GhostontheNet wrote:While not a Christian band in the sense of any real subcultural community involvement (i.e. Cornerstone), if the criteria is harshness and ability to scare little children, I would say hands down the electro-industrial act Mentallo & the Fixer is the hardest in their albums like Where Angels Fear to Tread (my blog at http://ghostonthenet.wordpress.com has an in depth review), particularly in songs like Sacrilege and Bring to a Boil.
Also, have we mentioned Zao yet?
Um, The Agony Scene wins hand down
Eric wrote:Surprise, surprise! No one has mentioned even a single death or black metal band.
GrubbTheFragger wrote:*sigh* Mortal treason is not only Black metal and Death metal (by the deffintion of myspace so who nows) and they are on your list as well Eric.
GhostontheNet wrote:I notice you don't have any Mentallo & the Fixer in your CD collection so how would you know (although I do indeed suspect death metal would any surpass industrial music)? Still, albums like Where Angels Fear to Tread and Vengeance is Mine are definitely brutal in their own genre. I notice you've been a lot more fond of a lot of post-industrial music moreso than industrial music. Any reason why? I'd be surprised if you didn't like groups like Front Line Assembly, Mentallo & the Fixer, and Skinny Puppy.
Umm, Myspace allows the owner to classify their own music, so this means that they classify themselves as Black/Death metal.GrubbTheFragger wrote:*sigh* Mortal treason is not only Black metal and Death metal (by the deffintion of myspace so who nows) and they are on your list as well Eric.
I've heard Argyle Park, and they're nowhere near the degree of Mentallo & the Fixer or even Scott Clay's sideproject Brainchild (particularly Metamorphosis).That Dude wrote:I'd have to second August Burns Red, Norma Jean, Zao...As far as industrial and such...Argyle Park is on the more brutal end as well as Mortal's CD Nu-En-Jin.
The way Klay Scott in his sideproject Brainchild plays the audio sampled machine gun for beautifully poetic demonstration of the truth of God's word, particularly in Metamorphosis alone makes it the harshest of his stuff. Then again, I'm mostly familiar with the Disengage/Refractorism era Circle of Dust, being particularly fond of Refractor.That Dude wrote:Yeah I know that Argyle Park isn't to hard in the singing/music part but they are pretty dark and harsh...Though I do agree with you that some of Klay Scott's others are harder...I was thinking Circle Of Dust though.
Knives wrote:Zao is still a christian band Eric. Read their lyrics.
Lets’ talk about religions now. Zao never hide its catholic behaviours. But what kind of faith do you practice ? Are you real catholics & go to church or is it more for you a kind of spiritual quest ?
No one is catholic. A couple members are christian, but it's more of a personal thing, we don't really put it in the music or the lyrics really. Even then, if it is, it's always more of an abstract way. You don't have to be christian to get stuff out of Zao's music. Not at all.
I heard Zao is touring North America with Demon Hunter this summer, aren't you afraid that touring with a big "Christian" metal band like them will bring up the old discussions again about Zao being Christian, or, as I understood happened lately, kids complaining that Zao is not Christian enough?
Eh, it's gonna happen anyway. So what the hell.We're friends with them. Don and Ryan Clark do all of Zao's record covers. We also know that there are a lot of fans of Zao's that are from the Christian scene… we have no problem with that. We are aware. We'll tour with Demon Hunter because they are nice guys and we know it will be a good tour. If Slayer asked us tomorrow we'd go out with them.The fact that the band isn't proclaiming itself as a "strictly Christian band" does not mean that we are ANTI-christian.
Has religion played a big part in your music?
Not really. Lyrically maybe a little bit, but it's not a major consideration in the overall project. ZAO originally started as a ministry band but those members left a long time ago and our mission and thoughts have changed as well since then.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 166 guests