Potential for experimentation |
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Diogenes
MMA Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: 06 Nov 2010 Location: Undecided Status: Offline Points: 877 |
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Posted: 17 Oct 2012 at 6:08pm |
...And vice versa. Lots of post-black metal bands out there. |
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Triceratopsoil
MMA Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: 17 Dec 2010 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 4202 |
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About the closest thing I've heard is the song En/Soph by Vaura. That riff at 2:55 is crushing. That being said, the rest of the album probably has more black metal than death metal influence Edited by Triceratopsoil - 17 Oct 2012 at 6:03pm |
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Tupan
MMA Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: 28 Mar 2010 Location: Brasil Status: Offline Points: 1626 |
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It's difficult to me for think in a death metal/post rock band, but there's many death metal bands blending their sound with jazz, for example.
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bartosso
MMA Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: 31 Dec 2010 Location: coffin on Io Status: Offline Points: 1555 |
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I just had a little thought that maybe black metal is just easier to combine with other genres and doesn't necessarily have bigger potential. Bands like Opeth, Edge of Sanity, Nile [isn't it fucking egyptian death metal?], Cynic and others are proof that death metal can be eclectic and quite successful at the same time. There's more eclectic black metal bands, obviously [hordes of ambient, shoegaze, folk, post, avant-garde bm], but maybe it's just because it's easier to... well, play, actually All in all, I chose the 3rd option too.
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Prog Geo
Forum Senior Member Joined: 27 Jan 2011 Location: Athens (Greece) Status: Offline Points: 472 |
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The 3rd option!
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Inexistence is the true normality.
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bartosso
MMA Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: 31 Dec 2010 Location: coffin on Io Status: Offline Points: 1555 |
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As the last decade abounded with eclectic death and black metal bands creating countless combinations of genres, I have the following question:
Which of these two sub-genres of extreme metal has bigger potential for experimentation with genres outside the metal one (e.g. jazz, folk, classical, psychedelic rock, post-rock)?
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