cry of the banshee wrote:
It doesn't even really matter whether or not death metal actually was becoming more commercialized (it actually was, in the early 90's it was easily the most popular sub-genre of metal, and rapidly gaining steam.
Only in the underground.
The bands that were selling heaps were still Metallica, Megadeth, Guns N Roses, Slayer, Skidrow as well as new stuff ala Pantera (talking about 1990-92).
After that it was Machine Head, Pantera, Fear Factory, Sepultura and lesser stuff ala Pissing Razors, Skinlab etc and by 1996 Nu-metal led by Korn.
The underground was all about Death Metal and Grindcore and occassionally stuff like Napalm Death and Morbid Angel made it into the charts but nowhere near the number 1 and 2's as experienced by Metallica, Megadeth and Pantera.
Though this was after their peak anyway (Fear,Emptiness Despair and Covenant were their most commercially successful from memory).
cry of the banshee wrote:
Thrash was on it's way out, NWOBHM, traditional metal, etc., likewise, except for the die hards, of course... the funny thing is the few people that I knew at the time, along with myself, that were into black metal were just tired, bored and disdainful of death metal and wanted a return to a more pure form of metal.
It was different where I'm from. Metal just dropped off the radar by about 1994 and was replaced by grunge and pop punk. By 1996 I was the only Metal guy left at my school of about 600.
Some of the older guys stayed true to Metal but they got into the ever more brutal DM/Grind (Suffocation, Mortification) or melodic DM and Doom. A small percentage got into Black Metal.
Small town syndrome I suspect (town of only 70,000 people means a smaller fan base).
cry of the banshee wrote:
The fact (and this is the real point) that in the minds of those that spearheaded the second wave (really the first wave as, was rightly observed, Venom, Bathory, Hellhammer, etc. were really proto-black metal, if that, but still the general consensus states that they are the first wave; so be it), that is to say Burzum, Darkthrone et al, saw it as such and did something in response by creating what is now known as black metal, is enough to constitute the notion of revolt, ergo, revolution.
Fair enough.
Though that revolution took a lot longer to gestate than Thrash Metal or Death Metal.
Death Metal pretty much became the standard form for underground Metal throughout the 1990's. We have far more variety these days.
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Oh I agree with your statement about Morrisound studios/Scott Burns production. Personally I think that sound got oversaturated. Even British bands ala Napalm Death went there and adopted that sound (e.g. Harmony Corruption).
It's kind of like Andy Sneap production these days. Any band that gets work produced by him has a too similar sound.