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Heavy Metal Literature – Lord of the Rings Not Allowed

Sunday, February 12th, 2012

Tyrion Lannister (played by Peter Dinklage) kicks Frodo - and all his castmates - to the curb. Is he the new heavy metal protagonist? (Image found at www.thestartofallthings.wordpress.com

I’m about to commit heavy metal heresy: I don’t want to hear another metal band naming itself after or singing about stuff from Lord of the Rings. It’s an old, tired, geeky heavy metal cliche. What works of fiction can bands turn to next to show their non-hackneyed literary cred? I have some suggestions broken down by the type of band.

For the Righteous Warriors of Power Metal
The first book in this series by George R.R. Martin, A Game of Thrones, is already a hit HBO series. The five-book (so far) collection is far darker and less cutesy than J.R.R. Tolkien’s work. It’s ripe with characters and places that would make epic heavy metal lyrics, from the The Wall guarded by the Night’s Watch to the mysterious, post-volcanic cataclysm of Valyria. Dragons? Check. Dudes in armor? Check. Scary undead creatures? You betcha. Perfect for heavy metal. Who could do it best? My bet is on Swedish power metal band Hammerfall – they could breathe lyrical life into Tyrion Lannister, Ned Stark and Daenerys Targaryen.

For Lamentations of Lost Love and Broken Families
So far, author Patrick Rothfuss has only finished two books in the Kingkiller Chronicles. You’ve got a flawed protagonist with a terrible past. You have him alternately bent on revenge and hiding to save his own skin. You have fairies, cruel nobles, enemies that seem to have no weakness. Mix in some lost love, and you’ve got a perfect stew for lyrics and music that would conjure memories of Oceanborn-era Nightwish symphonic metal. A female-fronted metal band could run with this mix … though the title of the first book, The Name of the Wind, also invites smirky dudes like me to riff on songs about flatulence.

For the Creepy Crypt Dwellers
There’s no rule that says heavy metal has to be about clashing steel and maidens fair. How ‘bout a lonely kid roaming an English moor searching for the remains of his dead uncle … and instigating a showdown with a serial killer who preys on kids his age? That’s the premise of Belinda Bauer’s outstanding book Blacklands. I describe it as About a Boy meets The Silence of the Lambs. It’s a ready-made recipe for a doom metal band. It requires a creep vibe, and the Dutch band Candlemass and its American singer could deliver.

For Politically Angst-Ridden Thinkers
Dystopian futures are no stranger to heavy metal. And Veronica Roth’s book Divergent could be a vehicle for a Queensrcyhe/Fates Warning/Iced Earth sort of metal band to go off the rails. It’s set in Chicago, where it follows the story arc of a girl named Beatrice. She leaves her family and her grim psuedo-Amish faction to join the society’s unquestioned badasses. There, Beatrice becomes Tris – and a fulcrum for change in the first book of a proposed trilogy. I was a bit chagrined to realize that Roth wrote it for young adults. By the end, I didn’t care.

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Nightwish “Imaginaerum”: 5 Quick Thoughts

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

Nightwish-Melbourne-2008

Nightwish after a show in Australia.

Even if you’re not a Nightwish fan, their new album, Imaginaerum, might catch your attention at your local music store. This post is for people who don’t know about this Nordic symphonic metal band. Well, here’s what you need to know about Nightwish and Imaginaerum. If you’re already a fan, this post might get you talking and thinking even more about this album.

Bird’s Eye View of the Band

Nightwish is from Finland. You could argue that their symphonic metal paved the way for Evanescence – for better or worse – by pioneering the “big guitar plus clear-voiced female singer” sound. They use a lot of orchestration, with tons of changes in volume and a few meter and tempo switches. The moods also shift quite a bit from song to song.

Singer Situation

Current singer Anette Olzon isn’t the original Nightwish singer. She succeeds Tarja Turunen, who had a classical singing style and a really powerful set of lungs. Turunen is pretty much a symphonic metal archetype. Her ouster from the band in 2005 caused a lot of angst for gothy types, especially when band leader/keyboardist/composer Tuomas Holopainen gave Olzon the gig. Turunen is a physical force that Olzon can’t match – but Olzon is more versatile and emotive. She also appeals to a wider audience (yet another reason some longtime fans are deepening their frown lines). Imaginaerum is the first Nightwish album that Holopainen wrote specifically for Olzon’s range and style.

Surprise, Surprise

Imaginaerum peaked at 27 on the U.S. Billboard chart, eliciting a huge “how the hell did that happen?” from me. I love this band in both incarnations … but symphonic metal is not exactly a sound popular in America. Holopainen calls the album “Hollywood landscape metal.” Some might call it cheesy because of its crazy orchestration and poetic lyrics. To me, though, “cheesy” is often code for “I couldn’t play or compose anything like this in a million years, and I’m jealous.”

How ‘bout Them Guitars?

Nightwish isn’t a riff-oriented band. One of the main criticisms I’ve heard about the album centers on guitarist Emppu Vuorinen … I hear stuff like “generic modern metal riffs.” Here’s the thing: The guitars on Imaginaerum (and indeed on the two albums before it, Once and Dark Passion Play) are more for texture and percussion rather than for main melodies. This is true of many symphonic metal bands. And listen to the extraordinarily tight interplay between Vuorinen and drummer Jukka Nevalainan: There is no room for error, and these guys don’t make any errors. Tight, tight, tight. Yngwie Malmsteen-style scrambling isn’t what Nightwish needs.

In and Out of Genres

Imaginaerum is not just a metal album. Sure, “Ghost River” rocks as hard as a lot of stuff out there. But “Slow, Love, Slow” is a slow, jazzy number that will make longtime Nightwish scratch their heads in consternation … at first. They’ll come to love the awesome melody and note choice – and listening to Jukka gently stroke a snare with jazz brushes. “Turn Loose the Mermaids” sound like something Blackmore’s Night would write, with a Druidic vibe that’ll make you feel like visiting Stonehenge. Oh, and it has a section that sounds like a spaghetti Western. Somehow, it all works. Then there’s “Scaretale”, which sounds like a carnival ride gone wrong. It’s probably also the wildest, most enthusiastic, most intense performance OIzon’s ever concocted. The versatility and changes are unusual, even from a symphonic metal originator.

So, what about you? Any observations I missed? Questions about the band? Let’s hear it!

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What Do You Want from a Cover Band?

Sunday, December 19th, 2010

A conversation with Nick, a longtime Hung Dynasty friend, got me thinking: What’s the best strategy for a cover band that wants to get the crowd really into the music?

Some bands will sound pretty much like you’re scanning the FM radio dial. You’ll hear whatever tunes fit their interest that get frequent regular airplay.

Me? I like it a bit different. I’ve got a good example: There’s this local Joan Jett tribute band called Bad Reputation. They did all the usual stuff, but also whipped out “Light of Day.” I’d completely forgotten about that song, and it was really cool to hear it again. I could see the movie poster with Joan and Michael J. Fox (looking quite uncomfortable as a male rocker skank) clearly in my mind.

Then Bad Reputation really surprised me: They played a Rage Against the Machine tune! And did a nice job of it.

That’s the way I like cover bands to operate: Dig up something I’ve forgotten. Surprise me with your spin on a well-known tune. And maybe even play something totally outside your genre.

Hung Dynasty isn’t a cover band. We love making original music in the vein of the bands we listened to growing up. But we also like to cover a few things here and there. We try to surprise, like our heavy metal mashup of “The Gambler” by Kenny Rogers and Johnny Cash’s “Ring of Fire.” Or playing “Down Under” by Men at Work likes it’s a Dio tune. Or digging really deep in the Iron Maiden catalog for “Wrathchild.”

So what about the rest of you? What do you like best from a cover or tribute band?

Words to Avoid When Writing Lyrics

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

If you’re sitting down to pen some anthemic lyrics, let me give you this tip: Do not ever use the phrase “the sky.”

You see, “the sky” can easily be mis-heard as “this guy.”

Classic example: Jimi Hendrix’s “Purple Haze” and it’s infamous line, “Excuse me while I kiss the sky” became “Excuse me while I kiss this guy.” This has amused people like, well, me, ever since.

Sweden’s Hammerfall took the lyrical landmine to a new high in their song, “Templars of Steel.” Granted, the song is already silly enough, glorifying, as it does, a bunch of admittedly badass Crusade-era knights who were still quite spartan in their living and weren’t exactly a bunch of ladies’ men, if you catch my drift. For them, it was a life of prayer, combat and just a bit more prayer thrown in for good measure. Partiers like Poison, these were not.

But Hammerfall made it worse with the line “Raise your fist in the sky.” Yes, heard through the wrong ears (namely mine), you have Joacim Cans possibly exhorting listeners to “raise your fist in this guy.”

Fortunately, Hammerfall are playing this over monstrous slabs of instrumentation and Cans’ very cool post-NWOBHM voice. Still, I giggle.

Don’t make me giggle at you – don’t use the words “the sky” in your lyrics.

Back at the Conservatory

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

Friday night, Hung Dynasty hit the studio again. Once again, we were at the Conservatory of Recording Arts & Sciences in Gilbert, Ariz. This time, Mike Gray was the man at the controls. He did a really nice job of getting some sweet sounds out of our rigs.

As for what we recorded – well, we’ve had a power ballad kicking around for awhile, so we did that. We also did a cover. Can’t tell you which one yet. We really want to get some licensing for this one and get it on the air, actually. Should be fun!

Watch Less, Do More

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

I’ve just been thinking a lot about what playing the guitar does for me. Oddly enough, it was firing up the TV that did this. A friend at work is upgrading his DVD collection to Blu-Ray. He gets pennies on the dollars for selling or trading, so he often gives DVDs to his buddies. I wound up with Superbad.

It took me two days to watch it. By my calculation, that was also the first time I turned our TV on in nearly three weeks.

That’s an average of about six-and-a-half minutes of TV per day. According to a story in the LA Times, Americans watch an average of nearly 5 hours a day on TV.

With that in mind, let me offer a modest proposal: For every 10 hours you spend watching TV, go see one live local concert. Having spent the last five years in a band, I can tell you that everyone loves to say they like local music. If a quarter of the people who say that actually went to see some shows, the venues would be packed.

And seriously, seeing just about any live band is more enriching than sitting in front of a TV.

By my best guess, I spend about 12 hours a week on my guitar. That includes composing, practicing, maintenance and the like. That’s about what I spend on exercise, generally. And that’s probably why I log 45 minutes of TV a week.

I’ve gotta say, I think my life is way better for it. I’d bet others would say the same if they gave it a try.

If you hate loud music, fine. Don’t see a show. Paint something. Read something. Dust off your camera. Get some knitting needles. But just tap into your creative side. There might be a true passion waiting for you to find it.

Fun with Heavy Metal Band Name Origins

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009
A photo of Iceland's Dimmuborgir by Mike Schiraldi.

A photo of Iceland's Dimmuborgir by Mike Schiraldi.

My wife and I are researching a trip to Iceland. I’ve been pouring over Web sites and books, and I ran across this fun tidbit …

There’s an area of spectacular lava flows there. The Iceland name for it translates into “Dark Castle.” That phrase, my friends, is dimmuborgir, from which the black metal band Dimmu Borgir takes its name.

That moves them a notch up in my esteem for creative band names. But I still can’t stand their vocals. Nuh, uh.

Speaking of black metal, if you haven’t seen the Ruthless Review Top 10 Most Ridiculous Black Metal Pics, do yourself a favor. Click the link. Have someone with you to either share the laughs or revive you after you faint from laughing too hard.

4 Albums That Got Me Pumped About Metal – Again!

Friday, November 6th, 2009
Joacim and Oskar from Hammerfall, a proper metal band. Photo by Ice Maiden

Joacim and Oskar from Hammerfall, a proper metal band. Photo by Ice Maiden

In a recent post, I gave you the 5 albums that changed the way I rock. As we all know, such music was laid to waste thanks to this one-dimensional, angst-ridden slacker by the name of Click GoBangKurt Cobain. Okay, maybe it wasn’t just him – but he was the standard bearer of this avalanche of suckitude.

As the fallout of metal’s implosion rained sadly upon my landscape, I found little solace. Ozzy’s solo stuff? Blah. Pantera? After Cowboys from Hell, I hated Phil’s “singing”. Limp Bizkit? The less said about them, the better.

So I was one sad Minor League Rocker. Until a few magical albums got dropped on me head. Here they are, again in no particular order.

One Crimson Night (Hammerfall) – I could tell immediately that these guys grew up loving the same music I do. They just added a modern sonic sheen – and some occassionally embarrassing “metal for the pure of heart” lyrics. But hey, they’re Swedish. And their riffs are off-the-charts awesome, so I will forgive an awful lot of lyrical shortcomings. I still favor the lineup that included Magnus Rosen and Stefan Elgren – it pains me to see new guitarist Pontus playing a Les Paul. But you can’t have it all, I guess. I am absolutely thrilled that they are a first-class live band – no, they’re better than that! They look and sound like a metal band should, and they treat their audiences like they’re the only people on the planet.

Better Than Raw (Helloween) – I’d almost forgotten about Helloween. Then I wound up in a record store in about 1998 or so. There, Helloween surfaced with this album like a ballistic missile submarine, and launched a full spread of atomic German speed metal. And each of those musical warheads hit the target! I was flummoxed (remember, in ’98 I barely used teh Interwebz) by the new lead singer, Andi Deris. But he earned his stripes, and I still love this freakin’ album. I absolutely must see Helloween live someday. Some of the albums they released since then haven’t been great, but I bought them anyway to support a deserving band that stuck it out through the Grunge Times. More than any other mentioned here, this album was here for me during a rough time.

Tarja's last album with Nightwish was a monster.

Tarja's last album with Nightwish was a monster.

Once (Nightwish) - In an earlier post, I told you how I discovered Nightwish. The Once disc continues to fry my mind with the possibilities of music, regardless of genre. What awesome arrangements! The creativity, huge sounds and precision on display humbles me. I’d prefer to see Nightwish get back to a more guitar-driven sound, but there’s no way I’ll ever fail to appreciate this ambitious giant of an album. Tarja was still onboard for this album, so the classical vibe was more pronounced. I love the new singer, too, because she has a warmth Tarja doesn’t. But Tarja has a grandeur and gravitas that I’ve never seen in any other heavy metal singer, regardless of what chromosomes they have.

Burning Down the Opera (Edguy) – So back in 2005, I was really stoked. I was on my way to watch Hammerfall play! I got there early to check out this Edguy band opening for them. I thought it was a lame name – and I still do. But man, they played a smokin’ set that night. They were full of the joy and verve of playing rock music, with all the warmth and enthusiasm as a bunch of dudes playing to a venue full of longtime friends. They would’ve blown any other act off the stage, but Hammerfall could match them. I bought this live album and still consider it their high point. Then, they were still more power metal. Today, they’re more hard rock. I’d like to see them swing more power metal, but I still like their newer stuff alright.

I’ve heard many great albums since then from some very fine bands: Tarot, The Gathering, Gamma Ray, Drain STH plus many of my old favorite bands. But these four really revived my enthusiasm.

One Thing to Remember if You’re Joining a Band

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

I know I make being in a band sound like a lot of fun. There’s a lot of banter, a lot of great incidents, some fun songs to play.

But there’s something important you need to know if you’re thinking of starting a band or joining one: You need to make sure your goals align with those of your bandmates. If you’re committed to playing your instrument to the best of your abilities, make sure your bandmates are the same. If you are trying to be Joe Satriani, don’t get in a band with cats who want to be The Ramones.

Likewise, if you’re content to be sloppy but fun, you’d better not hook up with a drummer who worships at Neil Peart’s altar.

And here’s something else: If you try it, and you just never feel right in the situation or it stops being fun, there’s no shame in saying “Guys, this is the wrong band for me.” If you’re not having fun, your bandmates won’t either. So don’t prolong it, and don’t do yourself a disservice by doing something you’re not loving.

5 Albums That Changed the Way I Rock

Monday, October 26th, 2009
Cover art is metal to the max - and so are the tunes.

Cover art is metal to the max - and so are the tunes.

Let me take you back to when I was 14 years old. This is gonna surprise you, but I didn’t really listen to much music. None of it got me excited. I often listened to Top 40 radio while playing computer games, but that was more like background noise.

My hesher of a neighbor at that time took it upon himself to set me on the right track (at least musically). He started me off slowly, ramping up the intensity as I began to immerse myself into his metal culture. Though he led the way, I also began discovering my own stuff. Here are 5 albums that changed the way I rock, in no particular order. Those supplied by The Hesher Neighbor are starred.

Savage Amusement* (Scorpions) - The Hesher and I might be the only people on the planet who actually like this album. Word is the Scorps themselves don’t even like it because of its meticulous over-production. But this was my first exposure, and I loved Klaus’s voice and the HUGE guitar tone. Even today, this album also has a dark, menacing gleam absent in any other Scorpions album.

Keeper of the Seven Keys Part II* (Helloween) – Okay, so riddle me this: Why did Master of Puppets get so much more attention than Keeper Part II? After all, this album is more intense, the playing more mind-boggling, the themes just as apocalyptic (yet often humorous). My theory? Helloween drew heavily from classicial music with wild harmony parts and a singer with crazy vocal range. Metallica drew from more accessible punk. I also think Helloween’s often-absurd lyrics -and farm animal noises- made it hard for them to take as seriously, even after they’d clean house with a blazing dual harmony guitar solo. I will also say that every Helloween riff had a point, where Metallica often got bogged down in riffs for riffs’ sake, just to through something in there. Kind of like The Dave Mustaine Project (aka Megadeth).

Live After Death (Iron Maiden) – My first exposure to Iron Maiden came from a mix tape a dude named Neil made for me. One listen, and I scuttled to the record store for a live album. It was like giving a espresso to an infant, an instant shot of “WTF that rules!” that delighted me. Everybody in the band sounds like they have a piece of Stonehenge its very self tucked away in their stretchy pants. “Aces High” remains an all-time favorite, as do many of the other classics on this stupendously awesome live album. I even love that spot in “Rime of the Ancient Mariner” where Bruce Dickinson sounds more like Al Bundy than himself (“Then, the spell starts t’break!”).

Beast from the East (Dokken) – As a high school junior, a girl named Tracy sat behind me in English class. She decreed that I needed to listen to Dokken, so she dubbed a copy of her live Beast album. And let me tell you, this thing rocked me silly. George Lynch’s guitar tone was monumental, and Don Dokken had a gritty vibe that sounded heavy as hell. I was almost crushed when I got a hold of a studio album – oy vey, so overproduced, shiny and barren. But this … this was awesome stuff. The same songs, but stripped to their essentials and delivered with feeling.

Queensryche's Michael Wilton - He rules, and plays the most awesome ESP on the planet. Photo from Hotsource.com.au.

Queensryche's Michael Wilton - He rules, and plays the most awesome ESP on the planet. Photo from Hotsource.com.au.

Operation Mindcrime* (Queensryche) – Gadzooks! To this day, no album impacts my mood as much as Mindcrime. I’ve removed it from my car, because it makes me want to crash my Subaru into a Hummer, steal a steamroller and go on an anti-authority rampage. The guitar tone is studiously and purposefully annoying (as admitted by the members), but so evocative. The songs interlink quite well. The arrangements are dense. They employ both guitarists to good effect, rather than just having them double each other. I love the way the play different voicings of the same chord, a technique I try to apply in Hung Dynasty songs. I know this list isn’t supposed to have any order, but this might be the #1.

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