Im amazed at the virtually consistent line drawn between those who play instruments (and at least have basic idea of what they are doing) and those that are just listeners.
When Moonlapse said "primitive" in origin, i doubt he meant "simplistic" in application which is what some seem to be suggesting (or that they "suck"- thanks for the well reasoned "critique"). Only an ignorant fool would claim, for example, that Trym's drumming is "easy". His athleticism, combined with his very musical cymbal and fill work are amazing, especially so on Prometheus. As a former drummer, i highly respect his work, and the potential of blastbeats in general. It is true that in most BM bands they are a generic given; the exact same goes for the mandatory rolling-double-kick of death metal, or the ride work of jazz. ALL music contains standards that define it within a genre. Stop ripping on blastbeats like anything you listen to isnt just as overused and watered down.
Blast beats may project a more overt aggression (i prefer urgency) and get the 'primitive' label, but they also up the ante on complexity (they can vary greatly- there is no one and only blast beat tempo/structure etc.), as the blast beat replaces the more simplistic standard, and demands that the drummer add color on top of a far more demanding base beat. I just dont understand peoples wholesale dislike/dismissal of them, outside of a purely listening experience, in which i fully agree that they are a difficult aesthetic, and cannot express the full range of emotion- however they can be very effective in communicating aggressiveness of all sorts or even a numb, or profound sadness. With a band like Emperor, they can even amplify a feeling of majesty, or epic scope.
Bring on the blastbeat fanboy flames!!!