Blackened death metal: Difference between revisions
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*[[Satariel (band)|Satariel]] (early albums) |
*[[Satariel (band)|Satariel]] (early albums) |
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*[[Sepultura]] (early albums) |
*[[Sepultura]] (early albums) |
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*[[Spearhead]] (UK) |
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*[[Thou Art Lord]] |
*[[Thou Art Lord]] |
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*[[Tristwood (band)|Tristwood]] |
*[[Tristwood (band)|Tristwood]] |
Revision as of 17:54, 22 May 2008
Blackened death metal | |
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Stylistic origins | Black metal Death metal |
Cultural origins | Early-Mid 1990s Australia, Norway, Poland, Sweden, United States |
Typical instruments | Vocals − Electric guitar − Bass guitar − Drums |
Other topics | |
Death growl − Extreme metal |
Blackened death metal (also called "death/black metal" or "black/death metal", depending on which style is dominant[citation needed]) is a fusion genre of extreme metal utilising elements of death metal and black metal; bands often hail from Europe. Many of the bands start out as full on black metal outfits and end up adopting death metal influences and fusing the two together, or becoming modern death metal artists. In the 1980s, bands like Hellhammer and Celtic Frost straddled the often still-vague genres of thrash metal, death metal and black metal, and it wasn't until albums such as Behemoth's Satanica that the current form of "blackened death metal" truly took form. Some melodic black metal bands have a style similar to blackened death metal because it owes much to death metal, more precisely Scandinavian death metal and melodic death metal.
Often cited musical characteristics of blackened death metal are relatively high pitched, raspy death grunts in a more black metal style, cyclical technical death metal riffs or simplistic black metal riffs, and extremely fast and often repetitive drumwork with a more groovy approach than in black metal, which is a death metal influence.
Blackened death metal bands often have influences outside black and death metal. For example, Akercocke has also displayed avant-garde and progressive elements in their albums (if considered blackened death metal) and Vesania are well known to feature orchestral arrangements mixed up with black/death metal. The lyrical content in particular draws more from the black metal discourse, with less emphasis on themes of gore and dismemberment popular in death metal. Like with traditional black metal, some critics have noted that particular bands seemingly real devotion to ideologies of a "blackened" nature makes them unintentionally comical. Despite this, the genre has a loyal following within the metal underground, although it is highly doubtful that many of the genre's consumers take the music/ideology hybrid as seriously as its practitioners.
Notable blackened death metal bands
- Abominator
- Absu (Pre-1994)
- Acheron
- Akercocke
- Allfader
- The Amenta
- Anaal Nathrakh (Domine Non Es Dignus album)
- Angelcorpse
- Arkhon Infaustus
- Behemoth (Formerly black metal, death metal in last 5 albums)
- Belphegor
- Bewitched (Blackened thrash)
- Cardinal Sin
- Crimson Thorn (Unblack/death)
- Crionics
- Dawn
- Dawn of Azazel
- Desecration
- Dissection (band) (early work)
- Epoch of Unlight
- The Funeral Pyre
- Gehenna (formerly black metal)
- Graveworm
- Goatwhore
- Hecate Enthroned (Melodic black/Melodic death metal)
- Hellhammer (early black metal; influence on black/death metal)
- Hypocrisy (Early material)
- Myrkskog
- Naglfar (latest album)
- Opera IX (latest album)
- Panzerchrist
- Sacramentum
- Sammath Naur
- Sarcófago (Blackened death/thrash)
- Satariel (early albums)
- Sepultura (early albums)
- Spearhead (UK)
- Thou Art Lord
- Tristwood
- Unanimated
- Vesania
- V:28
- Zyklon