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you are quoting a heck of a lot there.
[QUOTE]blah blah blah[/QUOTE] to reply to MarkFuckingRichards.
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[QUOTE="MarkFuckingRichards:639107"]Lamp said:[QUOTE]Mark is awesome! archaeon said:[QUOTE]I watched a D.R.I. video the other day, An the announcer was like "one of the greatest metalcore bands of all time..... DRI! [/QUOTE] Well, that's what metalcore was used for back in the 80s before the invention of the word "crossover"(which surely enough comes from DRI as well). Metal seems to be adept at stealing punk words. The word "thrash" was used to describe hardcore well before metal, and because of what the word hardcore has morphed into, a lot of punk kids are going back to calling it thrash(though I always refer to stuff like Slayer as thrash metal so I can differentiate it) or even "thrashcore"(ala 625 thrashcore, yada yada). The point being: fuck you.[/QUOTE] I do what I can, haha. I actually never knew that the word "thrash" was used before thrash metal. I guess you learn something new everyday. I feel uneasy using the word "thrashcore" since there is an electronic music genre known as "thrashcore." A lot of people have also called stuff like old Caliban and Heaven Shall Burn "thrashcore." I feel like I should call them pop metal, especially new Caliban, but I can't help that I like everything Heaven Shall Burn has put out. I guess I like 1 pop metal band, haha. Also, while we're on the vast topic of genre abuse, I want to bring up grind. I can't really say for sure that Napalm Death was the absolute first grindcore band, but since they are pioneers and also one of the most important bands that go hand in hand with the inception of grindcore, I'm going to use them as an example. In the documentary DVD that came with the 20th anniversary edition of "Scum," several people detail how some metal elements were commonly used, even if Napalm Death were one of few to do so. Now, I have seen grindcore "purists," I guess you could say, swear up and down that grind is a sub-genre of punk and hardcore. But, if one of the first bands in grindcore took influence and elements from metal, is it really justifiable to say that grind is a sub-genre ONLY of punk and hardcore? Or are there too few grind bands on the metal side of things to accurately state that grind does in fact have metal elements? I'm being such a nerd with music these days, but oh well. I have a thirst for knowledge, haha.[/QUOTE]
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