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Metal's Bark Is Far Worse Than Its Bite

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  • Metal's Bark Is Far Worse Than Its Bite

    METAL'S BARK IS FAR WORSE THAN ITS BITE
    By Thomas H Green,

    Daily Telegraph music writer/UK
    21/03/2007

    Heavy metal 'a comfort for the bright child'

    It must be worrying to parents of teenage rockers that the National
    Academy For Gifted and Talented Youth has pinpointed heavy metal
    as a favoured music of 11-19 year olds with lower self-esteem than
    their peers.

    This conclusion - that indie, pop and classical fans have a healthier
    self image and are better at forming relationships - implies that
    metal is a socially divisive force.

    advertisementAny old metal-head will tell you such a perspective is
    preposterously misleading. Heavy metal has long been a harmless form
    of escapism.

    Occasionally it hits the headlines, such as when the 1999 Columbine
    High School shootings were blamed on the music of Marilyn Manson and
    German industrial metallers Rammstein, but these cases almost always
    prove to be tabloid scare-mongering.

    Ever since the genre was brought into existence in the late '60s by
    the likes of Deep Purple, metal's main emphasis has been on technical
    guitar skill, male bonding and theatrical shows. Little has changed.

    Black metallers Cradle of Filth may look and sound a great deal more
    unpleasant than Alice Cooper but, in the end, both deal in the same
    cabaret Hammer Horror schtick.

    Metal in all its forms, and there are many - doom, sludge, death,
    goregrind, industrial, prog, stoner, etc, etc - is an easily
    embraceable form of outsiderdom that appeals to the introvert.

    >>From the days when denim and leather (also the name of a Saxon
    album) was the uniform, to the mascara/fringe combo popular with
    many contemporary fans, metal is a badge of teen individuality that
    requires no deep philosophical commitment.

    It has much in common with the escapism of fantasy literature, albeit
    couched in a more aggressive context.

    Lyrics often have high-fallutin' literary pretensions, closer to JRR
    Tolkien than punk's righteous fury.

    Indeed, Iron Maiden's Bruce Dickinson, singer of such opuses as Rime
    Of The Ancient Mariner and Flight Of Icarus, is a virtuoso fencer
    and published novelist.

    When 17 of the National Academy's gifted metal-heads had an online
    chat about their tastes it became clear that the music was a way of
    venting the stress of their driven intelligence.

    The youngsters said they could connect with metal's "politics".

    While it's true that a few groups, such as Armenian-American rockers
    System Of A Down, approach their political beliefs very seriously,
    most metal fans simply require the odd burst of anger replete with
    very loud guitars.

    Rage Against The Machine's Killing In The Name is a song about racism
    from a passionately political group, but hearing a crowd of metal-heads
    chant along to the chorus, "F**k you, I won't do what you tell me,"
    it sounds more like a protest at being asked to clear up an untidy
    bedroom.

    Metal doesn't even have the drugs that the ostensibly more upbeat
    and sociable dance culture does. Ecstasy and techno go hand in hand
    but most metal fans simply enjoy a few beers.

    In essence, heavy metal is a lot of sweaty fun, a sixth form common
    room favourite for over thirty years.

    Parents of junior metallers should happily regard it as a phase. Which
    isn't to say that there won't always be a place in their progeny's
    adult life for the 21st century equivalent of ACDC's Highway To Hell.

    Many of us can vouch for the fact that wanting to head-bang along to
    Motorhead's Ace Of Spades every now and then does not preclude having
    a thriving adult life.

    Heavy metal's bark is far worse than its bite. In reality it's about
    as dangerous as a night out at the circus.
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