BABYMETAL (an artificially assembled pop-metal band according to the "Punk Rock MBA" Finn Mckenty) has got to be the hardest, coolest, most talented band with a female-singer in history, eclipsing the late-great symphonic black metal of Eternal Conspiracy with baby-voice Kirsten.
5 things rock about being a female metalhead
(JJ Metalhead) Where are the metal babes? Let me know you exist.
Rolling Stone names best metal songs of all time
Revolver Staff, March 13, 2023 edited by Wisdom Quarterly
Nu-metal fans will be displeased. Back in 2021, Rolling Stone magazine shafted metal as a genre by only including six metal tracks on their supposedly comprehensive list of the 500 greatest songs of all time.
Motörhead's "Ace of Spades," Metallica's "Enter Sandman" and "Master of Puppets," Black Sabbath's "Iron Man" and "Paranoid," and Rage Against the Machine's "Killing in the Name" — earning the highest-ranking spot of all metal songs, at No. 207 — were, by the measure of voters, deemed the six best metal songs ever.
However, Rolling Stone have now corrected their own record by publishing a list dedicated to the 100 greatest metal songs ever, and the list's top 10 differs significantly from the top six that landed in the publication's all-genre list.
In this metal-focused ranking, Rolling Stone have placed Black Sabbath's "Black Sabbath" dirge at the No. 1 spot, which makes a helluva lot of sense" It essentially birthed the metal genre.
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Moreover, Rage Against the Machine's "Killing in the Name" — which some fans consider hard rock rather than metal, though we disagree — only made it to No. 38 on the metal songs list.
Contradictions aside, the songs that comprise Rolling Stone's Top 10 metal songs ever are gems:
- Black Sabbath "Black Sabbath"
- Metallica "Master of Puppets"
- Motorhead "Ace of Spades"
- Judas Priest "Breaking the Law"
- Black Sabbath "War Pigs"
- Ozzy Osbourne's "Crazy Train"
- Black Sabbath "Iron Man"
- Slayer "Raining Blood"
- Dio "Holy Diver"
- Iron Maiden's "Run to the Hills"
Hard to argue with any of those picks, though if you're under the age of 50 and you feel like those selections are skewing old-school, your suspicions are right.
The list makes a point of nodding to most metal sub-genres (death metal, black metal, grindcore, metalcore, prog metal, etc.), nu-metal giants like Korn, Slipknot, and Deftones were only granted one song each ["Blind," "People = Shit," and "My Own Summer (Shove It)," respectively], and the same went for alt-metal titans like System of a Down ("Chop Suey!") and TOOL ("Forty Six & 2").
Of course, lists like these are ultimately just fodder for people to argue, so in that sense, Rolling Stone surely succeeded. See the whole list. More
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