Anticitizen One
A Blurred Photograph
- Dec 18, 2008
- 450
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- 16
I would like to say that all the NS stuff is a phase that black metal will grow out of, but it's probably more likely that it'll be a fairly dominant (if marginalized) force as people continue to cling to tradition. Which is probably the surest way of metal 'surviving' for more than another 20-30 years. The 'orthodox black metal' scene is another example of zealotry pushing the genre.
The current 'bedroom black metal' and 'DSBM' craze is either a phase or the (sad?) thing that metal is doomed to become as the internet becomes the driving force of the new 'underground'. We can already see that some bands resist this fiercely, and that may go on for a while.
I think that death metal is the sort of thing that may wax and wane a bit, but it'll stick around for a long while.
Hard to say, but I honestly don't see metal ever completely dying. Even if it takes on other forms, people will always crave violent, aggressive, bombastic music. Or cathartic music. Elitist music. These are things metal does well.
The current 'bedroom black metal' and 'DSBM' craze is either a phase or the (sad?) thing that metal is doomed to become as the internet becomes the driving force of the new 'underground'. We can already see that some bands resist this fiercely, and that may go on for a while.
I think that death metal is the sort of thing that may wax and wane a bit, but it'll stick around for a long while.
Hard to say, but I honestly don't see metal ever completely dying. Even if it takes on other forms, people will always crave violent, aggressive, bombastic music. Or cathartic music. Elitist music. These are things metal does well.