CorgiRegisteredFriend
Well-known member
Thank you South Coast Owl.. You beat me!
Me too.I'm in if everyone who normally sends and reviews is too.
Hanging around the thread and remembered to reply. The metal being a broad church thing is interesting because I have just concocted a theory (stay with me, I'm bored). The 10% of metal that people such as me and Staly like may well be a different ACTUAL set of tunes for each of us. Mine? Let's start at Paradise City by GnR and stop for a quick headbang to Ace of Spades. One of the tracks on your CD was Du Hast by Rammstien which I absolutely love. My ex brother-in-law (in general a weasel) was minted and had a surround sound home cinema style thingy. The only time I liked him was when he got some beers out of the fridge and put a live Rammstien DVD on at top volume. And there there's the below (yes I know it's a cover and I prefer it). My guess is that at least half of these nods to metal are not in the 10% Staly likes. Could be wrong of course but an interesting theory for a cold Tuesday night.
There's also a subgenre of metal you don't mind doing as karaoke when you've had a few drinks. However, we're now in swamp country between irony and subconscious liking. Well, whatever - you'll find Livin On A Prayer and its cousins grazing here.
But my absolute favourites were Sacrilege, who were a metal / hardcore crossover sort of thing:
Rather than send me a CD a better idea would be to turn it into a podcast then post it on the mix cloud page so everyone can have a listen. If you, or anybody else wishes to do this then I'll PM you the password for the page.
Never that keen on GnR, but certainly up for a bit of Motorhead. I'm partial to a bit of AC/DC as well, and the first 3 or 4 Sabbath albums.
I remember them; C.O.R Records, same labels as The Stupids and other, more metal-minded bands. I remember being gutted that I had to work one Saturday back in the mid-80's when there was a gig featuring Sacrilege, Doom, Concrete Sox, and loads more of that ilk playing in London.
I could never really get in to the metal side of the 'crossover' though, always preferred the hardcore / thrash elements. For the 4mins 51secs of that Sacrilege track, you could have listened to these beauts from bands who all ended up with way too many pained guitar solo and (possibly) Flying Vs.
And that Sabbath album with the picture of an old mill house and a cloaked woman in the foreground was very creepy.
Intense Degree went to my school you know...
I once encountered Shane Embury buying loads of Sarah 7"s in Langland Records in Wellington.
I've got their 'War in my Head' LP but I genuinely cannot remember a single thing about it other than there was a picture of their female bass player wearing stripy tights on the back.
I've always been a bit fascinated by the 'indiepop / hardcore' crossover. It does seem like there are a lot of people who are really in to both sounds. So many times you see members of 'sweet little' indie bands who play perfect pop adorned in Heresy or Minor Threat T-shirts.