Music Banter

Music Banter (https://www.musicbanter.com/)
-   Rock & Metal (https://www.musicbanter.com/rock-metal/)
-   -   What is the difference between rock & metal? (https://www.musicbanter.com/rock-metal/68803-what-difference-between-rock-metal.html)

gilbeiry 03-30-2013 03:45 AM

What is the difference between rock & metal?
 
What is the difference between rock & metal?

Isbjørn 03-30-2013 04:20 AM

Metal started as a subgenre of rock, and came from blues- and psyhedelic rock in the late 60s. Rock and metal education thread

Psy-Fi 03-30-2013 05:28 AM

In rock, the amplifiers go up to 10.

In metal, the amplifiers go up to 11.


http://i1058.photobucket.com/albums/...psbb3ec9c2.jpg

http://i1058.photobucket.com/albums/...ps49fde5be.jpg

Isbjørn 03-30-2013 09:02 AM

Metal is:
-Louder volume
-Blues scales
-Strong vocals
-Shock value
-Extended solos
-Double guitars

Also, metal is a LOT more complex than most types of rock (riffs and solo work, I mean). I think a lot of rock music has simple, rather short solos, but metal solos tend to be a lot longer and with more bluesy improvisation.

jackhammer 03-30-2013 08:02 PM

Metal has a higher concentration of heavier elements than Rock does.

That's the Science lesson over.

Janszoon 03-31-2013 09:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jackhammer (Post 1302365)
Metal has a higher concentration of heavier elements than Rock does.

That's the Science lesson over.

:bowdown:

Norg 03-31-2013 09:52 PM

I always thought ROck was more bluesy then Metal

stuff like speed and Thrash and death metal pretty much said **** they blues riffs

Rjinn 03-31-2013 10:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Norg (Post 1302658)
I always thought ROck was more bluesy then Metal

stuff like speed and Thrash and death metal pretty much said **** they blues riffs

I think you got to take into consideration the style of rock you're talking about here. You wouldn't really call punk rock "bluesy" would you?

All in all Jackhammer pretty much summed it up.

Isbjørn 04-01-2013 06:32 AM

Acid rock, blues rock and rock and roll is bluesy.
Punk rock, garage rock, prog rock (you name it) CAN be bluesy.

Rjinn 04-01-2013 08:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Briks (Post 1302700)
Punk rock, garage rock, prog rock (you name it) CAN be bluesy.

So can metal. Take Clutch, Motörhead, Orange Goblin, Black Sabbath and Corrosion of Conformity as examples. I'm talking about definable standards of a genre. It doesn't mean they can't be innovative.


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 04:29 PM.


© 2003-2024 Advameg, Inc.