Welcome to Black Metal History month where we explore the past and preview the future, as We continue to unravel into the great assimilation into the One World Government, which will find the genre forced back into the underground, since "Satanism" in all its forms will likely find itself subject to something similar to the "Satanic Panic" of the 90s, though there is the chance that this will align with Deep State Theories and get written off as a "conspiracy". Either way, those of us truly sworn to darkness shall not care.
Black Metal should be the herald of nihilism., What is more hateful than a nuke? I understand that the genre itself is no longer trendy and thought of as problematic. The only problem is that most people are too ego-centered to accept the fact that they and everything they love will be wiped out. Black Metal is a celebratory song for that fact. No Life Matters. Why do you think it's called corpse paint, you stupid fuck? To celebrate this fact, we are going to venture back into the crypts to take another listen to some classics as well as see where black metal is heading so far this year. Before you get your little glue-sniffing hopes up, this doesn't mean I'm settling back for the next 28 days and just accepting every blast beat that comes my way. Nope, it's the end of the world, why settle for tremolo picking and the same old same ole? I want a black metal that stands out from the pack. I want darkness, but I also want it to sound beautiful, sonic, and hypnotic.
If a band is typically described as raw black metal, then chances are I will be bored quick by anything with production quality less than Horna. If I want to hear something that sounds like old Burzum or Darkthrone, well, I own those albums. What I will look for is new depressive suicidal black metal, which is one of the only sub-genres that I am willing to compromise on recording quality for, sometimes, as heard tin the early work of Cold World , a little rough around the edges works to create the atmosphere. Since history is a key component here, we are going to take another listen to some of the albums that influenced the genre, even though they might not be what kids growing up these days consider black metal; they don't know shit anyway.
.jpg)
No comments:
Post a Comment