emperorblackdoom wrote:
traptunderice wrote:
I don't like arguments that pin metal as simply deviant from mainstream culture. Totally working class music.
But the Scandinavian variety, as I've pointed out, is on the whole, not working class.
Yeah but nobody likes black metal anyways. Black metal also has a totally different subject matter as a result. I wish I remember Lords of Chaos better. There's no anthemic Judas Priest tracks or dystopian narratives a la Iron Maiden or in-group solidarity like early Thrash or even partying tracks like hair metal. Even up through Carcass and Bolt Thrower, you have depictions of the mistreatment of youth being sent to war and mutilated in doing so.
My account is pretty solid for British heavy metal through the mid-80s, and I think also given what I understand about my old store manager, my stepdad and all of their friends that's what pushed them to partying, thrash metal and hair metal.
I don't see Scandinavian metalheads as an unexplainable anomaly just something which needs to be thought through.
If anything we could just say all those black metal kids were fucking posers de jure like the deathcore kids these days whose inauthentic sense of brutality is mocked nowadays in the same way which Alice Cooper mocks the "evil" nature of black metal. Rich kids getting into things screams the commodification of dissidence into a package more susceptible to bourgeois marketing ploys and a way of pacifying the radical anger of the original movement, in the way, pop punk lacks the politics of Crass or Discharge.