Extreme metal
Extreme metal is a loosely defined umbrella term for a number of related heavy metal music subgenres that have developed since the early 1980s. It has been defined as a "cluster of metal subgenres characterized by sonic, verbal, and visual transgression".
The term usually refers to a more abrasive, harsher, underground, non-commercialized style associated with the speed metal, thrash metal, black metal, death metal, and doom metal genres. Hardcore punk has been considered an integral part of the development of extreme metal, in the case of song structure and speed, in every case other than doom metal.
Definitions
Extreme metal acts set themselves apart from traditional heavy metal acts, such as Iron Maiden, Judas Priest and Motörhead, by incorporating more abrasive musical characteristics such as higher tempos, increased aggression and a harsher extremity. In the majority of the world, extreme metal does not receive much radio-play or achieve high chart positions.Extreme metal's sonic excess is characterized by high levels of distortion, less focus on guitar solos and melody, emphasis on technical control, and fast tempos. Its thematic transgression can be found in more overt and/or serious references to Satanism and the darker aspects of human existence that are considered out of bounds or distasteful, such as death, suicide and war." "Visual transgression ... medieval weaponry bloody/horrific artwork."
According to ethnographer Keith Kahn-Harris, the defining characteristics of extreme metal can all be regarded as clearly transgressive: the "extreme" traits noted above are all intended to violate or transgress given cultural, artistic, social or aesthetic boundaries. Kahn-Harris states that extreme metal can be "close to being ... formless noise", at least to the uninitiated listener. He states that with extreme metal lyrics, they often "offer no possibility of hope or redemption" and lyrics often reference apocalyptic themes. Extreme metal lyrics often describe Christianity as weak or submissive, and many songs express misanthropic views such as "kill every thing". A small number of extreme metal bands and song lyrics make reference to far-right politics; for example, the Swedish black metal band Marduk has commonly referenced the Nazi Panzer tanks, which can be seen in works such as Panzer Division Marduk.
History
The British band Venom are one of the first bands to venture into extreme metal territory, due to their ideological shift into themes of evil, the devil and hell. Their first two albums, Welcome to Hell and Black Metal, are considered a major influence on thrash metal and extreme metal in general. This early work by Venom, in combination with bands like Discharge, The Exploited and Amebix as well as American hardcore punk brought integral elements into the budding extreme metal landscape at the time.In 1983, Metallica would release their debut album Kill 'Em All, which fused elements of the new wave of British heavy metal with hardcore punk and the style of Motörhead, becoming the first thrash metal album, and would eventually be certified triple platinum. A few months later, Slayer would release their own thrash metal album Show No Mercy, influenced by the sounds of Venom, Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, and Mercyful Fate.
When extreme metal band Hellhammer first began making music, it was generally panned by critics, leading to the members forming Celtic Frost in its place, which proved very influential on the progression of the genre. During this period, the line between extreme metal genres were blurred, as thrash metal bands such Slayer, Sepultura, Sodom, Destruction and Kreator were integral to the first wave black metal scene. The front cover of the Sarcófago's 1987 debut album, I.N.R.I., is regarded as a great influence on black metal's corpse paint style make-up. That record is also considered one of the first wave black metal albums that helped shape the genre. Their second album, The Laws of Scourge, was one of the first technical death metal records to be released.
List of genres
Primary genres
- Black metal
- Death metal
- Doom metal
- Speed metal
- Thrash metal
Subgenres of primary genres
- Subgenres of black metal
- * Ambient black metal
- * Folk black metal
- * Industrial black metal
- * Post-black metal
- ** Blackgaze
- * Psychedelic black metal
- * Symphonic black metal
- Subgenres of death metal
- * Brutal death metal
- * Industrial death metal
- * Melodic death metal
- * Slam death metal
- * Symphonic death metal
- * Technical death metal
- Subgenres of doom metal
- * Epic doom
- * Traditional doom
Fusion genres
Fusions between primary genres
- Black-doom
- * Depressive suicidal black metal
- Blackened death-doom
- Blackened death metal
- * Melodic black-death
- * War metal
- Blackened thrash metal
- Death-doom
- * Funeral doom
- Deathrash
Fusions with punk rock styles
- Crossover thrash
- Crust punk
- * Blackened crust
- * Crustcore
- * Crack rock steady
- Grindcore
- * Blackened grindcore
- * Deathgrind
- * Electrogrind
- * Goregrind
- * Noisegrind
- * Pornogrind
- Metalcore
- * Deathcore
- * Electronicore
- * Mathcore
- * Melodic metalcore
- * Nu metalcore
- * Progressive metalcore
- Sludge metal
Fusion with other rock styles
- Black 'n' roll
- Death 'n' roll
- Gothic-doom
- Progressive doom
- Stoner metal
Fusions with other musical styles
- Drone metal
- Pagan metal
- Viking metal
Derivatives
- Avant-garde metal
- Funk metal, influenced by thrash metal
- Gothic metal, influenced by death-doom and doom metal
- Groove metal, influenced by thrash metal and death metal
- Grunge, influenced by sludge metal and thrash metal.
- Neoclassical metal and power metal, influenced by speed metal and thrash metal
- Post-metal, influenced by doom metal and later black metal