I know im not the only one that loves this form of music... And yes it is considered music people :P
some bands I'm referring too are:
Suicide Silence, Whitechapel, Aesthetic Perfection, Cannibal corpse, Combichrist, Angelspit, etc.
If you like industrial or metal, tell me some of your favorite bands in that genre. :3
I have it mostly by mood by I like dark electro, EBM and this ways, and don't have preferred bands, because sons vary a lot even if is form same band
Quote from: Medusa on February 21, 2013, 07:03:00 AM
I have it mostly by mood by I like dark electro, EBM and this ways, and don't have preferred bands, because sons vary a lot even if is form same band
I agree, and ebm is amazing <3
Have you heard a nice place to visit by aesthetic perfection?
I love Iron Maiden, Metallica & System of a down to name a few, I would class Maiden as heavy rock rather than Metal but most Maiden fans disagree with me on that.
Metallica lost the magic with their later albums but managed a triumphant return to form with Death Magnetic.
Maiden have always been on top form but The final frontier album is so good it blows my mind.
System of a down have created some of the best metal music ever with Toxicity & Chop Suey, both songs kill me on Guitar hero/Rock Band
Lately I been getting into bands that I would classify as symphonic metal. My favorites are Epica, Kamelot, Sonata Artica, and Seventh Wonder. But I will also will always like classic metal like Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden, Dio, and of course Led Zeppelin.
Classic Meets Rock - Ghost Opera (Kamelot Cover) (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ne5MiuEeKTQ#)
More into symphonic metal like Nightwish,Within Temptation,Xandria,Delain & Epica theses days.I like 5 Finger Death Punch,Avenged 7fold,Black Veil Brides,Halestorm & Doro on the more metal side.Was a big fan of Motorhead,Iron Maiden,Whitesnake,Scorpions,Judas Priest and Girlschool 30 some years ago and saw them live many times.
Weird. I thought I had replied to this. Oops.
I like In Extremo, Finntroll, Eluveitie, Amon Amarth (guess which songs),
Oomph!, Eisbrecher, Megaherz, Rammstein, and others.
Quote from: xhorrorglam on February 21, 2013, 07:34:19 AM
I agree, and ebm is amazing <3
Have you heard a nice place to visit by aesthetic perfection?
Nice one :)
As far as metal goes I like Disrupt, Destroy, Extreme Noise Terror, early Napalm Death, early Carcass and early Terrorizer. I like lots of other stuff too but as far as the heavier bands are concerned this is what is floating my boat today. This could change at any time. :D
Wow, for sure I don't care for the symphonic metal. too much horn and not enough axe.
Seriously though anything with dirty guitars and hard. Death, dark and classic. How funny is that metal has with stood the test of time. I was at a red light the other day when two kids still in highschool pulled up and I could hear Tony Iommi's intro to Paranoid. I thought to myself there is still hope in the world.
Even though they started out as a Speed/Death Metal band and got progressively weirder and more musically expansive, Mr Bungle had some fantastic horn parts.
I don't discriminate against any instrument. It's all about what notes and riffs are played.
(and My Dying Bride friggin' RULES!!...nuff said!)
Bump..
I LOVE Cannibal Corpse. Death metal has kind of been a guilty pleasure for me.. everyone thinks I'm crazy for enjoying it.
I'm not a fan of industrial music, but I do like some metal. It depends. Most of the hardcore stuff with growling doesn't appeal to me (like Cannibal Corpse and some of the other bands mentioned. While I can listen to opeth and death, most of the growling stuff really isn't my cup of tea. It would really depend on the particular band and the overall atmosphere their music creates. For example, I love early Thrice (not metal, I know) and don't mind the screamo stuff they did. Some I can tolerate while others can totally repulse me. Having said that, I do love prog metal, symphonic metal, thrash, power metal, classic metal and many other variations of the genre.
Quote from: Mr Hockey on January 12, 2014, 03:16:25 AM
Bump..
I LOVE Cannibal Corpse. Death metal has kind of been a guilty pleasure for me.. everyone thinks I'm crazy for enjoying it.
I've been a Death Metal/Grindcore fan since the end of 1990. I never could get into Cannibal Corpse, though. They always bored the hell out of me.
Quote from: Laura Squirrel on January 15, 2014, 01:49:12 PM
I've been a Death Metal/Grindcore fan since the end of 1990. I never could get into Cannibal Corpse, though. They always bored the hell out of me.
Cannibal Corpse is from the same city where I live (Buffalo, New York) so I grew up around it. Since it's a local band lots of people here like them I've noticed.
Quote from: Mr Hockey on January 16, 2014, 05:23:21 PM
Cannibal Corpse is from the same city where I live (Buffalo, New York) so I grew up around it. Since it's a local band lots of people here like them I've noticed.
Yeah, that's cool. I can understand that. They just never floated my boat as far as Death Metal bands are concerned. Back in the day, I was more into stuff like: Napalm Death, Carcass, Exit-13, Disrupt, Macabre, Terrorizer, Obituary, etc.
Quote from: Laura Squirrel on January 16, 2014, 05:32:56 PM
Yeah, that's cool. I can understand that. They just never floated my boat as far as Death Metal bands are concerned. Back in the day, I was more into stuff like: Napalm Death, Carcass, Exit-13, Disrupt, Macabre, Terrorizer, Obituary, etc.
Yeah I understand. I like Carcass, they're pretty good.
Most of the metal I like is the hardcore death metal stuff but I do like some other metal like Iron Maiden, Black Sabbath, Ozzy Osbourne and old stuff like that.
Most of the time of late I have had hardradio.com playing when using a computer.
Quote from: mistressstevie on January 23, 2014, 09:25:53 PM
Most of the time of late I have had hardradio.com playing when using a computer.
Wow. They've been around a long time. I've never heard of that site. Usually, when I am listening to music online it's sites like Pandora, Spotify, or different Bandcamp/Soundcloud/Archive.org pages. The rest of the time it's physical media.
I used to be really heavily into metal, not so much anymore but i still like certain bands:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XLSBNIMDp9Y (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XLSBNIMDp9Y)
I really love folk metal xP but not so much other types of metal.
:D There are more girls in the metal scene now then there have ever been.
One thing that I know for sure is this: If I had been born a genetic female I still would have been a metalhead. I was naturally drawn towards looking for heavier music. In the late 80s, that was much more difficult than it is now where all you need is the internet. Back in those days it truly was something you searched out unless you were lucky enough to live in a big city. (Which I wasn't and I still don't)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Auqm2bKFxMU
One of my faves at the moment.
I've been listening to a lot of "Bloodstained Child"'s new album
http://youtu.be/s7zJVH5D0w4 (http://youtu.be/s7zJVH5D0w4)
I'm not a fan of all metal....but I like some.......
Pantera and Acid Bath are my favorites
So yes, I like both kinds of music- hard rock and heavy metal. OK, I listen to most genres of music but I've only really been in hard rock and metal bands.
I like a lot of different types of metal, especially the heavier stuff. I even used to be in a death metal band, but it's not something I generally listen to all day long. I'll usually go into bouts of listening to it just like I do with everything else.
Quote from: ath on January 30, 2014, 03:11:13 AM
I like a lot of different types of metal, especially the heavier stuff. I even used to be in a death metal band, but it's not something I generally listen to all day long. I'll usually go into bouts of listening to it just like I do with everything else.
I tried to get a few death metal bands going in the late 90s, but this town was (and still is) full of dorks that have no idea. Even the ones that claim to be "death metal" are just a bunch of lousy deathcore bands. :icon_blah:
Quote from: Laura Squirrel on January 30, 2014, 11:01:40 AM
I tried to get a few death metal bands going in the late 90s, but this town was (and still is) full of dorks that have no idea. Even the ones that claim to be "death metal" are just a bunch of lousy deathcore bands. :icon_blah:
Haha, that's pretty funny. Over in the city (only true city in my region) the same thing is going on. Whole bunch of bands claiming to be death metal when they're really another genre that isn't even death. When we were playing still, we were pretty much the only real death metal band around. Heavy cannibal corpse style pretty much. We had song titles like "drugz is gud" "tortured in a basement" "loaded for bear" etc hahaha.
Quote from: ath on January 30, 2014, 12:51:41 PM
Haha, that's pretty funny. Over in the city (only true city in my region) the same thing is going on. Whole bunch of bands claiming to be death metal when they're really another genre that isn't even death. When we were playing still, we were pretty much the only real death metal band around. Heavy cannibal corpse style pretty much. We had song titles like "drugz is gud" "tortured in a basement" "loaded for bear" etc hahaha.
I was into the social/political subjects when it came to lyrics (mostly influenced by Napalm Death & Terrorizer. Disrupt was also a large influence later on.) After a couple of years of attempting to get bands going, I gave up and bought a cassette 4 track and drum machine, and did it myself. I mixed it up between Death Metal, Japanese influenced Hardcore, Doom Metal and AC style Grind/Noise. It was usually a mixed bag since I wasn't the best when it came to recording so a lot of it had overloaded inputs, poor mixing, etc. It was fun, though.
I also did a lot of Harsh Noise, Experimental and Ambient stuff. I gave up on the metal stuff a few years ago because it was getting boring and now I just stick to Noise/Ambient/Experimental stuff when it comes to actually playing. But now I just record stuff with one of those tiny digital voice recorders.
Quote from: Laura Squirrel on January 30, 2014, 01:21:15 PM
I was into the social/political subjects when it came to lyrics (mostly influenced by Napalm Death & Terrorizer. Disrupt was also a large influence later on.) After a couple of years of attempting to get bands going, I gave up and bought a cassette 4 track and drum machine, and did it myself. I mixed it up between Death Metal, Japanese influenced Hardcore, Doom Metal and AC style Grind/Noise. It was usually a mixed bag since I wasn't the best when it came to recording so a lot of it had overloaded inputs, poor mixing, etc. It was fun, though.
I also did a lot of Harsh Noise, Experimental and Ambient stuff. I gave up on the metal stuff a few years ago because it was getting boring and now I just stick to Noise/Ambient/Experimental stuff when it comes to actually playing. But now I just record stuff with one of those tiny digital voice recorders.
I didn't do much of the lyrics writing, but our lyrics mainly centered around gory brutal stuff, and also a lot of drug references - but in a dark way. We also wrote songs centering on violence towards animals (loaded for bear - it's about a guy loading himself up for bear defense, but once in the woods he uses all his ammo blowing up squirrels and stuff, then runs into a 14 foot grizzly after running out, and gets mauled to death haha)
Often the bad people in our songs would get their just rewards for their evil acts. Or sometimes they were about evil acts of others creating monsters.
Music is how I make most of my money (guitar bass and piano lessons. Adding drum soon) so I have a pretty decent home recording setup. I've got a 6 channel stereo mixer from the 70's that has bitchin reverb and sound coloration, plugged into an 8 channel FireWire mixer, into my desktop. Outside the home I've got a room set up with a double kit, my main bass, keys, and guitar amps, my PA mains, sub, and 16channel mixer. We even have a headphone amp setup so we don't kill our ears at practices. My bands and a couple others chip in together to rent the room, and it's worth it since we get to practice literally any time we want. Didn't have nearly this good of a setup back when I was with the death metal band, though.
Quote from: ath on January 30, 2014, 03:52:01 PM
I didn't do much of the lyrics writing, but our lyrics mainly centered around gory brutal stuff, and also a lot of drug references - but in a dark way. We also wrote songs centering on violence towards animals (loaded for bear - it's about a guy loading himself up for bear defense, but once in the woods he uses all his ammo blowing up squirrels and stuff, then runs into a 14 foot grizzly after running out, and gets mauled to death haha)
Often the bad people in our songs would get their just rewards for their evil acts. Or sometimes they were about evil acts of others creating monsters.
Music is how I make most of my money (guitar bass and piano lessons. Adding drum soon) so I have a pretty decent home recording setup. I've got a 6 channel stereo mixer from the 70's that has bitchin reverb and sound coloration, plugged into an 8 channel FireWire mixer, into my desktop. Outside the home I've got a room set up with a double kit, my main bass, keys, and guitar amps, my PA mains, sub, and 16channel mixer. We even have a headphone amp setup so we don't kill our ears at practices. My bands and a couple others chip in together to rent the room, and it's worth it since we get to practice literally any time we want. Didn't have nearly this good of a setup back when I was with the death metal band, though.
I usually stayed away from gore 99% of the time, the only exception to that was a song I wrote called "Death Odors" and it was just something that was inspired by the title of a Slaughter Productions compilation of Industrial/Dark Ambient bands.
If I won the lottery, I would buy a small house and soundproof one of the rooms with a sweet recording set-up. But I live in a one bedroom apartment so I don't have the space for a set up like that. I tend to play as loud as I want, though. Sure, I've had the cops called on me a few times but I don't care. I do what I want.
Quote from: Laura Squirrel on January 30, 2014, 04:04:51 PM
I usually stayed away from gore 99% of the time, the only exception to that was a song I wrote called "Death Odors" and it was just something that was inspired by the title of a Slaughter Productions compilation of Industrial/Dark Ambient bands.
If I won the lottery, I would buy a small house and soundproof one of the rooms with a sweet recording set-up. But I live in a one bedroom apartment so I don't have the space for a set up like that. I tend to play as loud as I want, though. Sure, I've had the cops called on me a few times but I don't care. I do what I want.
Ive got a 1 bedroom apartment in the city, but I keep the same home recording setup there since I always use headphones while playing or recording. Only thing that is loud is my singing, but the neighbors have never complained.
I'm going back to the city again soon. Well rested from staying out in the middle of nowhere. I don't have to pay to stay down here so I've just kept my apartment in the city. Now that I've got gigs on the table again I'm just moving back so I don't have to drive like 6 hours or longer each way to do gigs and practices.
I never liked tracking with headphones, especially when it came to tracking the vocals. I need outboard monitors for that. It felt weird having headphones on. Plus, I liked throwing in a few squeaks of microphonic feedback here and there. But those days are long gone and I just stick with Experimental stuff.
Quote from: Laura Squirrel on January 31, 2014, 02:09:53 PM
I never liked tracking with headphones, especially when it came to tracking the vocals. I need outboard monitors for that. It felt weird having headphones on. Plus, I liked throwing in a few squeaks of microphonic feedback here and there. But those days are long gone and I just stick with Experimental stuff.
some people find it easier to stay in tune with headphones. i find it much harder, mostly because they make me too conscious of what i'm singing and then make me nervous.
Quote from: Zóôt Threepwood on January 31, 2014, 02:21:43 PM
some people find it easier to stay in tune with headphones. i find it much harder, mostly because they make me too conscious of what i'm singing and then make me nervous.
I never get nervous when I do vocals of any kind. The only thing that gets in my way is if I am having sinus issues or (like the week before the noise show that I played at), I was coming out of a week long cold. It really got on my nerves since it was like "why this week of all weeks??"
But, I was still able to pull it off. But, I also didn't do any actual singing at that show. It was just harsh vocals exclusively. I didn't do too bad looking back on it. The fact that we didn't have any noise gates for the vocal mic was a greater issue than anything else. Next time I will be prepared since I bought some used compressors with my Christmas money.
Quote from: Laura Squirrel on January 31, 2014, 02:35:12 PM
I never get nervous when I do vocals of any kind. The only thing that gets in my way is if I am having sinus issues or (like the week before the noise show that I played at), I was coming out of a week long cold. It really got on my nerves since it was like "why this week of all weeks??"
But, I was still able to pull it off. But, I also didn't do any actual singing at that show. It was just harsh vocals exclusively. I didn't do too bad looking back on it. The fact that we didn't have any noise gates for the vocal mic was a greater issue than anything else. Next time I will be prepared since I bought some used compressors with my Christmas money.
i did a really nice recording yesterday. there's this one song (it's called "Here Lies Love") that i couldn't do the same way that i did a few years ago, i don't know why i couldn't it's not hard, so i decided to alter my vocal delivery and put a new spin on it. So i alternated between loud and quiet, higher passages and lower passages and relaxed delivery and then at certain points raising my voice to emphasize the lyrics (it's not an industrial/metal number, it's an old obscure Rhythm N Blues track that my favorite artist, Frank Zappa, covered with his band "The Mothers", he released a live version on a CD in 1992 (recorded in 1969)
It goes like this (i hope this isn't spam):
Here lies love
In a grave caused by jealousy
Here lies love
In a grave caused by jealousy
Hate was the pall bearer
And on the tombstone was written "Misery"
It was a bad situation (this whole verse sung rather loudly)
From the beginning to the end
It was a bad situation
From the beginning to the end
I say, baby you killed my love
Now the undertaker is your friend (deliberately raspy and angry delivery on this line)
Now I'm sad and I'm blue
There's not much I can do
If these blues don't leave me
The undertaker will get me too (for this line i get really loud)
Oh oh, here lies love
In a grave caused by jealousy
You know that hate was the pall bearer
And on the tombstone was written "Misery"
:D You could always speed it up and do it Ramones style or AC style depending on how heavy you want to go.
I like using headphones ever since I started using them (the cup-over-ear kind with a speaker built in) at band practices, because I was starting to notice hearing loss from playing so many shows (usually 3 to 4 a month, sometimes more) and doing so many band practices with no hearing proteaction of any kind.
My next purchase will be a set of custom molded wireless in-ear monitors. They're pretty spendy and you have to go in to an audiologist to get them fitted, but so worth it I think.
I'm into sludge, thrash, doom, and stoner metal. Too many bands to list.
Quote from: Alexmakenoise on February 18, 2014, 09:20:24 PM
I'm into sludge, thrash, doom, and stoner metal. Too many bands to list.
Awwww, come on!! You can't throw out a top 5 or 10?
How about any of these as far as slower bands?
13
Eyehategod
Autopsy
Grief
My Dying Bride
Winter
Morgion
Trouble
Saint Vitus
Black Sabbath (But that's like....totally obvious)
Eyehategod is my favorite band right now. As far as classic metal bands go, Slayer is my favorite. Tonight I'm listening to Grief, Carpathian Forest, and Noothgrush. So I like some faster stuff too.
Well, the first band I ever saw?
Mayhem, yeah the Norwegian Black Metal gods, weird, seen them the two times since they have been in Australia
Watain supported them the second time, was very cool.
Seen the staples of course, Iron Maiden, Lamb of God, Black Sabbath, Metallica, Megadeth, all that fun stuff
Been to the last five Sound Waves, some good some bad there though, all to taste I guess :)
Still, the best band I have probably seen is Alcest, so much love for them :D
Quote from: ImpeachedEllie on February 19, 2014, 02:58:32 AM
Well, the first band I ever saw?
Mayhem, yeah the Norwegian Black Metal gods, weird, seen them the two times since they have been in Australia
Watain supported them the second time, was very cool.
Seen the staples of course, Iron Maiden, Lamb of God, Black Sabbath, Metallica, Megadeth, all that fun stuff
Been to the last five Sound Waves, some good some bad there though, all to taste I guess :)
Still, the best band I have probably seen is Alcest, so much love for them :D
Heh, I was front row, centre the first time Mayhem came out here! Great show, didn't catch them the second time though...
I'm well into a lot of different types of metal and industrial/dark electronica, a few examples...
Darkthrone
Burzum
Bathory
Celtic Frost
Black Sabbath
Judas Priest
Nine Inch Nails
The Kovenant
Covenant (lol)
Apoptygma Berzerk
In Flames (pre-Soundtrack to Your Escape stuff)
Sentenced
Morbid Angel
Deftones
Ulver
Type O Negative
X-Japan
I could go on forever, but I'll just leave it at that for now!