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With subject matter about war, corruption, religion, inequality, literature, etc? Music is what you make it and metal provides quite an interesting amount of subject matter geared towards critical thinking unlike pop or generic rock music.
Most Metal lyrics seems to be used just to match the music. Violent, dark music demands violent, dark lyrics.
Most of the bands sing about war, death etc because it fits the music and they don't sing about it any critical way.
The few that do usually espouse typical cliche left wing ideals etc that have been thrown about in music since the 1960's.
The only Metal band that actually had interesting morally and politically charged lyrics was Skyclad.
Furthermore Pantera and Machine Head have many songs about inequality, police corruption, ills of society pro-drug etc.
My own love of Heavy Metal is because I love the music and I find the
juvenile nature of it appealing.
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you read books, which I'm not sure of at this point, check out Robert Walser's Running with the Devil. Heavy metal is a vast bank open to analysis since it is so immersed in class and social relations.
Heavy Metal is the music of mainly white, lower middle class males who are misfits and generally feel somewhat alienated. It's the same as Punk, Emo, Goth whatever.
There's not much social aspect to it other than that.
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Adult? Define adult. Right now I work at a grocery store and the third guy from the top went to the same Judas Priest show I went to two summers ago. My old store manager went to see Motley Crue twice every summer and went to the same 'tallica show I went to last winter. Metalheads are competent people. My friends at university all listen to metal and hardcore.
Adult - greater than 18 years old. Most of the guys I knew where 25+.
Besides I've got two degrees (Commerce - major in Finance and International Business and Arts - major in political science. I was on the Honour Roll 3 years out of 5).
I was probably the only guy in the local metal scene that had gone to university. Most of the others were unemployed while some worked in menial jobs ala shop assistants, kitchen hands in restaurants etc.
The only 2 guys that I knew that where into Metal music and who had done well in life actually did not associate with the scene in any way and didn't bother with heavy metal iconography. They were basically middle class people who liked Heavy Metal in whatever form.
Most Metalheads I knew referred to them as posers. Again the elitist nerd rage that dominates alienated subcultures comes to the fore.