Haven't listened to them in quite a while. Kinda stopped listening to most 'nu metal' stuff a while back. I still like a lot of it, but its not stuff I listen to regularly or anything.
I dont know why they wouldn't be nu metal, though. I guess they didn't have the angsty whining that a lot of the stuff around the time did, but its still not too far from the other stuff, musically. I love the singer. He's my favorite part. Its a very militaristic, commanding voice.
Hey
To be fair, I sort of thought this was just gonna be a thread of people piling on me and I hate myself so I wanted to joke around with it. Surprising outcome though.
Nu-Metal is another one of those genres that just seems to attract fucking awful cheesball names too. Limp Bizkit, Morbid Angel, Sodom, Kreator, Amen, urgh.
I feel like you should never talk about music on GAF again. Stick to spamming random pictures of that redheaded chick. At least she's cute.Danny Carey is the best drummer ever to hold a pair of sticks.
Do you, bro? Everyone's referring to the quote in the OP, not your post.Mother of god. Do you guys even read?
i just don't get that nu-metal vibe from them at all, and honestly they really change the formula up from album to album.
Still a great CD after all these years.I also came here to recommend this masterpiece:
Chimaira????
That band isn't bad!
I hate (I hate) everyone!
I hate (I hate) everyone!
I hate (I hate) everyone!
I hate (I hate)
And I hate and I hate everyone!
Eh, no one said they(or any other nu metal band) were lyrical geniuses. The lyrics are probably one of the worst aspects of the whole genre in my opinion.
From back when I was 15/16 and listening to nu-metal all the way up to now, a band's music always stood out to me first and foremost. Next was the vocal patterns over the music, and finally lyrical content. I don't know if that's because I'm a guitar player myself or what. I doubt I could listen to some of those songs today without feeling a little embarrassed by the lyrics, but I can without a doubt still enjoy the music.
...it's really about the sound of the music. That's all that matters.
Spineshank's "The Height Of Callousness" was one of my absolute favourite albums for many years. To be honest I think it still holds up as a great album today.
I can still remember hearing them for the first time on a Metal Hammer sampler CD. I absolutely despised the song at first, but found myself humming the track incessantly in school the following day. In many ways I feel this was the moment my love for metal really began. This entire thread is a massive nostalgia bomb for me, most of it coincides right with the point in my life when I was attempting to find my own identity through music and the like.
Good times.
I think this post is cute.I feel like you should never talk about music on GAF again. Stick to spamming random pictures of that redheaded chick. At least she's cute.
Respect.
I think you're grossly generalizing why people liked this music.The OP reads like a who's who of about six months of my life as a 13 year old. We all had our embarrassing tryhard period, that was mine. I was listening to some bands I still love at the time too, but none mentioned here stuck. Terrible dated music, basically the bastard child of goth culture as filtered through evening news reports and major labels desperate for another grunge-style moment at any cost.
I appreciate the balls to own up to this, OP. if it makes you feel any better, around last year 19 year olds in scene bands started worshipping Slipknot and like bands and a bunch of them dropped the crabcore stuff and started sounding like the kind of nu metal that has just a tinge of hardcore genes left. So I don't think your love for Static-X will ever be justified, but you are getting the youth culture on your side a bit thanks to the usual nostalgia cycle. Give it a few more years and kids who were born in 1999 will happily bring a second wave of this stuff that idealizes it and makes it seem like every band was more like Slipknot and less like Adema.
None of these bands sound anything like Ministry. The industrial element might have been an influence in a few of these bands(like Spineshank), but otherwise.........what? I've never heard this 'industrial' Sepultura album, either.I always thought of nu metal as being the generic version of Ministry. All these bands were trying to copy the industrial metal sound. I knew industrial metal was over when Sepultura made an industrial album and Axle Rose was making one. Kinda like how you know dub step is over when Tailor Swift has a dub step beat top 40 song.
The OP reads like a who's who of about six months of my life as a 13 year old. We all had our embarrassing tryhard period, that was mine. I was listening to some bands I still love at the time too, but none mentioned here stuck. Terrible dated music, basically the bastard child of goth culture as filtered through evening news reports and major labels desperate for another grunge-style moment at any cost.
I appreciate the balls to own up to this, OP. if it makes you feel any better, around last year 19 year olds in scene bands started worshipping Slipknot and like bands and a bunch of them dropped the crabcore stuff and started sounding like the kind of nu metal that has just a tinge of hardcore genes left. So I don't think your love for Static-X will ever be justified, but you are getting the youth culture on your side a bit thanks to the usual nostalgia cycle. Give it a few more years and kids who were born in 1999 will happily bring a second wave of this stuff that idealizes it and makes it seem like every band was more like Slipknot and less like Adema.
That was a side project by Max Cavalera called Nailbomb. There was also a Refuse resist remix.None of these bands sound anything like Ministry. The industrial element might have been an influence in a few of these bands(like Spineshank), but otherwise.........what? I've never heard this 'industrial' Sepultura album, either.
None of these bands sound anything like Ministry. The industrial element might have been an influence in a few of these bands(like Spineshank), but otherwise.........what? I've never heard this 'industrial' Sepultura album, either.
That was a side project by Max Cavalera called Nailbomb. There was also a Refuse resist remix.
No, Nailbomb was Max, Igor and Dino from Fear Factory.Fuck yes Nailbomb. That was a side project with the Earache band 'Fudge Tunnel' dudes i think right. Fudge Tunnel. Pretty great band iirc. Never was suprised they didnt hit the mainstream stations if ya know what im saying.
FLOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOR
I always thought of nu metal as being the generic version of Ministry. All these bands were trying to copy the industrial metal sound. I knew industrial metal was over when Sepultura made an industrial album and Axle Rose was making one. Kinda like how you know dub step is over when Tailor Swift has a dub step beat top 40 song.
And Alex Newport from Fudge Tunnel.Yea, I know Nailbomb. But thats not Sepultura, nor is it really anything like Ministry.
Way better in my opinion.
No, Nailbomb was Max, Igor and Dino from Fear Factory.
What are you on about? Sepultura industrial album? Stop making shit up.
And Alex Newport from Fudge Tunnel.
That was one of my most anticipated albums of all time. I even remember downloading all of the wallpapers from their site prior to the release (they had dragons on them or something). Unfortunately, even back then, that I didn't end up liking it very much.
A lot of people hated Supercharger, but I thought it was okay, but I might be biased seeing as Machine Head is my favorite band ever.
Anyone remember this?
Really regret buying that album in retrospect
Why was mike patton even linked with nu-metal in the first place?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I4cUGCpEek8
To this day, I still think some Disturbed songs have killer riffs. Like this one.
L.D. 50 will forever be a great album.
It's tragic how the talent of Mudvayne shriveled up. Material on the level of The End of All Things to Come would've been acceptable if their output kept up, but alas they went major pop. And now Hell Yeah!...a waste (of oxygen).
I was really into nu-metal in junior high and into my first couple years of high school. I moved on to punk/hardcore, but I still love reminiscing with friends about most of the bands listed earlier in this thread. I feel like 90% of the songs didn't hold up well over time, but I'll still throw on a few albums for old times sake.
Chimaira - Pass Out of Existence was a favorite of mine.
The following compilation was an essential for all those into Nu-Metal:
A lot of people hated Supercharger, but I thought it was okay, but I might be biased seeing as Machine Head is my favorite band ever.
This song is fun to drink to.