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LET'S TALK ABOUT METAL

  • Manny
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9 years 11 months ago #394976 by Manny
Replied by Manny on topic LET'S TALK ABOUT METAL






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  • valo
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9 years 11 months ago #394988 by valo
Replied by valo on topic LET'S TALK ABOUT METAL
HIM...THAT'S WHERE I GOT MY NICKNAME!!!!

we should probably go to Finland..lol

NikS wrote: I used to listen to a lot of metal but now I've just been listening to more mellow artists like Within Temptation and HIM, I love my European metal bands! :cheer:
I really need to see them both live!

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  • Korean_Romeo
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9 years 11 months ago #394995 by Korean_Romeo
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Some brutal shit!!!!









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9 years 11 months ago #394996 by Korean_Romeo
Replied by Korean_Romeo on topic LET'S TALK ABOUT METAL
Here's an article from Classic Rock. classicrock.teamrock...onfederate-flag


Phil admits he'd turn back the clock if he could and stop Pantera and Superjoint Ritual using controversial banner


Phil Anselmo says he regrets using the controversial Confederate flag as band imagery in the past.


Pantera were regularly associated with the banner, while the cover of side-project Superjoint Ritual's debut album included it.

The flag has been at the centre of widespread debate in the US for its historic links with proponents of oppression and racism.

Anselmo tells Hard Rock Haven: "I think where the use of the rebel flag or Confederate flag with us really came from was from our love of bands like Lynyrd Skynyrd.

"There was never a time when it was okay to promote hate without a little bit of the tongue-in-cheek. It was never this blatant thing unless I was completely out of my mind – which I was at points in time. But that was a long-ass time ago."

The flag was removed from the grounds of South Carolina's statehouse last week after weeks of protests and debate. Anselmo says he understands why it upsets people, since flags can be used as symbols of extremism.

He says: "Would we be flying the Nazi flag? I don’t think so. I wish fucking everyone would get along."

On Superjoint's use of the Confederate symbol, Anselmo reflects: "In hindsight I would have not used it."

And he regrets calling the band's second album A Lethal Does Of American Hatred – to the extent that he wishes he'd never released it. "Truthfully, that’s how I feel right now," he says. "Either that or I would have called it something completely different. It’s regrettable. It’s probably my least favourite of any album I’ve ever done as far as lyrical content.

"I’ve got a crazy sense of humour and I do do a lot of tongue-in-cheek shit. But when something reads in black and white, people most of the time are going to read it in black and white.

"That particular record is a tough one for me to stand behind, that’s all I’ll say. That’s why the majority of the stuff that we’ll be playing is probably off the first record, not the second one."

The reactivated band, now called simply Superjoint, are currently touring North America.

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9 years 11 months ago #395031 by Ninja
Replied by Ninja on topic LET'S TALK ABOUT METAL

VALOlady1988 wrote: HIM...THAT'S WHERE I GOT MY NICKNAME!!!!

we should probably go to Finland..lol


Sorry, but very unlikely to see HIM live in Finland :/ They usually play max one show per year here.

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9 years 11 months ago #395036 by NikS
Replied by NikS on topic LET'S TALK ABOUT METAL
I didn't realise they were HIM fans here, that's awesome! :cheer:
If they only play once a year in Finland, I'll probably have more of a chance seeing them in Glasgow then ;)

VALOlady1988 wrote: HIM...THAT'S WHERE I GOT MY NICKNAME!!!!

we should probably go to Finland..lol

NikS wrote: I used to listen to a lot of metal but now I've just been listening to more mellow artists like Within Temptation and HIM, I love my European metal bands! :cheer:
I really need to see them both live!

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9 years 11 months ago #395043 by WillhelmTheNotSoGreat
Replied by WillhelmTheNotSoGreat on topic LET'S TALK ABOUT METAL
The band that rocks my auditory cortex to the very last neuron is Rammstein :evil: Tragicomic, grotesque, demented, their songs are in a class of their own, and so are their live shows :woohoo: R+ für immer!

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9 years 11 months ago - 9 years 11 months ago #395048 by valo
Replied by valo on topic LET'S TALK ABOUT METAL
something to please the ladies....





Last edit: 9 years 11 months ago by valo.
The following user(s) said Thank You: WillhelmTheNotSoGreat, NikS

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9 years 11 months ago #395124 by Ninja
Replied by Ninja on topic LET'S TALK ABOUT METAL
If were talking about pleasing the ladies, then I must mention Freddy Lim of CHTHONIC. (U know, this is Hey-Ai after all)

Not only is Takao an awesome song, but HOW CAN U NOT love the sight of Freddy playing erhu while the wind caresses his flowing locks!
Ok, maybe its just a wind machine... let a girl dream, eh



Personally I very much prefer the Taiwanese version of Takao, over the English one.

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9 years 11 months ago #395289 by Korean_Romeo
Replied by Korean_Romeo on topic LET'S TALK ABOUT METAL
Are any of you excited about Iron Maiden's Trooper beer? Here's a latest article from Classic Rock.


“Pint of heavy? Don’t mind if I do.” As Iron Maiden launch a new brew, we tell the story of Trooper, the heavy metal beer that's been a global success


The Vintners’ Hall, a palatial 17th Century craft lodge in East London. It’s October 2014 and the great and good from the packaging and brewing industries gather for the British Bottlers Institute Gala Evening. There’s a lavish sit down dinner during which assembled DJ-clad throng discuss bottles, beer and storage containers before the winners of the annual BBI awards are announced.


Not really the sort of beano you’d expect Britain’s most successful metal band to gatecrash.

Except that’s exactly what Iron Maiden did. That night last autumn saw them take home the Gold Award for their 4.8% premium ale Trooper, a beer that has astounded many in the British brewing industry - and beyond - by its rapid (and unexpected) success. Since it was launched two years ago it’s sold over ten million pints and been exported to 42 countries. When it went on sale at the Download festival in 2013 it sold out completely, and the band have just announced a new, stronger version called Trooper 666.

Of course, it’s hardly the first rock-related beer to have emerged in the last few years. Most of these have been little more than promotional gimmicks, short term wheezes to tie in with an album campaign. From the start Iron Maiden wanted Trooper to be different. “It would be very easy to knock up a three and a half percent beer as cheaply as possible and hope that millions of Maiden fans go and buy it,” says Dave Shack, Managing Director of Maiden’s management company Phantom. “We couldn’t just put an Iron Maiden sticker on a brew. That’s not the way we do things. Our fans know that. If we were going to do this, we’d do it properly.”

The original idea was for an Iron Maiden wine. “We chewed it around and thought ‘actually what’s more appropriate for our fans would be a beer’.” With that brief in mind, Phantom very quickly came across Robinson’s.

A family-run Cheshire-based brewer with a history that dates back to the 1830s, Frederic Robinson proved ideal partners. They’d obviously heard of Maiden but perhaps didn’t entirely know what they were dealing with. Certainly though they were impressed when they met Bruce Dickinson, not realising that in addition to his extra curricular interests of flying, fencing and writing, the frontman is a certified real ale nut.

“They didn’t expect him to be quite so forthright, opinionated and with a very clear view of what he wanted in a glass,” says Shack. “The story goes that they did a blind tasting with Bruce and he named 7 of the 10 beers - not just what they tasted of but the names as well.” Both parties knew then that they were serious about this project.

Bruce took a central role in developing the beer - testing and tasting and sampling until singer and brewery had something both were happy with. They’ve come up with an ale with mixes a malt-y flavour with a subtle hint of lemon, a beer that, at 4.8%, is robust but not overpowering. “We wanted something you could have three or four pints of and not be flat on your back with a hangover the next day,” the frontman insists.

The name Trooper was an obvious choice. First released on Maiden’s 1983 album Piece Of Mind, it’s one of their best-loved tracks and to this day remains one of the highlights of the band’s live show. The song itself - penned by bassist Steve Harris - was inspired by the Tennyson poem The Charge of The LIght Brigade and celebrates the bravery of ordinary soldiers during one of most ignominious episodes of British military history. The beer’s label reprises the original single artwork, with an ‘Eddie’ figure clutching a torn Union Flag in one hand and a cutlass in another.

The attention to detail doesn’t just extend to the artwork. Trooper is one of the star attractions at Ramblin’ Man Fair’s beer festival next weekend (25/26th July). To ensure Ramblin’ Man fans will be able to experience Trooper in the freshest condition possible, the night before the festival a special batch of Trooper will be filled into aluminium kegs before making the 256 mile journey from Robinsons brewery down to the festival site at Mote Park.

Maiden fans have obviously given it the thumbs up but what’s been interesting has been the response of the brewing trade to this interloper from the world of rock. “I think they’ve been shocked at its success,” say Shack. “Brewers that I admire like Timothy Taylors, even big companies like Marstons, when we meet them at trade things they shake their heads at disbelief at the volume we’ve been able to do.”

Ultimately, that success is down to the fact it’s just a great beer - medium-bodied, amber-hued, with a slightly citric, bread-y taste. “All the embellishments - the marketing, the name, the artwork - wouldn’t mean a thing if it didn’t work as a beer,” says Shack. “I think anyone who tastes it, whether they’re an Iron Maiden fan or a passing drinker would go ‘it’s actually a damn good drop of English ale’. Everything else is just gravy.”

Or in this case, froth.

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