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- <text id=91TT2290>
- <title>
- Oct. 14, 1991: Heavy Metal Goes Platinum
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Oct. 14, 1991 Jodie Foster:A Director Is Born
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MUSIC, Page 85
- Heavy Metal Goes Platinum
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Polishing their music, if not their image, rock's raunchy, long-
- haired rebels win a growing mainstream audience
- </p>
- <p>By Guy Garcia--With reporting by Patrick E. Cole/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> Poison. Anthrax. Alice in Chains. Skid Row. The band
- names alone conjure images of mayhem, torture and death.
- Heavy-metal rock, with its raw lyrics, pummeling beats, banshee
- vocals and buzz-saw guitars, seems custom-made for leather-clad
- lowlifes with tattooed biceps and lobotomized brains. Teenagers
- love it. Always have. But during the early 1980s, when the
- insipid glam-rock of Duran Duran ruled the charts, heavy metal
- was the idiot in the basement, shunned by music-industry
- executives and dismissed by critics as adolescent noise.
- </p>
- <p> Not so in the hardheaded '90s. Today Duran Duran is
- history, and heavy metal is white-hot. Thanks to bands like
- Metallica, which sold 650,000 copies of its namesake album in
- the first week of its August release, every parent's worst
- nightmare has become a record executive's dream come true.
- Metallica entered Billboard's top-albums chart at No. 1 and
- stayed there for four weeks, spawning the hit single Enter
- Sandman. Even the critics are coming around. Rolling Stone
- awarded Metallica four stars in its review, calling it "an
- exemplary album of mature but still kickass rock & roll."
- </p>
- <p> Metallica is not the only band turning heavy metal into
- pure platinum. Skid Row's latest, Slave to the Grind, has sold
- 2.5 million copies worldwide since last June. Van Halen's For
- Unlawful Carnal Knowledge entered the charts 13 weeks ago at No.
- 1 and sold 2 million copies in less than a month. Poison's past
- three albums, Look What the Cat Dragged Down, Open Up and Say
- Ahh and Flesh and Blood, have sold a combined total of 12
- million copies; all five of Motley Crue's have sold more than
- 1 million each.
- </p>
- <p> Those numbers are giving metal bands the kind of clout
- once reserved for pop's biggest stars. In August Columbia
- Records signed Aerosmith, a hard-rock band with metal overtones,
- to a $30 million-plus contract. Motley Crue's deal is even
- sweeter. Elektra Records will pay the Crue at least $35 million,
- including a $22.5 million advance, for its next five albums.
- Meanwhile, A&M Records expects big things from Soundgarden, a
- Seattle-based band that packs the sonic punch of early Led
- Zeppelin.
- </p>
- <p> MTV, which features heavy-metal bands every Saturday night
- on the Headbangers' Ball program, acknowledged metal's
- ascendancy by inviting Metallica to play on its 1991 video
- awards show. On that show, the Viewer's Choice Award for Best
- Video went to Queensryche, another metal band with a broad
- following. In October the heavy-metal scene will get its own
- Grammys when the first Concrete Foundations Awards are held in
- Los Angeles.
- </p>
- <p> Most metal bands still must rely on concerts and word of
- mouth to sell records. "It's a cultlike audience," says Geoff
- Mayfield, director of retail research for Billboard. "A record
- like Metallica can sell without airplay and without MTV. So
- there is a voracious appetite."
- </p>
- <p> Musically, heavy metal has evolved somewhat, from a
- monotonous barrage of frenetic tempos and slashing guitars
- toward richer aural textures and even an occasional ballad.
- Metallica is typical of the metal bands that have renounced
- their raunchy roots and polished their music, if not their
- image. Gone are the crude lyrics and blaring wah-wah guitars
- that marked its sound in the mid-'80s. Many of the tunes on
- Metallica could almost be called reflective, like Holier Than
- Thou: "Gossip is burning on the tip of your tongue/ You lie so
- much you believe yourself/ Judge not lest you be judged
- yourself."
- </p>
- <p> Metal musicians play to the alienated fantasies of a
- mostly white, young and male audience by portraying themselves
- as disillusioned outsiders who have turned their backs on a
- corrupt civilization. Dressed like renegade bikers, they sing
- anthems to the rebellious and the wild, or wild at heart.
- Outrageous behavior is more than a pose for many of them,
- notably Skid Row's lead singer, Sebastian Bach (ne Bierk), whose
- on-the-road antics have included tearing up hotel rooms and
- striking a concert spectator with a bottle that he hurled into
- the audience.
- </p>
- <p> "Things have come full circle," says Bach, a Canadian who
- sang in church choirs before finding his true calling in the
- Toronto club scene. "In the '70s pop was more hip, and now the
- energy of punk has come into heavy metal. Punk was a socialist
- thing, and metal was a capitalism thing." Yet both are
- sneeringly anti-Establishment. In Slave to the Grind, Skid Row
- proclaims, "Can't be the king of the world/ If you're slave to
- the grind/ Tear down the rat racial slime."
- </p>
- <p> "We're not going to f----in' sell out like the
- mainstream," vows Bach. "The kids can see through the
- phoniness." No doubt. Which could raise a ticklish problem for
- bands like Metallica and Skid Row, which presume to voice the
- disaffection of middle-class youths while earning fat-cat
- salaries. To stay on top of the heap, metal's messiahs may have
- to figure how to keep both their millions and their edge--or
- risk becoming long-haired rebels without a cause.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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