The State of Metal Today

Heavy Metal, that beast that continually refuses to die, is more alive at the start of the new century than ever before. Today, Metal is a fragmented hydra-headed beast living it up mainly in the underground, a world-wide underground that is most strongly connected via the internet.  

Fragmentation 

  • Heavy Metal began to fragment in the early 1980s. In the past dozen years many new styles, often called subgenres, have emerged. Among them are
    • Thrash Metal
    • Doom Metal
    • Power Metal 
    • Death Metal
    • Progressive Metal 
    • Black Metal 

Globalization

Metal began in that small island which once headed the British Empire. But today the sun never sets on the empire of Metal. Metal scenes abound in far-flung places such as Turkey, Columbia, Greece, Taiwan, Namibia, Saudi Arabia, and, among so many others : 

Wherever there are bands there are fans, or is that vice versa? Metal fans are as globally ubiquitous as cockroaches, and a hell of a lot hardier. For example, one band has scores of fan-made websites in over 30 countries, from Argentina to Japan 

Proliferation

Once upon a time, obsessive metalheads (a redundant phrase if ever there was one) could name almost all of the Metal bands, their albums, and genre-based magazines. Today that isn't remotely possible because of the vast proliferation of 

  • bands (including innumerable "side-projects")
    • new recordings
    • concerts
    • record labels
    • 'zines 
    • internet sites
      • net-based discussion groups
      Via the internet you can also learn about Metal's enemies, past and future. Read the transcript of the 1985 Senate hearings that Mrs. Al Gore put together. PMRC Hearings


      Underground focus

      Metal's vitality is not something that the mass media You won't hear much if anything on radio, unless it's a college station. And unless it is an older glam-metal band whose members have died or were into drugs big time, televsion avoids the genre as much as the major rock mags. But the genre lives most vividly at shows and festivals.  



       
       
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