Showing posts with label video. Show all posts
Showing posts with label video. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Classic Metal Class Session 7 - New Wave of British Heavy Metal

We started our discussion of a major movement in the development of heavy metal - the New Wave of British Heavy Metal - in Classic Metal Class session #7.  We turned over so many interesting topics that we'e going to return to it in the next session.  If you missed the class session when it took place, and you'd like to watch or listen to the discussion, here's the recording


The Fall semester is at last starting to wind down as well, so I'm hoping to be able to start writing posts regularly here again in Heavy Metal Philosopher.

Friday, October 2, 2020

Videorecording of Classic Metal Class Session #5 - British Mid-Late 1970s Metal

We held Session 5 of Classic Metal Class several weeks ago.  This time, we intended to return to a focus primarily on music history, but we ended up going into a lot of discussion about technological and sound development aspects of the period we were discussing.  I won't say "strayed" or "digressed" because all of that discussion - led primarily by my co-host Scott Taruli - was both very well-informed and extraordinarily useful for understanding the development across the sound vectors that we call "heavy metal".

The official topic for this session was mid-late 1970s British heavy metal - so all the major bands,  developments, tours, continuities and changes in sound in England, Scotland, and Wales.  I used whether or not a band managed to bring out at least one more-or-less metal album in those years as a proxy for whether to include them in the discussion.

Those years were a time, of course, in which the New Wave of British Heavy Metal (NWOBHM) was coalescing, growing, and getting ready to burst forth.  Saxon did manage to get their first album out by 1979 (as did the somewhat less favored Samson), but some of the other really key players in the scene - like Iron Maiden - hadn't yet got to that stage.  So 1979 winds up being a good cut-off year.

We'll be revisiting some of these bands in later sessions - particularly Motorhead and Judas Priest - and we'll also be devoting some sessions to the NWOBHM movement.  But it was really worthwhile to focus in on those 1970s years in the development of British heavy metal.  Here's the videorecording of the session!


Our next classic metal class session will be coming up later this month, on Saturday, October 10.