Metal--the one dynamic form of Music

speed

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I came across this article on the front page of the Guardian website. It is written by Julian Cope, who i know was a guest vocalist for Sunn O))). But it is rather intriguing, in that his hypothesis here, is that metal is the form of music of experimentation and progress.


Bassoons, flamenco, monks' cowls ... welcome to the new rock underground

Julian Cope explains why heavy metal, so often maligned, is at the heart of today's rock avant-garde

Friday August 18, 2006
The Guardian


Metal recast: (Clockwise from left) SunnO))), Comets On Fire, Acid Mothers Temple



In April this year, after my half-hour stint as a guest vocalist for the US doom metal band SunnO))), I left the stage at Brussels' Domino festival and removed my burka. Backstage, I remarked to the band's biographer, Seldon Hunt, how open-minded heavy metallers had become: they were accepting, as festival headliners, a band without a drummer, a bass player or guitars, and with every bearded, long-haired musician among them clad in the habit of a Christian monk. Percipiently, Seldon commented that because the support acts had contained all of those ingredients (except the habits), SunnO))) considered it their duty to reject every metal cliche, replacing each of the archetypal rock instruments with Moog synthesizers, downtuned enough to bring the plaster off the theatre's ceiling.

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SunnO))) are taking metal to places you never imagined. Their music inhabits the territory that once was the preserve of meditative, ambient and experimental music alone. And they are doing it through the most critically reviled music of all. More remarkably, they are not alone. Across the world, underground scenes are using the shell of heavy metal - the volume, the grinding riffs, the imagery, the nomenclature - to test rock'n'roll perceptions and explore boundaries, all the while shamelessly subsuming other vastly different musical styles into their own work.
In a worldwide underground music scene that encompasses artists playing improvisatory music, folk, psychedelic and free jazz, metal is the common thread. You don't hear much about this music in the mainstream press, especially in Britain, where the kingmakers of the music press have inadvertently created generations of musical whores, all doing their utmost to produce what they think the NME will want, rather than the music they want to make. But why is metal the link? Because the avant-garde musicians in the vanguard of today's experimental underground scene grew up on it. They spent their late childhoods/early teens playing noisy computer games, watching 24-hour news of the first Gulf war and listening to grunge and metal. As they are mostly in their late 20s and early 30s, their strongest cultural landmarks are the suicide of Kurt Cobain in 1994, and, before it, the overwhelmingly loud sludge of Slayer, Megadeth and Metallica. Therefore the "inner soundtracks" of the new avant gardists are informed by grinding metal bands, just as the sound of the Velvet Underground's Sister Ray informed that of my own punk generation. Older readers who equate the term heavy metal with the brash, stupefying 1980s anthems of Def Leppard and Bon Jovi will do well to remember that these bands are long out of the equation, having been at their height over 20 years ago.

Let's go furthest away from metal first in our tour of the new underground, to acoustic music. In northern Portugal, the Galician separatists Sangre Cavallum accompany their often improvised songs of national identity with traditional instruments such as bagpipes, lyres, Iberian flutes and chanters, each song sung with an aching and a longing more reminiscent of Sardinia's traditional Tenores music than anything current. We move closer to metal's metaphor with the drum and hunting horn-led Saxon acoustic folk of Waldteufel, which conjures up an ancient atmosphere of Woden's wild hunt careering through a dark-age forest. But the hand of metal is clear by the time we get to Wolfmangler, from Germany. Their album art may look like every other Germanic death metal trudge-o-thon, but the music of their latest record, Dwelling in a Dead Raven for the Glory of Crucified Wolves, features a six-piece line-up replete with trombonist, bassoonist, flautist and two bass players.

As slow and brooding as compost with a grudge, Wolfmangler are the bridge between pure ritual and "death folk", a hybrid music whose best representatives are probably Austria's Cadaverous Condition. This band began as a black metal act way back when, but have, in recent times, brought forth a delightful acoustic side that no one could have been prepared for. Indeed, the only surviving black metal element in Cadaverous Condition's current performances is the Cookie Monster vocals of singer Wolfgang, whose delivery is performed with such a straight edge that it demands we take him entirely seriously. Once past the initial smirk of discomfort, we find ourselves a party to the hopes, fears and shattered dreams of a loathsome troll destined to live out his days under a haunted bridge awaiting the occasional victim, and singing to himself of how he dreads their piteous cries as he gnaws at their bones.

But the clear leaders on the acoustic side are an American band, Ben Chasny's ensemble Six Organs of Admittance, who record incredibly dark gnostic meditations. Propelled by Chasny's masterful acoustic guitar, the tumultuous clamour of Six Organs of Admittance inhabits a heathen netherworld reminiscent of the Lucifer Rising soundtrack recorded by Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page, their 20-minute mantras never once falling into the cod-raga of so much so-called 1960s-informed folk music.

America's underground leads this immense musical experiment. Its gargantuan land mass and the localised nature of its media ensure that no musician can rise beyond their local throng without having first paid their dues. And it is American bands of the past - not necessarily underground bands - that inspire many of the underground artists elsewhere. In Spain, for example, Viaje A800 take inspiration from America's biggest live act of the early 1970s, Grand Funk Railroad, as well as the proto-metal group Blue Cheer, to play a brooding, soul-based slow metal. They bring their own origins to bear by having the singer always employ his own, unique Spanish style (and taking an age in the process). Another band, the trio Orthodox, take the Spanish angle on metal even further. They have recontextualised the doom metal sound associated with the Nordic nations, and the methods of SunnO))), by dressing in the Ku Klux Klan-like cowls of the Easter parade in their home city of Seville (complete with ropes around their necks). They perform extremely long, arduous pieces accompanied by a female flamenco dancer, and separate themselves from the Wodenist, pagan traditions of the Nordic bands by appearing in press shots hailing brightly enamelled statues of the Virgin and child.

Second after America, probably, comes Japan, whose underground has inspired America's own. (The Yoshimi of the Flaming Lips' album Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots is a former member of the Boredoms, and now has a group called OOIOO). Here, too, metal is at the heart of things. The prolific Acid Mothers Temple commune/band rose from the ashes of proto-metal bands such as Mainliner and High Rise. Their international success has, in turn, inspired Japan's psychedelic ritual cult act Death Comes Along, whose free- fuzz sonic avalanches take such titles as Psychedelic Inferno, Children of the Death and Death Death Death. Led by the mysterious Crow, Death Comes Along have also modelled themselves on earlier, more politically motivated 1960s commune bands, such as Berlin's Amon Düül - who shared living space with the Baader-Meinhof gang - and the communist agitators Les Rallizes Denudes, whose own career was forced underground after their bass player hijacked a JAL airliner and took it to North Korea in March 1970.

Politics informs much of this underground music, especially that made by musicians working in repressive social conditions. My travels through southern Armenia in 2003 put me in touch with Iran's progressive trio Kahtmayan, whose violent marriage of krautrock, the French Zeuhl music of Magma, and early Metallica contains samples of US pilots' radio communiqués as they prepared to attack northern Iraq. Recent pictures of these guys show them making signs of the horned god, and images of Tehran's business centres sprayed with Kahtmayan's own heavy metal graffiti - which all inclines me to believe the rumour that one member was recently murdered by Iran's secret police. But I digress ...

The journey from acoustic to electric brings us back to Ben Chasny, who is not just the leader of Six Organs of Admittance. He's also the guitar player in the Santa Cruz psychedelic band Comets on Fire. Even without a real songwriter among the lot of them, Comets remain the rising stars of the underground scene - they are signed to a big independent label, Sub Pop, and even manage to get reviewed in papers like this one. They are the real thing, for shit damn sure. Commencing their career as a radical mix of Creedence Clearwater Revival, 13th Floor Elevators and Slade,they just got better. You didn't know what they were singing about - which was possibly nothing, but what an electrifying nothing. This euphoric noise got the band signed to Sub Pop, where someone told the band's yawping, howling singer Ethan Miller that he had to write some songs. He couldn't, but maybe he thought he could. Mercifully for us, and luckily for Comets on Fire's career, Ethan spewed out these efforts as a side project entitled Howlin' Rain.

Which brings us to the brand new Comets album, Avatar. In Comets terms, it's been an age coming, but compared to your average English rock underachiever, it's way ahead of schedule. The production sucks, but then so does mine. Ethan's not singing enough, but then he never did. Avatar's only great crime is the "everything playing at once" lack of dynamics that Jim Morrison always accused Jefferson Airplane of having. Once their flavour-of-the-month status has passed, however, Comets on Fire's continuity will return and we can look forward to 30 years of classic barbarian space travel barfed out every nine months. Lovely.

The underground is in better shape than it's been for years - and greedy for the prizes. Today's underground collective chant would probably go something like: "Where are we going?" "Everywhere!" "When are we going?" "Now!"
 
Speed, very interesting article to say the least. I need time to absorb all this before I make a sensible comment. Btw, you certainly amaze with all of your in-depth posts. Thanx.
 
SunnO))) take a very intersting stance insomuch as the aim to make the music get into your head and make the listening experience less passive. It takes a while to get there, but when it does it impacts like hell.
 
BloodSword said:
Speed, very interesting article to say the least. I need time to absorb all this before I make a sensible comment. Btw, you certainly amaze with all of your in-depth posts. Thanx.

Thanks; i'm actually quite bored at work--thats when all of these threads and posts are made. Im getting pretty lazy actually. This I found on the Guardian (I love their book reviews, op-ed pieces, and film reviews--amazing, a paper with a staff or writers who can write! Who use big words, puns, and other aliterations), the Words thread I found in a book on the Russian Symbolists, and The Evil thread posed multiple somewhat simplistic questions.

If we could only get our talented philosophers/intellects who post on this forum, to make more threads...ahem--you guys know who you are.


And I remember some years ago, when I think Doomcifer ( i think that's still his name on here) mentioned Sunn O))), and I was amazed at what I heard. Or perhaps it was someone else. Regardless, Im amazed at the level of knowledge on this board on the new and up-and-coming bands. I cant tell you how many of these truly phenomenal bands I had recommened to me, or read a post mentioning their first just released known by no-one album on this board. And i'd download the album from Soulseek before they were even released in America (or available due to very limited pressings) I truly think SUnn O))) and Om, Isis, The Ocean, etc, are the making the most interesting and important non-classical music in the entire world today.
 
speed said:
And I remember some years ago, when I think Doomcifer ( i think that's still his name on here) mentioned Sunn O))), and I was amazed at what I heard... Regardless, Im amazed at the level of knowledge on this board on the new and up-and-coming bands.

Yeah, he is still around, and still churning out recommendation after recommendation of amazing up and coming bands of all types :kickass:
 
After thinking about this, I believe Metal, right now, is experiencing an upsurge or revitalization. Metal is not just noise, screaming and growling vocals and blastbeats, there really is so much more going on. An attentive listener will be able to hear various muscial genres incorporated into the sound. Jazz, blues, folk, world music, ambient it's all in there. However, there are some mediocre and just plain horrible bands out there. Trying to ride the wave of what came before them, and saying it's new. Also, with the amazing digital and recording technology available today, some bands are just masking and covering up their lack of musical ability. There really not as good of songwriters and musicians as they sound, because of the above-mentioned. For me, in the Metal scene of today, there are 2 bands that stick out as being excellent. Enslaved and Opeth. Enslaved are never a band to stay for long at any musical juncture. They are always expanding and pushing forward their material. Opeth, some have said are in a rut, are phenominal in what they incorporate into their sound. There is so much happening underneath in their songs. Truly, a talented set of musicians. Agalloch, are another band that comes to mind. They combine black, doom and folk with post-rock and have forged IMO, a very unique form of Metal. The Lords of "Grey" metal. These styles and combinations are convincing me that Metal is evolving.As all great Art should. The example of Sunn)))0 is difficult for me to analyze. What I have heard I simply did'nt like. Too sinister and abyssmal for my taste. That being said, only an idiot would dismiss this band. They are grounbreaking and essential to Metal's growth as a genre.
 
It's good to see that Cope can still write clearly and avoid constant use of the word "motherfuckers" when he has too. Regardless, I always enjoy the man's writings about music; he sure has a wealth of knowledge on underground rock.

I do think it is a valid statement that the majority of us in this era did grow up on heavier music, but this alone does not make "metal music", so in this sense I disagree. Ben Chasny, for example- Six Organs and Comets on Fire seemingly cull their inspirations from different sources, and surely it is plausible the man was raised on Metal bands, but I don't see this lending any credence to it being completely metal at heart. It is more to compare the bands today as from an era of electrified music than it is to say they are birthed from metal in particular. Comets on Fire, up until their latest release, "Avatar", were a balls out noisy psychrock trip, but what does this have to do with metal? The way I see this style, which as far as it seems it pioneered, and in another sense, revived, by Acid Mothers Temple with the sheer volume of their release output, lends itself greatly to the 70s, inparticular the Krautrock movement (I doubt Cope would disagree). The bands today are heavier than in those days, of course, but the tendency for these bands to not just repeat that and instead amp up their sound has as much to do with pushing the edge today as it did back then. It is just a byproduct of the times that bandmates has had their tenure in metal bands.

I checked into Wolfmangler at one point due to Cope's persistance in plugging the band at every chance, so as I see it, Wolfmanger and Sunn O))) certainly have undeniable metal influences (not particularly in Sunn O)))'s case until some tracks on the White albums, but definitely for Black One), and they have pushed the edge from within that field to something new and altogether different.

Now back to Ben Chasny, or even Acid Mothers Temple (seeing as these are the bands brought up in the article), it can be argued they still are influenced just as much by the Velvet Underground's ur-punk aesthetic than anything else, only a generation removed. So this comes around to filling in that generation gap, what's in there? Metal Bands? We are a generation where the world around us is "heavier", the incorporation of industrialization has brought it on us, but metal music isn't all that's heavy. Sunn O))) got on their feet as an "Earth tribute band", so thereby pushing the limit of a sound which was already pushing the limit, much like their other compatriots in the Seattle scene who were creating something slower and heavier than what was in the past. But these bands weren't direct byproducts of anything Metal.

I guess, in the end, I just have a hard time accepting any truth to "metal being the one dynamic form of music" and it's not even backed up to a high degree in the article, which ventured off the path of the topic at hand by the time it reached the end, moreso being a commentary on the endearing qualities of the current state of the underground than anything else. The music of today is incredibly dymanic, maybe even more so than at any point in history, but just because we live in an era where metal has first had a large influence does not mean everything done today can be defined as such.