Being opposed to Christianity means being opposed to all of its magical, mythical, bs, which would mean the Devil also. Only Christians believe in and or worship "the Devil" because nobody else believes in the Devil. Great music video; thanks for posting! Peace & love!
Bro, how are you not going to give Motorhead their due? Lemmy is the godfather of Metal. Starting in 1975, Motorhead was the band that meshed the Hard Rock sound of Sabbath with the speed and grittiness of punk. They literally invented Metal as a genre as a whole...
I’m over 65 y.o. and, just recently became a metalhead! I even won the black Metallica cd on a radio contest this past August! One is never too old to learn to like something new!!!! 💿
@@Selrisitai Hi Sel! Last week on a different radio station I won a 2 tickets to a Foo Fighters concert....I gave them to a relative! Please have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! 🎄🌳🎄 ☃️ 🏡🏘🏡 🎄🌳🎄. 😎. Stay safe out there!
Back in the 90s, when we had an actual Heavy Metal club in town (I miss you, Mad Max, with your ramshackle interior comprimising of old subway trains and even a helicopter weck) the DJ played the Ofra Haza version of Sisters of Mercy's Temple of Love and the DJ was giving away a bottle of champagene if somebody could name him the year. After some tiome I just stepped up to him, while kids yelled years at him, he looked at me and I was: "92, du'h" and he handed me the bottle.
The lo-fi dedication for the Norwegian black metal track was impressive. Also unironically loved it, I would really like to hear that one explored further
As a black metal fan, I love how all out you went with second wave Black Metal. The shitty camera, no lights, sounding like it was recorded through a phone. Perfect
@@rockout55551 Speed metal is an off-shoot of classic metal, and predates thrash metal. It was when bands wanted to take classic metal into a faster, rawer direction. th-cam.com/video/thrAFv1p3WU/w-d-xo.html
There are a few notable omissions but I really can’t get mad, or even annoyed because this dude covered 19 genres, if I counted right, and accurately portrayed all of them. Fucking Bravo
Definitely, the history was accurate and the explanation of the genres seems easy to understand to novices/non musicians. Stoner/doom/sludge 's absence definitely hurt tho lol
I felt that Iron Maiden and Van Halen not being present was a bit odd. Perhaps Iron Maiden wasn't as formative as I thought, but Van Halen definitely definitely ushered in a new era of guitar solos.
@@tlkuvic Iron Maiden, Van Halen, and no Rush which defined the "power metal" category 10 years before the dating in this vid. Van Halen also was 10 years before and defined the sound of Hair Metal. And dude, I'm not really a metal guy, just been around a while.
0:07 Rock’n Roll 0:40 Rock 1:16 Heavy Metal 2:05 Punk Rock 2:52 Hardcore Punk 3:31 NWOBHM 4:11 Thrash Metal 4:46 First Wave Of Black Metal 5:08 Hair Metal 5:52 Death Metal 6:29 Power Metal 7:02 Second Wave Of Black Metal 7:53 Groove Metal 8:20 Progressive Metal 8:55 Alternative Metal 9:35 Nu Metal 10:11 Industrial Metal 10:26 Metalcore 11:22 Djent
Andrea Boma Boccarusso should have named the video "The Guitar Evolution of Metal." He also forgot Machinegun and Voodoo Chile (slight return). Sad, so many people forget HENDRIX. How? I have no idea; too young, I guess. This was a great music video, nonetheless!
Groove metal began in '86 with Exhorder, Phil from Pantera was not only a fan of them, but also a member of the band for about 4 hours in '87, pantera were doing power metal at the time, but Phil managed to get the rest of Pantera listening to them and they changed their style.
@@herickhammerMeshuggah also had a groove phase, from the None EP to the Chaosphere album. Destroy, Erase, Improve in particular is a progressive groove metal gem.
@@Crazimir discharge is nowhere near my favorite band but the most common drum beat in punk is named after them so maybe don't fucking talk if you're stupid.
@@CrazimirDischarge was one of the most influential bands in the Hardcore scene and was important to the development of Thrash metal. Go ask James Hetfield.
This was neat. I'm an old man metalhead and could never keep all of the sub-genres straight. The constant arguing about it always kept me from wanting to try. You explained it so this old man could understand :)
It's just like any other genre, people will always argue and come up with genre's the bands themselves don't agree with. All it really is good for is trying to find bands with similar sounds.
@@christopherbaca1342 all of those riffs are created by himself, yeah it's an original composition, he's not playing some other established songs as examples.
This is one of the most honest and fair evolutions of metal I've ever seen. It's non biased, and gives honest kudos when needed. Awesome job, wicked playing!
Funk metal was one of those offshoots he mentioned at the end like symphonic. Personally my biggest critic is that there should have been a rock and hard rock segment instead of mixing them together. There are harder Beetles and Who songs sure, but Deep Purple and later acts like say AC/DC and Queen sound entirely different. I'd call Zep, Purple and Sabbath the diverging point between metal and rock, though I agree with the sentiment that Sabbath falls on the metal side and Zep and Purple on the rock side. Even after they become distinct genres there is a lot of cross play between metal and hard rock that can make them hard to distinguish. There is a reason Hair Metal and Glam Rock are treated as synonyms and that whole argument over Alt. Metal.
@@deplorabledegenerate2630 Deep Purple and Ped o Zep were considered metal at the time. In fact in the late eighties, some groups like Bon Jovi and Def Leppard were even considered metal.
This should be an intro video to anyone who wants to understand metal and its origins and influences. I hope you get millions of views. I'll definitely look at more of your videos.
@@philsurtees I am not a rock or metal aficionado and I can't vet what he presented, but could you correct the mistakes you think he made, step by step?
Actually the two bands credited for the advent of Djent in mainstream music are Meshuggah and Sikth. Dunno why everyone forgets Sikth; they’re criminally underrated and under appreciated.
Metal is such an amazing genre of music. No matter what the subject matter is of the song it’s always conveyed and portrayed perfectly due to metals inherent nature of raw emotion.
Damn this is probably one of the best crash courses in music evolution. Straigh to the point and some great original tracks that capture the fundamentals of each genre. Well done man 👍
I used to say you are one of the best guitarists I have heard. Now I have to take that back. You are one of the best musicians I have ever heard. assolutamente bellissimo amico mio!
If anyone asks me anything about metal, I will direct them to this video. You deserve all the success that's coming to you. And it will come to you, I know it will. Much love from the UK \m/
This is absolutely awesome. One small nitpick could be that the text was flying by too fast so I was pausing a lot just to be able to read everything, and that broke the flow of the music. Other than that, this is great. I have a mapofmetal poster, i am obsessed with history of metal and music in general
Another small nitpick was that the text was there at all. I can't stand videos where all the information is in text. You don't need a video for that. Speak FFS.
@Simon Harris I see where you’re coming from, but this video is focused on hearing the subtle differences between metal genres, and spoken word would probably disrupt the musical “flow” that this video has.
I really enjoyed this video, and I appreciate that for length, some details simply had to be sacrificed. If I may offer: 1. (the more minor one) The industrial metal, I believe, came significantly earlier than 1995; by 1989 the genre was alive and kicking. It reached more mainstream audiences already and was really past its peak by 1995 when KMFDM and Ministry reached their pinnacles. 2. I feel like you skipped an entire generation between the 1950s and 1960s, going straight from 1950s Chuck Berry straight into the more late 60s rock like Zeppelin and Deep Purple, skipping entirely over the early 60s British invasion music of the Kinks, early Who, etc. Well-presented and enjoyable. Thanks!
Managed to talk about the history of metal in a practical way, as there are many ramifications, congratulations! An addendum, if you research the band Sarcófago/Sepultura you will see that they are also at the beginning of Death Metal, not to mention the influence that Sepultura had on Nu-Metal bands, it is a lot. A big hug!
hi-five man, let's give the favourite Sepultura some love, their early works were definitely death metal, but since Beneath the Remains, the music eventually turned to more Thrashy, Groovy. I believe later on, Roots played a huge role on influencing modern Nu-metal bands.
Let’s not forget Sepultura’s earliest material was heavily Slayer inspired. Slayer isn’t my favorite metal band by any stretch, but there is no denying their massive influence on many bands as well. Venom is also heavily underrated and practically spawned the Black Metal subgenre. I’m surprised the album “Black Metal” itself wasn’t listed as the most important to sparking the movement.
@@Cheddar_Wizard Slayer? Nah, Sepultura was super different than Slayer back in the day, Sepultura was more proto death metal and Slayer NWOBHM oriented
@@SamuelSouza-di6nq ... You’re joking, right? Listen to Sepultura’s Morbid Visions, their first record. The Cavalera brothers and Andreas Kisser himself even stated Slayer and Venom as their two primary influences in their sound, and it shows on their first record. Also Slayer was definitely not NWOBHM oriented lmao.
@@Cheddar_Wizard Morbid visions? Haha, no my friend, Sepultura started with Bestial Devastation, compare that shit with Show no mercy and you will see the difference. And Both Iggor e Max (Andreas isn't an original member, it was Jairo Guedz) said their inspirations was Venom ofc, but way more extreme, based in other national bands like Dorsal Atlântica and Sagrado Inferno. And yes, Slayer in the beginning was totally influenced by NWOBHM, they get their contract with Brian Slagel to Metal Blade Records after he see they playing Phantom of Opera of Iron Maiden for example, this is crystal clear. To resume: Sepultura is way more extreme than Slayer since the begining.
Some awesome playing, but two glaring omissions, Motörhead and Van Halen. Motörhead bridged the gap between Punk and Rock creating thrash, speed etc. Van Halen moved musicianship too a new level and could be argued was the fore runner to hair metal. Overall a great video and undeniably fantastic playing.
yeah i thought the exact same thing, how the hell do you talk about the history of metal, without mentioning Speed-Metal and Motörhead once? he even skipped over Van-Halen which insanely big, and Tool, two bands that popularized their respectives sub-genres of metal.
@@Rise65487 van halen technically wasn't metal by any means. Motorhead did bridge the gap but thrash metal quickly replaced speed metal as a term and scene almost insantly.
I don’t normally comment but this was just…wow. So representative and tastefully done. So intelligent and just spot on. Amazing stuff man. I appreciate the time and effort you put into these vids. Excellent!
Dude I gotta know the name/inspiration of that second wave black metal song, it sounds absolutely amazing! And if its completely original PLEASE put it on spotify I beg of you
Apologies for finding this most impressive video only now, especially when being a metalhead since I discovered "Killers" in 1981 and found this to be my new way into music. Working as an Executive Producer for a film production company, I even more appreciate the level of skills beside the musical part. Especially the editing is excellent, congratulations. And I really do love all the music you created to be able and cover the whole, long and complex history of Heavy Metal. Extremely well done, Andrea! Three thumbs up...
Great video! I would just include Sepultura and Sarcofago as precursors of so many metal genres such as: Death Metal, 2nd wave of black metal and even groove metal. Great video!
No groove at all, but I like how he laid out progression of style instead of following the timeline. Because if he did, then we won't have either punk or hardcore and jump from doom directly to grindcore. However, proto-metal and a few important subgenres were missed completely... e.g. Rammstein etc. are actually post-industrial, as Die Krupps rendition of One (by metallica and all the way to Fear Factory was all about metallizing it with Thrash, but Godflesh (1988 release where Justin Broadrick had recently parted ways with Napalm Death) sounds like initial Industrial.
My one and only gripe with this video is the lack of mention of Motörhead. I feel as if leaving them out is a major link between the punk to thrash metal pipeline. But other than that this was such a great video and really did detail in an extensive way the timeline and progression of metal music as a whole.
1979 to 1982 that "speed metal"/proto- thrash sound was they key element that made the deal for the thrash scene to flourish. Also, it was important to differentiate the American/bay area thrash scene from the Germanic one
The trouble with Motorhead is that they never considered themselves a metal band, they always considered themselves hard rock/rock and roll band and did not want credit for anything to do with metal.
This was interesting and educational for us old guys who tuned out decades ago. One note: Printed copy went by a little too fast for me. Otherwise, good video and I wish I had your chops.
i saw overlap. and djent. i'm sorry, it sounds like ai computer generated sludge. meshugah is not djent. their best song "bleed" is not that in the least. they play with time tablature. they do not shriek for no reason.
@@tonyb7615 Are you really convinced Rational Gaze by Meshuggah is not djent? I'd say they spawned the genre without knowing just like Black Sabbath and Heavy Metal.
you are awesome man, this video should be considered as a documentary i would suggest. i am a slayer fan(id prefer any slayer album instead of metallica), but i may have missed the part `tool` takes place which made me this video watch twice. anyway, good work man.
@@crackalackincamden 1:16 black sabbath: eponymous song, into the void 2:12 ramones: I wanna be sedated, blitzkrieg bop 3:30 Saxon princess of the night 4:12 metallica: battery 5:09 dokken: in my dreams 5:57 death: zombie ritual 7:55 pantera: shattered, mouth for war 9:36 POD: youth of a nation 10:14 gravity kills: guilty
So rare and impressive to see a metal fan who apreciates all sub genres and how the genre has progressed over the years without being an elitist snob. Good job and great playing as well!
Having discerning taste is not the same as being an "elitist snob", personally I don't like nu metal but I can recognize the talent and musicianship involved.
That was absolutely awesome! But I have two little remarks of things I was missing: 1. Grunge as a whole genre. 2. Rammstein and NIN as representatives of Industrial Metal.
Yip grunge being the biggest musical phenomenon to hit the mainstream in the early 90s...which spawned stoner rock etc...and yes industrial rock deserves a mention
Thanks for an informative history. As someone that grew up through all of this, it brings back good memories. In the end for me it doesn’t matter what others call a genre or style, good music is good music, just like what you like, no need to justify yourself to anyone else…..
I would certainly mention Tool, A Perfect Circle, Soundgarden and Alice In Chains as alternative metal acts. And besides that, I must say my favorite metal concept is post-metal. I adore Russian Circles and some songs by Isis. Amazing stuff, really!
I miss some of my favorites (The video was amazing! Respect the creator! Wow!): Melodic deathmetal: Arch Enemy, In Flames, Scar Symmetry, Dark Tranquility, At the Gates, Soilwork, Amon Amarth Folk metal: Finntroll, In Extremo, Korpiklaani, Eluveite, Wardruna, The HU, Aelstorm,
Yeah, thought the same thing, omitting what is probably the biggest subgenre of the last 25 years (maybe outside of Nu in the early 00's) that just keeps going strong is kinda weird.
Hard Rock + Thrash Metal + Hair Metal + Progressive Metal + Djent = EPICCO Funny enough, "Progressive Metal" already basically does any and all fusions of other subgenres of metal. It is a fusion genre. It takes the energy of metal and moves it around boundlessly. The best acts in the subgenre do this organically and for the sake of the song, rather than just showing off how out-there they can be.
Probably mentioned somewhere in the comments, but I was bit surprised that Doom Metal isn't included. I thought bands like Candlemass were considered Doom Metal.
very impressive how the guys walked through all genres without having played any cover .. very fine authorial work .. a masterpiece .. congratulations to those involved
What's crazy is how people who love: Heavy Metal, Hardcore Punk, NWOBHM, Thrash MEtal, tend to like other genres as well, and then suddenly, you see it divide into two paths. Black/Death/Progressive vs Power/Thrash/Heavy/Groove. Anti-melodic vs melodic. 80s and 90s was just a golden age of rock music.
It’s usually the death/thrash vs black vs heavy/power/prog Also, if you call black metal not melodic you are just💀 the whole genre is build around melody, compared to the more rhythm centered songs of death and thrash metal.
Nice work! There is a lot of other genres and scenes, but it would be a really long video. I personally like Grunge (Nirvana, Alice in Chains), Doom (Candlemass), Pirate (Running Wild) or Speed (Accept, Satan). Sometimes I listen to our czech scene, which I really recommend (Arakain, Root, Master's Hammer, Kabát).
The shoutout to helloween was much appreciated. They're a band that started out with melodic thrash influence and slowly progressed to power metal and once they got deris as their 3rd singer along with another great guitarist and being blessed with incredible drummers they found a sound of their own.
Excellent summary. Congratulations. I'm from the Black Sabath and Led Zepellin era and I could understand a little bit the complex evolution of rock thanks to your video and performance.
Reminds me of how big part metal has played in my life, so many great sub genres. Particularly love Deep Purple, early Metallica, Cradle of Filth, early Dimmu Borgir, Blind Guardian, In Flames, Machine Head, etc
I was surprised to read at the end that you composed music of each style yourself. That's pretty near, most would cover a sample from an important album but you took it a step further and I love that
This was really awesome. I enjoyed this a lot. One notable omission is Motorhead, however I'm not entirely sure what genre to really put them in. For my money, that band is single handedly responsible for most of the genres of metal after the initial punk era and one of the most important bands in metal. Overall this was fantastic. Great work!
@@s3nsec0rruptr80 Lemmy even said something like how he felt they were more kin with punk rock than heavy metal. He despised being called metal when they’re just rock n roll personified
yeah kind of glaring really. to name all the hard core punk bands and act like thrash is a marriage of black flag and maiden or something, and ignore lemmy from the equation...
An interesting note is my dad who was a "head", he said that's what they used to call people back then "heads", never really listened to the 70s punk. Neither did anyone he knew. Maybe it was a city thing. He started with sabbath and then they'd go to maiden and priest concerts, UFO, Rush.
True with my dad as well, he loves rock music from the early 60's -70's stuff to some of the more recent bands (rhcp, muse, korn) and he's never showed any sort of interest in punk, like 0 interest, doesn't know any of the band's.
Yes, we didn't look at the punk stuff until a few years after it was a thing. It didn't suit a lot of us. It was amateurish noise that didn't have much content. It was all will. Still doesn't appeal to me. I want to hear the music in the grind, and words with some meaning. One of the newer bunch that got it right imo is Alice in Chains. I also really like Lamb of God and Bullet for my Valentine. I haven't dug into more recent stuff yet. Any suggestions?
No hate, but, in the 70s, head was short for pothead. Head shops were small record stores that sold black light posters, rolling papers, amyl nitrate, and bongs. And they reeked of patchouli, but they sold all the music Kmart and other big chain stores wouldn't touch. I don't know your dad, tho, so I can't say one way or another who he was or is, just my two cents. And, again, there was a LOT of amazing music you could only find in a head shop. Edit - the bands you mentioned were just a few of those "shunned" bands
Punk is relevant as an influence when io consider hardcore punk. Yes, most metalheads hated punk (and rightly so) especially in England. But thrash, death and black metal owe the east-coast punk scene quite a lot. The punks just had to figure out how to get that metronome flying...
"technical insanity" and "songwriting sensibilities" will be at odds. I find it best to use technique to show off the written music, rather than writing music to show off the technique.
It’s not *quite* what you’re talking about, but a good (imho, purists will disagree) band that combines elements of prog with accessible songwriting is Evergrey.
Amazing video. I am 50 years old and saw the Metal genre evolve right before my eyes. I wasn’t a big fan of Nu Metal at the time but started really enjoying the genre much later on, I would say at least 10 years late. Meshuggah is an amazing band BTW. But I still enjoy old school metal, 80s was amazing in terms of creativity
I wish I could have been around to watch metal grow. I'm 27 and got into heavy metal around 2010 with metal core. These days I'm in to pretty much every kind of metal and find myself really digging the early stuff. I even have an original vinyl copy of black sabbaths first album
@@nwbasson yeah some of it really sucks but I do still genuinely dig some nu metal. Follow the leader was the first heavy album I ever bought as a kid.
Bravissimo!! Hai ripercorso perfettamente la storia del Rock che mano a mano è mutato nel Metal. Cominciato alle scuole medie con Powerslave, orgoglioso di non essermi fossilizzato e ho vissuto praticamente tutta l'evoluzione che hai indicato fino al Djent. Menzione ad honorem per Facelift, l'album piu metal del Grunge, giusto per citara anche quel genere visto che fu cmq seminale.
È da mezz'ora che sto cercando la canzone che fa a minuto 1:15 ma non trovo niente. Se l'è inventata o esiste veramente? Grazie mille per chi mi aiuterà!
@@TheSkratch92 tutti i pezzi suonati NON sono cover ma riprendono sonorità e riff simili del periodo in questione. a 1:15 sta citando Black Sabbath dei...indovina...Black Sabbath. Ti consiglio, dopo aver ascoltato l'originale, si ascoltarti la versione fatta dai Type o Negative nell'album tributo alla prima vera Metal Band di tutti i tempi.
I can't argue with any of this. You nailed it, especially the important album for each genre. I'd think, "Oh, nu metal. Korn's debut album better be the important one named." And it was. Everything I thought of, you called it. Also, excellent playing. Great video.
Led Zeppelin recorded “Communication Breakdown” in October 1968. The first recorded song to have muted downstrokes played with distortion for the entire song.
Some other genres to check out; Doom metal( Saint vitus, Trouble) Stonerrock (Kyuss, Fu manchu) Gothic metal (Type o negative, Paradise lost) Crossover trash(Suicidal tendencies, D.R.I.) Funk metal (Living colour, early Faith no more) Sludge(Melvins, Crowbar)
Fantastic! I'd saw we missed symphonic metal (Nightwish), or melodic-death metal (Hatebreeder/Follow the Reaper era of Children of Bodom), but how can I criticize such an awesome video? Amazing!
Progressive rock also influenced metal. Even in the 70's, for example Sabbath's sabbath bloody sabbath, sabotage and technical ecstasy records. I think Rush had the major impact on metal bands (and of course yes, king crimson and genesis).
Agreed- some parallel developments too. I think AC/DC started as a parallel to punk, and Iron Maiden mirrored the new British prog of the 80s. Groups like Queensryche, Extreme and even some Pink Floyd (Nile Song, In the Flesh) fall neatly in the middle. Queen doesn't neatly into prog or metal either, but can veer into both.
I feel like one of the most important seminal influences was ignored here: Surf rock! Dick Dale was pretty much the father of heavy metal guitar. You can't do a history of metal without him.
I was looking for this comment, dick dale definitely pushed the boundaries of speed and volume further than almost anyone else in the history of metal, if you put a distortion pedal in front of his amp he’d already have some of the heaviest riffs ever by the mid 50’s! Truly a legend!
Seriously great video! A little surprised of the lack of Melodic Death Metal being mentioned given its created some of the best bands ever. Opeth, In Flames, Insomnium, Dark Tranquility, etc.
This is the best breakdown (no pun intended) of some of these overlapping and often extremely contested subgenres. Thank you for all the time and effort you surely put into this to educate us!
This was some of the best playing I've had the pleasure of hearing in a long time. No matter the style , you made it sound awesome. My hat's off to you young man.
There's a whole lot that could have been added, and personally as I'm an avid fan of Swedish melodeath, I think it could have been added as a variant of death metal to later give birth to what would be metalcore. However, you did an awesome job and you definitely put a lot of work into this.
I would say that what made Melodic Metalcore was the inovation of Melodeath AND metalcore thats why we have bands like As I Lay Dying, Caliban, All that remains.. maybe God Forbid? They are kinda metalcore even tho they are labelled melodeath. But back in the 90s metalcore was still kind of a hardcore genre hence Hatebreed, Converge, Integrity being labelled as Metalcore also
Fair point, I've never thought to distinguish melodic metalcore from the rest of metalcore; Ironically those are my favorite metalcore bands. No wonder!
When Trash Metal came in the video my heart literally missed a beat, when hair metal came I got goosebumps all over my body but when Power Metal came I had tears falling down my cheeks.... This video is perfect!
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Being opposed to Christianity means being opposed to all of its magical, mythical, bs, which would mean the Devil also. Only Christians believe in and or worship "the Devil" because nobody else believes in the Devil. Great music video; thanks for posting! Peace & love!
You jump right in to BS. You forget Arthur Brown, he did serious stuff in late 60's.
hey, what do u use for programming drums?? cheers :D
Bro, how are you not going to give Motorhead their due? Lemmy is the godfather of Metal. Starting in 1975, Motorhead was the band that meshed the Hard Rock sound of Sabbath with the speed and grittiness of punk. They literally invented Metal as a genre as a whole...
hahaha punk rock looks like the song fuwa fuwa houkago tea time
Can we all appreciate how he composed original music exemplary of the style he's demonstrating?
I was really impressed how well he captured the essence of the genres, the thrash metal one is literally a slayer song from another dimension
AT first thought that was War Pigs in the black sabbath part
Yes we can!🤘
i can appreciate how Djent is hard af,Djent for life
@@Seruphin Also there was a bit from youth of the nation in the nu metal part
The most important thing I learned from this video: I am a slow reader.
Right, but a couple of times I was like c'mon, that popped up to quickly lol
You and me both. The video was excellent though.
Didn't catch half myself
Font kinda small too. Imao 🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟
I can read 240 words per minute in English (more in my mother tongue obviously) and that was sometimes impossible to read it all in time.
I’m over 65 y.o. and, just recently became a metalhead! I even won the black Metallica cd on a radio contest this past August!
One is never too old to learn to like something new!!!! 💿
I'm mostly just surprised there was a radio contest where they actually rewarded prizes.
@@Selrisitai Hi Sel! Last week on a different radio station I won a 2 tickets to a Foo Fighters concert....I gave them to a relative!
Please have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
🎄🌳🎄 ☃️ 🏡🏘🏡 🎄🌳🎄. 😎. Stay safe out there!
Back in the 90s, when we had an actual Heavy Metal club in town (I miss you, Mad Max, with your ramshackle interior comprimising of old subway trains and even a helicopter weck) the DJ played the Ofra Haza version of Sisters of Mercy's Temple of Love and the DJ was giving away a bottle of champagene if somebody could name him the year. After some tiome I just stepped up to him, while kids yelled years at him, he looked at me and I was: "92, du'h" and he handed me the bottle.
Few people are so open minded, so good for you, and welcome to the community! \m/
ONE OF US
ONE OF US
ONE OF US
The lo-fi dedication for the Norwegian black metal track was impressive. Also unironically loved it, I would really like to hear that one explored further
hola
I wish there was more than just this snippet, I keep coming back to listen to it
As a black metal fan, I love how all out you went with second wave Black Metal. The shitty camera, no lights, sounding like it was recorded through a phone. Perfect
Fuck BM!
Make Witches Burn Again
Varg would be secretly proud but openly display his hatred at being imitated.
the only way he could have been more authentic is if he had filmed himself walking in a forest
Same 🖤
Yes and the only thing which was missed is the corpspaint 🙂
This is a fantastic video. Well-crafted and put together. The level of planning and editing doesn’t go unnoticed!
@@rockout55551 And didn't mention speed metal!
@@rockout55551 Speed metal is an off-shoot of classic metal, and predates thrash metal. It was when bands wanted to take classic metal into a faster, rawer direction. th-cam.com/video/thrAFv1p3WU/w-d-xo.html
@@rockout55551 jimi Hendrix gets mentioned at 0:56
Too bad he gets a good amount of stuff wrong
@@chrisfusion6945 ok, when we will see a link for your video?
There are a few notable omissions but I really can’t get mad, or even annoyed because this dude covered 19 genres, if I counted right, and accurately portrayed all of them. Fucking Bravo
Definitely, the history was accurate and the explanation of the genres seems easy to understand to novices/non musicians. Stoner/doom/sludge 's absence definitely hurt tho lol
I felt that Iron Maiden and Van Halen not being present was a bit odd. Perhaps Iron Maiden wasn't as formative as I thought, but Van Halen definitely definitely ushered in a new era of guitar solos.
@@tlkuvic Maiden was there
yeah, deep purple -.-
@@tlkuvic Iron Maiden, Van Halen, and no Rush which defined the "power metal" category 10 years before the dating in this vid. Van Halen also was 10 years before and defined the sound of Hair Metal.
And dude, I'm not really a metal guy, just been around a while.
0:07 Rock’n Roll
0:40 Rock
1:16 Heavy Metal
2:05 Punk Rock
2:52 Hardcore Punk
3:31 NWOBHM
4:11 Thrash Metal
4:46 First Wave Of Black Metal
5:08 Hair Metal
5:52 Death Metal
6:29 Power Metal
7:02 Second Wave Of Black Metal
7:53 Groove Metal
8:20 Progressive Metal
8:55 Alternative Metal
9:35 Nu Metal
10:11 Industrial Metal
10:26 Metalcore
11:22 Djent
What happened to Un-Black (AKA White Metal)
1:16 Sounds like Doom Metal (CMIIW)
@@kristiancahyo2089because Black Sabbath played doom metal too.
Wich is the song of the second wave of Black Metal?
@@raspberryflash583No one cares about this sht
Can't imagine the amount of work, editing and hours you put into this one. Masterpiece, thank you for this.
I like the solo part and the hair metal thanks gobert!!!
🇺🇲 Nerd generation just RUINED Metal history. Heavy Metal was about holding a beer on hands not masturbating chords locked in a bedroom.
Now I have a video to send to my non metal friends, that thinks metal is only screaming.
Good job man, your videos keep getting better and better!
Thats so unfair tho this has no vocals.
Andrea Boma Boccarusso
should have named the video "The Guitar Evolution of Metal." He also forgot Machinegun and Voodoo Chile (slight return). Sad, so many people forget HENDRIX. How? I have no idea; too young, I guess. This was a great music video, nonetheless!
Lol i don't even think they would wanna watch the vid🗿
@@reubenchawhte, A REAL friend, would at least pretend to watch it, lol!
@@drivinsouth651 ig I'm a real friend then.🙈😂
I loved how he credited himself for every single instrument then just got tired and literally wrote 'everything' 😂😂
And he deserves all the credit aswell.
@@issqsskatingclips9108 dude I know, I wasn't saying he doesn't 😅😅
@@silviaaltieri7883 I was also just making a statement, lol.
😂 I was thinking the same
This is like taking a walk through a botanical garden of Metal. Look at you all growing together, cross breeding and evolving. It’s glorious
Exactly! But then there's elitists that would make the garden a lot less pretty.
HELL YEAH METAL FOREVER
Long live metal 🤘🏻
Cringe
@@RegularGuy1998 just shut up and headbang xD
Stay safe my fellow metalheads
Adamsın lan adam 😂😂
Outstanding work. Moreover, you wrote appropriate riffs for each "genre." Keep slaying it.
Groove metal began in '86 with Exhorder, Phil from Pantera was not only a fan of them, but also a member of the band for about 4 hours in '87, pantera were doing power metal at the time, but Phil managed to get the rest of Pantera listening to them and they changed their style.
It would be cool to mention the sepultura groove metal phase too with Chaos Ad and Roots in the 90s
@@herickhammerMeshuggah also had a groove phase, from the None EP to the Chaosphere album. Destroy, Erase, Improve in particular is a progressive groove metal gem.
Wow dude, not only did you nail the genre’s descriptions, you nailed the music! You’re a great musician! Nice video.
I'd say leaving discharge out the hardcore section is pretty stupid
@@billrobertjoe "Bu-but what about MY favorite band!?"
@@Crazimir discharge is nowhere near my favorite band but the most common drum beat in punk is named after them so maybe don't fucking talk if you're stupid.
@@Crazimir and by the way, before you ask, it's sabbath.
@@CrazimirDischarge was one of the most influential bands in the Hardcore scene and was important to the development of Thrash metal. Go ask James Hetfield.
This was neat. I'm an old man metalhead and could never keep all of the sub-genres straight. The constant arguing about it always kept me from wanting to try. You explained it so this old man could understand :)
It's just like any other genre, people will always argue and come up with genre's the bands themselves don't agree with. All it really is good for is trying to find bands with similar sounds.
"Hot funk, cool punk, even if its old junk, It's still rock and roll to me." - Billy Joel
Hi. I’m a younger guitarist and I also have had the same frustration about picking a genre to learn.
@@dumpstercat2229 just play what you like man. Who cares if anyone else likes it? Music is free expression. Express yourself.
There once was a great band called Moray Eel. Can`t define genre at all.
I started laughing uncontrollably when you showed the second wave of black metal in the worst possible quality haha
Brilliant video.
Do you know what song he was playing? Man im looking through the comments to find out
@@christopherbaca1342 all of those riffs are created by himself, yeah it's an original composition, he's not playing some other established songs as examples.
@@christopherbaca1342 I think most of these were improvisations, not actual songs
@@MFachrizalR damn, badass riff then
go through to the end of the video he explains them
11:54 God how many Andreas Boccarussos are there in Italy
4:35 Thrash Metal Solo always hit different
Awesome 😃😃😃
cringe
5:32 Hair Metal Solo always hit different
@@Exotic69420 you know that people have preferences right?
How i wish for a full version.
This is one of the most honest and fair evolutions of metal I've ever seen. It's non biased, and gives honest kudos when needed. Awesome job, wicked playing!
Could have done with funk metal - Chillis, Extreme, Faith No More, but thst's about my only criticism.
@@thursoberwick1948 I agree , But Chili's don't fit there. You want to talk Funk Metal then Infectious Grooves & Fishbone have to be up front.
@@sgildea4215 Fishbone are okay... I think the Chillis can verge into metal. The first four or five albums anyway.
Funk metal was one of those offshoots he mentioned at the end like symphonic. Personally my biggest critic is that there should have been a rock and hard rock segment instead of mixing them together. There are harder Beetles and Who songs sure, but Deep Purple and later acts like say AC/DC and Queen sound entirely different.
I'd call Zep, Purple and Sabbath the diverging point between metal and rock, though I agree with the sentiment that Sabbath falls on the metal side and Zep and Purple on the rock side.
Even after they become distinct genres there is a lot of cross play between metal and hard rock that can make them hard to distinguish. There is a reason Hair Metal and Glam Rock are treated as synonyms and that whole argument over Alt. Metal.
@@deplorabledegenerate2630 Deep Purple and Ped o Zep were considered metal at the time. In fact in the late eighties, some groups like Bon Jovi and Def Leppard were even considered metal.
This should be an intro video to anyone who wants to understand metal and its origins and influences. I hope you get millions of views. I'll definitely look at more of your videos.
man im so glad i came across this video, its cool to learn about the evolution of metal and rock and i’ve definitely learnt stuff from watching this
Why, so that they can be completely and utterly wrong about everything and embarrass themselves the way this guy has???
@@philsurtees I am not a rock or metal aficionado and I can't vet what he presented, but could you correct the mistakes you think he made, step by step?
@@philsurtees It’s not perfect, but this is probably the most accurate of these I’ve seen so far.
@@philsurtees you should do a better vid then Phil. Easy to criticize from the cheap seats!!
Actually the two bands credited for the advent of Djent in mainstream music are Meshuggah and Sikth. Dunno why everyone forgets Sikth; they’re criminally underrated and under appreciated.
I'll go and listen to it right now
4:10 every now and then I come back to listen to this badass riff! It has all the Thrash goodness, super tight playing and amazing tone!
Definitely heavily inspired by Metallica's 'Battery'. Even the solo begins the same way haha. It is a great riff regardless.
@@ad6499 More like Damage Inc!
Damn i wanna steal it and make people think its mine (khm a7x)
Jk ofc i love a7x
@@ad6499 i thought it sounded more like slayers black magic tbh, but the pentatonic solo lick definitely isn't like slayer.
Most generic shit ever 😂
Metal is such an amazing genre of music. No matter what the subject matter is of the song it’s always conveyed and portrayed perfectly due to metals inherent nature of raw emotion.
Damn this is probably one of the best crash courses in music evolution. Straigh to the point and some great original tracks that capture the fundamentals of each genre. Well done man 👍
I used to say you are one of the best guitarists I have heard. Now I have to take that back.
You are one of the best musicians I have ever heard.
assolutamente bellissimo amico mio!
Those last three chugs at the end of progressive metal was critical. Random, unexpected time change for seemingly no reason at all. Love it
If anyone asks me anything about metal, I will direct them to this video. You deserve all the success that's coming to you. And it will come to you, I know it will. Much love from the UK \m/
This is absolutely awesome. One small nitpick could be that the text was flying by too fast so I was pausing a lot just to be able to read everything, and that broke the flow of the music. Other than that, this is great. I have a mapofmetal poster, i am obsessed with history of metal and music in general
It's metal. You gotta keep up! 😄
I kept pausing the vid to read the text too Dev.
@@andyappleton3353 So did I
Another small nitpick was that the text was there at all. I can't stand videos where all the information is in text. You don't need a video for that. Speak FFS.
@Simon Harris I see where you’re coming from, but this video is focused on hearing the subtle differences between metal genres, and spoken word would probably disrupt the musical “flow” that this video has.
I still remember hearing Sabbath for the 1st time in 5th grade back in 1970. Immediately hooked on heavy metal from there on to this day
I really enjoyed this video, and I appreciate that for length, some details simply had to be sacrificed. If I may offer:
1. (the more minor one) The industrial metal, I believe, came significantly earlier than 1995; by 1989 the genre was alive and kicking. It reached more mainstream audiences already and was really past its peak by 1995 when KMFDM and Ministry reached their pinnacles.
2. I feel like you skipped an entire generation between the 1950s and 1960s, going straight from 1950s Chuck Berry straight into the more late 60s rock like Zeppelin and Deep Purple, skipping entirely over the early 60s British invasion music of the Kinks, early Who, etc.
Well-presented and enjoyable. Thanks!
Managed to talk about the history of metal in a practical way, as there are many ramifications, congratulations! An addendum, if you research the band Sarcófago/Sepultura you will see that they are also at the beginning of Death Metal, not to mention the influence that Sepultura had on Nu-Metal bands, it is a lot. A big hug!
hi-five man, let's give the favourite Sepultura some love, their early works were definitely death metal, but since Beneath the Remains, the music eventually turned to more Thrashy, Groovy. I believe later on, Roots played a huge role on influencing modern Nu-metal bands.
Let’s not forget Sepultura’s earliest material was heavily Slayer inspired. Slayer isn’t my favorite metal band by any stretch, but there is no denying their massive influence on many bands as well. Venom is also heavily underrated and practically spawned the Black Metal subgenre. I’m surprised the album “Black Metal” itself wasn’t listed as the most important to sparking the movement.
@@Cheddar_Wizard
Slayer? Nah, Sepultura was super different than Slayer back in the day, Sepultura was more proto death metal and Slayer NWOBHM oriented
@@SamuelSouza-di6nq ... You’re joking, right? Listen to Sepultura’s Morbid Visions, their first record. The Cavalera brothers and Andreas Kisser himself even stated Slayer and Venom as their two primary influences in their sound, and it shows on their first record. Also Slayer was definitely not NWOBHM oriented lmao.
@@Cheddar_Wizard
Morbid visions? Haha, no my friend, Sepultura started with Bestial Devastation, compare that shit with Show no mercy and you will see the difference.
And Both Iggor e Max (Andreas isn't an original member, it was Jairo Guedz) said their inspirations was Venom ofc, but way more extreme, based in other national bands like Dorsal Atlântica and Sagrado Inferno.
And yes, Slayer in the beginning was totally influenced by NWOBHM, they get their contract with Brian Slagel to Metal Blade Records after he see they playing Phantom of Opera of Iron Maiden for example, this is crystal clear.
To resume: Sepultura is way more extreme than Slayer since the begining.
Some awesome playing, but two glaring omissions, Motörhead and Van Halen. Motörhead bridged the gap between Punk and Rock creating thrash, speed etc. Van Halen moved musicianship too a new level and could be argued was the fore runner to hair metal.
Overall a great video and undeniably fantastic playing.
ТРЕШ ДОЗА!!! 🎸 🎸 trash dose !!!=
th-cam.com/video/yReQ952Xiqk/w-d-xo.html
yeah i thought the exact same thing, how the hell do you talk about the history of metal, without mentioning Speed-Metal and Motörhead once?
he even skipped over Van-Halen which insanely big, and Tool, two bands that popularized their respectives sub-genres of metal.
@@Rise65487 van halen technically wasn't metal by any means. Motorhead did bridge the gap but thrash metal quickly replaced speed metal as a term and scene almost insantly.
Van Halen not only upped ante for technique and sounds, but EVH was hugely responsible in the area of heavy tone and equipment.
Yeah, the complete omission of speed metal is a bit odd.
I don’t normally comment but this was just…wow. So representative and tastefully done. So intelligent and just spot on. Amazing stuff man. I appreciate the time and effort you put into these vids. Excellent!
Dude I gotta know the name/inspiration of that second wave black metal song, it sounds absolutely amazing! And if its completely original PLEASE put it on spotify I beg of you
I absolutely need that song
Your tone for the hair metal was godlike!
No joke is that an original or is it a cover cause I need the full thing.
@@Noseiwaj14 It's a very loose cover of In My Dreams by Dokken
Apologies for finding this most impressive video only now, especially when being a metalhead since I discovered "Killers" in 1981 and found this to be my new way into music.
Working as an Executive Producer for a film production company, I even more appreciate the level of skills beside the musical part.
Especially the editing is excellent, congratulations.
And I really do love all the music you created to be able and cover the whole, long and complex history of Heavy Metal.
Extremely well done, Andrea!
Three thumbs up...
You have hit the centre of all those genres. I'm a metal fan for 20 years now and this video is accurate, informative and fun.
Great video! I would just include Sepultura and Sarcofago as precursors of so many metal genres such as: Death Metal, 2nd wave of black metal and even groove metal. Great video!
No groove at all, but I like how he laid out progression of style instead of following the timeline. Because if he did, then we won't have either punk or hardcore and jump from doom directly to grindcore. However, proto-metal and a few important subgenres were missed completely... e.g. Rammstein etc. are actually post-industrial, as Die Krupps rendition of One (by metallica and all the way to Fear Factory was all about metallizing it with Thrash, but Godflesh (1988 release where Justin Broadrick had recently parted ways with Napalm Death) sounds like initial Industrial.
My one and only gripe with this video is the lack of mention of Motörhead. I feel as if leaving them out is a major link between the punk to thrash metal pipeline. But other than that this was such a great video and really did detail in an extensive way the timeline and progression of metal music as a whole.
yo this fucking guy didn't mention Motorhead? What the fuck? Lmao
True dat
1979 to 1982 that "speed metal"/proto- thrash sound was they key element that made the deal for the thrash scene to flourish. Also, it was important to differentiate the American/bay area thrash scene from the Germanic one
@@andresarguelles6507 not mentioning at least Kreator.
The trouble with Motorhead is that they never considered themselves a metal band, they always considered themselves hard rock/rock and roll band and did not want credit for anything to do with metal.
1:15 that sounds like "Black Sabbath" mixed with "ritual zombie". Sounds great.
What's the name of the song?
This was interesting and educational for us old guys who tuned out decades ago. One note: Printed copy went by a little too fast for me. Otherwise, good video and I wish I had your chops.
Yeah i cant read so fastly and needed to pause ...
i saw overlap. and djent. i'm sorry, it sounds like ai computer generated sludge. meshugah is not djent. their best song "bleed" is not that in the least. they play with time tablature. they do not shriek for no reason.
@@tonyb7615 Are you really convinced Rational Gaze by Meshuggah is not djent? I'd say they spawned the genre without knowing just like Black Sabbath and Heavy Metal.
you are awesome man, this video should be considered as a documentary i would suggest.
i am a slayer fan(id prefer any slayer album instead of metallica), but i may have missed the part `tool` takes place which made me this video watch twice.
anyway, good work man.
This just confirms that I am a metal fan in general
?
@@greenmaster6688 he means he listens to most, if not all, genres listed in this video
7:02 For best experience, use 144p resolution.
If had a penny for each pixel, i'd have a dime
You sir have created the world’s most difficult try not to headbang challenge. No one is spared as all genres are covered
2nd wave black metal sucks
Not even a mention of Swedish Melodic Death Metal, smh
@@Tredemptation
That's because it is gay
Except for speed metal. Interesting that he doesn't follow up with modern metal. Overall a good video.
except brutal death metal
This is so great. Really, really impressed with how well you've captured each genre -- and with all original music! Well done, man.
Even the tones and mixes sound authentic to their time period. very impressive
I like how he changes up the songs just enough to not get hit with a copyright claim. Awesome job.
do you know the original songs?
@@crackalackincamden there's a few that are stumping me. But most are fairly easy.
@@BrandonHalo can you please tell me some?
@@crackalackincamden
1:16 black sabbath: eponymous song, into the void
2:12 ramones: I wanna be sedated, blitzkrieg bop
3:30 Saxon princess of the night
4:12 metallica: battery
5:09 dokken: in my dreams
5:57 death: zombie ritual
7:55 pantera: shattered, mouth for war
9:36 POD: youth of a nation
10:14 gravity kills: guilty
@@BrandonHalo thank you heaps, but do you not know what the power metal one is?
I like how he lists each important album to the sound of that Era. Nice
That second wave black metal melodic guitar was beautiful. I want to hear more of it
whats name that song bro?
from mayhem i know but i dont know the name song
So rare and impressive to see a metal fan who apreciates all sub genres and how the genre has progressed over the years without being an elitist snob. Good job and great playing as well!
Having discerning taste is not the same as being an "elitist snob", personally I don't like nu metal but I can recognize the talent and musicianship involved.
@@husseltoo Yes but man there are folks who not only not like the genre but will never give the people involved in it their props
That was absolutely awesome! But I have two little remarks of things I was missing: 1. Grunge as a whole genre. 2. Rammstein and NIN as representatives of Industrial Metal.
Also Glam metal and band Kiss
Rammstein is there though (10.21) 🙂. But yes, NIN also seminal for Industrial.
Also Stoner and Doom Metal
Yip grunge being the biggest musical phenomenon to hit the mainstream in the early 90s...which spawned stoner rock etc...and yes industrial rock deserves a mention
Brutal Deathmetal and Grindcore...
The entire metalcore section is BEAST AF but that breakdown at 11:05 is CRUSHING
disGUSTING breakdown
Transformers sounds
Thanks for an informative history. As someone that grew up through all of this, it brings back good memories. In the end for me it doesn’t matter what others call a genre or style, good music is good music, just like what you like, no need to justify yourself to anyone else…..
I would certainly mention Tool, A Perfect Circle, Soundgarden and Alice In Chains as alternative metal acts.
And besides that, I must say my favorite metal concept is post-metal.
I adore Russian Circles and some songs by Isis. Amazing stuff, really!
Tool utilizes difficult time signatures. That alone keeps them in my forethought.
That as well as Cynic for prog metal scene, their album focus is pretty widely regarded as a starting point for the genre.
Isis is a terrorist group bro
Was surprised by Tool not being mentioned in the Prog Metal, nor Opeth.
Alice in Chains and Soundgarden were grunge.
AIC is usually classed as Grunge, which is basically West Coast American Sabbath dipped in heroin.
We should be grateful that we managed to see and hear the work of an extremely talented, versatile and creative man - Andrea Boma Boccarusso.
9:17 everything very well done and amazing, but man, where is my favorite band forever? Faith No More, they are the progenitors of Alternative Metal!!
Hair Metal song is inspired in “In My Dreams” by Dokken
I am blown away by your talent and skills! You're a professional guitarist + drummer + video editor too :O
Fabulous, man! Keep up the good work!!!
I miss some of my favorites (The video was amazing! Respect the creator! Wow!):
Melodic deathmetal: Arch Enemy, In Flames, Scar Symmetry, Dark Tranquility, At the Gates, Soilwork, Amon Amarth
Folk metal: Finntroll, In Extremo, Korpiklaani, Eluveite, Wardruna, The HU, Aelstorm,
"The Jester Race" and "The Red in the Sky is ours" top!
Totally agreed. There is a lack of some important genres like doom, gothic or symphonic metal.
Yeah, thought the same thing, omitting what is probably the biggest subgenre of the last 25 years (maybe outside of Nu in the early 00's) that just keeps going strong is kinda weird.
Its a shame In flames quit music after clayman and never released anything else.*puts fingers in ears*
I came here to type your exact comment. Don't forget Children of Bodom.
Hard Rock + Thrash Metal + Hair Metal + Progressive Metal + Djent = EPICCO
Funny enough, "Progressive Metal" already basically does any and all fusions of other subgenres of metal. It is a fusion genre. It takes the energy of metal and moves it around boundlessly. The best acts in the subgenre do this organically and for the sake of the song, rather than just showing off how out-there they can be.
Probably mentioned somewhere in the comments, but I was bit surprised that Doom Metal isn't included. I thought bands like Candlemass were considered Doom Metal.
very impressive how the guys walked through all genres without having played any cover .. very fine authorial work .. a masterpiece .. congratulations to those involved
"The guys" involved are just one...
Andrea
Whats? He's definitely covering music here. The death metal section is Zombie Ritual lol
@@sparkee3729 its not zombie ritual.. its very similar tho
Didn’t realize I liked metal more than I thought, unless it was just the way you played. We’ll never know until you put out an album💯
I tend to like metal more when there aren't vocals. Maybe that's why I was able to watch this whole thing without a break ;)
5:32 wow this is actually an incredible solo...
Yeah my favourite as well!🤟
@@Max_the_Hellhound its name pls...really incredible😭
@@pinkcp7761 None of this music has a name, it's all created by the user but a lot of it is very similar to specific bands/songs
Glam Metallll
What's crazy is how people who love: Heavy Metal, Hardcore Punk, NWOBHM, Thrash MEtal, tend to like other genres as well, and then suddenly, you see it divide into two paths. Black/Death/Progressive vs Power/Thrash/Heavy/Groove. Anti-melodic vs melodic. 80s and 90s was just a golden age of rock music.
It’s usually the death/thrash vs black vs heavy/power/prog
Also, if you call black metal not melodic you are just💀 the whole genre is build around melody, compared to the more rhythm centered songs of death and thrash metal.
Nice work! There is a lot of other genres and scenes, but it would be a really long video. I personally like Grunge (Nirvana, Alice in Chains), Doom (Candlemass), Pirate (Running Wild) or Speed (Accept, Satan). Sometimes I listen to our czech scene, which I really recommend (Arakain, Root, Master's Hammer, Kabát).
YES FOR PIRATE METAL!!! Wind rose when not LARPing Dwarves, Alestorm, a syrprisingly good genre (if a bit tounge in cheek)
Yes to doom and yes to each country’s metal scene
Also swedish death-metal (Entombed, Dismember, Carnage, Grave), some strange mixes as Voivod or Atheist etc.
Nirvana is punk rock Alice in chains is prog metal
Stoner/ desert metal 🤘🏼🤘🏼
"You can't kill the metal. The metal will live on"
metals boring now so yes you can kill the metal.
Doesn't seems so. Not a single new genre from the 2010s, and we are now well into the 2020s.
@@sirspongadoodle I see you are uncultured. Understandable.
@@Kovi707 As are you, My condolences.
@@TomTom-qh1lk im cultured.. powerchords on 7string guitars with shitty solos doesnt seem very musically interesting to me..
The shoutout to helloween was much appreciated. They're a band that started out with melodic thrash influence and slowly progressed to power metal and once they got deris as their 3rd singer along with another great guitarist and being blessed with incredible drummers they found a sound of their own.
I NEED a full version of the Norwegian black metal part!
This was incredibly accurate. Props to the insane amount of work to put this together 🤘🤘
Excellent summary. Congratulations. I'm from the Black Sabath and Led Zepellin era and I could understand a little bit the complex evolution of rock thanks to your video and performance.
Reminds me of how big part metal has played in my life, so many great sub genres. Particularly love Deep Purple, early Metallica, Cradle of Filth, early Dimmu Borgir, Blind Guardian, In Flames, Machine Head, etc
Add Testament and Megadeth to that list and you've got it all.
And add pantera, then you have the ultimate list
I was surprised to read at the end that you composed music of each style yourself. That's pretty near, most would cover a sample from an important album but you took it a step further and I love that
This was really awesome. I enjoyed this a lot. One notable omission is Motorhead, however I'm not entirely sure what genre to really put them in. For my money, that band is single handedly responsible for most of the genres of metal after the initial punk era and one of the most important bands in metal. Overall this was fantastic. Great work!
According to what Lemmy described the band as, "rock and roll"
@@s3nsec0rruptr80 Lemmy even said something like how he felt they were more kin with punk rock than heavy metal. He despised being called metal when they’re just rock n roll personified
Motorhead es evidentemente el precursor del trash metal...
Un saludo desde Madrid!!!
Phil's double-bass was basically the invention of thrash
yeah kind of glaring really. to name all the hard core punk bands and act like thrash is a marriage of black flag and maiden or something, and ignore lemmy from the equation...
4:35
damn that was sick
An interesting note is my dad who was a "head", he said that's what they used to call people back then "heads", never really listened to the 70s punk. Neither did anyone he knew. Maybe it was a city thing. He started with sabbath and then they'd go to maiden and priest concerts, UFO, Rush.
True with my dad as well, he loves rock music from the early 60's -70's stuff to some of the more recent bands (rhcp, muse, korn) and he's never showed any sort of interest in punk, like 0 interest, doesn't know any of the band's.
Yes, we didn't look at the punk stuff until a few years after it was a thing. It didn't suit a lot of us. It was amateurish noise that didn't have much content. It was all will.
Still doesn't appeal to me. I want to hear the music in the grind, and words with some meaning.
One of the newer bunch that got it right imo is Alice in Chains.
I also really like Lamb of God and Bullet for my Valentine.
I haven't dug into more recent stuff yet.
Any suggestions?
No hate, but, in the 70s, head was short for pothead.
Head shops were small record stores that sold black light posters, rolling papers, amyl nitrate, and bongs. And they reeked of patchouli, but they sold all the music Kmart and other big chain stores wouldn't touch.
I don't know your dad, tho, so I can't say one way or another who he was or is, just my two cents.
And, again, there was a LOT of amazing music you could only find in a head shop.
Edit - the bands you mentioned were just a few of those "shunned" bands
Punk is relevant as an influence when io consider hardcore punk. Yes, most metalheads hated punk (and rightly so) especially in England. But thrash, death and black metal owe the east-coast punk scene quite a lot. The punks just had to figure out how to get that metronome flying...
I hate punk but thrash, my favourite genre, owes a lot to it.
6:57 can't stop listening to that ride cymbal part
Man... combining Djent technical insanity with 80s hair metal songwriting sensibilities may create the most beast and awesome genre not yet seen.
"technical insanity" and "songwriting sensibilities" will be at odds. I find it best to use technique to show off the written music, rather than writing music to show off the technique.
It’s not *quite* what you’re talking about, but a good (imho, purists will disagree) band that combines elements of prog with accessible songwriting is Evergrey.
@@janisschaab8027 THANKS! Will check it out.
@@janisschaab8027 Evergrey is AWESOME. I personally think they've got flavors of Queensryche and dream theater but heavier.
Yeah, that's just what we need...
The progressive metal part was AMAZING. Pure images and words madness
⚡⚡
Wow, now THIS is absolutely worthy to watch!
Низкий поклон тебе, парень. Огромное спасибо. Я, будто бы, снова жизнь прожил.
Amazing video. I am 50 years old and saw the Metal genre evolve right before my eyes. I wasn’t a big fan of Nu Metal at the time but started really enjoying the genre much later on, I would say at least 10 years late. Meshuggah is an amazing band BTW. But I still enjoy old school metal, 80s was amazing in terms of creativity
I wish I could have been around to watch metal grow. I'm 27 and got into heavy metal around 2010 with metal core. These days I'm in to pretty much every kind of metal and find myself really digging the early stuff. I even have an original vinyl copy of black sabbaths first album
Man, there was some terrible Nu Metal I listened to back in the day. Like wtf was I thinking buying those CDs 😂
@@nwbasson yeah some of it really sucks but I do still genuinely dig some nu metal. Follow the leader was the first heavy album I ever bought as a kid.
Korn is great, but there were some other bands...
@@nwbasson I can definitely agree on that 🤣 I've always been a bit of a limp bizkit hater haha
Bravissimo!! Hai ripercorso perfettamente la storia del Rock che mano a mano è mutato nel Metal.
Cominciato alle scuole medie con Powerslave, orgoglioso di non essermi fossilizzato e ho vissuto praticamente tutta l'evoluzione che hai indicato fino al Djent.
Menzione ad honorem per Facelift, l'album piu metal del Grunge, giusto per citara anche quel genere visto che fu cmq seminale.
È da mezz'ora che sto cercando la canzone che fa a minuto 1:15 ma non trovo niente. Se l'è inventata o esiste veramente? Grazie mille per chi mi aiuterà!
@@TheSkratch92 tutti i pezzi suonati NON sono cover ma riprendono sonorità e riff simili del periodo in questione.
a 1:15 sta citando Black Sabbath dei...indovina...Black Sabbath.
Ti consiglio, dopo aver ascoltato l'originale, si ascoltarti la versione fatta dai Type o Negative nell'album tributo alla prima vera Metal Band di tutti i tempi.
@@passoborgo assolutamente ascolterò il tuo consiglio! Grazie mille :D
I can't argue with any of this. You nailed it, especially the important album for each genre. I'd think, "Oh, nu metal. Korn's debut album better be the important one named." And it was. Everything I thought of, you called it. Also, excellent playing. Great video.
Did you not think Grunge was missing? No Nirvana
@@MattyB-ee
What else is missing is kawaii metalm
@@MattyB-ee Nirvana is not metal, it's grunge. Grunge is not a sub-genre of Metal.
great job. I would like to add NWOSDM bands like In Flames as predecessors to metalcore, and some other genre-busting bands like COB and Necrophagist
Led Zeppelin recorded “Communication Breakdown” in October 1968. The first recorded song to have muted downstrokes played with distortion for the entire song.
Meaning they were the first to do punk?
@@decemberflower3990 nah, id say the Kinks were kinda the original punk band.
I thought the Beatles were the first band to ever use distortion in a song? 1968 “Revolution”
@@Homerlovesbeer2 bands in the 50s had used distortion before. However "you really got me" by the Kinks brought it to the next level in 1962.
@@Homerlovesbeer2 What? People were using distortion before that. Even the Beatles.
Some other genres to check out; Doom metal( Saint vitus, Trouble) Stonerrock (Kyuss, Fu manchu) Gothic metal (Type o negative, Paradise lost) Crossover trash(Suicidal tendencies, D.R.I.) Funk metal (Living colour, early Faith no more) Sludge(Melvins, Crowbar)
In funk metal I'll replace Faith No More with Mordred
Wouldn't Paradise Lost be considered Doom, at least their older stuff?
i think hes covering all the major genres, there are lots of sub-genres, i was thinking wheres the post and pre stuff, so yeah
grind dude grind XD
Also, there is Voivod (Voivod).
Fantastic! I'd saw we missed symphonic metal (Nightwish), or melodic-death metal (Hatebreeder/Follow the Reaper era of Children of Bodom), but how can I criticize such an awesome video? Amazing!
yes, as well as doom metal, folk metal and probably many more.
Progressive rock also influenced metal.
Even in the 70's, for example Sabbath's sabbath bloody sabbath, sabotage and technical ecstasy records.
I think Rush had the major impact on metal bands (and of course yes, king crimson and genesis).
Totally agree was a major influence especially with concept albums. Also a lot of band like Discharge, the damned and rainbow
Agreed- some parallel developments too. I think AC/DC started as a parallel to punk, and Iron Maiden mirrored the new British prog of the 80s.
Groups like Queensryche, Extreme and even some Pink Floyd (Nile Song, In the Flesh) fall neatly in the middle. Queen doesn't neatly into prog or metal either, but can veer into both.
Rush was the first Heavy Metal Progressive Band... ( 2112 ).
I feel like one of the most important seminal influences was ignored here: Surf rock!
Dick Dale was pretty much the father of heavy metal guitar. You can't do a history of metal without him.
I was looking for this comment, dick dale definitely pushed the boundaries of speed and volume further than almost anyone else in the history of metal, if you put a distortion pedal in front of his amp he’d already have some of the heaviest riffs ever by the mid 50’s! Truly a legend!
Dick Dale turned guitar picks to dust with his picking style. He should edit some surf rock in for sure but the video was great otherwise.
For real if you listen to alot of Old school death metal from Finland and Sweden most bands use the Tremolo picking and have pretty groovy riffs
Surf Rock literally is black metal but with christian white guys and clean guitars.
It's in history of rock
Seriously great video! A little surprised of the lack of Melodic Death Metal being mentioned given its created some of the best bands ever. Opeth, In Flames, Insomnium, Dark Tranquility, etc.
Exact same thought I had after watching this!
Same here, also wrote a post about the exact same thing before seeing your post (and mentioning some of the same bands as you too). 😅
Very surprised it was totally left out.
Don't forget At The Gates.
Carcass
This is the best breakdown (no pun intended) of some of these overlapping and often extremely contested subgenres. Thank you for all the time and effort you surely put into this to educate us!
This was some of the best playing I've had the pleasure of hearing in a long time.
No matter the style , you made it sound awesome. My hat's off to you young man.
The education is one thing, but putting together original tracks to showcase the evolution of styles across time is next f**king level.
Lmao all the songs he's playing are cover.He just changed them up to avoid copyrights.
There's a whole lot that could have been added, and personally as I'm an avid fan of Swedish melodeath, I think it could have been added as a variant of death metal to later give birth to what would be metalcore. However, you did an awesome job and you definitely put a lot of work into this.
I would say that what made Melodic Metalcore was the inovation of Melodeath AND metalcore thats why we have bands like As I Lay Dying, Caliban, All that remains.. maybe God Forbid? They are kinda metalcore even tho they are labelled melodeath. But back in the 90s metalcore was still kind of a hardcore genre hence Hatebreed, Converge, Integrity being labelled as Metalcore also
Fair point, I've never thought to distinguish melodic metalcore from the rest of metalcore; Ironically those are my favorite metalcore bands. No wonder!
When Trash Metal came in the video my heart literally missed a beat, when hair metal came I got goosebumps all over my body but when Power Metal came I had tears falling down my cheeks.... This video is perfect!