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Wilkins
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Thu Apr 19, 2007 9:51 pm
PostPost subject: Different Metal genres explained: Reply with quote

A lot better and more understandable explaination

Black metal

Evolving from thrash metal, black metal is characterised by a dark, cold atmosphere replacing thrash metal's head-on brutality. Though not as atonal as death metal, it is still considered to be one of the most extreme subgenres of metal. The vocals are usually shrieked, screamed, rasped or grunted, with the lyrical themes often being depressing, Satanic, occult, or anti-Christian 1990s.

Black metal's origins have been put to a few bands (the name "black metal" is usually accredited to Venom, who coined the term with their album entitled Black Metal), though the style itself is thought to have emerged first from Sweden's Bathory and then from Norway; the most influential bands being Dimmu Borgir, Mayhem, Burzum, Darkthrone and Emperor. Black metal is now found throughout the world, with each region seemingly attributing their culture differently to the black metal sound. Fusion between black metal and folk music is also quite common.


Death metal

Death metal is a subsidiary of thrash metal pioneered by Possessed. Possessed, Death, Morbid Angel and other bands pushed to more brutal extremes, with dissonant harmonies, exotic scales, erratic time signature changes and downtuned guitars. Double bass drums are universally implemented, as well as rapid snare drums, 'blast beats', and chaotic cymbal crashes. Vocals are usually growled, but also can be shrieked, yelled, or screamed. Current death metal bands often dabble in neo-classicism, Jazz-fusion, medieval music, or folk and symphonic endeavors. The lyrical content usually deals with the darker, nihilistic side of human imagination, dealing with blood, death, gore, and Satan (like the band Deicide). However, Death Metal is not limited to just blood, death, and gore. It can also range out to philosophy, Mythology (such as the band Nile), and politics.


Doom metal

The subgenre of doom metal differs from others in many ways. Instead of fast paces, pure doom metal uses only mid or slow tempos; the atmosphere emphasizes melancholy feelings. Candlemass is one of the most important bands of the genre and their first album, Epicus Doomicus Metallicus named and defined the genre. Some bands, such as My Dying Bride and Bethlehem, mix death metal or black metal with doom metal using the vocals from death or black and the tempos of doom. Doom metal often uses three octave major scales played on the 7th fret for riffs as well as solos. Several strains of doom also maintain heavy influence from the originators of heavy metal such as Black Sabbath and Deep Purple.


Folk metal

Folk metal embraces metal bands that are influenced by folklore from varying cultures and origins. Originally started as a mixture of folk rock, power metal and black metal, the term has progressed to encompass many folk-themed metal bands, that use folk based lyrical themes and composition, including instrumentation. Some prominent bands of this genre are Finntroll, Mägo de Oz, and Skyclad.


Glam metal

Glam metal was one of the most popular styles of metal during the 1980s, often referred to by detractors as “Hair metal“. The sound; as the name suggests lies somewhere between the Heavy Metal sound of Black Sabbath, Deep Purple and the Glam rock sound of Sweet and KISS. The bands were famous for their use of guitar solos, energetic frontmen and drummers that did not only have technical ability, but the ability to put on an entertaining show; as per Tommy Lee. Many of the bands donned make-up to achieve an androgynous look, similar to that of some 1970s Glam rock bands. Mötley Crüe, W.A.S.P., and Quiet Riot are examples and references for this kind of music.


Gothic metal

Gothic metal is a genre of heavy metal music that originated during the early 1990s in Europe as an outgrowth of doom-death, a subgenre of doom metal. Musically it combines the guitaring styles of doom metal, black metal and death metal with its own unique use of heavy keyboard atmospherics, romantic and story like lyrics and dual vocalists. Bands include Within Temptation and Lacuna Coil.


Grindcore

Grindcore is influenced by thrash metal, and also hardcore and punk, taking its name from the "grinding" sound made by the atonal riffs 'grinding' into one another. The style is characterised by a vocal style similar to death metal, rapid fire "blast beats" from double-kick drums and short songs. There are grindcore bands that are more hardcore than metal, but most bands today are heavily influenced by death metal. The heaviness of Grindcore is slightly comparable to the heaviness of death or black metal. Some examples of grindcore can be found in bands like Carcass, Cock and Ball Torture, Pig Destroyer, or Napalm Death.


Industrial metal

Industrial metal (also referred to as noise metal and cyber metal) fuses elements of industrial music and other electronic genres such as House music by using electronic instruments such as Synthesizers and drum machines alongside more purely heavy metal instruments such as Guitars and Bass and a vocal style combining elements of both genres. Fear Factory and Rammstein have both made it particularly big in this genre.


Metalcore

Metalcore is defined usually by bands whose music combines both the raw vocals and beat of American hardcore (generally within the Northeast US) with the guitars more often used in European thrash metal and melodic death metal. Some good examples of this genre are Killswitch Engage, Shadows Fall, Atreyu, Haste the Day, and Avenged Sevenfold.


Neo-classical metal

Neo-classical metal incorporates elements from classical music, into the normal heavy metal sound, including tempos, instrument usage, and even melodies. Yngwie J. Malmsteen is a known proponent of this branch of metal.


Nu metal

Nu metal is a style that combines elements of heavy metal, hip hop and alternative rock music, with a downtuned guitar technique. There is some contention between metal fans, that, given nu metal's alternative rock ties, calling it a metal genre can be considered a misnomer. Bands like (hed) Planet Earth, Linkin Park and Slipknot are good examples. Korn, Deftones, Limp Bizkit and Coal Chamber are seen as some of the first bands in the genre.


Power metal

Power metal is more upbeat than most metal genres, taking heavy influence from thrash metal and heavy metal, with more progression replacing the electro-blues style, more virtuosity in the guitar leads and solos, and stressing, jaunty tempos. Power Metal often emphasizes clean, melodic, high-pitched vocals and fast pacing that is mostly driven by double bass drumming and melodic lead guitar. The rhythm guitar is defined by straight power chord progressions. Power metal leans toward the positive, happy side of life, seeking to empower the listener and inspire joy and courage. Power metal usually carries fantasy or science fiction themes. Most power metal bands (e.g. Nightwish) are from continental Europe, though a small number (e.g., Jag Panzer, Kamelot, and Manowar) hail from North America.


Progressive metal

Progressive metal is a fusion between progressive rock and heavy metal. It's one of heavy metal's most complex genres (along with other technical metal genres), due to its use of unusual and dynamic time signatures, long compositions, complex compositional structures, and virtuosic instrumental playing, where instrumental solos are detailed and extended. Vocals, if present, are melodic and lyrics are often philosophical, spiritual, and/or political. Forerunners in this genre include Tool, Dream Theater, Symphony X, Pain of Salvation, Fates Warning, Evergrey, Savatage, Opeth and Queensrÿche.


Speed metal

Speed metal is a sub-genre of heavy metal that uses traditional heavy metal song structures and riffing but with faster tempos and driving rhythms. It is usually just as melodic as traditional heavy metal. Speed metal emerged when traditional heavy metal bands started writing an occasional fast song. It kicked off as an established genre when bands wrote the majority of their songs in this style. It is considered an offshoot of power metal, and most bands in the genre are considered power metal.


Symphonic metal

Symphonic metal varies in form. It most commonly refers to bands that use orchestral elements in their music. These elements include full orchestras, opera themes, vocals or keyboarding akin to that of opera or symphony music, and a softer and more upbeat nature than other metal genres. The bands Nightwish, Within Temptation, and Epica fall under this sub-genre. Often, symphonic metal can be a combination of other sub-genres of metal, such as Rhapsody of Fire, who are a symphonic power metal band or Dimmu Borgir, a black metal band.


Thrash metal

Thrash metal originated, and remains, NWOBHM[1][2][3] with tempos influenced more predominantly by hardcore punk. Thrash metal songs are usually fairly complex, and frequently contain constant time and tempo changes. Thrash metal replaces melody with brutality and speed, with the use of ample distortion. Thrash was the first subgenre to widely use double bass drums in metal. Vocals in thrash metal are usually yelled, screamed, or snarled, though, at the same time, melodic.

As is true for many of the terms in this list, the moniker "thrash metal" was not always embraced by its supposed representatives; early on, Metallica referred to themselves as "power metal" (conflicting with the above definition of this term). Conversely, many bands, like Kreator, have been labeled as hate metal.[4]


Cross-genre references

Many terms are used to group bands from across genres that share a common trait. These terms are used loosely when used, and in some places may or not be used at all. They normally group bands of several genres together into a group due to a shared trait that is not normally a feature of any of the genres of metal the individual bands are part of.[citation needed]


Alternative metal

Alternative metal is a cross-genre term used to describe metal bands and metal influenced bands, which some fans consider to be unique or experimental, as well as bands of the nu metal genre that lack hip hop influence. Some examples are System of a Down, Marilyn Manson and Tool.


Avant-garde metal

Avant-garde metal (sometimes called experimental metal), is a cross-genre grouping which contains bands from multiple genres of metal that exhibit experimentation through non-standard sounds, instruments, and song structures akin to the genre of metal they are rooted in.


Blackened death metal

Blackened death metal is a fusion genre of extreme metal utilising elements of death metal and black metal. Many of the bands start out as full on black metal outfits and end up adopting death metal influences and fusing the two together.


Blackened thrash metal

Blackened thrash metal is a fusion genre which fuses thrash metal with elements of black metal or vice versa.


Celtic metal

Celtic metal is a cross-genre grouping which contains bands from multiple genres of metal that contain strong connections to Celtic music and imagery.


Christian metal

Christian metal is another cross-genre grouping which contains metal bands that introduce Christian themes into their lyrics. Often the Christian themes are melded with the subjects of the genre the band is rooted in, often giving a supposedly Christian take on the subject matter. Some examples are Zao, Underoath, Blindside, Norma Jean and Disciple.


Classic metal

Classic metal is a name given to the original form of heavy metal music characterised by thumping fast bass lines, fast, crisp and somewhat heavy and more melodic riffs, extended lead guitar solos, high pitched vocals and anthemic choruses, this era of metal bands boomed in the early to mid 1980s.


Dark metal

Dark metal concerns bands across genres that use what is considered to be a darker atmosphere than is normal for the genre they are in. Bands of this type are normally symphonic metal, gothic metal, doom metal and black metal bands.


Epic metal

Epic metal is a cross-genre name given to bands with fantasy-inspired lyrics and a symphonic feel. Bands of this grouping often belong to gothic metal, power metal and symphonic metal genres.


Extreme metal

Extreme metal is a cross-genre reference to some heavier and aggressive styles of metal including black metal, death metal, grindcore and thrash metal.


Groove metal

Also known as neo-thrash, post-thrash, and half-thrash, it consists of slow or mid-paced and down tuned thrash riffs, blusey guitar solos, greatly emphasized drum work and harsh vocals. Pantera is a primary example of the groove metal style in addition to Lamb Of God and Chimaira.


NWOAM

Main article: New Wave of American Metal
The 'New Wave of American Metal' (often abbreviated as NWOAM) is a genre heavily influenced by melodic death metal and Scandinavian death metal that generally combines some elements from those genres with metalcore. The movement is largely American with a few European bands practicing the genre as well. The genre first came to being with Darkest Hour's The Prophecy Fulfilled, Prayer for Cleansing's The Rain in Endless Fall, and Unearth's Above the Fall of Man. The genre boasts a great deal of musical variation, however, lyrics often reflect hardcore rather than metal themes. Foremost representatives of the genre include Atreyu, As I Lay Dying, Killswitch Engage and Unearth.


NWOBHM

The 'New Wave of British Heavy Metal' (often abbreviated as NWOBHM) is a term used to describe British heavy metal artists that emerged in the late 1970s/early 1980s in the wake of the 'original wave' of British traditional metal artists, and as a reaction against pop and punk. NWOBHM was hugely popular and has been influential to most metal genres since. The key bands of this genre are Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, Saxon (band) and Def Leppard.



Post-metal

This movement is largely American, but also includes some Japanese bands. Instrumental bands like Mono, Pelican, and Explosions In The Sky write lengthy, frequently changing songs (typically five or six per album) that can range from post-emo guitar rock to full-on black metal. Other related bands like Isis, Sunn O))) and Earth are in some ways closer to doom metal but share the same fanbase.


Rapcore

Rapcore (sometimes called Rap metal) is a cross-genre reference to metal bands that institute the vocal and lyrical form of rap. It is normally used in association with the term 'alternative metal' to differentiate between nu metal bands that contain hip-hop influence, and those that do not. It is also used occasionally to refer to bands that have worked alongside hip-hop artists on tracks before. Some modern examples are Limp Bizkit, Crazy Town, Linkin Park, P.O.D., and The Bloodhound Gang.


Stoner metal

Stoner metal refers to bands who use low, bassy riffs and elements of heavy metal, doom metal and psychedelica. The Black Sabbath song "Sweet Leaf" is often regarded as the template for stoner metal. While not all fans are marijuana users, the tag "stoner" has stuck.


Viking metal

Viking metal is a subgenre of black metal, typically with musical compositions more complex than early Norwegian black metal. Having songs with lyrics about vikings or the various histories and legends of the Nordic countries has nothing to do with classifying a band as Viking metal. It is a complex subgenre with subtle cross-over elements, such as native folk music styles or melodeath. Thyrfing and Ensiferum are examples of this genre.


Related genres

The genres listed here are sometimes mistaken as metal genres, or have association with metal genres through influencing, or being influenced by them.


Blues rock
Blues rock is a genre which many early heavy metal performers such as Black Sabbath and Led Zeppelin were rooted solidly in.


Hard rock

Hard rock is a progression from blues rock and early psychedelia, and a precursor to heavy metal. (Heavy metal evolved from the style during the 1970s) It was pioneered in the mid to late 1960s. It is hard to distinguish hard rock from early heavy metal due to some artists such as Queen, Deep Purple, Thin Lizzy, and AC/DC fitting into the description of both genres.
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Thu Apr 19, 2007 9:53 pm
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Too Long / Didn't Read...

You could have atleast summed it up for us.
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Mr Mittens
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Fri Apr 20, 2007 8:50 pm
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TLDR
Thank you for the insight?
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Fri Apr 20, 2007 9:27 pm
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yeah, i hate to be the one to say it wilkins, but it kinda seems you're in the wrong forum for huge posts about metal...

i read a fair bit of it, but it still didn't really interest me.
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Fri Apr 20, 2007 10:47 pm
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i skimmed to see who the bands were and if i knew any of them!

im actually starting to get into screamo and like hardcore!
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Mr Mittens
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Fri Apr 20, 2007 11:39 pm
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Budderball wrote:
im actually starting to get into screamo and like hardcore!

And now the turning emo accusations become stronger....
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Sat Apr 21, 2007 10:47 am
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LABEL LABEL LABEL LABEL LABEL



One Love (8)
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Sat Apr 21, 2007 11:17 am
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I agree Elliot... I did try to stray from long posts about metal. But Adam wanted to know. So there you go

In before lock perhaps?
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Sat Apr 21, 2007 11:57 am
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I skim read, got the important details, probably won't remember any of it, but quite insightful Smile .
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Sat Apr 21, 2007 12:09 pm
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To much detail. I read the headings of each one and the first line or 2 and thought cbf. Metal is Metal no need to split it up so much.
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Sat Apr 21, 2007 12:11 pm
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inf0rm3r wrote:
Metal is Metal no need to split it up so much.


QFT
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Sat Apr 21, 2007 7:39 pm
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Actually. Not QFT. Seeing as though I would know more than all of you put together when it comes to metal. All those genres are COMPLETELY different. Listen to Gothic metal and Goregrind and tell me they are the same.
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Sat Apr 21, 2007 9:43 pm
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*does that*. For a genre to become many genres they must all have similarities.
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Sat Apr 21, 2007 10:01 pm
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I personally don't think grind should be metal. It's too different.
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Sat Apr 21, 2007 10:01 pm
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It has something to do with the guitars and vocals. Other than that its up to anybody's chosing what they want to do. But there are a few rules that you can not break if you want to be metal. No "core". No hardcore! Hardcore isn't metal. Thats a BIG misconception.

To my knowledge metal is probably the most diverse metal genres there is.

*Edit* Chris. Grind is probably the hardest metal genre to perform. And if it's to different, then no metal should exist. All metal is soo different.
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Mon Apr 30, 2007 5:50 pm
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Read the top please.. Better understood
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Mon Apr 30, 2007 6:04 pm
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You can't dispute that hardcore isn't metal.
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Mon Apr 30, 2007 8:32 pm
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Yes I can. Hardcore is really different than metal, the "image" is different, the overall feel is different. I can't explain it, I'll get some "official" help on this if you so want it
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Mon Apr 30, 2007 9:07 pm
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Hardcore is metal. For fuck's sake, just because you don't like it don't shit all over it needlessly.
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Tue May 01, 2007 4:05 pm
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Munky106 from Firestream.net wrote:
Short answer:

Hardcore is more punk influenced and usually has breakdowns (depending on the type of hardcore it is)
Metal is usually more structured and usually has leads whereas hardcore usually doesn't have leads

Metalcore is a blend of the two.


Hardcore is NOT! metal
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Tue May 01, 2007 4:31 pm
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So what is Hardcore?
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Tue May 01, 2007 5:05 pm
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Wilkins wrote:
Munky106 from Firestream.net wrote:
Short answer:

Hardcore is more punk influenced and usually has breakdowns (depending on the type of hardcore it is)


The part is bolded is the main difference between them both.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardcore_punk

That's a long explaination.

Listen to Hatebreed and Focal Point (old style Hardcore), Underoath, End of Destiny (Underoath style) Parkway Drive (Post Hardcore)

.. confused? Yep, me too. Hardcore people do not know what they want to be.
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Tue May 01, 2007 5:08 pm
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Hatebreed's metal...
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Tue May 01, 2007 8:35 pm
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Thats just some doushe from another forum.... Not enough "actual" citation, or evidence... Nothing from wiki either...
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Tue May 01, 2007 9:04 pm
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That's why I got people from Firestream. And no, Hatebreed are Hardcore with some metal in it...

I don't expect you people to understand. That's why I don't try explaining to you. (except with the list up there. I thought that'd explain better than I could)
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Wed May 02, 2007 5:25 pm
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why such a fuss about something (i think) no-one on here cares about?

i never get asked about the difference between romantic and classical music, or the difference between the styles of different composers... and i'd be hard pressed to try and explain the latter in under a thousand words.

why doesn't anyone ask? because no-one gives a crap... so why pick at something that shouldn't be an issue?
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Mon May 21, 2007 5:24 pm
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I actually read it Smile It all makes a bit of sense.
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[FD]Aleksandr



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Sun Jun 10, 2007 1:03 pm
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<-- Hardcore
And you forgot that one of the biggest industrial metal bands would be NIN.


Last edited by [FD]Aleksandr on Thu Jun 14, 2007 5:16 pm; edited 1 time in total
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Wilkins
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Sun Jun 10, 2007 1:27 pm
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Hardcore isnt metal alecks.. you know that
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Thu Jun 14, 2007 5:18 pm
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Yeah, It's totally differant, but I was still trying to promote NIN as on of the major influencial industrial metal bands to date. Besides Time magazine named Trent Reznor one of the 25 most influential people in America. Proves my point?
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