Nephilim96
Member
You put down Venom for not creating a "disturbing atmosphere"...
...you do know they're a NWOBHM band, right?
This is why I find this debate silly: they're two pretty different bands. I don't even consider Venom as Black Metal.
You put down Venom for not creating a "disturbing atmosphere"...
...you do know they're a NWOBHM band, right?
You put down Venom for not creating a "disturbing atmosphere"...
...you do know they're a NWOBHM band, right?
Also, lol @ telling Venom what they should have done in 1981 when no other metal bands had even taken after dark/occult/Satanic lyrical themes like they did.
Also, lol @ telling Venom what they should have done in 1981 when no other metal bands had even taken after dark/occult/Satanic lyrical themes like they did.
Uh, "exact same song"? They share a song title, they aren't the same song.
"Radio rock" is no more descriptive than "mainstream"; is every metal band with some Motorhead influence in riffing now "radio rock"? Is Exodus now "radio rock" for featuring gang shouts/group chanting? The two songs aren't a fair comparison anyways since you picked one of two slower/"atmospheric" Bathory songs and one of the more upbeat Venom ones.
Not to mention that their guitar tone was incredibly filthy and raw as well.
Also, lol @ telling Venom what they should have done in 1981 when no other metal bands had even taken after dark/occult/Satanic lyrical themes like they did. Yeah, they obviously didn't take it too seriously. Neither did Quorthon when he went from adamantly denying any Venom influence to playing down his early records as him having listened to a bit too much Venom. I suppose that <insert overly serious Dungeons & Dragons power metal band here> is therefore more artistically valid than Judas Priest too for delivering immature fantasy lyrics with deadpan performance. ART!!!!1
You still haven't explained what "radio rock" is. When I think of "radio rock" in the early 80's, the first things that come to mind are Blackout/Love at First Sting-era Scorpions and Golden Earring's Twilight Zone, and that would be at the heaviest/hardest edge of the rock hits of that era. It's not hyperbolic at all to say that Venom pushed boundaries in metal music, especially aesthetically which seems to be something you value highly.
I still don't see what seriousness has to do with artistic purity (let alone musical proficiency), nor how Quorthon was any more pure in his motives. Especially since on could just as easily argue that Venom's music was a violent reanimation of mankind's inner primal urges with the end goal of destroying every po-faced goth and reinstatement of... ok I speak poor ANUSese but you get the point.
I recognize that they pushed the genre aesthetically, but I also recognize that they only had one foot in the water and one on land, so to speak. The results are records that are not completely satisfying or aesthetically coherent (the crappy vocalist and hit-and-miss songwriting doesn't help).
Genres don't come out of a vacuum. Progression has to exist. I suppose you think Quorthon could've "put both feet in the water" without Venom "putting a foot in first"?
Your criticisms of Venom make perfect sense in a world devoid of context.
You also seem to assume that all extreme metal must meet your desired aesthetic of evil. Different bands have different aims and Venom fucking EXCEL at what they do. In fact, pretty much no one plays Venom better than Venom, while the primitive evil of the Bathory debut would be matched a few times in the future.
Quorthon was not being serious either. If you hear simplistic lo-fi Venom knockoffs with bad goblin vocals and Satanic lyrics and think "Holy shit this is the genuinely evil as fuck!", you're just another sucker deluded by the sham of Bathory.
And "could make the case"? Just read the lyrics to Black Metal, fuck. They're obviously tongue-in-cheek, but that doesn't change or diminish their message.
And nothing special at all? Witching Hour and other early songs were basically the beginnings of thrash metal and provided a starting point for all the early thrash bands to build on, for one.
EDIT: I mean, do you find Motorhead themselves artistically valid or whatever?
Also, I don't care about that argument but DSO kinda fucking sucks so yeah, keep my inferior opinion in mind.
+2 for Alice in Chains BTW <3
What does the seriousness of expression have to do with a given message itself? Not every band with Satanic themes needs to be Deathspell Omega.
I'd consider the songs found on said albums of influence to provide intrinsic worth to the album. "Bad vocals" is quickly becoming your trademark, btw.
EDIT: re: crimsonfloyd