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Death-Metal

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Shared by: Miroslav Kovcalija
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Death Metal

Author: OzzMosis MetalHead

Building from the musical structure of thrash metal and early black metal, death metal emerged during the mid 1980s.[2] Metal acts

such as Slayer,[3][4] Kreator,[5] Celtic Frost,[6] and Venom were very important influences to the crafting of the genre.[2] Along with the

band Death and its frontman Chuck Schuldiner, who is often referred to as "the father of death metal",[7][8][9] bands such as

Possessed,[10] Obituary, Carcass, Deicide, Suffocation and Morbid Angel are often considered pioneers of the genre.[11] In the late

1980s and early 1990s, death metal gained more media attention as popular genre niche record labels like Combat, Earache and

Roadrunner began to sign death metal bands at a rapid rate.[12] Since then, death metal has diversified, spawning a variety of

subgenres.[13]

The setup most frequently used within the death metal genre is two guitarists, a bass player, a vocalist and a drummer often using

"double bass blast beats".[14][15] Although this is the standard setup, bands have been known to occasionally incorporate other

instruments such as electronic keyboards.[16]

The genre is often identified by fast, highly distorted and downtuned guitars, played with techniques such as palm muting and tremolo

picking. The percussion is usually aggressive, and powerful; blast beats, double bass and exceedingly fast drum patterns frequently

add to the complexity of the genre.[17]

Death metal is known for its abrupt tempo, key, and time signature changes, as well as fast and complex guitar and drumwork.[18]

Death metal may include chromatic chord progressions and a varied song structure, rarely employing the standard verse-chorus

arrangement. These compositions tend to emphasize an ongoing development of themes and motifs.

Death metal vocals are often guttural roars, grunts, snarls, and low gurles colloquially known as death growls. Death growling is

mistakenly thought to be a form of using the lowest vocal register known as vocal fry, however vocal fry is actually a form of overtone

screaming and true death growling is in fact created by an altogether different technique. Attempting to growl using a screaming

technique will result in massive damage to the vocal cords.[19][specify] The style is sometimes referred to as Cookie Monster vocals,

tongue-in-cheek, due to the vocal similarity to the voice of the popular Sesame Street character of the same name.[20] Although often

criticized, death growls serve the aesthetic purpose of matching death metal's agressive lyrical content.[21] High-pitched screaming is

also commonly utilized in death metal, being heard in songs by Death, Exhumed, Dying Fetus, Cannibal Corpse, and Deicide. Often

death metal singers will alternate between shrieks and growls in order to create a contrasting effect.

The lyrical themes of death metal often invoke slasher film-stylized violence,[22] but may also extend to topics like Satanism, anti-

religion, occultism, mysticism, philosophy, and Politics.[23][24] Although violence may be explored in various other genres as well,

death metal elaborates on the details of extreme acts, including mutilation, dissection, torture, rape and necrophilia. Sociologist Keith

Kahn-Harris commented this apparent glamorization of violence may be attributed to a "fascination" with the human body that all

people share to some degree, a fascination which mixes desire and disgust.[25] Heavy metal author Gavin Baddeley also stated

there does seem to be a connection between "how acquainted one is with their own mortality" and "how much they crave images of

death and violence" via the media.[26] Additionally, contributing artists to the genre often defend death metal as little more than an

extreme form of art and entertainment, similar to horror films in the motion picture industry.[2] This explanation has brought such

musicians under fire from activists internationally, who claim that this is often lost on a large number of adolescents, who are left with

the glamorization of such violence without social context or awareness of why such imagery is stimulating.[2]

According to Alex Webster, bassist of Cannibal Corpse, "The gory lyrics are probably not, as much as people say, [what's keeping us]

from being mainstream. Like, 'death metal would never go into the mainstream because the lyrics are too gory?' I think it's really the

music, because violent entertainment is totally mainstream."[27]

In order to be updated with the latest happenings in death and other type of metal music, one could visit the Metal Music Blog which

records the Daily Metal News and Events including Free Metal Music Downloads.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/music-articles/death-metal-5031036.html

About the Author

OzzMosis - Keep it heavy \m/



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