..Doom Metal
Doom metal is a form of heavy metal that emerged as a recognized metal sub-genre in the early/mid-1980s. Doom metal is heavier and slower than other metal genres. Lyrics play a very important role in this genre, and are traditionally rife with pessimism, evoking an atmosphere of darkness, despair and misery. Musically, doom metal is strongly influenced by the early work of Black Sabbath. A number of early Black Sabbath tracks, such as "Black Sabbath" are often considered embryonic or prototypical doom metal songs. Many of the tracks on their third album Master of Reality (released in 1971) seem to have more in common with what today is seen as doom metal, with tracks such as "Sweet Leaf", and "Into The Void" that featured Tony Iommi's guitar and Geezer Butler's bass tuned down to C# for heavier riffing and reduced string tension for Iommi's previously injured fingers. However Black Sabbath was not the only influence- many doom metal bands started up only a few years after Black Sabbath's debut, some of whom hailed from countries that had not yet seen the rise of Black Sabbath's popularity.
History of doom metal
Doom metal is among the oldest forms of heavy metal, rooted in the music of early Black Sabbath, who are one of the first heavy metal bands. Their music is rooted in blues, but with the specific loud guitar playing of Iommi, and the then-uncommon dark and pessimistic lyrics and atmosphere, they set the standards of early heavy metal and inspired various doom metal bands. In the early 1970s both Black Sabbath and the American band Pentagram composed and performed this heavy and dark music, which would in the 1980s begin to be known and referred to as doom metal by subsequent musicians, critics and fans. From the late 1970s to mid 1980s, bands such as Trouble, Saint Vitus, Candlemass, Pentagram and Witchfinder General contributed much to the formation of doom metal as a distinct genre. The form of music played by these artists can be described as being rooted in both the music of Black Sabbath and, especially in the case of Witchfinder General, in the New Wave of British Heavy Metal. Some US acts such as Cirith Ungol and Manilla Road also influenced the rise of the style, especially its epic side which Candlemass defined on their classic, debut album Epicus Doomicus Metallicus.During the 1980s, doom metal was deeply underground and gathered only small circles of cult-following fans. In the 1980s, metal was dominated by speed and thrash metal, and in many commercial areas by glam and "stadium-anthem" pseudo-metal bands. Slower, heavier and pessimistic in its nature, doom metal bands didn't receive much attention even among some die-hard metal fans of that time. Bands such as Trouble established the use of Christian imagery and themes in the lyrical side of doom metal which led these bands to be seen as "weird" and unacceptable amongst some metalheads. It should be noted that although Trouble were Christian, many of the later doom bands weren't. However, many of them, such as Candlemass or Saint Vitus, still embraced elements of Christian imagery, not as a religious viewpoint, but as a lyrical symbolism for themes they deal with in their lyrics such as pain and suffering. Doom metal remained more or less underground at this point.
Doom metal developed further in the early 1990s. The most influential doom metal band from the early 1990s to the present was Cathedral (a band led by ex Napalm Death singer Lee Dorrian). Their debut album Forest of Equilibrium (1991) was rooted in traditional doom, yet opened the door for the incorporation of elements from other genres. Besides Cathedral, a whole wave of influental doom bands followed during the early 1990s including Solitude Aeturnus, Count Raven, The Obsessed, Penance, Sleep, Revelation, Confessor, etc. Underground labels who most supported the scene in these years were Germany's Hellhound Records and Rise Above (owned by Lee Dorrian).
From the late 1990s to the present, another wave of traditional-based doom metal has emerged, mostly due to the success of bands such as the British Electric Wizard, and the Finnish Reverend Bizarre. Other bands include Orodruin, The Gates Of Slumber, While Heaven Wept, Warning, Solstice, Mirror Of Deception, etc.
Doom in mix with other styles
Cathedral's debut album Forest Of Equilibrium, was very important in the development of doom metal, helping to expand the sound of doom by incorporating elements of other genres. Soon followed a large number of bands who crossed the doom with other scenes. Few of these bands gained more popularity than classic doom metal bands.A few death metal bands bordered the line of doom metal by slowing down their playing style, such as Sorrow and early Paradise Lost. A number of bands started combining the original doom metal style that was pioneered in the 1980s with influences from death metal, other forms of extreme metal, and even hardcore. The first band who mixed doom with death metal may have been the heavily Celtic Frost-influenced Winter, although this style known as death/doom later became generally associated with and made popular within wider metal audience by three British bands: Paradise Lost (old), My Dying Bride and old Anathema.
Although classic doom metal and death/doom have remained central to the present, during the 1990s the doom metal genre developed in much further mix with other styles. In the early 1990s European bands such as Thergothon and Funeral moved the basis of death/doom to the extreme. With much slower interpretation of death/doom, their music had a new dimension similar to the one of dark ambient music. This utterly slow and often very dark style is now known as funeral doom. At the same time, American bands such as Crowbar and Eyehategod mixed certain doom metal with significant hardcore and even punk influences, forming another new faction within the doom metal scene: sludge doom. It should be noted as well that sludge doom also existed during 80s with The Melvins who made a huge impact on above mentioned sludge doom bands. Also, the band Earth (Seattle band, not to be confused with early name of Black Sabbath) pioneered the rise of drone doom, as the slowest and the most minimalistic and psychedelic form of doom.
That experimentation continued further, and nowadays there are a lot of bands who mix their basic doom metal sound with various styles as ambient, avantgarde, black metal, post rock, folk, progressive metal, progressive rock, crust punk and even industrial and jazz.
Nowadays, the original brand of doom metal with clean vocals is usually labelled as "traditional doom." One of the most important traditional doom bands in the past few years was Finnish Reverend Bizarre.
Genre misconceptions
Doom metal as a genre has one of the most present varieties between its bands. The mixing between styles during the 1990s lead often to confusion in media (especially during mid and late 90s) who mistakingly labelled some of gothic metal, melodic death metal, stoner rock and even grunge bands as doom. Some of doom traditionalist fans take some hybrid doom styles such as funeral doom as very questionable for is it actually a part of doom scene, but in general, whole variety of doom metal fans rejected stoner rock and gothic metal bands to be considered as doom metal. However, early history of these genres took a little part from 80s doom metal amongst some other styles, but soon developed as a distinct scenes and genres completely separate from, and in some aspects quite opposite to doom metal.A number of bands, such as The Gathering and Theatre of Tragedy took the mellower side of Paradise Lost, and started with a lot of experimentation with female vocals and keyboards, creating the generally more accessible genre of gothic metal (specifically, so-called "beauty-and-the-beast" metal). Although this genre is generally considered to be inspired by some death/doom metal bands, it is not considered a doom subgenre, but as its own entity.
Also, it has been argued that a nexus exists between doom metal and stoner metal although each of these genres have developed on their own. The stoner metal bands like Kyuss, Fu Manchu, Mondo Generator and Queens of the Stone Age share with doom metal a heavy sound and a strong Black Sabbath influence, but generally have a different objective: whereas doom metal aims for dark and moody themes/atmosphere, stoner rock aims for a more spaced-out, psychedelic sound. A number of doom metal bands, however, such as Cathedral (mid) and Sleep, have combined doom metal with psychedelic influences, thereby creating a style which some consider as a hybrid form of doom metal and psychedelic rock.
Instrumentation
Guitars, bass guitars and drums are the most common instruments used to play Doom Metal. Heavy, down-tuned guitar riffing is considered an important feature within almost all of its sub-genres. Some doom metal uses keyboards occasionally. Traditional doom metal bands tend to prefer clean vocals, often patterned off Ozzy Osbourne's on early Black Sabbath recordings or operatic vocals, like Candlemass' former singer Messiah Marcolin or Solitude Aeturnus' Robert Lowe. Doom bands with extreme metal influences tend to favor the grunts, growls and screams common in death metal and black metal. Some sludge bands incorporate the harsh strained vocal style commonly found in hardcore and crust. Fast tempos are relatively rare; slow tempos are one of the defining technical characteristics of doom metal. However, some bands make use of faster drum beats--including occasional blast beats. diSEMBOWELMENT often uses this technique, incorporating brutal death metal in their approach to doom metal. A number of doom metal bands, such as My Dying Bride or Funeral, have made use of violins in their music. Despite the outliers, doom metal remains a guitar-oriented genre of heavy music.Lyrical themes
Lyrics in doom metal play a very important role, often accentuating its moody and dark atmosphere or creating an ever-present epic feel. In general, lyrics by doom metal bands mostly present a pessimistic view of the world and life, but the approach depends and varies from one band to another. Usually, lyrical themes deal with despair, loss, depression, death, paranoia, anger, melancholy and various other negative aspects. Many bands such as Saint Vitus, Penance or Anathema for example often wrote lyrics in quite introspective, personal ways, while many others such as, Candlemass, Morgion or Esoteric prefer abstract, mythological, religious and/or fantasy symbolism. Various bands from Pentagram to Thergothon and others took some inspiration from horror literature or movies.Religious themes are very common in doom metal. Bands as Trouble incorporated Christian imaginery in doom metal which will be accepted by most of traditional acts, not as a belief, but for aesthetic and symbolic purposes. Individualism is often a main point in lyrics of doom bands rather than belief, so many of them also share interests for the occult and mysticism and use them aesthetically.
As for early Black Sabbath, political themes were always present in the genre, but Swedish traditional doom act Count Raven was one of the first doom bands which wrote social lyrics about war, corruption and injustice in an explicit way. Political and social themes are most present in sludge/doom bands because of their roots or influences from the hardcore/punk scene. Some other bands with social related lyrics outside of traditional and sludge/doom include early death/doom band Winter, while later death/doom bands mostly followed the romantic, poetic-styled direction set by bands like early My Dying Bride and Anathema.
Also, various bands such as Witchfinder General, Cathedral or Reverend Bizarre often wrote lyrics with a sense of humor and irony. Many doom bands took inspiration from experiencies with drugs such as Electric Wizard or Esoteric - a similar approach to stoner rock bands, but with an important difference - without a "feelgood" connotation prevalent in stoner rock, but with a dark, paranoid and apocalyptic feel.
Stylistic divisions within doom metal
Traditional doom
Traditional doom is doom metal in its purest, non-crossover form. It is mostly slow, riff-based "downer" metal which was influenced by Black Sabbath, Pentagram as well as the NWOBHM movement. Typical examples include Pentagram, Saint Vitus, Trouble and Candlemass. Four "waves" have so far been recognised in the history of traditional doom: the first one started with the originators of the entire genre, the proto-doom bands Black Sabbath and Pentagram; the second one dates from the mid-1980s, especially in the work of Saint Vitus and Candlemass; the third one started with the success of Cathedral's debut album Forest of Equilibrium; and the fourth has been affiliated with Reverend Bizarre.Epic doom
Epic doom is often used as a description for traditional doom bands with a stronger medieval and/or fantasy influences in lyrics. Also, vocals have a much more narrative, epic, or even theatrical presence. Epic doom traces its roots through more traditional metal such as Manowar and Iron Maiden in addition to emulating the concepts of pre-doom bands such as Black Sabbath. Some of today's most popular doom metal bands with this epic feel are veterans Candlemass and Solitude Aeturnus.Stoner doom
Stoner doom is very close to (or sometimes is) traditional doom, but only with a more psychedelic edge. Typical examples: (mid) Cathedral, Sleep, High on Fire and YOB. A significant borderline case is Electric Wizard, whose music can be sometimes seen as a mixture of traditional doom and stoner doom with clear tendencies towards sludge doom. For few bands as UK's Acrimony or California's Goatsnake is actually seen as a hybrid form of doom metal and stoner rock.Sludge doom
Sludge/doom is mix between hardcore and doom metal. Sometimes called "doom core", it's actually a doom metal with roots in hardcore instead of traditional heavy metal. Combining the slow riffing and depressive outlook of doom metal with the raw abrasiveness and shrieked vocals of hardcore, sludge is at some of the outer limits of doom metal, although a couple of bands such as Eyehategod and Crowbar are fairly well known within the metal community, especially in the New Orleans sludge scene from which they came. Even though first sludge bands sport the "booze 'n' bongs" image synonymous with stoner rock, they lacked the stoner rockers' positive outlook on life. Lyrical themes are typically centered around misery, hatred and nihilism, but also social and political issues owing to its hardcore roots. Some examples are Eyehategod, Grief, Corrupted and Crowbar.===Death/doom===A mixture of doom metal mixed with elements of death metal, most notably guttural vocals. Typical examples: Winter, diSEMBOWELMENT, early Paradise Lost, My Dying Bride, early Anathema, Novembers Doom, Ataraxie, Mourning Beloveth, Draconian and Runemagick. This style emerged in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
===Funeral doom===Funeral doom is a style that takes the slowness of doom metal to further extremes, and that puts a strong emphasis on an atmosphere of despair and emptiness. The style can be seen as a departure from death/doom, slowing down the music even further, and frequently incorporating influences from ambient music, creating a sound which is distorted and gloomy, but often dreamy at the same time. Vocals are usually growled, but are often much less in the foreground than in other styles of music, and are rather used to provide an additional texture to the music. The style was originally pioneered by Thergothonhttp://www.metal-archives.com/band.php?id=876, and later also by Skepticism, Worship and Funeral; modern examples include Celestiial, Mournful Congregation, Remembrance and Nortt.
===Drone doom===Also known as drone metal, drone doom is a genre which is even more repetetive and inaccessible than funeral doom, but not entirely minimalistic. Generally influenced by noise and ambient music, the music often mainly consists of distorted downtuned guitars and bass, usually with lots of reverb applied to the final mix, with clear themes being a rarity. If vocals are present they are often "sung" in a screaming manner (such as Khanate). Drone doom tracks are generally long, with typical lasting between ten and thirty minutes; some drone doom releases even consist of only one album-long track, an example of this being Sun Baked Snow Cave, a collaboration between Boris and Merzbow which clocks in at 62 minutes. Vocals and even drums are often absent, and the music often lacks any beat or rhythm in the traditional sense. Like funeral doom, drone doom typically emphasizes despair and emptiness, abstract and apocalyptic and cryptic themes are also common. Heavily influenced by Earth, Stephen O'Malley can be largely credited for the rise of drone doom as a recognised subgenre, being or having been involved with seminal acts such as Burning Witch, Khanate and Sunn O))). Sunn O))), Boris and predecessor Earth can be considered the most influential bands in the genre. Other notable acts include Nadja, Black Boned Angel, and Torture Wheel.
===Black/doom===Black/doom is a combination of elements from black metal and doom metal. As in funeral doom, the lyrical themes often deal with nature, melancholy, sadness or depression. The music is characterized by the use of high-pitched screams, distorted doom or black metal guitar riffs and clean guitar riffs. The most typical bands associated with this genre are Dolorian and (contestably) early Katatonia. Pure Black/doom bands are fairly rare, but bands such as Forgotten Tomb, Nortt and Bethlehem, are also considered Black/Doom due to common lyrical and atmospheric elements, in spite of their prevalent black metal side.
===Avantgarde Doom===
Avantgarde doom is a division of undefinable, atypical and unique doom metal bands with slightly artistic touches. Examples are Esoteric and Unholy. Avantgarde doom also include some avant-garde metal bands which are not strictly doom metal by any means, but with many connections and/or influences from/to doom metal: In The Woods... (with their album Omnio), Neurosis, Jesu, Isis, Cult of Luna, Callisto. Some of these bands are also often referred to as "atmospheric sludge" or "melodic sludge". However, most of the bands are described as having a post-metal sound, which is highly influenced by post-rock, hardcore and sludge-doom.
Fonte: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/doom_metal
Tags:
..Artisti Doom Metal
- T55
- Doom Metal
- Taak
- Doom Metal
- Tacit Fury
- Death Metal, Doom Metal, Symphonic Metal
- Taipan (Ger)
- Doom Metal
- Tales Of Dark
- Doom Metal
- Taliándörögd
- Black Metal, Death Metal, Doom Metal
- Tanelorn (Pol)
- Doom Metal
- Tangorodream
- Black Metal, Doom Metal
- Tanha
- Doom Metal
- Tapetum Lucidum
- Black Metal, Doom Metal
- Tarpit
- Doom Metal
- Tarrakian
- Doom Metal
- Taufane
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- Taurine
- Doom Metal
- Tayga
- Doom Metal
- Tchort (Can)
- Doom Metal, Heavy Metal
- Te Deum
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- Te Devm
- Doom Metal
- Tear Gas and Plate Glass
- Doom Metal
- Tears of a Mourning Angel
- Doom Metal
- Tears Of Beggar
- Doom Metal
- Tears of Israfel
- Black Metal, Doom Metal
- Tears of Luna
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- Tears Of Mankind
- Doom Metal
- Tears of Melody
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- Tears of Mystigma
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- Tears of Rain
- Doom Metal
- Tears Of The Sun
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- Teeth of Lions Rule the Divine
- Doom Metal
- Teeth of the Hydra
- Doom Metal
- Tefra
- Doom Metal, Power Metal
- Tegen Hart
- Doom Metal, Heavy Metal
- Tehenet
- Black Metal, Death Metal, Doom Metal, Thrash
- Tellurian (UK)
- Doom Metal, Heavy Metal
- Temenos
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- Temperance
- Death Metal, Doom Metal, Thrash
- Tempestine
- Black Metal, Doom Metal
- Temple
- Doom Metal
- Temple of Oblivion
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- Temple of Shadows
- Doom Metal
- Tempter
- Doom Metal, Heavy Metal
- Tempus Edax Rerum
- Black Metal, Doom Metal
- Tenever
- Doom Metal
- Tenhornedbeast
- Doom Metal
- Tenochtitlan
- Doom Metal
- Tenotitlan
- Doom Metal
- Tephra
- Doom Metal
- Terhen
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- Terminal Lovers
- Doom Metal
- Terra Firma
- Doom Metal, Heavy Metal
- Terrae Sole Calentes
- Doom Metal
- Terramortis
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- Test-Site
- Doom Metal, Progressive Metal
- Testimony (Pol)
- Death Metal, Doom Metal, Heavy Metal
- Tethuo
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- Thalarion
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- Thamuz
- Doom Metal
- ThanatoSchizO
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The 3rd and the Mortal
- Doom Metal
- The Abominable Iron Sloth
- Doom Metal
- The Apostasy
- Black Metal, Doom Metal
- The Arm and Sword of A Bastard God
- Doom Metal
- The Becoming
- Doom Metal, Heavy Metal
- The Bizarre Blue Spectre
- Death Metal, Doom Metal, Electro-Industrial
- The Black (Ita)
- Doom Metal, Heavy Metal
- The Bleeding (Hol)
- Doom Metal
- The Bleeding (Hrv)
- Doom Metal
- The Bleeding (Svk)
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Blinding Light
- Doom Metal
- The Bloodless Dead
- Doom Metal
- The Bloody Earth
- Doom Metal
- The Body
- Doom Metal
- The Bodybag Romance
- Death Metal, Doom Metal, Heavy Metal
- The Bottle Doom Lazy Band
- Doom Metal
- The Burning Cathedral
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Caktus
- Doom Metal
- The Cellts
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Chapter
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Church Bizzare
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Corpse Grinders
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Coven (Fin)
- Doom Metal
- The Covent
- Doom Metal
- The Craving
- Doom Metal
- The Cromptons
- Death Metal, Doom Metal, Thrash
- The Cross (Bra)
- Black Metal, Doom Metal
- The Cursed
- Doom Metal, Heavy Metal
- The Darkening
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Dead Is Tired When the Morning Comes
- Doom Metal, Heavy Metal
- The Dead See
- Doom Metal
- The Deformity
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Dethroners
- Doom Metal
- The Difference
- Doom Metal
- The Disciples of Zoldon
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Doomsday Cult
- Doom Metal
- The Drowning (Fra)
- Doom Metal
- The Drowning (UK)
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Eleventh Room
- Doom Metal
- The Equinox Ov The Gods
- Doom Metal
- The Eternal (Aus)
- Doom Metal
- The Eternal (Aut)
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Ethereal
- Doom Metal
- The Fall Of Every Season
- Doom Metal
- The Fireball
- Doom Metal, Heavy Metal
- The Flaw
- Doom Metal
- The Foreverlorn
- Doom Metal
- The Funeral Orchestra
- Doom Metal
- The Garcia
- Doom Metal
- The Gates of Slumber
- Doom Metal, Heavy Metal
- The Gathering
- Alternative Pop - Rock, Death Metal, Doom Metal, Rock
- The Gault
- Doom Metal
- The Gersch
- Doom Metal
- The God Machine
- Doom Metal
- The Goddamned
- Doom Metal
- The Gods
- Doom Metal
- The Grasshopper Lies Heavy
- Doom Metal, Progressive Metal
- The Gravity Guild
- Doom Metal, Heavy Metal
- The Green Evening Requiem
- Black Metal, Doom Metal
- The Grief
- Black Metal, Doom Metal, Symphonic Metal
- The Hidden Hand
- Doom Metal
- The House Of Capricorn
- Doom Metal
- The Inbreds
- Doom Metal
- The Jam Session
- Doom Metal
- The Knell
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Lamp Of Thoth
- Doom Metal
- The Last Feeling
- Doom Metal
- The Last Sigh
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Last Supper
- Doom Metal
- The Lilim
- Doom Metal
- The Liquescent Horror
- Doom Metal
- The Lull
- Doom Metal
- The lust I seek
- Doom Metal
- The Malevoiy
- Doom Metal
- The Mandrake
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Mansion of Soul Drain
- Doom Metal
- The Marble Icon
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Mass (Can)
- Doom Metal
- The Mezmerist
- Doom Metal, Heavy Metal
- The Mighty Nimbus
- Doom Metal
- The Mist and the Morning Dew
- Doom Metal, Folk Metal
- The Mist of Avalon
- Doom Metal
- The Morningside
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Mushroom River Band
- Doom Metal
- The Nihilistic Front
- Death Metal, Doom Metal
- The Obsessed
- Doom Metal
- The Obsidian
- Doom Metal
- The Ocean
- Doom Metal, Symphonic Metal
- The Old Dead Tree
- Doom Metal
- The Other Side (Pol)
- Doom Metal
- The Other Side of the Sky
- Doom Metal
- The Past
- Doom Metal, Heavy Metal
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