Big respect for raising awareness of my crippling "T" shortage 🙏
@ELFBOYMUSIC Жыл бұрын
I love you man.
@FinnMckentyPRMBA Жыл бұрын
Thoughts and prayers 🙏
@hulluporo9067 Жыл бұрын
I thought you Brits may import some Ts from eastern Europe.
@butHomeisNowhere___ Жыл бұрын
Hey man, hope you're doing alright without any T's 😔 it's crazy that in 2023, a whole country can be forced to live without any T's. I'm pulling for you, buddy 🥺
@TJfromEarth Жыл бұрын
@@FinnMckentyPRMBA 'hou's and prayers*
@TremoloTim Жыл бұрын
"...And justice for all needs bass guitar" I have to agree. I just watched Korn's cover of "one" from their MTV Icons performance and the bass really shined through. It sounded sick.
@subparnaturedocumentary Жыл бұрын
did fieldy changing tunings to play it?
@TremoloTim Жыл бұрын
IDK @@subparnaturedocumentary
@TremoloTim Жыл бұрын
@Luke5100 It sounded like I just broke your heart, chill out homie the album was still sick.
@TremoloTim Жыл бұрын
@Luke5100 Yeah, I get that and I agree. Thanks for clearing that up. lol
@wozaow Жыл бұрын
@Luke5100Personally, I think the album is great, but if the bass was even audible it might even be my favorite Metallica album. Because it isn't though, it's only 4th place for me.
@obscured.by.clouds. Жыл бұрын
I love the mixing on those old school death metal records - that solid mid-range production just scratches the itch.
@ryanjacobson2508 Жыл бұрын
What's interesting also is that even movies had better sound recording and mixing in the late 80's/early 90's.... Mixing in particular is a lost art.... Nowadays sound FX and music will be at a million decibels and then you can barely understand the dialogue.
@fivedaysinjune9 ай бұрын
The older sound was warmer and more authentic. As opposed to being overproduced, over layered and sounding sugary sweet. Metal needs to maintain that element of danger.
@PIZZAdayisback2 ай бұрын
@@fivedaysinjune but it doesn't need to be under produced It's a fine line
@kode-man23 Жыл бұрын
The other double edged sword that nobody mentions is there are WAY more bands today than there were in the 80’s, 90’s and 2000’s. Back then there was only maybe a dozen bands that you absolutely HAD to keep up with. Today there are dozens of bands a month with releases, it seems. That’s great, there has never been so much great music to listen to. But at the same time it’s really hard to get invested in and attached to so many of them. I have so many full albums that I’ve only listened to once or twice.
@NotHere2SellCookies6 ай бұрын
And also most of the bands today are just copycats of some other band.
@FilleIceRises5 ай бұрын
@@NotHere2SellCookiesThere’s like 50 big metalcore/djent bands atm that sounds exactly the same. Overproduced, compressed to hell, breakdowns and whiny clean vocals in the chorus. It’s a pain in the ass finding unique new artists nowadays, they’re out there, just buried under alot of mediocrity.
@snarehit2230 Жыл бұрын
What was modern becomes classic over time, some people become stuck in time because it reminds themnof their youth. Load of great music out there in many different genres, just enjoy it and listen to whatever makes you happy
@SPMinerva Жыл бұрын
I love the imperfections on older records, its sometimes create a unique distinctive sound to the record. Thats why modern metal sound the same to many people, the overproduce and same technique. The annoying thing about old recording is the sound is so low thay i have to turn the volume up, and if the next song on the shuffled is modern loud one, good luck, especially if you listen to headphones
@crazydud3380 Жыл бұрын
LOL, you go from a classic metal song straight to modern deathcore, it's like "Oh well, hearing is overrated, anyway!" 😂
@deraldiweihnachtskalender1757 Жыл бұрын
When it comes to the question "what can be done in Rock that hasn't been alredy done", really like what Farvann has to say. He compared it to Jazz, that gnere has been done to death for far longer than Rock has been around, but there are still a lot of People Who like it, i'd be cool with it, if that happens with Rock too.
@bushleague3472 Жыл бұрын
I feel like jazz has lasted longer because it incorporates a way wider variety of instruments, any one of which can take a lead roll. Rock is getting tired much quicker because it has always been guitar centric.
@ChristopherJames1993 Жыл бұрын
Plus jazz doesnt have as many nerds attached to it.
@bushleague3472 Жыл бұрын
@@ChristopherJames1993 I dont know what sort of Jazz you listen to, but Jazz people are like prog nerds on crack. Has a jazz song EVER been played without the DJ rattling off a comprehnsive history of every player on the recording? And any time an aquaintance "discovers" Coltrane, outdated head wear, and $15 latte's... dont even get me started.
@porterdavis1612 Жыл бұрын
“Mix bad, older music not good” is the equivalent of “graphics bad, older game not good”
@robwalsh9843 Жыл бұрын
Or when people complain about older movies that have more dated pre-CGI special effects. They can't appreciate what the artists had to work with, they just dismiss it.
@ChristopherJames1993 Жыл бұрын
@@robwalsh9843LOTR is 20 years old and the CGI in that is still better than most movies coming out today.
@perfectallycromulent Жыл бұрын
i think you are confused in your analogy. music is about how it sounds, and a bad mix ruins the sound, and therefore ruins the song. a game is about how the rules work, not what it looks like. people have been playing chess with pebbles and pennies or just their memory for centuries, it's not about what the board or pieces look like. but a painting is about what it looks like, and if someone uses crappy materials, the painting can be ruined not matter how good the concept.
@porterdavis1612 Жыл бұрын
@@perfectallycromulent it’s not about that exactly tho. It’s about people over looking and not giving something old a chance because to some people it’s not “as good” as the new stuff simply cause it’s not modern with the times. An example being old analog recording vs digital, old game with with less sophisticated Tec and graphics being played on a 13 inch CRTV vs similar type game on a ps5 and 65 inch 4K UHD TV. Point being, just because somethings quality doesn’t hold up to modern standards doesn’t mean it’s bad it just means you may have to take a bigger step back yo appreciate the art if that makes sense.
@porterdavis1612 Жыл бұрын
I guess what I was thinking was how many comments on an old game do you see that say “wow I wish they world remaster this!!” Like, why? What’s wrong with the original? Most people just want a boost in graphics and that would make the game “good/ playable” again to them rather than continuing to take it for what it’s worth and enjoy it for being a product of its time.
@adamwells6079 Жыл бұрын
Modern metal is way overproduced, but it is also very difficult logistically to record a band live off the floor unless you're in a pro studio with a big budget, and even then the band has to be insanely tight and well-rehearsed (even more so compared to the old days) to compete with the precision and clarity that people expect to hear from metal now. Recording to a click is necessary for 99% of bands.
@matturner6890 Жыл бұрын
Not necessary, just a lot easier
@AmiliaCaraMia Жыл бұрын
One thing you can also do is record the drummer to a click and keep it as unquantized as possible. Then just use the transients of the drum recordings as the "grid." So if the drums start to drag a certain way, you can edit guitar or bass around that. Instead of always defaulting to the DAW's grid.
@one_with_kevrything9825 Жыл бұрын
It's also super generic. Cookie Monster singer✅️ Constant double bass✅️ Borderline amelodic guitars✅️ Congrats. You have a modern Metal band.
@stevec6427 Жыл бұрын
You don't need lots of money to hire a small independent studio. My band recorded a four track EP on a budget of less than $1000. We used the studios amazing amps, all with cab mics. We also recorded without a click and played together in one take. The options are there for any band if the will is there.
@adamwells6079 Жыл бұрын
@@stevec6427 $1000 is a lot of money
@OldSchoolMetalVinyl Жыл бұрын
My main problem with modern metal is that it's too guitar/breakdown oriented and there just isn't enough emphasis on melody and good refrains. No matter how extreme, oldschool bands like Maiden, Metallica, Slayer, Deicide etc all relied on memorable chorus lines which made their best songs instant classics and easy to sing along to. Apparently today it's all about the heaviness and aggression of guitars, vocals are not that relevant anymore.
@crazydud3380 Жыл бұрын
I mostly agree but current deathcore is an exception. If you look at Lorna Shore and Slaughter to Prevail, among others, the vocal performance is actual the emphasis.
@crazydud3380 Жыл бұрын
@icankillbugs Deathcore is a subgenre of modern metal. It is a fusion genre of hardcore punk and death metal. If we decide that fusion genres don't count, then even thrash must be thrown out, as that was derived from a fusion of hardcore punk and NWOBHM.
@Sergio-nb4hj Жыл бұрын
Listen to Suffocation. Winding song structures, breakdowns, and without many hooks way back in 1991, with Scott Burns producing. I think genre is very important to consider. Something that's meant to be "extreme" and "brutal" (like brutal death metal) has never needed those things, even back then.
@OldSchoolMetalVinyl Жыл бұрын
@@Sergio-nb4hj never said I particularly love Suffocation anyway
@Sergio-nb4hj Жыл бұрын
@@OldSchoolMetalVinyl Oh yeah, I don't assume you do. Just pointing out that these things are all relevant to old school metal depending on what subgenre you pay attention to (almost all brutal death metal in the 90s was aping Suffocation with all the attributes I noted)
@GForce_ART Жыл бұрын
This channel is always really good. Thanks again for facilitating interesting and topical discussions on heavy music. Thoughts: In the 80's, being a "rebel" (going against the cultural grain) meant being a narcissistic, selfish, anarchistic, nihilistic, "rock star". That was the counter cultural metal/punk position of the times, and a rebellion against their parent's generation's values. The reason that doesn't really jive today, is because, in the instagram era we live in... the AVERAGE person IS all of those things... the status quo right now IS indulgent egotism, and directionless meandering through life, to an unprecedented degree. A random 14 year old girl nowadays could give Niki Sixx a run for his money, in terms of belligerent partying. That's where we're at. So, the "rebel" against the status quo (today) is a different animal really... it's being learned, goal oriented, down to earth, focused, and not at all self destructive (as a counterpoint). IMO this is why the rockstar persona, as it was, cannot really exist comfortably in 2023. What was "badass" in 1986, is basically how a college girl acts on any given Saturday night of her life. "YOLO" "WE OWN THE WORLD BITCH" is likely exactly what RATT or POISON were thinking mid 1980s, funny enough. If you look at all the modern guitar gurus and young shred gods, sitting in their home studio, ripping, they have a whole other vibe. I am NOT CERTAIN it's for the betterment of rock music that the current generation is kind of overproducing, making videos sitting in a chair all day with no real "live energy", kinda avoiding any real "danger" in their music or even performance... but, it is what it is atm. There's an academic nature to modern metal that, to me, can kinda kill the "attitude" of metal, for lack of a better term. However, I believe you don't have to be like those old-school guys to be interesting... but, something was perhaps lost from the "persona" when the pendulum swung hard the other way in early 2000s. To the point in the video, maybe the more alarming thing we all see, is how there is NO real torch to be passed in terms of "legendary" characters in the scene. At least not on he level of like a Halford, Dimebag, or Mustaine and company. Also, it may very well be just a crazy over-saturation problem happening in all media. There's just... so much stuff. People don't really "follow" artist's work so closely now (except maybe other musicians) . Like reading liner notes in a CD booklet is an impossible act to consider for the newer generation. Last thought here is...I think all the new bands are making music for other bands... and not at all a general audience...and that is the root of the issue. It has to do with social media, I'm sure, but the kind of "vacuum" and separation/distance that bands enjoyed from one another in decades past is what maybe allowed for more creativity and originality. Now, we are hyper aware of what everybody is doing and thinking at every moment. Can't be good for finding a unique voice. You can't sit with your own thoughts long enough without interruption.
@harrybaggins666 Жыл бұрын
Me and a lot of people I personally know have a deep love for classic and modern metal. Honestly I find it ignorant when someone completely trashes either era to no end. In fact I think the best groups and artists pull from both eras. As an amateur musician who's about to be 27 I love the old and new. We need more harmonious interactions between the older generations and the new ones
@aaronlawrence666 Жыл бұрын
I’m on board with you. I got into metal in the early 80s and still enjoy the old stuff but just as much love modern metal.
@robertfisher468911 ай бұрын
Metal went bye bye after the creation of Korn. They suck balls.
@jordanjoestar8839 Жыл бұрын
Gojira strikes a timeless balance. Ill never stop listening to them. Granted, they are influenced by Metallica, Sepultura, Morbid Angel etc. Nice to see them influencing the newer bands though.
@phobixthething5692 Жыл бұрын
@icankillbugs ok
@Acolyte82 Жыл бұрын
@icankillbugstruth, they’re doodoo
@LamarcusElwood5 ай бұрын
I've never seen people get so upset about a band, Gojira is great! Let the people enjoy!
@christiancasteel5962 Жыл бұрын
Unearths album in the eyes of fire was one of the last big metalcore albums recorded without a click track. It had that subtle level of human imperfection and feel in it. Still holds up.
@voidofhope625910 ай бұрын
And that album still fuckin owns!!!
@Downhuman74 Жыл бұрын
Another thing I dislike about modern metal bands is that no one seems to be striving to capture a unique sound signature anymore. Used to be that you could identify a band almost immediately by their sound and unique tones and phrasing without even hearing the vocals. Bands like Van Halen and Pantera had such unique sounds that almost no one else sounded quite like them. Rush is another one.
@elrincondelocutre9884 Жыл бұрын
Rush weren't metal so they don't count on this. But it's true that they had their signature sound (even when they stopped playing prog rock in the 80s)
@subparnaturedocumentary Жыл бұрын
when you heard fear factory or type o negative you knew right away
@Downhuman74 Жыл бұрын
@@subparnaturedocumentary Both excellent examples.
@elrincondelocutre9884 Жыл бұрын
@@Luke5100 in the 80s they tuned down their prog influences with albums like Grace Under Pressure or Hold Your Fire. Obviously they'd return to that sound for most of their career but it's not like they always did prog
@Rosterized Жыл бұрын
@@elrincondelocutre9884 you could identify rush simply by the bass tone alone
@noizetrauma242 Жыл бұрын
Man, Focus was so ahead of its time. I remember hearing Uroboric Forms on the At Death's Door II compilation by Roadrunner. That compilation, itself, was great (Death, Fear Factory, Suffocation, Cynic). I spent a weekend driving all over southern California looking for that Cynic album. I drove over 100 miles, visiting 8 different music stores. Finally found it on audio cassette at the Tower Records in the Anti-Mall in Costa Mesa. Wore the tape out within a year it got played so much. Saw them open for Cannibal Corpse. I felt bad for them. They were not meant for that crowd. I'm glad they got back together in an age that could fully appreciate them. I've seen them 5 other times now. They're ability to re-invent themselves while still remaining undeniably Cynic is awesome. RIP Sean and RIP Sean. Finn, you should do a video on them. They're long-lasting impact is criminally under-documented.
@subparnaturedocumentary Жыл бұрын
comps were the go to back in 90s man thats for sure
@NeXaSLvL Жыл бұрын
as someone who produces records mixes and masters their own music I fully agree with you about not letting an imperfect mix ruin your appreciation of a song
@PikeBishop15 ай бұрын
True, but then there's AJFA vs. Black album as a counter.
@robertocozzi7306 Жыл бұрын
Whether you like old or new stuff, there is also one thing to consider: how many of the contemporary bands will still be there in 10-20 years? Take any form of art: for every Michelangelo or Raffaello, there were 10 copycats, which tried to imitate their styles because they were popular, but today are completely forgotten. The only difference is that today spreading your creations is far easier, and this is a double edged sword: on one hand there are far more "copycats", on the other it is also easier to find diamonds in the rough.
@robertocozzi7306 Жыл бұрын
@Luke5100 my bad: I didn't mean that a band should be long lived but that should be able to make memorable songs
@nickhurley8417 Жыл бұрын
I think the thing I liked about production before it was all so perfect,was the variety. You’d get so many different sounds .even the same bands would sound completely different each album purely because of the mix
@Mr_Biggs Жыл бұрын
“It’s not like a producer will put a gun to your head”- I just knew a pic of Phil Spector was going to fly up on the screen.
@MilitantMe Жыл бұрын
"Still trapped in the UK's tea shortage" ever since we dumped it into the Boston harbor in 1775😎
@EnvisionedBlindness Жыл бұрын
🎆 🇺🇸 🎇 🇺🇸🎆🎇🇺🇸🎆🎇🇺🇸🎆🎇🇺🇸🎆🎇
@crazydud3380 Жыл бұрын
MURICA . . . FUCK YEAH!
@Eclecticompany Жыл бұрын
I saw a girl in a Nirvana shirt when buying groceries earlier today, and for the first time I thought about asking her to name three songs. I blame Finn for this.
@FairyCRat Жыл бұрын
I think the reason mixing quality matters so much to us modern metal fans is because as you said in another video, modern metal is essentially like EDM. We want something to sound so heavy that it activates a fuckton of chemicals in our brain. If the mix isn't good enough, it just misses the opportunity to provide us with that punch.
@ryanjacobson2508 Жыл бұрын
@@Luke5100To me, it's pre-80's stuff that sounds very thin... Once the 80's came around, guitar sounds became a lot "fuller".
@crazydud3380 Жыл бұрын
@@ryanjacobson2508I can get behind that for the best albums of the 80s, at least. Heard the original Raining Blood earlier this week, and it is still hits as hard as it ever did.
@_nuclearnoodle_5757 Жыл бұрын
very well said
@Zundfolge Жыл бұрын
I think a lot of this also has to do with the way the music is listened to. When I was young, music was mixed so it would sound good on a cassette tape played in a car stereo with no sub, no amp and just a couple of 6x9 speakers on the back deck. The factory stereo in my 2008 Honda is better than a top of the line custom, aftermarket stereo one would pay significant money for back in the 80s (And the music is now digital, so no tape hiss or warble).
@MATCHLESS78911 ай бұрын
Weird, I think a lot of modern metal doesn't sound heavy because of the mix, everything is so static, we'll trimmed, clinically clean with no balls in sight.
@MrMikewright1980 Жыл бұрын
Really good video, very true overall. Too many bands these days, everything sounds Linkin Park perfect, not as many unique and catchy songs.
@mtnnoonan Жыл бұрын
Metal just sounds great recorded on old technology. I can't say if it's "better" or "worse", but as a matter of personal preference, I LOVE it. I can definitely enjoy an album recorded on a Tascam cassette portastudio. There's something about it that just sounds awesome.
@maverick4255 Жыл бұрын
Same. And fortunately there is some”modern” metal that is like that. I love trivium’s earliest demo and As I lay Dying’s earliest stuff and they sound like absolute ass.
@necrosis758910 ай бұрын
@icankillbugsand what they're? Reggae?
@soysaucehairdye7869 Жыл бұрын
I'm not really into metal, but I love the new metalcore album by Kingdom of Giants called Passenger. I also love everything Alcest puts out and he is seen as black metal.
@thebizzle413 Жыл бұрын
Korn and Blink 182 used the same Mesa Rectifiers. Blink used the dual and Korn used the triple.
@bavelar8775 Жыл бұрын
I love classic metal. I love modern metal. Im a better person for it. I also collect horror VHS so production quality doesnt matter much to me.
@princealigorna7468 Жыл бұрын
I love all metal. I just want loud drums and mean guitar riffs and songs that make me want to get up and move/break shit. As for the whole debate over classic vs. modern mixing and production, I think there's strengths and weaknesses to both that Bradley highlights well. Classic production has that organic feel. Things are imperfect and there's a grit on everything and it just feels very natural and very live. I think this is why vinyl and cassette have made a comeback too. There's something about record/tape hiss that just makes stuff feel like home. But I don't always want that. Modern styles demand a more clean, more quantized sound. I can't imagine a band like Abnormality or Archspire drowned in hiss and sounding slightly muddy. Classic production would hide all the complexities and cool little tricks in those bands' sound
@superunknown2812 Жыл бұрын
One band that comes to mind that blew me away when i first heard them and i thought to myself there one of the first bands that were able to capture the old production of the late 80s maybe early 90s was Powertrip when it came to thrash.
@gus2n Жыл бұрын
100% agree late 90's / early 00s had the best mixes, the right balance of using techology but still keeping a natural and dynamic sound
@cotomaznaczyc Жыл бұрын
Breakdowns have been so overdone that I have come to hate them (and as a result make an effort to avoid genres that have them). It's a trend I expected to die a long time ago (and to my surprise it hasn't). If Lorna Shore cut out their boring breakdowns, they would be an awesome band (rather than just a pretty good band). Solos are not a must for me, but highly appreciated and a great solo can be the climax of the song. That's why modern bands that still can shred and do it well (like First Fragment and Inferi) resonate well with me.
@guilmartica-a813 Жыл бұрын
Maybe if they put breakdowns at the beginning of the song, must sound fckn great? Haha
@adamyahya4638 Жыл бұрын
I feel like there's no much in dynamics with modern metal. There seems to be a lot of stuff that just has the exact same sound to it. A sound that doesn't offer much dynamics. A lot of what I've heard is on one side of the extreme. Guitars that are tinny and sterile sounding, vocals that are either high pitched or low growling and just a consistent drum blast beat. Song writing just was so much better back then IMO. It took you on journeys and seemingly the lyrics just had more to them (maybe that's because you can actually hear the vocalist lol).
@hobojungle1 Жыл бұрын
The mix is almost as important to me as the music. I’m not saying I like overproduced because it’s not that. I don’t like that. I just like a really good sounding mix. Part of that is probably due to my dad (RIP) was a career audio engineer. The mix doesn’t have to be exceptional for me to enjoy an album but it does need to surpass a certain standard otherwise I’m going to write the album off entirely (unfortunately) - also yes, most of these modern metal bands coming out over the last few years do suck. For reference on what I like, dark tranquillity is my favorite band. Probably followed by Insomnium.
@corbinm5237 Жыл бұрын
I used to like Periphery,and Spiritbox is an exception to the rule for me. But honestly once Djent became rampant in metal and kind of “the sound” for modern metal and the new releases I stopped exploring metal beyond the 7-8 bands and few extra songs I already liked. If there is another true innovation that comes along I’ll check it out,but for the most part I’ll stick to the limited metal I already listen to.
@dominikaksiazek7177 Жыл бұрын
Same here, I hate djent. I wanna listen to songs, not riff collections. Additionally, focusing mainly on heaviness is stupid. Tuning down veeery low or those 9-string guitars are absurd as well, somehow many 80s bands wrote heavy stuff on 6-string guitars tuned to E standard.
@rob604 Жыл бұрын
90’s and 2000’s production and mixing undefeated, most criminally underrated producer imo is ZEUSS. His records from that era sound perfect to my ear.
@_ericc. Жыл бұрын
I think late 90s death metal has the best production (Gorguts, Cannibal Corpse, etc.) it’s a little more polished than the stuff from like 90-93 but not overproduced bubble bath clean we have today
@PieknyWojtek Жыл бұрын
When it comes to old mixes I think it depends if you have some kind of nostalgia for those songs. If yes - the bad mixes wont matter to you, but if you'll try to listen to something old for the first time and hear the bad quality - It's gonna ruin the experience for you. It's like with games. If you played I don't know - Morrowind when it came out, you will still be able to enjoy it but if you tried to play it now for the first time? Well, I think you're not going to have great time with it.
@Iyashikei-t4u Жыл бұрын
Not always. I wasn't even born when Reign in Blood came out and while I don't like that album I do like the mix. Same with Individual Thought Patterns. For some reason that bass guitar overruling basically everything in the mix sometimes gives it a lot of character.
@prehistoricturtlesaurus5309 Жыл бұрын
There will always be people who want to go to the source of their interests. But lots if people just go off of their first impressions. I was listening to slipknot and deftones when I got into bands like carcass and napalm. My first impression was "woah, this sounds rough" but I was interested enough in the songs to keep listening.
@CodyCockyote7046 Жыл бұрын
@@Iyashikei-t4uthose mixes were seen as polished back then lol. Thats how exaggerated mixing in metal has become 😂. If you happen to wanna listen to dark lo fi metal checkout Carcass' Reek of putrefaction and Napalm Death's Scum LP
@MATCHLESS78911 ай бұрын
I played Morrowind for the first time in 2019. Loved it, my favorite TES by far.
@kstark321 Жыл бұрын
I think mixes are very important depending on the band/album/song. For instance I loved PJ's Ten and Green Day's Dookie but since it was their first major studio albums they now sound way too polished like there's a Instagram filter on them. Also, listening to major song's demos vs the studio album are usually world's apart. Like occasionally streaming will throw in some goofy remixed version of a great song and it's like, yeah, no.
@6maniac6metal6 Жыл бұрын
It’s kinda funny thinking about it now, but the more the “core” genres started taking over the scene more I ended up drifting back into crust punk and stuff like that. I can’t help it, I like my metal nasty and aggressive and most modern metal just doesn’t do it for me.
@SpaghettiWithMeatSauce Жыл бұрын
Modern metal is in an amazing spot and is some of the most fun I've had in music in a long time. So much Incantation, Entombed, and Morbid Angel worship out there that's doing it right and doing it justice. Plus all the great core bands that dabble in the metal world. Love it 🤘
@TheCivildecay Жыл бұрын
" the mixes are bad!" Me *listening to 80's-90's punk... oh
@superunknown2812 Жыл бұрын
Hahaha good call but that's what made that era so special in its own rite
@samuelnichols4709 Жыл бұрын
Also the latest underoath album isn’t completely quantized and sample replaced, there’s audible imperfections but it sound amazing
@pancakeburglar9361 Жыл бұрын
I listen to way more modern metal these days then classic metal. There are plenty of cool things going on in the modern metal scene. Really enjoying the new Orbit Culture album that dropped today.
@Bedrockbrendan Жыл бұрын
Watching now. Just want to comment before I forget on the mix. I find this perplexing as well. I also find it perplexing because we listened to these albums and tapes on completely different equipment. I don't have my old tape decks, record players and speakers so I can't summon up a comparison now, but I know when I listen to Ride the Lightning on my computer through my mono speaker (which sounds terrible, isn't in stereo but still costs an arm and a leg) it sounds different than how it did when I used to listen on tape with two speakers. Yes the tone was harsher, but that was the point, and I don't really understand the focus a lot of current critics place on early metal having a harsh tone (it was meant to be abrasive). I don't think there is anything wrong with the new preferences, but I do wish people were more charitable towards the past and understand they are examining it from a vantage point where the technology is so different they may actually be missing something
@raulfigueroa588 Жыл бұрын
One of the best examples of organic and high-level mixing was Korn’s Untouchables. It sounds massive, tight, and refined, yet organic and groovy. Here to Stay is one of the better metal riffs and songs of all-time in my opinion
@RyanSchilling-fg9qn11 ай бұрын
I am going to apply this to pop punk. I think pop punk started off as to raw in its production and then it got really polished to the point where by the time the second simple plan album came out the genre got mega overproduced. But then when TWY came out I think that’s when pop punk production got perfected all leading up to life’s not out to get you by neck deep which is the single best produced pop punk album ever made. Jeremy killed it on that album.
@FinnMckentyPRMBA11 ай бұрын
Love that album! Andrew Wade engineered , mixed and produced it along with Jeremy.
@RyanSchilling-fg9qn11 ай бұрын
Love Andrew he is amazing at his job. Besides maybe jerry on the three blink albums he did no one has ever made a pop punk album sound better then those 2 on that album
@abcdetheridge Жыл бұрын
iMO, production quality is so digitalized and musicians are at such a high level of skill, that it all sounds basically the same to me. I personally think production quality of the 2000s to 2010s.
@DrTabarnak Жыл бұрын
For those unaware, there is a such thing called ...And Justice For Jason on KZbin and Spotify that has Jason's bass turned up in the mix on the AJFA album.
@jessecovey1778 Жыл бұрын
Altars of Madness is one of the all time best death metal albums. I like Blessed the most, as far as Morbid Angel goes, but Altars is incredible too. Maze of Torment!
@jessecovey1778 Жыл бұрын
Also, I love that he mentioned Poppy! I’m still not down with Sleep Token, though.
@powermonger90908 ай бұрын
Metal was far more innovative between between 1985 to 2005 than from 2005 until now (2024). So many bands were exploring different levels of heaviness, tempos, aggression and melodies. Modern metal seems stale and uninnovate, caring more about image or fitting the template.
@veglord_the_profaneАй бұрын
Ultimately it's all subjective anyway. Anyone can like anything for whatever reason they want. Personally my favourite era of metal is the 90's and early 2000s.
@EncoreASMR7 ай бұрын
The problem with modern metal is the *lack* of solos. Solos is the reason metal became big in the first place.
@mikeyhodge6191 Жыл бұрын
I think modern production is a big part of it. Everyone is using the same drum samples and same plugins. Therefore there is no “unique sound” like the classic bands had. Instead, everyone sounds the same and on a grid. Those old Pantera, Van Halen and Metallica records sound like people in a room playing their instruments.
@bwaka917811 ай бұрын
89 to 2000 the mixes sound great. Honestly music now sounds too polished like this is metal not pop lol.
@elchicharron9503 Жыл бұрын
The GOOD mixes from the 90s were amazing. Albums like Deicide Deicide were really hindered, though. I just can't crank that one loud enough to enjoy in my truck, on my ipod, or my home stereo to get the full effect. Sounds like someone is listening to it down the block. A shame as it has some of the catchiest songwriting in death metal. I remember how excited everyone was at the production on Legion, which had a good sound, but to me the songwriting wasn't quite there. And again I remember when Hypocrisy Osculum Obscenum came out, everyone was freaking out about just how good the recording was. I remember driving around town playing that one in the car and it was thumping the seats and rattling the mirrors. My friend had an old Corvair and we had three guys in the front bucketseat headbanging and disloged the entire fixture. Good times, Wish we could have rocked Deicide Deicide that hard.
@sole__doubt Жыл бұрын
There has never been a better time to be a metalhead.
@andrewhart9310 Жыл бұрын
In terms of the touring scene, that may be right. In terms of general availability of good music, that will ALWAYS be right, because you can always go back to listen to the classics whether or not there are a lot of good modern bands at any given time. No good album releases from your favorite niche micro genre of metal? Go back and listen to the earlier albums; problem solved! Essentially, it will always be the "best" time to be a headbanger in terms of availability in music; the only thing that changes is the touring scene, and yeah, right now, it's pretty fire.
@bgmchrisc Жыл бұрын
The mix issue is a yes and a no for me. Songs should be more important, but there are times when music just isn't fun because of how it sounds. A lot of metal records are simply so loud and compressed that no matter how good the songs are, I get exhausted listening to them. A solid hour of nothing but loud, loud, loud, without any dynamics is absolutely enough to make me turn off good songs.
@squifurgie10 ай бұрын
If the mix is horrendous enough, it can definitely ruin a song or even an entire album. I can forgive a poor mix but there are limits.
@davidscott31248 ай бұрын
Back in the '90s you could tell a band just by their guitar tone. Obituary, Fear Factory, Pantera, Type O Negative all had their own sound and tone. Also, part of the appeal of 80s/90s metal, for me, was that it was a little "naive", played by people who didn't really know what they were doing. The technical talent of modern players has kinda destroyed that
@ALpz-pb4nr3 ай бұрын
Nowadays they all sound the same. I dont know how these kids can tell the diference
@volkatz9611 ай бұрын
I really don't get why Death's Human and Morbid Angel's Altars of Madness are listed in the "horrible mix" category, they both still hold up.
@AmiliaCaraMia Жыл бұрын
I think my issue is that when I start listening to a 7 minute metal song, the music generally is not worth being 7 minutes. If I have to default to paying attention to the mix quality, I probably should just stop listening.
@AmiliaCaraMia Жыл бұрын
@icankillbugsNo you misunderstand. I can listen to a 15 minute film score cue just fine if the music is eloquent, well written, and is actually moving somewhere. I find a lot of modern (American) music isn't arranged well and is repetitive. I don't need to hear most songs at a minute and a half because I know where it's going to go. They aren't "WORTH" being 7 minutes. In terms of short music: Blink 182's Dude Ranch and the score for American Beauty by Thomas Newman have pieces that are one or two minutes and they're solid.
@AmiliaCaraMia Жыл бұрын
@@Luke5100100%
@jasonbates2687 Жыл бұрын
A high school friend of mine Jason Gobel was one of the guitar players in Cynic when they recorded their first album. He is still recording today, great player.
@xuanathan9 ай бұрын
Reason Ronnie Radke can't be the modern Rockstar is the same reason nobody can be the modern rockstar. The internet. We live in an era where no musician has any sort of mystique, because all their info is publicly available and their behaviour is broadcast across social media 24/7. Back in the day, Ronnie Radke's shitty rap album would have been an urban legend he'd just shoot down at interviews, now the whole internet can clown on him for it. Nobody talked shit about Metallica the way they do now until that one documentary dropped, but Ronnie's whole career has been that from start to present. In reality Ronnie Radke is actually very similar to a lot of the archetypical Rockstars but unlike them, Ronnie never had a period where all the clown shit wasn't broadcast to the world.
@Djfmdotcom Жыл бұрын
21:34 Agreed. I thought Colin Richardson did an INCREDIBLE job on the old Carcass stuff (including 2011's Surgical Steel). And Morrisound Studios in Tampa really perfected the "kick triggering" that's essentially where we are today. But even then, those triggered kicks were perfectly in time with what the drummer was doing - which may or may NOT have been recorded to a click. At the time, those techniques *were* ground-breaking. Please tell me what was wrong with "Altars of Madness"? Incredible album.
@andrewhart9310 Жыл бұрын
The examples of production quality that Bradley cites are perhaps not the best, but there's no question that there are a lot of badly produced albums in the early days of metal that, quite frankly, make the albums sound much worse than the actual song writing and performance. Max recently re-released early Sep albums, and while anyone can question the motive, I don't think anyone can really question that those albums, production-wise, sounded like ass until Beneath the Remains came out. This is definitely an improvement in the scene (although strange outliers of poor production do still exist).
@Melodeath00 Жыл бұрын
Listening to Schizophrenia was physically painful. Something about the high frequncies just hits hard in all the wrong spots. Probably the worst production for an album I have ever heard, and I've listened to a lot of 80s Metal Demos and 90s Black Metal bands that did the whole "recorded at a cottage in the mountains without plumbing and electricty" kind of production style...
@Vortex19887 ай бұрын
The fact that we even have the electoral college is bad enough, but adding insult to injury is that most states have decided that delegates should not be proportional. If we're going to have the electoral college, then all states' delegates should be proportionate to the votes in that state. In either case though, the electoral college should be abolished.
@Blaze-wb6bk Жыл бұрын
whoever says that guitar solos are replaced by breakdowns is so off. Like every metal band in the game plays solos except for metalcore bands. All the popular metal bands right now (Mastodon, Behemoth etc.) play solos. I dont get that point at all.
@JoinMeInDeathBaby Жыл бұрын
But those are legacy bands from early 00's. All popular new bands (in rock that means
@Gee-no Жыл бұрын
Totally agree. Musicians are better but songwriting....ehhh? Btw, I had a tascam 4trk to start with. Actually I used two boom boxes and a 2 chn mixer before that. Very old school.
@napesdrk1174 Жыл бұрын
I would trade all "breakdowns" for solos anyway. To me, the mind trip of a good solo is one of the big reasons I am here. A lot of personality comes out in the solo. It's inspiring.
@aaron.durci.4444 Жыл бұрын
why not both tho
@vonNachtmahr Жыл бұрын
@@aaron.durci.4444Using breakdowns in music generally is a big mystery to me.
@6maniac6metal6 Жыл бұрын
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, I’ll take a generic pentatonic solo over a breakdown any day. One of my favorite aspects of metal is the drive and aggression so to me breakdowns are super annoying because it brings the momentum to a crawl. Like the musical equivalent of being stuck in traffic.
@napesdrk1174 Жыл бұрын
@6maniac6metal6 excellent visual, I can see myself stuck on an on-ramp, blazing sun and just praying for a hole to break andni can escape. The solo is the hole and the jam is the breakdown. 47 M, ny
shoutout to the songster mention in chat at 4:44! love that site
@symptomofsouls7 ай бұрын
The Violent Sleep of Reason is one of the most underrated albums of all time, and each track was recorded in 1 take, full studio, all instruments on 1 track, like a live album. Still sounds clean. Phenomenal album
@davidmajor5393 Жыл бұрын
I like both old stuff and new stuff. I'm 52 so grew up with the old stuff
@metalheadjake3339 Жыл бұрын
Don't mind me. I'm just wondering if late 90s-Early 2000s Nu Metal is now considered classic or is still modern.
@sole__doubt Жыл бұрын
General rule is anything 25 years or older can be considered a classic.
@grymscape2611 Жыл бұрын
i dont think people are intentionally "focussing" on the bad mix, theyre saying the song doesnt sound good to them, and the mix is the culprit
@phorestpsy35705 ай бұрын
Agreed about Altars of Madness. You drive down the street blasting that album in 2024 it still turns heads. It's not just incredible production for 1989, its just great production full stop.
@Zundfolge Жыл бұрын
I'm older than both of you guys so when it comes to the production of classic metal, I don't find it all that bad. In fact I'm old enough to remember when most bands were defined by their live albums (which always had the worst production). Frampton Comes Alive, Kiss Alive, Queen Live Killers, Led Zeppelin's The Song Remains The Same ... all of these are my favorite albums of these respective bands and its because the production is kinda crap, but its REAL. No overdubs, no edited in orchestras or other stuff, just the real band playing the music live. Modern metal bands don't even give you a real live show when they play live anymore (watch live videos from some of these bands like Animals as Leaders ... you can hear keyboards in the mix but I don't see no keyboard player).
@podespault Жыл бұрын
There was a lot of tape editing, even on orchestral recordings. Just not to a laser precision like today.
@agirlsname7159 Жыл бұрын
Cynic Focus tempo drift is glorious. You can hear 19yo kids getting excited for certain parts all playing them faster. You can feel it.
@edwardhuxter3572 Жыл бұрын
TO ME WHICH EVER Time ERA YOUR BORN INTO THAT'S MOST LIKELY THE MUSIC YOU PREFER. IM AN OLD SCHOOL METAL GUY I LIKE YO HEAR THE BANDS PLAY THERE INSTRUMENTS NOT LIKE PLAYING THROUGH COMPUTERS TAKES THE FEELING OUT OF IT BUT I DO STILL LISTEN TO MODERN METAL IT JUST LACKS FEELING ALSO OLD SCHOOL METAL YOU HEARD A BAND YOU KNEW WHO IT WAS BY THE SOUND AND VOCALS UK DRILLERS 6.6
@ackyducc50405 ай бұрын
The thing I like about modern metal is that there is so much more diversity and variety. Like in the 80s, it was a lot more focused on just a small handful of classic bands and albums, and traditional metal and thrash metal were basically the only genres around that weren't in their infancy. Compare that to today where metal has developed significantly more and there are countless more genres and bands, which just leads to so much more variety and it's just significantly more interesting overall in my opinion.
@bigal_3000 Жыл бұрын
whats with the reaper hate
@hobeauxthearchitect10 ай бұрын
I'm an old guy too but I %100 agree with you about older recording quality, I think it made each album more unique.
@Matias-music-713 ай бұрын
very true about " musicianship " , many could surpass what Eddie Van Halen could do , but how many can write and or come up with a good riff like Malcom Young could ?
@Cr0wsMurd3r Жыл бұрын
I thought about it like 20 or more years ago when there was some artist being sued for some copyright shit or other saying his riff sounded like some other guys riff. Thinking to myself "Can you actually write a riff these days that sound like no other riff thats ever been written?", and that was many years ago... it's even harder now.
@NotHere2SellCookies6 ай бұрын
Metal in the 90s and early 2000s was so sick and so heavy. Bolt Thrower, Obituary, Shadows Fall, etc were such amazing bands. Then the dumb emo shit started coming out and made metal really gay.
@pain927010 ай бұрын
I prefer classic metal to modern metal. I like the raw and aggressive sound of classic metal. Also, the riffs are more interesting and recognizable. Modern metal bands sound almost all the same. They focus too much on being as technical as possible.
@billywaylls Жыл бұрын
Man, I'm either 100% exactly on board with what you say. Or I am 100% on the contrary. & That's OK, I Love & hate it. Great job man. Great channel.
@michaelbashford273311 ай бұрын
I feel the same about solo's as I do about breakdowns. If it makes sense for the song then add one, but when it feels like its been put in in an obligatory manor, it shows and is terrible.
@RatelHBadger Жыл бұрын
10:20 what's left? Rock music scoring a spoken word recital of Shakespeare or the Canterbury Tales, or some other ancient texts. You know, some full 7 hour marathon of a thing.
@christiancasteel5962 Жыл бұрын
Ice Nine Kills new record has some of the most musical and shred solos I’ve heard in a modern metalcore type album that actually work. Last records that really made them work with early trivium and all that remains.
@kowalsolosolo Жыл бұрын
Metal as a genre has NEVER been so diverse and varied and inspiring as it is today.
@jeffbell4434 Жыл бұрын
Couldn't agree more homie. I completely agree.
@soldierbreakneck77111 ай бұрын
Have you ever heard the term "Golden Era of rock music"? But for you weirdos, what's "inspiring" is modern "metal".
@fivedaysinjune9 ай бұрын
Let's be fucking glad that metal is still around. Five to ten years from now, metal may evolve or return to its roots. Trends come & go. What stays with us is what moves us.
@Somberdemure9 ай бұрын
Lol. Good joke
@iqbalmuhammad29204 ай бұрын
Inspiring today? Irony because I think more people (relatively speaking) listen to metal in the 90s, 2000s as opposed to today. Evidence? Less airtime or radio play for metal music in mainstream media platform presently. So nope.
@strongbad6667 ай бұрын
Sean Reinert and Paul Masvidal were 19/20 for Death's "Human" record. For Cynic's album "Focus" in 1993 recorded the album live in the studio with Scott Burns they didn't use any "extras" mainly because they couldn't afford it and Morrisound was busy in those days. For Deicide's "Legion" in 1992 it was recorded in the same way. Same producer too. You don't think producers matter? The best in the business were Bill Metoyer on the west coast and Scott Burns in Florida. Bill Metoyer made ever band from Slayer, to Sacred Reich to Sadus sound good from his production bench. Burns did basically everything from Whiplash to Exhorder to Deicide to Death to Obituary. Producers matter.
@sole__doubt Жыл бұрын
Overlap right here. I love Slayer and Necropanther.
@dismaspickman773 Жыл бұрын
I largely reject the last criticism with a single name... Ian Fraser Kilmister.
@raegandalbo97313 ай бұрын
For me mixing can’t ruin my enjoyment of a song but there’s something really special about a great mix (see Black Album or Zeppelin IV)
@austinbeghin20128 ай бұрын
Fuck the mix. I want it raw! As long as the artistry is there I can listen and decide if it's for me or not, despite the quality from the producers and technicality of the musicians. Also, I agree about the genre disillusion. Who cares what genre anymore. If it's art it can rip!
@davida1310 Жыл бұрын
As a wannabe music producer I do appreciate a good mix and I won’t listen to music if the mix is shockingly bad to the point where the instruments are inaudible and you can’t tell what is going on.
@radioseppe Жыл бұрын
Level of instrument playing evolution reminds me kind of what has happened in skateboarding too.