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PostPosted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 4:58 pm 
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:lol: Actually, the thing is that what I like about this site is that the reviewers are not elitist, and that a lot (all?) of the metal genres are covered. Also at the same time there is hatred for shit like nu metal, St. Anger and most metalcore.


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PostPosted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 8:11 pm 
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Bands like Protest the Hero, however, pretty much embody everything I despise from the music itself down to the typical metalcore attitude. There's a kind of cheapness to their sound, a bit like the whole hipster "post-blahblahblah" trend these days. Protest the Hero vocals sound like a cross between a whiny Linkin Park fan deciding to "step it up a notch", and a Blink 182 or Offspring fan who decided to combine an epic phail attempt at traditional metal vocals with "emotional" boy band vocals. The music itself partly suffers from Dragonforce syndrome: ie. wanking for the sake of wanking without any quality riffs whatsoever. They're one of those bands who seem to want to come off as technical just because they can play slightly varied note patterns over and over again real fast, ma! Take that to the extreme and you get something like Orthrelm's OV at which point you just want to shoot yourself in the eye socket in a desperate attempt to stop your ears from bleeding. Fortunately Protest the Hero haven't taken it that far but have still managed to produce needless music without much substance or anything particularly interesting at all. Basically take the above description and add in some breakdowns and voila! "omg b3st album of teh yearz0rz!"


well, they did start off as a pop punk band that played NOFX covers so you might be right about Rody's vocals. saying they have no substance is kinda silly though since i haven't found any other bands where i can listen to their album roughly 40 times in the first two months since it came out and still not figure out what's going on in half the songs. if anything they have too much substance since they rarely go more than 30 secondsor a minute without dropping some awesome hook, but they never repeat the hooks so the first ten times i listened to Fortress it was overwhelming just how much was going on.

same thing with saying they have no emotion @Zad because of the end of "Sequoia Throne" doesn't make your soul explode with joy then you're probably a lifeless shell who shuold stick to listening to death metal.

and comparing Protest the Hero to Dragonforce to OV is pretty ridiculous because other than that all three play fast they're all doing different things from the other two (in OV's case, a completely different thing from Protest the Hero or Dragonforce). i don't see where that connection even comes from lol. judging things because of stylistic things like being technical or playing metalcore seems kind of shallow and lame to me. also Fortress has a ridiculous amount of awesome riffs, just listen to "The Dissentience" or "Bloodmeat" or either of the two instrumental sections on the album.


Last edited by noodles on Thu Feb 19, 2009 9:48 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 8:43 pm 
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FrigidSymphony wrote:
I used to think exactly the same way, but there is a certain value in what metalcore bands do. It's a different approach to quality than what Death or Black metal bands do, because instead of focusing on building up atmosphere, playing with dynamics (beyond the trademark breakdown) and making you dig for something deeper, metalcore bands are like the pop of metal. Catchiness, simple aggression, occasional wankery for the sake of wankery, yes, but many bands (some of my favourites are Lamb of God, Unearth, Mendeed, Slowmotion Apocalypse and Bullet For My Valentine) have very good insight into just how to correctly arrange the songs for just the right amount of impact. There's a reason Metalcore is currently the most mainstream genre, it's easily reachable and in many ways superficial. But there is quality there, it's just not what we're used to.


Honestly I just fail to see the quality there, and metalcore is popular right now for the same reasons nu-metal was popular in the 90's or glam was popular in the 80s. I don't see much quality in those genres either. As you said at first, its mainstream accessible and superficial. Its a corruption stemming from the blending of a long line of corruptions, and its only real purpose is trend-following for the sake of popularity and that isn't something I can respect.

I may have misunderstood you here in my following response and if so feel free to correct me. You are saying that what metalcore has to offer is catchiness, simple aggression, and in some cases an appropriate/well-directed amount of over technicality? Thing is, if I want to listen to catchy, simple music there are a heck of a lot of bands in metal that I would and do turn to, and who are able to play such a style well. Folk metal as a whole has a whole slew of bands that are catchy, simplistic and upbeat, whose music is actually well written and enjoyable.

Aggression? There are more than enough bands in the metal genre that provide this to keep a metalhead happy for ten life times. Why not pop in early Sadus or Massacra? Or for simple aggression, Exhumed's Gore Metal is perfect without the previously mentioned annoyances in metalcore. What is metalcore's use, then, beyond spoon feeding the mainstream a watered down, commercialized version of a genre they'd never care about in the first place? Its the difference between Guinness on tap in an authentic Irish pub or a nice glass of dark rum vs. those pink umbrella fruity drinks where you can't even appreciate the taste of the alcohol, or when people combine lime and beer. If you're going to drink, do it right. If you're going to claim to listen to metal, listen to metal not the MTV version. Generic comparison, I know, but its true.

Honestly, sometimes some general wankery's fine, but in metalcore it isn't even interesting enough to be worth paying much attention to. Feel free to provide examples of what you mean, though. Shitloads of early bands loved to show off but they made it count, that's the difference. Not to mention if I wanted to listen to "unstructured" overly technical music there'd be plenty of jazz musicians to choose from, not a guitarist basically "cheating" his way into looking like he has the skill necessary to play technically sound music. I just fail to see the point, but I also recognize that neither of us are likely to be budging from our respective positions any time soon :P

I guess what I'm saying is that there is plenty of honest metal out there that provides catchy, simple music, basic aggression, and technical musicianship. Why turn to metalcore?

Edit, Oh damn, didn't see your post noodles. Was kind of multitasking while writing the above post and took me longer than should have been necessary. Will respond to your post later.


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PostPosted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 8:57 pm 
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The quality to be found in metalcore lies mostly within the arrangement and songwriting, no matter how simplistic. Same with Glam and Nu-Metal, although the first KoRn cd has some really cool plays on dynamics (the rest isn't really worth checking out), and I wish I was able to write a song like Phil Collen.

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PostPosted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 9:09 pm 
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FrigidSymphony wrote:
The quality to be found in metalcore lies mostly within the arrangement and songwriting, no matter how simplistic. Same with Glam and Nu-Metal, although the first KoRn cd has some really cool plays on dynamics (the rest isn't really worth checking out), and I wish I was able to write a song like Phil Collen.


+1, except for Korn, I tried listening to all of their albums and it's a wonder how I'm still alive as their discography will drive anyone to suicide. Hell I still remember that awful, awful track called Snakes and Ladders (I think that's what it's called) and it still makes me shudder.

But yes although most of both metalcore and glam are shit, there are some good bands that I enjoy, especially of the former. Although I don't listen to them as often as proper metal, I appreciate bands like Lamb of God, Chimaira and God Forbid. As far as the catchiness factor that Ironduchess was talking about, what's the difference between the catchiness of these bands and that of a band like Turisas, except for the genre they're in? Also there are differences in folk metal, as for me the likes of Turisas and Korpiklaani are a far cry from the folk metal of Equilibrium and Moonsorrow. The thing is it just depends on the mood you're in.

And as far as glam goes, the only band I really like is Dokken, somehow even though they sound similar to bands like Motley Crue and the like, they have something about their sound I really like that doesn't make me just say how gay this is and just stop watching. It's probably George Lynch.


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PostPosted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 9:15 pm 
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SoulSociety wrote:
FrigidSymphony wrote:
The quality to be found in metalcore lies mostly within the arrangement and songwriting, no matter how simplistic. Same with Glam and Nu-Metal, although the first KoRn cd has some really cool plays on dynamics (the rest isn't really worth checking out), and I wish I was able to write a song like Phil Collen.


+1, except for Korn, I tried listening to all of their albums and it's a wonder how I'm still alive as their discography will drive anyone to suicide. Hell I still remember that awful, awful track called Snakes and Ladders (I think that's what it's called) and it still makes me shudder.

But yes although most of both metalcore and glam are shit, there are some good bands that I enjoy, especially of the former. Although I don't listen to them as often as proper metal, I appreciate bands like Lamb of God, Chimaira and God Forbid. As far as the catchiness factor that Ironduchess was talking about, what's the difference between the catchiness of these bands and that of a band like Turisas, except for the genre they're in? Also there are differences in folk metal, as for me the likes of Turisas and Korpiklaani are a far cry from the folk metal of Equilibrium and Moonsorrow. The thing is it just depends on the mood you're in.

And as far as glam goes, the only band I really like is Dokken, somehow even though they sound similar to bands like Motley Crue and the like, they have something about their sound I really like that doesn't make me just say how gay this is and just stop watching. It's probably George Lynch.


I love Snakes and Ladders :P The singer really does some cool stuff in the little volume games, it's almost similar to what Friden does on current In Flames records, and IMO it's a fucking punch in the face (in a good way).

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PostPosted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 9:23 pm 
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Oh and it's Shoots and Ladders btw.

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PostPosted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 9:58 pm 
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i like metalcore because of cool riffs, emotion and good songs; pretty much the same reasons i like any other type of metal. Converge sounds a lot more sincere in how pissed off they are than Demolition Hammer or Exhumed or whatever but that might just be because i like them a lot. in general metalcore is a lot more open towards earnest and straightforward emotion while other types of metal tend to hide behind "fuck yeah war and Satan", so that gives bands like Thrice or Protest the Hero a desperation i don't hear in other types of metal.


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PostPosted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 10:07 pm 
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FrigidSymphony wrote:
Oh and it's Shoots and Ladders btw.


The one with the nursery rhymes, yeah? I can't believe I know that. I've gotten to the stage now where Soulfly and Deftones are the only Nu Metal bands worth listening to for anything except lulz, and even then both have some truly awful moments on their early albums.

OK, I'll admit it; and Disturbed.


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PostPosted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 10:33 pm 
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Mudvayne's L.D. 50 is probably the best Nu-Metal album ever. It's full of all the creativity, emotion and ability the rest of the genre wasn't proficient enough to produce. The End Of All Things To Come was more song oriented, but it was still great. Slipknot's self-titled was pretty balls-out awesome too. So was Iowa; it just had more filler.


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PostPosted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 10:36 pm 
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Goat wrote:
FrigidSymphony wrote:
Oh and it's Shoots and Ladders btw.


The one with the nursery rhymes, yeah? I can't believe I know that. I've gotten to the stage now where Soulfly and Deftones are the only Nu Metal bands worth listening to for anything except lulz, and even then both have some truly awful moments on their early albums.

OK, I'll admit it; and Disturbed.


lol even I'll admit Disturbed, though not really the first album (except Down with the Sickness, if I remember d rest of d album was pretty gay with rapping in places ffs) but I haven't heard them in ages.

As for Deftones, I just heard the first single off Saturday Night Wrist, and fuck me if those weren't some of the most whiny vocals ever. Worse than Corey Taylor's embarrassing ''growled'' vocals.


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PostPosted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 11:15 pm 
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Chino Moreno's a pretty love-or-hate singer, but I love his voice to death.


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PostPosted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 2:18 am 
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noodles wrote:
well, they did start off as a pop punk band that played NOFX covers so you might be right about Rody's vocals. saying they have no substance is kinda silly though since i haven't found any other bands where i can listen to their album roughly 40 times in the first two months since it came out and still not figure out what's going on in half the songs. if anything they have too much substance since they rarely go more than 30 secondsor a minute without dropping some awesome hook, but they never repeat the hooks so the first ten times i listened to Fortress it was overwhelming just how much was going on.

same thing with saying they have no emotion @Zad because of the end of "Sequoia Throne" doesn't make your soul explode with joy then you're probably a lifeless shell who shuold stick to listening to death metal.

and comparing Protest the Hero to Dragonforce to OV is pretty ridiculous because other than that all three play fast they're all doing different things from the other two (in OV's case, a completely different thing from Protest the Hero or Dragonforce). i don't see where that connection even comes from lol. judging things because of stylistic things like being technical or playing metalcore seems kind of shallow and lame to me. also Fortress has a ridiculous amount of awesome riffs, just listen to "The Dissentience" or "Bloodmeat" or either of the two instrumental sections on the album.


Question. When you say there you “haven’t found any other bands where I can listen to their album roughly 40 times in the first two months since it came out and still not figure out what’s going on in half the songs” are you over exaggerating in any shape or form. I took your advice on those three songs, The dissentience, Bloodmeat and Sequoia Throne. I opened each one up in a window on youtube and gave them each four or five listens. Even within the first two listens it was pretty easy to figure out what was going on and I often kept pausing and switching back in forth between songs around approximate time and comparing. Isolate the guitarist and the bassist in each song and you hear a similar formula in each song. Each song, with slight variations, seems to follow the initial structure of some kind of running scale or arpeggio, followed or preceded by some kind dull breakdown. I actually don’t find the riffs in Bloodmeat or The Dissentience to be catchy at all. In fact, I found them rather irritating in an atonal, repetitive kind of way. The drummer is unremarkable at best, absolutely nothing about the drumming really catches my interest.

When you say that there seems to be a lot going on, I honestly think that its production and speed have a lot to do with it. Production-wise you get a lot of vocal layering, which I wonder how it would replicate live. Also, while the vocalist alters between three distinct vocal styles, he is pretty monotonous and sounds off key in each one (at least most decent dm vocalists can growl on fucking key). To me his vocals don’t sound emotional at all. If you hear him in one song you’ve apparently heard him in every song.

Now I realise I was earlier talking about van Drunen’s vocals being very distinct, for example, but I think the problem for me here is that he sounds, to my ears, more like he’s caterwauling off key than adding anything productive to the music. What I liked about van Drunen’s vocal style is that, in the context of a WWII album that focuses on the German advance into hostile Russian territory during a harsh Russian winter is that his voice sounds like it reflects that kind of fatigue and despair a soldier in that situation would face. By the end of the album on the song Berlin with the verses “The war is over, it is done” etc. you pretty much get the feeling that the soldier is on the verge of collapse now that the tireless march is complete. His vocals fit the emotion one might expect from such a soldier. I have a very hard time hearing any sort of convincing emotion in the vocalist of Protest the Hero.

You mentioned the end of Sequoia Throne as an example of the emotional performance of the vocalist. I assume you mean 2:23 onward? If so, his vocal performance seems just about as convincing as your average backstreet boy trying to convince his audience of his heart break over losing some love or other by singing in what I’d describe as a rather infantile style native to every pretty boy singer since New Kids on the Block. To me that is a classic example of a pre-packaged commercial attempt at a “woe is me look at how deep I am” style. Back in grade 6 or 7 I remember my classmates used to listen to a band called Prozak and there was a song they’d play over and over in gym class, at lunch, not to mention it seemed to be on every radio station. I remember this because the vocalist had that same annoying, droning “woe is me I sound like a pre-pubescent child” style. Maybe if I were ever a fan of 90s pop music this would appeal to me in some way or other. However, that is not the case and I have always found that style utterly nauseating. The guitar work matches the vocalist's all too sugary performance with his own, and it really is something I’d expect from Dragonforce (some clips could easily be mistaken for Dragonforce, in fact).

I actually wouldn’t go as far as to say that Dragonforce and Protest the Hero are aiming for all too different goals. Some similarities would be their shared tendency to run scales at lightning speed, which makes them, to your average “guitar hero”, sound like there is a lot going on technically when in actuality it’s a pure smoke screen. There’s a lot of superficial layering going on that adds to the effect. I’m curious to hear about some of these hooks that you claim aren’t repeated elsewhere because to me it sounds like they keep reusing the same formula with occasional variation.

As for my comparison to Orthrelm’s OV, if you look at the context wherein I made the comparison you’ll notice that it is referring to the repetitive nature of the riffs. I used of as an excessive example. I agree that Orthrelm are trying to achieve something quite different, but there is some similarity to be recognized.

In contrast to Protest the Hero, I think a band like Sleep Terror (off Probing Tranquility not their newer non-instrumental songs) is an example of a band that actually does employ interesting use of odd time signatures, shifts, stylistic variations and creative transitions that, despite their erratic nature, fit and blend well into each other without trying to mask whatever repetition there is with smoke screens. Though I’d say that Sleep Terror do get repetitive after a while and there’s definitive formula(s) to be found there, too, Jaeger’s work is at least an example of a band that genuinely does employ interesting theoretical techniques.

When it comes to Protest the Hero and bands of their ilk, while I may not enjoy the metalcore style musically speaking and, thusly, admittedly biased, what gets me even more is that they put up a façade of technical complexity that is easily exposed once you isolate their songs into their three or four basic sections as well as the respective instruments. The dishonesty of it is what gets me most (other than the sugary music that is). There's nothing inherently wrong with repetition, and some times it can work well in portraying a kind of cohesion in an album, but at least be honest about it.

Also, I think to make such a comment as “same thing with saying they have no emotion @Zad because of the end of "Sequoia Throne" doesn't make your soul explode with joy then you're probably a lifeless shell who shuold stick to listening to death metal” is a pretty ignorant one to make, but I've already rambled on for long enough.

Edit, wrote this up quickly and there seemed to be some weird spots...its late, too many energy drinks, I apologise.


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PostPosted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 3:47 am 
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tl;dr.


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PostPosted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 7:50 am 
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IronDuchess wrote:
Question. When you say there you “haven’t found any other bands where I can listen to their album roughly 40 times in the first two months since it came out and still not figure out what’s going on in half the songs” are you over exaggerating in any shape or form.


not really. i listened to it between 1-3 times every day when it leaked last January and for about three months i was a little disappointed with it because i thought they blew their load too early on the album, with "Bloodmeat", "Sequoia Throne" and "Bone Marrow" being the best songs. i even tried reorganizing the track list a bunch to make it work better but eventually gave up on that. then eventually "Spoils", "The Dissentience", and "Goddess Bound" clicked with me; i remember for "Spoils" it was when i read the lyrics. i only started appreciating "Limb From Limb" the last two or three times i listened to the album, and i still think "Palms Read" is kinda weak. (it should be longer or smth.) there aren't any other albums that come close to Fortress in terms of how long it's taken me to appreciate, except maybe The Mars Volta's Amputechture, but in that case it was me gaining an appreciation for jazz and psychedelic rock rather than figuring out what was going on in the album.

anyways i can understand hating Protest the Hero for sounding poppy or whatever; if i were angrier and/or closed minded when i'd first heard Kezia, i probably would have called it gay emocore shit and never listened to it again. but the fact is that their music is some of the most attention-requiring music i've come across - they cram so many ideas into three minute songs that if my mind strays to something else even briefly, the whole song is ruined for me - and criticizing Rody for taking on a "woe is me" style is like criticizing a death metal singer for trying to sound like the cookie monster or a silly evil demon: it doesn't really say anything because you can take any music and characterize it in a negative way

what makes Protest the Hero different from Backstreet Boys or whatever other pop band is that instead of cramming a chorus into your head by repeating it ad nauseum, they rarely repeat anything, and what makes them different from Dragonforce (well, they do the repeated chorus thing too) or Dream Theater or whatever is that they rarely have extended instrumental/soloing breaks (none on Kezia, two on Fortress). that's basically their appeal to me. they combine the best of catchy pop music, with the best of tricksy technical music while shaving away the shit i don't like about either genre. i guess if you aren't down with that then whatever.

i should probably give Hail of Bullets' album a closer listen.


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PostPosted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 1:49 pm 
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noodles wrote:
anyways i can understand hating Protest the Hero for sounding poppy or whatever; if i were angrier and/or closed minded when i'd first heard Kezia, i probably would have called it gay emocore shit and never listened to it again. but the fact is that their music is some of the most attention-requiring music i've come across - they cram so many ideas into three minute songs that if my mind strays to something else even briefly, the whole song is ruined for me - and criticizing Rody for taking on a "woe is me" style is like criticizing a death metal singer for trying to sound like the cookie monster or a silly evil demon: it doesn't really say anything because you can take any music and characterize it in a negative way


Disliking a poor vocal performance (outlined a few of the qualities beyond simply being poppy in the above post) is a sign of being an angry person or close-minded? The primary criticism of the "woe is me" style is that it isn't reflective of an emotionally powerful performance as you suggested. The vocals are not powerful at all, but rather pathetic and, as I mentioned, tend to use the same tactic as boy bands do to come off as "emotional". If we go into clean vocal performances in heavy metal, doom metal, power metal and elsewhere (since you don't seem to be a fan of dm vocals) there are plenty of examples of powerful vocalists who do a great job of portraying the mood of the song without sounding weak (and I don't simply mean vulnerable, physically weak, "emo" etc., but as in not properly projected from the diaphragm) and thin.

Also, if you have the time or desire to do so I wouldn't mind reading your opinion on what exactly those numerous ideas are that are apparently crammed into the songs? In my last post I went into a little detail why I found the opposite to be true, so I'm kind of curious about what you're hearing that reflects that.

Quote:
what makes Protest the Hero different from Backstreet Boys or whatever other pop band is that instead of cramming a chorus into your head by repeating it ad nauseum, they rarely repeat anything, and what makes them different from Dragonforce (well, they do the repeated chorus thing too) or Dream Theater or whatever is that they rarely have extended instrumental/soloing breaks (none on Kezia, two on Fortress). that's basically their appeal to me. they combine the best of catchy pop music, with the best of tricksy technical music while shaving away the shit i don't like about either genre. i guess if you aren't down with that then whatever.


I'll take some time later on to give a few examples of where I saw the tendency toward repetition and so on.


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PostPosted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 6:22 pm 
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I'm not trying to sound mean-spirited or anything, but instead of saying you just don't like their style or their music as a whole, and saying what doesn't appeal to you, you seem intent on saying that you're indisputably right because they have no talent, and you try to prove that by going on long winded tangents that say pretty much nothing. I could understand the former perfectly, because I've been there, but the latter seems like a desperate attempt to prove the validity of your argument (Rody is off key? Their technical ability is a facade?). I think you said it best yourself:

Quote:
When it comes to Protest the Hero and bands of their ilk, while I may not enjoy the metalcore style musically speaking and, thusly, admittedly biased,


Just because you don't like them doesn't mean they're bad musicians or that they aren't talented.


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PostPosted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 6:25 pm 
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Or that they have a compositional attitude different than what you're used to or what you enjoy personally. It's the same point I was trying to make with fucking Nickelback.

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 6:40 pm 
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FrigidSymphony wrote:
Or that they have a compositional attitude different than what you're used to or what you enjoy personally. It's the same point I was trying to make with fucking Nickelback.


Nickleback is gay dude get over it.


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The_Voice wrote:
FrigidSymphony wrote:
Or that they have a compositional attitude different than what you're used to or what you enjoy personally. It's the same point I was trying to make with fucking Nickelback.


Nickleback is gay dude get over it.


They know how to play, and they know how to arrange. I don't give a shit if you think they're "gay", recognition should be given where it's due.

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