Metal as you get older

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delet

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The Unworthy Gentleman said:
Aby_Z said:
Because metal is what you go to when you 'rebel' in your teen years.[footnote]To clarify, this is not my opinion, but a possible answer to why people in society would believe metal is something you just outgrow. I personally love metal.[/footnote]

For me, I went from pop, to alternative, and so on until I found Symphonic Metal, which I'm sticking with into the foreseeable future. It's all just personal taste.
Nail, meet Hammer. Hammer, meet Nail. I don't think that anything else can clear this up better than this... but lets give it a shot

I got into metal a couple years ago but I was never more than just hovering on the surface and I only ever listened to the bands that were real big. Then I changed a bit and figured out who I was and all that junk (which, for 16 is pretty good. I think it came around when I started looking at this site more, hmm) and now I'm into pretty much any music that tickles my fancy. Plus, I reckon a lot of it is down to wanting to be accepted.

Overall though, it can always be brought down to the fact that you change from your rebellious phase of metal and punk (like Aby_Z stated) to a different kind of music as your personality changes. But, everyone's different. A lot of people love metal all the way till they die.

Apologies to Aby_Z for quoting the you 3 pages into the thread.
No need to apologize; that's what the quote button is for, after all.

You actually bring up a good point. While the main brand of music I listen to is Symphonic Metal, I often deviate into anything from classical to J-pop. It's no longer about figuring out the type of music I prefer, and more just searching for any song that I find I can enjoy.
 

RUINER ACTUAL

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Macheteswordgun said:
real metal heads *not you core pussies*
lol. I enjoy Lamb of God, and they're all in their 40s at least. They didn't grow out of it, and neither have many others. I have never heard of people growing out of metal. I have seen some of my friends do it though. All I listen to is metal, and I always have music playing.

Edit 1. I would like to bring into this thread metal musicians talent. Im talking about real skills not ooo lets play this breakdown in g etc. I mean who can shread play the works. Also a random drum discussion. I beleive that gravity rolling is fucking cheating. I respect a man who can do 280 bpm *thats 4 hits* with single strokes than some guy who can sound fast and just let something else do all the god damn work. Side note triggers do nothing but add to your sound not speed etc
I use to be able to do 4 hits in 1 stroke, nearly 5:1, but then I broke my hand and haven't been able to play the same since. I can still do triples okay though.

Edit 2. Why does being a metal head imply you automaticly smoke. Idk how many times in school people wanted to know if i smoked weed asked me for cigs etc. That was before i smoked *i enjoy cigars and pipe seeing as how im a refined man* This ever happen to anyone else
I'm not sure. I don't smoke often, and most people don't think I smoke at all.
 

RUINER ACTUAL

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Aby_Z said:
Because metal is what you go to when you 'rebel' in your teen years.[footnote]To clarify, this is not my opinion, but a possible answer to why people in society would believe metal is something you just outgrow. I personally love metal.[/footnote]

For me, I went from pop, to alternative, and so on until I found Symphonic Metal, which I'm sticking with into the foreseeable future. It's all just personal taste.
I didn't have anything to rebel against. I was fine with my parents and everything. Metal is just better then all the other music.
 

Ultra_Caboose

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I really like metal, but I'm picky about it. I absolutely cannot stand death metal. Any band that seemingly has their "singer" shove the mic down his throat and growl, gargle and scream the lyrics just brings my piss to a boil. It doesn't make matters worse that my friends all have about three death metal bands they all play in.

The way I see it, if you plan on having lyrics, you need to actually sing them. I don't want to sit with my ear next to the speaker, double checking to see if the guttural sounds coming from the "singer" actually do match what the lyric sheet says.

So yes, I still enjoy metal at my ancient age of 23, just not a huge chunk of it.
 

delet

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CORRODED SIN said:
Aby_Z said:
Because metal is what you go to when you 'rebel' in your teen years.[footnote]To clarify, this is not my opinion, but a possible answer to why people in society would believe metal is something you just outgrow. I personally love metal.[/footnote]

For me, I went from pop, to alternative, and so on until I found Symphonic Metal, which I'm sticking with into the foreseeable future. It's all just personal taste.
I didn't have anything to rebel against. I was fine with my parents and everything. Metal is just better then all the other music.
I agree. Most metal is simply better than the rest. I added that footnote in for a reason...

Captain Placeholder said:
Can you send me a PM with some kinds of "Symphonic Metal" music? It sounds interesting.
Sure. Just let me pick out some of my favorites...
 

Citrus

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I grew out of a certain type of metal (Iron Maiden, Megadeth, etc) but I wouldn't say I've grown out of the genre altogether, or that it's really possible to. There's a lot of stuff you can do with metal, after all, just like any other style.
 

StriderShinryu

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I did listen to a lot of metal back when I was around 12 or 13 (when it certainly wasn't really as available, diverse or established as it is now) and I barely listen to any now. I wouldn't, however, really say I grew out of it so much as I would say my taste in music expanded. I'll still listen to some metal now a days but instead of being all I listen to it's something I dabble in amongst all of my other musical favourites when I happen to be in the right mood for it.
 

Bloodstain

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I will just quote what I said some time ago.

I like anything. Including rap (although there is good and bad one). Jazz, country, classical, trance, rock, metal, minimal, anime soundtracks, and so on...I like it all. There are no particular genres I don't like (wait, okay, I don't like metalcore), but particular songs and artists.
A few years ago, I used to listen to metal almost exclusively, but that's over. ^.^
 

faselei

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Still like metal, but tastes broaden as you get older. I prefer other types of music now, but I still like metal in the right place and time.
 

KefkaCultist

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Metal forever! Sure I may get tired of a band (metallica) and move on to another but I will never grow out of metal

I like all genres though. yes, I even find some country, rap, and pop T... T... TOLERABLE o_O
Symphonic metal is definitely my favorite at the moment
 

Withall

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I personally only started listening to metal relatively recently, having stuck to classical and rock music as prefered genres. While I'm sticking to what I prefer, I don't know what genre of metal I would call my new favorite (there are apparently alot of them out there). If I to be as bold as to ask, any recommendations from you, fellow escapists?

A wild stab in the dark, though... classical+rock= symphonic rock, right?
 

Acaroid

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Macheteswordgun said:
I've always been told or heard that everyone eventualy grows out of metal. Im sure it will never happen to me but i still dont know why everyone says it. I go to a lot of concerts meet a lot of bands real metal heads *not you core pussies* and some of them are in there 60's and later still enjoying it. I've loved metal since i was 4 years old and continue to this day. Also my father was a metalhead who got into it way back in the aerosmith days and probaly will continue till the day he dies. So my discussion is this why do you think people say or grow out of metal once they are "older" or will you be like me and be a metalhead forever \m/

Edit 1. I would like to bring into this thread metal musicians talent. Im talking about real skills not ooo lets play this breakdown in g etc. I mean who can shread play the works. Also a random drum discussion. I beleive that gravity rolling is fucking cheating. I respect a man who can do 280 bpm *thats 4 hits* with single strokes than some guy who can sound fast and just let something else do all the god damn work. Side note triggers do nothing but add to your sound not speed etc

Edit 2. Why does being a metal head imply you automaticly smoke. Idk how many times in school people wanted to know if i smoked weed asked me for cigs etc. That was before i smoked *i enjoy cigars and pipe seeing as how im a refined man* This ever happen to anyone else
I want a shirt made that says "just because I have long hair and a band shirt on doesn't mean I smoke or have drugs on me"

I find as I get older I get more lazy about what I listen to, less time trying to find new bands, more time enjoying the bands I know :)
 

tzimize

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Macheteswordgun said:
I've always been told or heard that everyone eventualy grows out of metal. Im sure it will never happen to me but i still dont know why everyone says it. I go to a lot of concerts meet a lot of bands real metal heads *not you core pussies* and some of them are in there 60's and later still enjoying it. I've loved metal since i was 4 years old and continue to this day. Also my father was a metalhead who got into it way back in the aerosmith days and probaly will continue till the day he dies. So my discussion is this why do you think people say or grow out of metal once they are "older" or will you be like me and be a metalhead forever \m/

Edit 1. I would like to bring into this thread metal musicians talent. Im talking about real skills not ooo lets play this breakdown in g etc. I mean who can shread play the works. Also a random drum discussion. I beleive that gravity rolling is fucking cheating. I respect a man who can do 280 bpm *thats 4 hits* with single strokes than some guy who can sound fast and just let something else do all the god damn work. Side note triggers do nothing but add to your sound not speed etc

Edit 2. Why does being a metal head imply you automaticly smoke. Idk how many times in school people wanted to know if i smoked weed asked me for cigs etc. That was before i smoked *i enjoy cigars and pipe seeing as how im a refined man* This ever happen to anyone else
A metal heart is hard to break apart :)
Heard my first metal album when I started my teens: Manowar - Triumph of steel. To this day its one of my favorite albums even if it is cheesy as a homemade pizza. While I listen to other music styles than metal, there is nothing that can give me the chills or make me feel as much as metal can (real metal, not the nu-metal stuff).

I predict this will not change to much seeing as I am almost 29 years now and WAY past my "rebellious" years. METAL FOREVER!
 

Adecristo

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Well, I used to listen mostly to pop, alternative music, rock etc.; and then I found out Sabaton. Metal really got me in; then there was (and still is) Hammerfall, Blind Guardian, Iron Maiden.. I'm getting metalified.
But still, I don't like all these bands like Behemoth[footnote]Even though I'm polish, as they are.[/footnote] where there is almost no sense in what they "sing" (or rather, growl). I don't like all those "DEEEEATH" songs; I prefer Epic metal, with all of it's medieval-ish feel of glory, honor and epicness. (That's why Sabaton and Hammerfall are my favorites, even though Sabaton's songs are mostly about World Wars, not Medieval).

tzimize said:
While I listen to other music styles than metal, there is nothing that can give me the chills or make me feel as much as metal can (real metal, not the nu-metal stuff).
Quote for truth, even though[footnote]I like to say "even though".[/footnote] I'm 17, not 29~
 

cdvolbers

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Well... wether or not you grow out of metal depends on what you're really looking for in music and in life; if you're happy sticking to just one genre, then fine. No offense, I'm a metalhead myself, but I never supported it as "the only way of good music", or even the dreaded "trveness" of some ignorant shitheads. Music is about feelings, emotions, stories and rebellion, about freedom and imagination, but not about finding the holy grail of music that appeals to everyone. So I often don't understand the urge of fanatic metalheads to convert everyone they encounter to the glory realms of (heavy) metal. It's a personal thing.

That being said, I think I'm not grown out of metal, but out of our subculture. I hate to say it, but like in every other subculture, the half of it are total idiots. And the whole metalcore - movement makes things even worse. As you mentioned the moshpits - I liked them when I was younger, for the same reasons as you did. I always respected the hidden "codex", so when anyone was falling down, I helped him up. This year at RockHarz festival in Germany someone lost his glasses (or maybe earplugs, i guess) while Kreator were playing, and we formed a circle aorund him against the moshpit to help him.

But the mosh itself were brutal and respectless, and I partially blame the metalcore teenies for this. It's not okay, jumping around, kicking and punching everyone in sight in the faces. At Darkness over X-Mas in Hamburg in december last year, I got the knee of 15 - year old crowdsurfer in the face, because he stupidly jumped from the stage into the crowd during the gig of Dark Tranquillity. My nose bleeded as it never bleeded before, and I remember how moshpits were a little less dangerous just a few years ago.

Okay, but that's maybe beside the point and yeah, I still love metal to the death, but I'm a bit emberassed to be put into the same scene like those morons. And that's sad, because it should be all about the music, not about genres, T -Shirts, ideologies etc. And if you're saying that there's just one true way of metal like almost half of the metal world, than you're nothing better than any religious leader on this planet.

Well... I started with german punk in my early teenager days, then made my first contact with Subway to Sally, a german medieval - metal/goth band. Than, my emo - phase with Linkin Barf and AFI began, interrupted by short outbreaks of the Offspring/BadReligion/Green Day - virus. Then, finally, I arrived at metal. First with stuff like Finntroll, fueled by my interest for fantasy and the medieval ages, then i discovered In Flames (when they still did melodic death) and soon "The Jester Race" and "Reroute to Remain" became my favourite albums. At the same time, I learned to know Children of Bodom and Nightwish, and they all together formed my "starting trio". From there I expaneded my knowledge about metal, through Iron Maiden, Equilibrium, and a short period of Darkthrone, then finally got to the classics in the last two years. I have to admit, I'm a bit more focused on the european metal scene; I never really got into Slayer, sorry, because I found Kreator and in common the german Thrash movement (Sodom, Destruction...) much more interesting because I found them more... rough, in terms of overall sound. Then the skandinavian ones, like Immortal, Dark Tranquillity, Hypocrisy, Arch Enemy and of course, Therion. Back to germany with Rage, and SuidAkra, to Holland with Epica. Then there came the big flood of medieval/pagan/folk - metal bands over europe, which I refused to follow. I looked out for more Synths and less bagpipes, the result (strangely) was Dream Theater. Last year, I found out about Behemoth and Shrinebuilder. And this year about Ayreon and Nile. Classics? Motörhead and Megadeth.

Oh, and Yesterday, Star One. Pure awesomness.

You see? You don't outgrow metal, if you live it and love it. And even if the scene is becoming more and more balls, and besides, why is it so important what non - metalheads think of us? Like a shirt from Die Apokalyptischen Reiter (german for the riders of the apocalypse) says that I own, metal will never die. Because of People like you and me.

Sorry for the long post.
 

RhombusHatesYou

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Between There and There.
Country
The Wide, Brown One.
Apparently I grew back into metal in my mid-30s... was news to me but apparently some of the bands I like are classified as Drone and Sludge sub-genre metal etc etc... and I'd given up metal at 15 in favour of punk, oi and the closest I got to metal those days was spinning some old crossover vinyl.

Still, until someone manages to get Ska classified as a sub-genre of metal I'll never be a metalhead.
 

AbyssalSanhedrin

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Like many here have said, my appreciation of metal has grown and intensified every day of my life. There is so much new, interesting and exciting music coming up from the underground metal scene and this constant evolution of the genre suggests to me that I will never grow out of it, and I say that at the ripe-old-age of 30!