Jesse's out of town this week for Spring Break, so I thought I might take this opportunity to play a setlist that I've had in my back pocket for some time. The list is, in a way, about the history of Heavy Metal. Or perhaps more appropriately, about the stigma surrounding heavy metal. This week's setlist is about suicide. That and the relationship that heavy metal music and specifically the stigma surrounding heavy metal have with self-destruction. Indeed, of the songs on the list, only a few actually concern suicide directly. The rest either use suicide as a (perhaps reductive) metaphor for a number of things (war, religion, life, death, substance abuse), describe historical events (e.g Jonestown cult), and/or actually are only commonly mistaken for having anything to do with suicide whatsoever. That this last category exists has been the greatest instrument in the creation of metal's dangerous stigma. Indeed, the Ozzy and Priest songs were both subject to landmark court cases in which case the "offending" artists were respectively sued for responsibility of the suicides of young men. Much as the PMRC's insistence that metal and hard rock were corrupting America's youth led to the Explicit Lyrics stickers that have so accelerated record sales, heavy metal music, despite its naturally dark atmosphere and serious content, has gained most of its reputation from those ignorant enough to label it as such. Metal was never Satanic before the religious said it was.
Metal music's content tends more towards both the philosophical and the vulgar than much of today's mainstream music, but I think for the most part, the genre's best work gravitates around the former. Perhaps this has greatly to do with metal's attitude of "no boundaries", "pushing the envelope", and about connecting with listeners in a very deep, personal way, particularly with the uglier sides of life. Hence, much metal is about struggle, life, death, war, hatred, religion, blasphemy, and any number of topics, simply because they're deeply important, deeply connecting elements of the human race and merit discussion. I could go on about how the "metal
concert" is akin to the primal human gathering and is, in itself, a great release for its listeners, through moshing, crowd-surfing, motion, or simply reveling in a unity of spirit (and admittedly, I just did), but this might distract from today's theme.
The following are all excellent songs (Spooky Tooth aside), but you won't find suicide among them outside of metaphor, misattribution, or hyperbolic extension.
Opening Sample from Billy Joel's "We Didn't Start the Fire"
In Flames - Take This Life
Ozzy Osbourne - Suicide Solution
Judas Priest - Better By You, Better Than Me (Spooky Tooth cover)
Megadeth - A Tout Le Monde
Pain - Suicide Machine (Cut short by technical difficulties)
Sentenced - The Suicider
Sentenced - Excuse Me While I Kill Myself
Metallica - One
Black Label Society - Suicide Messiah
Nightmare - Battleground for Suicide
Manowar - Guyana (Cult of the Damned)
This show is archived for your perusal/amusement/deal-with-it at:
http://wmbr.org/m3u/Heavy_FM_20100326_0200.m3u
As always, archives are located here:
http://wmbr.mit.edu/cgi-bin/arch
Saturday, March 27, 2010
Friday, March 19, 2010
Yes, Angela, There is a Mailing List
Want to hear more about the show?
You're probably getting that as good as it gets right here.
Want to be occasionally reminded stylistically when a show or something important is happening?
Now you're cookin' with steel! Send an email to heavyfm-request [at] mit [dot] edu where we can process your mutated request at our leisure and our own convenient interpretation!
We can/will/already have:
Add you to heavyfm, the show's fanlist, (now featuring a less than 90% forced participation rate),
Tack you onto heavymetal, the main list for information on upcoming concerts and events in the area,
Or derisively mock your requests for songs on the air before conveniently forgetting that you suggested them and adding them to our playlists anyway.
You're probably getting that as good as it gets right here.
Want to be occasionally reminded stylistically when a show or something important is happening?
Now you're cookin' with steel! Send an email to heavyfm-request [at] mit [dot] edu where we can process your mutated request at our leisure and our own convenient interpretation!
We can/will/already have:
Add you to heavyfm, the show's fanlist, (now featuring a less than 90% forced participation rate),
Tack you onto heavymetal, the main list for information on upcoming concerts and events in the area,
Or derisively mock your requests for songs on the air before conveniently forgetting that you suggested them and adding them to our playlists anyway.
Nightmare #3 - 3/19/10
Good to be back from the trip to DC. Megadeth/Testament show was incredible, despite being congested all to hell and generally unable to bang my head without much discomfort (you heard me). Tour was an anniversary celebrating the release of Rust in Peace in 1990 and The Legacy in 1987, by the respective bands, or at the very least a well-executed "Oh shit, we just got ready to go on tour with Slayer, but Tom Araya blew out his spine and had surgery, what the hell do we do now?" circuit of slightly smaller venues of North America (sans New England, hence the trouble).
Having everyone in a place half the size of the Avalon scream out
We brought some of that aggression to the airwaves tonight in a heavy-hitting salvo of metal for you. It looked like this:
Prong - Whose Fist Is This Anyway?
Sentenced - Vengeance is Mine
Symphony X - Domination
In Flames - Land of Confusion (Genesis cover)
Ozzy Osbourne - Trap Door
Testament - Alone in the Dark
Megadeth - 44 Minutes
Van Canto - Battery (Metallica cover)
Primal Fear - Church of Blood
Dark Tranquillity - Monochromatic Stains
Manowar - Fight Until We Die
This show is archived for your perusal/amusement/deal-with-it at:
http://wmbr.org/m3u/Heavy_FM_20100319_0200.m3u
As always, archives are located here:
http://wmbr.mit.edu/cgi-bin/arch
"It's funny playing this album 20 years after I wrote it, in the city that I aimed it at. No offense to any of you, of course. Or to anyone in our government who is a patriot.
Vote for me, and you'll have at least one, motherfuckers!
<Holy Wars... The Punishment Due>" - Dave Mustaine, DC, 3/15/10
Having everyone in a place half the size of the Avalon scream out
IF THERE'S A NEW WAY!is almost humbling if you weren't also a part of the thing.
I'LL BE THE FIRST IN LINE!
BUT IT BETTER WORK THIS TIME!
We brought some of that aggression to the airwaves tonight in a heavy-hitting salvo of metal for you. It looked like this:
Prong - Whose Fist Is This Anyway?
Sentenced - Vengeance is Mine
Symphony X - Domination
In Flames - Land of Confusion (Genesis cover)
Ozzy Osbourne - Trap Door
Testament - Alone in the Dark
Megadeth - 44 Minutes
Van Canto - Battery (Metallica cover)
Primal Fear - Church of Blood
Dark Tranquillity - Monochromatic Stains
Manowar - Fight Until We Die
This show is archived for your perusal/amusement/deal-with-it at:
http://wmbr.org/m3u/Heavy_FM_20100319_0200.m3u
As always, archives are located here:
http://wmbr.mit.edu/cgi-bin/arch
"It's funny playing this album 20 years after I wrote it, in the city that I aimed it at. No offense to any of you, of course. Or to anyone in our government who is a patriot.
Vote for me, and you'll have at least one, motherfuckers!
<Holy Wars... The Punishment Due>" - Dave Mustaine, DC, 3/15/10
Labels:
Dark Tranquillity,
In Flames,
Manowar,
Megadeth,
Ozzy Osbourne,
Primal Fear,
Prong,
Sentenced,
Symphony X,
Testament,
Van Canto
Episode 2 - 3/12/10
Very well, I suppose I'll have to start listing this crap with the ahem "correct" date so it will at least line up with the archives. We'll be contacting the ALCU soon to discuss the institute's insistence that we conform to a calendar directly in opposition with our own waking hours.
Playlist for the 2nd day, Reamer piloting solo:
Enter Annihilation - Descending
Twilightning - Gone to the Wall
Nocturnal Rites - Never Again
Iron Saviour - The Omega Men
Pyramaze - Year of the Phoenix
Dammit Reamer, Matt Barlow already rejoined Iced Earth!
Human Error - City of Ghosts
Harasai - A Constant Disbelief
Welicoruss - Apeiron
In Flames - Delight and Angers
As I Lay Dying - The Sound of Truth
Arch Enemy - I Will Live Again
Primal Fear - Face the Emptiness
This show is archived at:
http://wmbr.org/m3u/Heavy_FM_20100312_0200.m3u
As always, archives can be found at:
http://wmbr/cgi-bin/arch
Playlist for the 2nd day, Reamer piloting solo:
Enter Annihilation - Descending
Twilightning - Gone to the Wall
Nocturnal Rites - Never Again
Iron Saviour - The Omega Men
Pyramaze - Year of the Phoenix
Dammit Reamer, Matt Barlow already rejoined Iced Earth!
Human Error - City of Ghosts
Harasai - A Constant Disbelief
Welicoruss - Apeiron
In Flames - Delight and Angers
As I Lay Dying - The Sound of Truth
Arch Enemy - I Will Live Again
Primal Fear - Face the Emptiness
This show is archived at:
http://wmbr.org/m3u/Heavy_FM_20100312_0200.m3u
As always, archives can be found at:
http://wmbr/cgi-bin/arch
Nightmare #1 - 3/4/10
A bit late, but that's my fault. I am a delinquent webmaster. I am a much better metalhead. Here's the playlist for our first show under the new flag:
Manowar - The Gods Made Heavy Metal
*Hello, World!*
Sabaton - 40:1
Ozzy Osbourne - Mr. Crowley
Fear Factory - Demanufacture
*wank*
Luna Mortis - Ash
Blind Guardian - Imaginations From The Other Side
*wank*
Pain - Shut Your Mouth
Megadeth - Addicted to Chaos
*wank*
Lordi - Raise Hell in Heaven
Iced Earth - Brainwashed
Blind Guardian - I'm Alive
Sometimes I don't remember to take out the CD. Whoops, more Germans.
*signoff*
Arch Enemy - Silent Wars
You can find an archive of the show at:
http://wmbr.org/m3u/Heavy_FM_20100305_0200.m3u
and archives of our last few shows more generally at:
http://wmbr.mit.edu/cgi-bin/arch
under "HeavyFM" (or "Heavy_FM", as they seem to insist on calling us...)
Manowar - The Gods Made Heavy Metal
*Hello, World!*
Sabaton - 40:1
Ozzy Osbourne - Mr. Crowley
Fear Factory - Demanufacture
*wank*
Luna Mortis - Ash
Blind Guardian - Imaginations From The Other Side
*wank*
Pain - Shut Your Mouth
Megadeth - Addicted to Chaos
*wank*
Lordi - Raise Hell in Heaven
Iced Earth - Brainwashed
Blind Guardian - I'm Alive
Sometimes I don't remember to take out the CD. Whoops, more Germans.
*signoff*
Arch Enemy - Silent Wars
You can find an archive of the show at:
http://wmbr.org/m3u/Heavy_FM_20100305_0200.m3u
and archives of our last few shows more generally at:
http://wmbr.mit.edu/cgi-bin/arch
under "HeavyFM" (or "Heavy_FM", as they seem to insist on calling us...)
"I'm in a heavy metal-powered world
That's my way to be"
- Iron Savior
Labels:
Arch Enemy,
Blind Guardian,
Fear Factory,
Iced Earth,
Lordi,
Luna Mortis,
Manowar,
Megadeth,
Ozzy Osbourne,
Pain,
Sabaton
Monday, March 1, 2010
March Metal Madness
Ah, March.
Hammerfall is coming through. Megadeth is on one of the best Thrash Metal tours I've heard of in a while. To any of you on heavymetal@, this is old hat. If so - GOOD, I like to maintain a well-informed metalocracy.
Our first show is firing the cannons live this Thursday("Friday") night("morning") from 2-3am and will do so for every week thereafter. Once we're in the throes of it, we'll be able to pepper the lot of you with a wide span of information for calling in for comments, making requests, full playlists, future plans, and what mailing lists you can sign up for if you're interested in hearing more from the mouths of kings.
As for less-happy news, I feel an obligation to pour a proverbial 40 for the dissolution of Luna Mortis, a great start-up band out of Wisconsin with only one album (at least under that name). They remain the best surprise of an opener that I've ever encountered.
Of course, I am still further obliged to rig several tankers of Carlsberg with explosives and to flood Gothenburg's Scandinavium with the alcoholic dross in tribute to Jesper Strömblad. Jesper formed both Hammerfall and In Flames, spending a solid 17 years in the latter effectively revolutionizing the fusion of Death Metal and Thrash into what is arguably the most advanced form of Metal any of us have ever seen, Melodic Death Metal. Jesper has spent something on the order of an entire year at home resting from the tribulations of alcoholic (and possibly World of Warcraft) rehab and officially declared his exodus from In Flames in mid-February.
I cannot wait to see what the man does next.
Hammerfall is coming through. Megadeth is on one of the best Thrash Metal tours I've heard of in a while. To any of you on heavymetal@, this is old hat. If so - GOOD, I like to maintain a well-informed metalocracy.
Our first show is firing the cannons live this Thursday("Friday") night("morning") from 2-3am and will do so for every week thereafter. Once we're in the throes of it, we'll be able to pepper the lot of you with a wide span of information for calling in for comments, making requests, full playlists, future plans, and what mailing lists you can sign up for if you're interested in hearing more from the mouths of kings.
As for less-happy news, I feel an obligation to pour a proverbial 40 for the dissolution of Luna Mortis, a great start-up band out of Wisconsin with only one album (at least under that name). They remain the best surprise of an opener that I've ever encountered.
Of course, I am still further obliged to rig several tankers of Carlsberg with explosives and to flood Gothenburg's Scandinavium with the alcoholic dross in tribute to Jesper Strömblad. Jesper formed both Hammerfall and In Flames, spending a solid 17 years in the latter effectively revolutionizing the fusion of Death Metal and Thrash into what is arguably the most advanced form of Metal any of us have ever seen, Melodic Death Metal. Jesper has spent something on the order of an entire year at home resting from the tribulations of alcoholic (and possibly World of Warcraft) rehab and officially declared his exodus from In Flames in mid-February.
I cannot wait to see what the man does next.
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