Originally posted by HoserHellspawn
Well, (back to the original question) I'm not actually all that disturbed, myself, as I honestly believe that right now is the best time for metal, ever.
Well at least you're taking this from the right perspective.

But it is harder to find the good stuff with all the crapola out there compared with years past. Or maybe that's the point. The crapola was there, we're just not subjected to it NOW.
I'm still trying to decide if time buries the anomalies that should be remembered, or if time does its job and makes sure the shit is forgotten.
Then again, when sometime mentions a great album from the early 80s, "You HAVE to hear this, they were so typical for their time!" isn't something often said. Which means Don't Break the Oath has more notoriety than Battle Cry, so maybe it works out.
But I worry about things these days. Take Elitist Records, to use an example. Rakoth and Ephel Duath in particular. Those bands' debuts now at least get a chance through Earache's system, whereas Code666 was getting them nowhere in the grand scheme, just because they didn't have the power to do it. The business side is so important just in letting the 'right' people know about the talent out there, unfortunately...
Originally posted by HoserHellspawn
Look at the releases in 1999 alone. Just running down BW&BK's top 30 of the year, we have (in not quite exact order):
In Flames - Colony
Testament - The Gathering
Nevermore - Dreaming Neon Black
Hypocrisy - Hypocrisy
Opeth - Still Life
Emperor - IX Equilibrium
Arch Enemy - Burning Bridges
Dream Theater - Scenes from a Memory
Amorphis - Tuonela
Katatonia - Tonight's Decision
With the exception of Nevermore, I don't think there's really much of anyone who would say those albums are the best of those bands, let alone of all time.
My Top 10 of 99 (in alphabetical order):
Agalloch Pale Folklore The End
Dusk My Infinite Nature Alone Hibernia
Ebony Lake On the Eve of the Grimly Inventive Cacophonous
Forgotten Silence Senyaan Redblack
Nevermore Dreaming Neon Black Century Media
Opeth Still Life Peaceville
Primal Fear Jaws of Death Nuclear Blast
Solefald Neonism Avantgarde
Devin Townsend Infinity HevyDevy
Virgin Steele The House of Atreus Act I Noise
Wuthering Heights Within Sensory
And there's only one on there that I would even considered for a list of greatest of ALL TIME, and even that probably wouldn't rank THAT high... and a couple where people actively argue with me about even being good at all, heh.
Originally posted by HoserHellspawn
Anyways, I think when we ask what are the 'best' albums of all time, even if we allow that we can seperate 'favourite' from 'best' we're still not looking strictly objectively at the album for what it is, we're taking into account the influential impact it had and a number of other such factors.
I think a lot of people who make such lists got into metal last year and don't have that much from the 90s, let alone 80s and 70s. I used to do it too. heh. What fixed me is realizing if I was going to write about it, I'd better know about it, so I started off buying CDs that I had no intention of liking, but thought I needed to know. Amazing what one discovers that way. I'd do it a lot more now if I had the money, too, but it's funny when you're losing money like mad on a publication, just how little explorer's money is left while you're just buying full versions of the promos you DID like. heh But the realistic goal of the newsletter (wow, segue back to LotFP!) is to break even, PLUS allow me to buy 30 CDs a month of all styles, even stuff I expect to HATE HATE HATE, because with all the crud I get, I really need to hear some of the crud that's not sent to me, and that I wouldn't buy on a strict budget. Any profit after that will probably go to CDs anyway too. hah! So much for the dream of living off of this if I got 1200 subscribers, I'd never manage the money well enought.
Originally posted by HoserHellspawn
Is it hard to accept that My Arms, Your Hearse (or insert whatever other example here) might be the best metal album ever, because it's only 4 years old?
Certainly, when it's not even the best album Opeth themselves have released.
Originally posted by HoserHellspawn
despite the public image of what metal is based on the angry disco that is nu-metal floating around MTV
I firmly believe that if it was Opeth, Emperor, and Cannibal Corpse all over MTV and Staind, Linkin Park, and Limp Bizkit in the underground, that it's Opeth, Emperor, and CC that would be called 'angry disco'... because the underground is just as image-driven as anything else. We can only think that we ourselves are exceptions to the marketing hype, but we always fail in some way...
I like how the MTV guy put it on this week's Metal Sludge interview, basically, 'If Slipknot was on Relapse Records, all the underground kids would love it.' And it is true.