Afro Lint wrote:
Awesome band, awesome album, but I just can't call them heavy metal. It just doesn't fit.
Hm, I agree with that. Just because some bands on this scene were influenced by Black Sabbath doesn't make it metal. Although having said that AIC are much closer to it than a lot of the "grunge" bands... you are quite right that it is a scene rather than a style, Zad. But the grunge fans I know would be horrified to hear you call it metal, probably more so than the metalheads would be.
Personally, I don't like this:
Quote:
(grunge) may well have helped to bring about the end of the commercial Metal world, but why is this a bad thing? Metal just before Grunge was a bloated, excessive beast that needed to be put down for its own good. I’ve never appreciated any of the Glam ‘Metal’ bands of the era, and as for the Metal underground, in my view the early 90s explosion of Death and Black Metal could never have happened without Grunge chasing them into the darkness of extremity.
IMO this is all manufactured. The people that turned metal as a whole into a "bloated excessive beast" were exactly the same as the people that turned it into grunge. That is, the music press, advertisers, record label execs. All that happened is that they decided one product was getting past its sell by date and they needed to find something new. And the perfect tagline for the new stuff? Why not present it as something revolutionary, played by ordinary people, and about real angst. Perfect.
That's not to say that there wasn't a lot of important music being made in that scene, or that it wasn't a reaction against hair metal. Simply that it is too simplistic an analysis to simply have this manufactured narrative of "hair metal=bad, grunge=the hero, saving the soul of mainstream music". It reminds me of the way people talk about punk and prog in 1976. Prior to the Sex Pistols the whole music world was suffering uinder the terrible tyrany of Rick Wakeman and his wizard costume, until JOhnny Rotten etc. killed all the prog bands and saved the day.
IMO this is a one dimensional way at looking at the development of music, and one that people are in danger of applying to the hair-metal/grunge transition also.
(and the stuff about the DM/BM explosion just doesn't ring true to me, but that's another discussion)