stevelovesmoonspell wrote:
Thrashtilldeth wrote:
I never said it was complex. I just said it was good.
Besides, it's fair enough if you don't like it, but to suggest it sounds like Trivium is just a completely trite argument that anyone with half an ear knows isn't true. Also, kind of amused at the "plastic music for plastic people" comment, coming from the guy posting Limp Bizkit album covers in this thread.
I'm not saying this because it pisses me off. Actually, i'm kinda used to people giving me shit over new wave of thrash bands. I'm just saying if you want your opinion to be considered with respect, it helps not to arbitrarily compare the music to (insert-Nu-Metal-band-here) and then insult the listener for liking it.
What trite argument you love restrained aggression with poppy vocals that blatantly steals riffs from Master of Puppets its ok. Limp Bizkit are a classic and innovative band that fused the best elements of funk, hardcore, and metal back in the 2000s. They're notoriously underrated, and you should feel like an ass for dismissing them. Seriously, the revisionism in the metal scene for pioneers like Limp Bizkit is obscene.
Come on man! Fine if you like them, but don't try to pass them off as innovative. If you want to talk about bands combining elements of funk and metal, we can go back as far as Aerosmith, if you want. If you want to talk about adding hip-hop elements, you can stick with Aerosmith, and their run-dmc collaboration.
Bands were doing this stuff in the 80s. Living Color? Funk, metal, hip-hop, it's all there, just in their debut album! Early Red Hot Chili Peppers? Pretty much used every half-decent idea Limp Bizkit employed, to
much better effect I might add, years in advance. I could say much the same thing about Faith No More.
I readily admit that Evile is mostly Metallica worship. At least have the sense to admit Limp Bizkit was no more of an innovator.