Facts of Heavy Metal
The development of heavy drums, bass and guitar distortion came from British groups like Cream, Yardbirds, Jeff Beck Group together with Jimi Hendrix during the mid-1960’s resulting in heavy metal’s distinction from blues-based rock. Heavy metal music as we recognize it exists thanks to Led Zeppelin II, Deep Purple in Rock and Black Sabbath’s Paranoid which both applied heavy guitar riffs and power chords combined with mystical lyrics and guitar drum solos while Plant supplied powerful vocals and Osbourne delivered high-pitched wails. The bands Kiss and AC/DC together with Aerosmith and Judas Priest alongside Alice Cooper maintained worldwide followings by producing grand stage productions while constantly touring to compensate for their minimal radio exposure during the 1970s.
Heavy metal experienced decline when disco took over at the end of the 1970’s yet rose to unprecedented fame during the 1980’s through Def Leppard and Iron Maiden and Saxon who led a “new wave of British heavy metal” revival that transformed the genre further with Eddie Van Halen’s guitar brilliance. A Los Angeles-based Glam metal wave activated with bands like Mötley Crüe and Ratt in 1983 leading dozens of groups like Poison and Guns N’ Roses to relocate there for commercial opportunities.
Heavy metal music spread across the globe through the success of German acts like Scorpions and musicians from Japan and all parts of Scandinavia during this period. Baroque models dominated heavy metal throughout the 1980s by supplying the decade’s most crucial musical elements including altered chord progressions with figuration and virtuosity standards that specifically derived from Bach and Vivaldi.
The sound of the guitar of Van Halen enabled Ritchie Blackmore (Deep Purple), Randy Rhoads (with Osbourne) and Yngwie Malmsteen to introduce a new standard of musical styles by including the removal of the impressions of misunderstanding that heavy metal was comprised of references to lower forms of music.











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