Status Updates From Death Metal Music: The Pass...
Death Metal Music: The Passion and Politics of a Subculture by
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Sami Al-Khalili
is on page 108 of 242
Naturally, it feels outdated. 2003 was 22 years ago and the scene has rapidly changed since... but very good preliminary understanding. Good idea structuring. Every is clear. I'm loving the book.
— Jan 30, 2025 11:53AM
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Matthew
is on page 155 of 242
Fourth time “gay” has been used by an interviewee to express something unpleasant. Again, no qualification. So much of this book barely scratches the surface of what it professes to investigate. The attitudes toward violence, race, sexuality, religion, pop culture are much broader and more substantial than the research shows. The content is also limited. Not all lyrics/bands fit into the established categories.
— Feb 12, 2021 04:09PM
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Matthew
is on page 133 of 242
I’m deep into the formal “ethnographic” chapters of the book. This is what sets this study apart and secures its value from a sociological perspective. Cool. But as a cranky antisocial misanthrope, I don’t care about the fans or people involved in DM! Hahaha! Plus, I don’t think the findings are particularly accurate or representative of DM today (but it’s been 10+ years since publication so...)
— Feb 12, 2021 03:43PM
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Matthew
is on page 50 of 242
This is going to be difficult to forgive: “Although the DM audience as a whole generally disavows white supremacy and racism, many fans and bands in the black metal scene have embraced such themes. Such bands include Emperor/Zyklon B, Mayhem, Burzum, and Absurd.” NO SOURCE, no evidence, no explanation. Oh, and Lovecraft is a “19th century author.” The chapter on the lyrics offers examples but no analysis.
— Feb 12, 2021 10:55AM
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Matthew
is on page 25 of 242
Not sure about this one...a bit dry and limited in scope. A few minor factual errors and inconsistent formatting things already (nitpicking but this is meant to be an academic study so I have a bit of a higher standard). I’ve definitely been spoiled by the other metal books I’ve read, which are definitely more oral histories with an insider’s view. Not sure what I’m going to learn from this...
— Feb 11, 2021 11:06PM
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Felipe
is 40% done
I really don't know that this volume is equipped to deal with race properly. Also, the almost exclusive use of "males" and "females" is really starting to grate.
— May 14, 2016 08:40PM
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Jess
is on page 122 of 242
This is really starting to feel like an extended term paper
— Jun 23, 2012 08:52AM
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Jess
is on page 107 of 242
Oh, this section on metal vs rap in terms of racial identity is painful.
— Jun 23, 2012 08:41AM
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Jess
is on page 95 of 242
I thought once we got away from the musicology and into the sociopolitical analysis this would be better. Alas no.
— Jun 23, 2012 08:27AM
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Jess
is on page 58 of 242
Ok, the musicology is lacking, but the author's enthusiasm is kind of charming
— Jun 22, 2012 07:40PM
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Jess
is on page 38 of 242
I'd complain that the author isn't citing her sources, but she doesn't seem to be using any (other than interviews with people heavy in the scene)
— Jun 22, 2012 07:25PM
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Jess
is on page 24 of 242
Ah, I'm becoming nostalgic for my days listening to Seton Hall's Pirate Radio. But I don't understand how this book from 2003 is an advanced review copy.
— Jun 22, 2012 07:16PM
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