I'm surprised no one has mentioned Daniel Ekeroth's Swedish Death Metal. It's probably the best book on a metal sub-genre I've ever read. It's generally very difficult to find decent books (or documentaries for that matter) on metal.
Lords of Chaos isn't so great, but I think I have some kind of nostalgia complex attached to it because I read it when I was in my mid teens and I seem to be nostalgic about everything music related from back then. It could have been worse, and I think it's decent if you're just getting into the genre.
It's kind of strange how many people here seem to like Christie's Sound of the Beast because I've only ever heard bad things about it. I personally thought it was a load of crap and everyone I know who's ever read it thinks about the same. What, exactly, did you guys like about it?
stevelovesmoonspell wrote:
GeneralDiomedes wrote:
Popularity works both ways.
I try to agree with that statement with regard to some death and black metal bands that have absolutely no talent. A great deal of underground death metal bands (Master, Exhumed) and other have just recently gotten popular. Also bands like Archgoat, Blasphemy, and Profanatica are a big what the fuck when they are sucking the air away from superior bands. Seriously, bands like that only had the timing right, when they engendered themselves into being. I don't know I'm not an archivist or anything, but I'd like to believe that some bands should stay underground.
So what exactly is your definition of "talent."