Although most people see metal as a relatively new genre, its roots can actually be traced back as far as the 1950s, when power chords and riffs reliant on distortion effects were first introduced. However, metal itself wouldn’t begin to grow or become known until into the 1960s.
Legends of the music industry Black Sabbath and Led Zeppelin are most often credited as the founders of the genre, but other bands, including Steppenwolf, are often thrown into the conversation, too.
However, U.S. west coast band Blue Cheer actually recorded the first metal song, which was a January 1968 cover of “Summertime Blues.” The same month also saw the release of Steppenwolf’s debut album that included their signature track, “Born to be Wild.” Despite these being seen as early examples of metal music, it is accepted today that these were widely experimental, and it wasn’t until Led Zeppelin’s 1969 debut and the emergence of Black Sabbath and Deep Purple in 1970 as leaders in the genre that metal was truly born.
In the 1970s and 1980s, metal music became unpopular almost as quickly as it had once risen to prominence. Metal during this time became disliked due to its tendency to be over produced and have too much going on, and punk would become loved for its simplicity.
However, bands like Motorhead and Van Halen would enjoy huge success by being able to straddle the two genres.
This traditional metal music is what would become known as ‘heavy metal.’ Throughout the late 1980s and up until the present day, heavy metal has been seen as something of a generic categorisation.
The following subgenres of metal would often be used to describe the type of music a band or artist was producing:
Metal remains popular to this day, but is more a combination of genres rather than being out and out metal. Bands like Bullet for My Valentine, Avenged Sevenfold, and Mastodon are widely seen as being the closest to producing what would be considered a metal sound while gaining mainstream exposure.
Image Author: Flickr – Saad Faruque
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