate their way of singing. The band that made me love prog and want to dig more is Marillion : I began with Fugazi, then came Misplaced childhood which was a huge surprise. Coming back to the topic, prog didn't prevent me from listening to metal, I still listen to Maiden, Annihilator (only 'Alice in hell') or Metallica (up to '...and justice for all') with a great pleasure. But currently my focus is mainly on metal-prog : Altura, Ark (only their first record), Angra, Evergrey, Ice Age, Ayreon and the first heavy metal bands : Deep Purple (I really love the Gillan-era), Black Sabbath, Uriah Heep, Led Zeppelin than on death metal.     
"Magma was the very first gothic rock band" (Didier Lockwood)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2004 at 17:46
I'm an old metalhead. I'm 30 now. I used to listen to Iron Maiden, Testament, Kreator and so on. One day I heard old Yes stuff. I was sold. Being more bored with metal those days ('90s) I wanted to hear something new. Prog gave me what I was looking for.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2004 at 09:08

Add me to the old metalheadz pile - I cut my teeth, so to speak, on AC/DC, Motorhead, Sabbath, Maiden and Purple in the mid to late 1970s.

I picked up on prog when bands like Diamond Head started appearing. Marillion just blew me away - I thought they were so much better than the old prog bands like Genesis and Rush, because the lyrics were about real things, and they weren't over-complicated and noodly.

I then got heavily into Metallica, Slayer, Megadeth, Anthrax, Sacred Reich - and eventually my own "Thrash" band.

Then I read for a degree in music - I've heard some stuff that makes heavy metal sound wussy (Penderecki's Threnody to the Victims of Hiroshima), Klaus Schulze sound like pop music (almost anything by Stockhausen) and most prog seem, well, not very progressive at all (I won't start, because the list would be too long!).

I like quite a lot of Nu-Metal, including Linkin Park, Rammstein, Killswitch Engage and System of a Down - but then I still consider myself to be very open-minded, and in full possession of my own tastes and opinions.



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2004 at 11:10
I'm still a part-time metalhead: Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, Mercyful fate, Scorpions, Accept, Ozzy, Dio, Black Sabbath, Raven, Keel, Motley crue, Metallica, Queensryche, Anthrax, Megadeth, Dokken, Armored Saint, Pile Driver, Great White, White Lion, Brighton rock, Manowar, I still enjoy those excellent bands!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2004 at 13:54

I used to be a real metalhead, but about a year ago I discovered prog (Zappa, Tull, Crimson).

As a metalhead, my favourite bands were: Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, Motörhead, Grave Digger, Raven, Saxon, Metallica, Megadeth (My favourite genre was New Wave Of British Heavy Metal. I never felt much for death metal or thrash metal.)

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2004 at 13:58
Bilden “http://www.izoo.net/images/mhead.jpg” kan inte visas, då den innehåller fel.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2004 at 14:05
Originally posted by Joren Joren wrote:

I used to be a real metalhead, but about a year ago I discovered prog (Zappa, Tull, Crimson).

As a metalhead, my favourite bands were: Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, Motörhead, Grave Digger, Raven, Saxon, Metallica, Megadeth (My favourite genre was New Wave Of British Heavy Metal. I never felt much for death metal or thrash metal.)

Raven were a great band, but "bought the shark" after "All For One".

...I always thought Metallica/Megadeth invented thrash...

 

HEY!!! The Clown's back!!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2004 at 14:10

Thrash / Deathspeed Metal is good when you're in a certain mood.

However, just like Pavlov's dogs...I get wood when I hear the Wife put on her soppy trash.....Coz I knoiw whats coming next................

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2004 at 15:00

My metal mentor was a disturbingly psychotic high school friend who listened, amused, as I tried to impress him with my knowledge of Iron Maiden. "That's what I put on when I go to sleep," he replied. Then he introduced me to Celtic Frost, Sodom, Kreator, Destruction, and a little S.O.D. for comic relief. Decades later, I keep my feet wet in the metal arena.

I wasn't blown away by numetal, although System of a Down have their moments and Tool is always worth checking out. My current favorites, besides the 'classics', include Cradle of Filth, Rammstein, and Cannibal Corpse.

In a lot of ways, my prog timeline has mirrored my metal timeline; sometime between the middle of high school and the last few years I let both genres slide a bit while I went exploring, only to rediscover them- excited by what I might have missed the first time around. Prog is much more rewarding, but I don't think I'll ever totally 'outgrow' my metal side..although my hair is now short and my leather jacket much more tasteful.

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2004 at 15:22

Yup, i think a lot of us were brought to prog via metal. I was about 12 when I heard AC/DC and bought the whole shootin' match full on Zep, Sabs, Purple, Rainbow, Maiden, Leppard, Diamond Head, Saxon (oh dear), Tank, etc etc etc. I was a complete nerd for it, walls covered in pages snipped from Kerrang.

But I guess my coming of age was hearing Rush's Spirit of Radio. It was less routine, less formulaic and more interesting than most metal. Around the same time Peter Gabriel's Games Without Frontiers was out and I loved that too. Then I heard my cousin's copy of DSOTM and that was it..... I bought all the Rush, then heard Yes's Run Through the Light on the radio when it was released and started looking into them. My broither's friend from New York brought us a load of Kansas records around 1980 too. The difficulty of finding a lot of the stuff made it seem like the holy grail to me. It was mysterious, arcane and my own, nobody else was into this sh*t. I had a secret love. It was cool.

I got incredibly bored with metal. It just seemed incredibly adolescent and I sold almost all of it, with the exception of the prog-flavoured stuff and Zeppelin.

All the while I was listening to metal and prog I was also tuning into the Pistols, PIL, Dead Kennedys, as well as pop new wave like the Pretenders, Elvis Costello, The Police, Blondie etc and other stuff like that so my metal lps were repleced by Joy Division, Echo & the Bunnymen, New Order, The Smiths, Cure etc.

But i always came back to the prog and as I head towards the years doomed to be swamped in nostalgia I've been repurchasing some of my fave hard rock/metal record - Purple/Rainbow/Triumph/AC-DC/early Def Leppard/early Maien/Diamond Head etc. It's wonderful fun music.

I never really got thrash/death/speed whatever metal, even thought Motorhead were the first band i ever saw. I do like Metallica (And justice for all.. and the black album) but that's as far as I go.

As for the modern stuff. I just can't stand it. I'm old, it's just noise to me.

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2004 at 15:44

Arcer - check out "Master of Puppets" by Metallica (if you haven't already) - they released it in a state of denial, as they got sick of the thrash metal tag that "Kill 'Em All" so rightly earned them. It contains thrash, but goes way beyond anything before it. I would say it's the first prog metal album, as prog metal is defined these days (when I were a lad, Diamond Head and Budgie were progressive metal).

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2004 at 15:47
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Originally posted by Joren Joren wrote:

I used to be a real metalhead, but about a year ago I discovered prog (Zappa, Tull, Crimson).

As a metalhead, my favourite bands were: Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, Motörhead, Grave Digger, Raven, Saxon, Metallica, Megadeth (My favourite genre was New Wave Of British Heavy Metal. I never felt much for death metal or thrash metal.)

Raven were a great band, but "bought the shark" after "All For One".

...I always thought Metallica/Megadeth invented thrash...

 

HEY!!! The Clown's back!!

Let's say Metallica's and Megadeth's first albums were "proto-thrash"  I didn't really enjoy the other thrash that came after that (Anthrax, for example). And Metallica and Megadeth soon got into speed metal, a lot less chaotic than thrash.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2004 at 15:50

happy to check one out Cert, cheers, though in all honest, prog-metal leaves me totally cold. I just find its overblown melodrama laughable. It lacks any self-regarding irony and is just Spinal Tap to me.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2004 at 03:45

I know where you're coming from arcer - it does the same to me, on the whole. I normally find that when I listen to a prog metal album, I'm just hearing "Master of Puppets" revisited - it's hard to believe that it's nearly 20 years old!

joren I know what you mean about the storm of thrash bands that followed hot on the heels of Metallica - I find it hard to differentiate between the various forms of Metal, and prefer the single term thrash as an umbrella term. I saw Metallica with Anthrax in support in September 1986 - a month before Cliff Burton tragically died in that coach crash. It blew me away - I just couldn't believe those guys playing music of that complexity at that speed, it was completely new. I saw Slayer a month or two later, and Kreator, with Death as support act shortly after that. All those bands were amazing - but a bit wearying after a while.

Anthrax at least had a sense of humour - "Spreading the Disease" is probably their best album, especially the track "Gung-Ho", but the rest are patchy to say the least. Slayer's "Reign in Blood" lives on as a landmark of what thrash metal can be - never mind Napalm Death, who were silly (genius, but ultimately silly and unlistenable). I also liked Helloween's "Walls of Jericho", which had real potential - the trouble seemed to be that no-one wanted to be accused of taking themselves seriously (which most did), and tried erroneously to develop a sense of humour a la Anthrax. The only band that really succeeded, IMO, was Lawnmower Death. Their album "Ooh Crikey! It's Lawnmower Death" is a classic!

What Metallica and Megadeth produced in 1983/4 was definitely thrash, due to the style of playing - I don't know what "Thrash" as a separate genre is supposed to sound like, but any metal band that produces a riff by thrashing (Whiplash, Metal Militia, Fight Fire with Fire, Damage Inc./ Rattlehead, Mechanix, Peace Sells But Who's Buying) writes thrash metal in my book.

But none of that is prog metal



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2004 at 10:45

For me proto-metal:

[Cream: Disraeli Gears (listen to some of the outtakes on the recently reissued 2 CD set)]

 

Jeff Beck: Cosa Nostra Beckola (Jimmy Page apparently then stolen the 'blueprints')

May Blitz: May Blitz

Pink Fairies: Never Never Land (and Mike Farren in his autobiography claims The Social Deviants laid down some of the rules for the PF's)

Deep Purple: In Rock

And a band that suggested they might have been really heavy but in the end never went headlong down that way: Stray (e.g. their All In The Mind - was pretty heavy rock for its time)

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2004 at 12:38
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

I know where you're coming from arcer - it does the same to me, on the whole. I normally find that when I listen to a prog metal album, I'm just hearing "Master of Puppets" revisited - it's hard to believe that it's nearly 20 years old!

joren I know what you mean about the storm of thrash bands that followed hot on the heels of Metallica - I find it hard to differentiate between the various forms of Metal, and prefer the single term thrash as an umbrella term. I saw Metallica with Anthrax in support in September 1986 - a month before Cliff Burton tragically died in that coach crash. It blew me away - I just couldn't believe those guys playing music of that complexity at that speed, it was completely new. I saw Slayer a month or two later, and Kreator, with Death as support act shortly after that. All those bands were amazing - but a bit wearying after a while.

Anthrax at least had a sense of humour - "Spreading the Disease" is probably their best album, especially the track "Gung-Ho", but the rest are patchy to say the least. Slayer's "Reign in Blood" lives on as a landmark of what thrash metal can be - never mind Napalm Death, who were silly (genius, but ultimately silly and unlistenable). I also liked Helloween's "Walls of Jericho", which had real potential - the trouble seemed to be that no-one wanted to be accused of taking themselves seriously (which most did), and tried erroneously to develop a sense of humour a la Anthrax. The only band that really succeeded, IMO, was Lawnmower Death. Their album "Ooh Crikey! It's Lawnmower Death" is a classic!

What Metallica and Megadeth produced in 1983/4 was definitely thrash, due to the style of playing - I don't know what "Thrash" as a separate genre is supposed to sound like, but any metal band that produces a riff by thrashing (Whiplash, Metal Militia, Fight Fire with Fire, Damage Inc./ Rattlehead, Mechanix, Peace Sells But Who's Buying) writes thrash metal in my book.

But none of that is prog metal

To me, the first prog metal album is Mercyful fate - Melissa

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