Regarding As I Lay Dying, they are not doing anything groundbreaking or incredible yet. However, I do think they are quietly pushing metalcore, thrash and even a bit of death metal into uncharted territory. Listen to a song like this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8qJni67mkBw
Classic material? No...but new and interesting? I would say so. I guess appreciating them requires not rejecting the entire genre of metalcore offhand, which some are you inclined to do.
But, As I Lay Dying are not really that important.
OldSchool wrote:
For me, it's not necessarily something that creates new genres or subgenres (after all, RIP or RIB didn't), but rather something that towers over most releases through sheer quality and an unique and very personal approach to the genre it belongs to.
I agree with this, totally. This is why I do not think that a band like Ulcerate, while definitely pushing the boundaries of DM, really do anything to make death metal a genre with "potential". Personally, I do not see death metal putting forth any legendary releases in the near future--the kind that make us go, "Damn, 2004--that was the year SMRC came out." At least, 2010 definitely did not have anything in that way for death metal, and I would challenge you guys to think of a truly landmark DM release from the past three or four years.
I think the only release of 2010 with that kind of staying power would be Marrow of the Spirit. 2009, probably just Crack the Skye. Something like Ironbound or Zad's Decrepitaph might be pretty badass, but is anyone going to give a shit about it five years from now? Next year, even? Releases that are based around revival of past styles are doomed to transient relevancy because, by definition, they reflect the state of metal as it was 20 or so years ago. The genres I defined as "exciting" are the ones I see as defining metal in 2011.