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Structuralist, atonal, modal metal that combines hardcore punk
compositional technique with metal riffs and song structure. "Only death
is real," its guiding statement, pointed out that most of social mores
and morals are illusory, and that we need to pay attention to the
structure of reality instead. Its specialty is seeming random until you
hear the piece as a whole.
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Lawless romanticism that praised isolation from the crowd, denial of
individuality in the face of nature, natural selection, war and
conflict, this genre used melody to construct atmospheric emotion. It
guiding statement might well have been "the cut worm forgives the
plough," and its feral explosion left murders and mayhem across two
continents.
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Punk technique applied to neoclassical heavy metal with the use of
muffled strumming made the most enigmatic heavy music ever, thanks to
the use of the muted strum which produced a buffeting, battering sound.
This was closest to heavy metal in composition but began the evolution
of the phrasal riff as used in death metal.
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Heavy metal riffs in punk song structures, with a combination of the
epic view of history that metal favors with the punk anarchist
criticism, resulting in one long questioning of the experiential value
of modern society and its impact on people, especially teenage
skateboarders ("thrashers," hence the name). Many songs under thirty
seconds; direct ancestor of grindcore.
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Progressive rock, Celtic folk and heavy rock forged this genre from the
ruins of pop music, designed to sound like a horror movie and shock
flower children into reality. Its innovation was the moveable power
chord riff, creating for the first time rock compositions made of
phrases and not based around open chords to which vocals harmonize.
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Grindcore combined thrash, hardcore punk and death metal vocals to
create a blur of intensity whose goal was to sound muddy, offtime,
semi-coherent and like an ugly churning manifestation of the outsider
underworld. Incorporating the organic post-political concepts of death
metal, many grindcore bands expressed themselves through lyrics about
gore, death and other limits to human control.
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Other genres influenced metal as it evolved. Ranging from ambient music,
horror film soundtracks, punk hardcore, industrial noise and
progressive rock, metal's many influences are documented here, with an
emphasis on those that reflected a paradigm shift in their time and
passed that on, through their music and ideas, to metal out of
compatibility with the spirit of metal.
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