cry of the banshee wrote:
traptunderice wrote:
stevelovesmoonspell wrote:
traptunderice wrote:
Ummm black metal became non-transcendent when it became rehashed in the late 90s. I think the USBM current wave actually does what those guys were doing but transcends it in a way. It isn't necessarily better but they have stripped the regressive nature of the lyrics while building on it. I know you guys and lady hate it but from their perspective I think they do so. I don't think they reach outside of black metal quite like Blut Aus Nord does but that could be debated with their influence from post-rock.
So adding leftist nonsense to their overall approach to music makes them "transcendent". Nonsense, it merely makes them a political band, not that I have anything against environmentalism, but to say it separates them from the larger corpus of the scene is bullshit pure and simple.
Umm you're completely misinformed. Liturgy is the one who coined the term transcendental and Hendrix write about personal spiritual endeavors a la Nietzsche. He has an article about Transcendental Black Metal, maybe you should read it before you comment on the damn genre. It has nothing to do with Leftism. Krallice mentions in no form leftist ideas. Their latest album is about the Platonic love defined by Diotima in the Symposium. Transcendental is musical not political.
I think Hendrix has dropped a few too many hits of acid but honestly they are doing a style of black metal that isn't simply the rehashed Darkthrone that all too often comes up. What does it matter what they label it?
You mean this?
http://www.lacan.com/lacinkXXXV7.htmlSounds like half-baked pretentious bullshit to me.
Steve nailed it in the original post.
Not only that, but USBM (sorry, American Black metal) by and large sucks ass.
A cheap imitation of the true form(s) of black metal.
As EBD stated: black metal is in and of itself a transcendental form of music, the artists that are transcendant are the ones that (figuratively speaking, of course) seperate the mind from the flesh of the listener. Adding "progressive" elements to it does absolutely nothing in furthering the concept of transcendence. It either has that ill-defined and elusively transient quality, or it doesn't.
Quote:
they have stripped the regressive nature of the lyrics while building on it
Elaborate, please.
Holy shit! That got published on the Lacan website! Oh man, Lacan is this dead psychoanalyst who is kinda renowned for esoteric bullshit but he was on to something so maybe it's fitting. Insofar as that article was labeled the prolegomenon, it is only the introduction to what I think is a 20 page article.
Well, this inherently transcendental form of music got washed down quite heavily with the ilk of Immortal and Marduk and their clones. Yeah, Mayhem has recently released cool shit, DsO, BAN are transgressing limitations, but by and large I think black metal was pretty stagnant artistically wise minus those bands on the outskirt.
As for the lyrics, the individualism lauded in black metal was only being inhibited by citing Satanism so re-doing it in the more spiritual way Hendrix does I think has something to it, Nietzschean without being infantile.
Edit: I can't get over how his article is beneath a Badiou clipping and a Zizek snippet. But LacanianInk isn't political just to point out. Lacan refused to put his psychoanalysis in terms of ethical or political frameworks. I'm curious what he means by the burst beat. I know Liturgy uses an incredibly stripped down drumset. I don't think that article was too pretentious. He was putting it in overly Nietzschean terms but nothing ridiculous, considering it was published in Lacanian ink.