Page 3 of 4
Posted: 08 Sep 2006, 19:00
by Izzy HaveMercy
James Blast wrote:Izzy HaveMercy wrote:And Death Metal nearly succeeded...
Bollox! that just sounds like a load of shopping trolleys falling down a lift shaft!
That's Black Metal, James. Death metal sounds like listening to your stomach after a 7-course dinner with a stethoscope.
IZ.
Posted: 08 Sep 2006, 20:22
by James Blast
<---none the wiser, but then I'm old and gave up after thrash/speed metal
Posted: 08 Sep 2006, 20:26
by weebleswobble
ormfdmrush wrote:weebleswobble wrote:ormfdmrush wrote:
сам гандон
English please otherwise it'll be Fuds all round
[translation]: "you're a condom, too"
maybe, you will NOT be calling me fud, eh?
Not at all.....................
Posted: 08 Sep 2006, 20:27
by Zuma
James Blast wrote:<---none the wiser, but then I'm old and gave up after thrash/speed metal
It was NWOBHM for me...
Posted: 08 Sep 2006, 20:33
by James Blast
Jeez! ye mean y've never seen and heard Anthrax, Megadeth, Slayer et al Dave?
<cough> Metallica <cough>
Posted: 08 Sep 2006, 20:54
by Zuma
James Blast wrote:Jeez! ye mean y've never seen and heard Anthrax, Megadeth, Slayer et al Dave?
<cough> Metallica <cough>
Oh aye, just thought they were pish that's all - dutifuly went and bought the first Anthrax record as it had good reviews and nearly crashed the car laughing at how awful and cliched it was..I'm sure some of it has merit but lost the will to try. Struck me very much as style and technique over content.
Each to their own though
(edit) - And I do realise some of that stuff means a hell of a lot to some folks which I respect, just not for me.
Posted: 08 Sep 2006, 21:11
by mh
Among the Living is still an all-time great. Most metal bands from a certain era don't really hit their stride until their third anyway.
Has nobody mentioned Black Sabbath yet? That first LP is awesome stuff - totally un-metal and weird and twisted stuff.
Posted: 08 Sep 2006, 21:20
by ormfdmrush
weebleswobble wrote:ormfdmrush wrote:weebleswobble wrote:
English please otherwise it'll be Fuds all round
[translation]: "you're a condom, too"
maybe, you will NOT be calling me fud, eh?
Not at all.....................
Posted: 08 Sep 2006, 22:42
by James Blast
nae, yuo misunnderstake uss
Posted: 09 Sep 2006, 09:56
by OverThe Rainbow
mh wrote:
Has nobody mentioned Black Sabbath yet? That first LP is awesome stuff - totally un-metal and weird and twisted stuff.
and still sounds great
Posted: 09 Sep 2006, 13:22
by allfear
First goth record as far as im concerned was Devils Grip by the Crazy World of Arthur Brown released in 1967 , that directly influenced Sabbath, Alice Cooper ect.
And the first band with the concept of Drum Machine driven music (ie what the sisters/violetsd did and all its deritivies) goes back to the album Journey by Kingdom Come in 1973.....
Matt
Posted: 09 Sep 2006, 18:09
by Karst
Suprised Led Zep wasn't mentioned. Or Television. Or Sinatra for that matter.
Posted: 10 Sep 2006, 03:03
by 8.5
Let us not talk of awful things...
Posted: 10 Sep 2006, 18:07
by Andie
allfear wrote:First goth record as far as im concerned was Devils Grip by the Crazy World of Arthur Brown released in 1967 , that directly influenced Sabbath, Alice Cooper ect.
And the first band with the concept of Drum Machine driven music (ie what the sisters/violetsd did and all its deritivies) goes back to the album Journey by Kingdom Come in 1973.....
Matt
i think you'll find that bands in the last rush of punk weren't that choosy with their infulences...
if you take the music we call post punk/new wave as being the forbears of the music loosely termed Goth then you'll find that with all things there had to be a catalyst...something that was new and inventive that stretched boundaries...
what you're asking me to believe is that bands who use a drum machine are influenced by Kingdom Come...where as i suggest that they're more likely to be influenced by bands like Human League and Cabaret Voltair who were pushing the boundaries of the drum machine in the late 70's...while they (HL and CV) may have cited Kingdom Come as forbares it doesn't mean that bands from Leeds in 1981 would also...in the same way as people say that Iggy and the MC5 influenced punk and the Pistols...yeah cool...but the Pistols were then the major influence on bands that followed...the so called second wave...
in short while you have the originators...you don't necessarily have the original influences...the music of Sabbath and Alice Cooper is far removed from the world of goth music in my point of view...where as punks second wave is far closer in both style and attitude...and influence
this is where things get blured as this is only my opinion from where i stood in 1979 as a 15 year old...the bands who influenced me and the music that inspired me...i wasn't trying to reinvent past glories...i wanted new ones...now today as i look back i can see more of the relevance in seeking out the past...but it wasn't a consideration then
hugs
andie
Posted: 10 Sep 2006, 20:07
by Maisey
Wait, so this was a silly thread?! What fool shouts "who started goth?" to a bunch of sisters, siouxsie and joy division fans and expects Madonna as an answer. These people are dangerous, dangerously serious when it comes to taking themselves too seriously
Posted: 10 Sep 2006, 20:44
by ormfdmrush
hey, i didn't expect Madonna!
she's a grindcore drummer, not goff
Posted: 10 Sep 2006, 21:53
by James Blast
I posted a thread (another Blast one that died at birth) about Kingdom Come and their Bentley Rhythm Ace album Journey c.2004.
Now some of you remember that album?
Baisturts!
<-----peeved
Posted: 11 Sep 2006, 11:41
by markfiend
James Blast wrote:Now some of you remember that album?
No.
I do remember the thread though
James
Posted: 11 Sep 2006, 18:39
by wild bill buttock
No-body mentioned King crimson's first album yet?If In the court of the crimson king ain't goff as fukc I'll eat my own dusty hat.
Posted: 11 Sep 2006, 19:10
by mh
Hem hem.
Devil at the crossroads. Goff as fook.
Case closed.
Posted: 11 Sep 2006, 20:52
by Badlander
Posted: 12 Sep 2006, 09:21
by markfiend
Johnny Cash - Wore black.
- Sang about heartbreak and loss.
- Is dead.
None more goth.
Posted: 12 Sep 2006, 10:32
by ormfdmrush
you're on the right road, men
Posted: 12 Sep 2006, 20:06
by mh
Well, it's about doomed love 'n' death 'n' stuff, but the colour is all wrong. Make your own mind up:
Alas, my love, you do me wrong,
To cast me off discourteously.
For I have loved you well and long,
Delighting in your company.
Chorus:
Greensleeves was all my joy
Greensleeves was my delight,
Greensleeves was my heart of gold,
And who but my lady greensleeves.
Your vows you've broken, like my heart,
Oh, why did you so enrapture me?
Now I remain in a world apart
But my heart remains in captivity.
chorus
I have been ready at your hand,
To grant whatever you would crave,
I have both wagered life and land,
Your love and good-will for to have.
chorus
If you intend thus to disdain,
It does the more enrapture me,
And even so, I still remain
A lover in captivity.
chorus
My men were clothed all in green,
And they did ever wait on thee;
All this was gallant to be seen,
And yet thou wouldst not love me.
chorus
Thou couldst desire no earthly thing,
but still thou hadst it readily.
Thy music still to play and sing;
And yet thou wouldst not love me.
chorus
Well, I will pray to God on high,
that thou my constancy mayst see,
And that yet once before I die,
Thou wilt vouchsafe to love me.
chorus
Ah, Greensleeves, now farewell, adieu,
To God I pray to prosper thee,
For I am still thy lover true,
Come once again and love me.
chorus
Posted: 12 Sep 2006, 20:20
by Big Si