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Posted: Mon Jul 09, 2007 10:31 am
(I didnt write this, i pulled it from Iron Maidens official website, and they pulled it from somewhere lol, But I f igured this might be inspirational to alot of people. So I posted it ^^)
Kitty Empire Sunday March 25, 2007 The Observer
Heavy metal is the preserve of knuckle-dragging simpletons, right? Of delinquent Beavises and monosyllabic Butt-heads; people for whom making the sign of the devil's horns was the point of evolving an opposable thumb? Wrong, according to a study presented this week to the British Psychological Society Conference. Warwick University's Stuart Cadwallader, who carried out the study, says some of the brightest young people in Britain like nothing more than a monster riff to unwind to after a hard day of being a chess prodigy. The study found that one third of their sample - drawn from members of the National Academy of Gifted and Talented Youth, or Nagty - rated metal among their favourite genres of music, ahead of classical and jazz, two complex genres long thought to be the sound of choice for brainiacs.
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All this seems deeply counter-intuitive. Ever since 'heavy metal thunder' - a reference to motorbikes in Steppenwolf's 'Born to Be Wild' - gave birth to a whole genre of noisy, aggressive music, people have looked down on metallers as thickos with poor social skills. Of course, cannier metallers have played up to the stereotype. AC/DC's guitarist Angus Young still dresses as a schoolboy in a winking acknowledgement of metal's puerile attributes. Yet clever kids have always been into metal. Take the lid off any university science lab and you will find metal fans scurrying around. Queen's Brian May has a degree in astrophysics; Bruce Dickinson of Iron Maiden is a graduate who holds a pilot's licence too. Lemmy from Motorhead knows an awful lot about the Third Reich.
The study's conclusions come as no shock to me. Although I don't lay claim to youthful brilliance, I was a metal brat once. I remember the frisson of buying my first album - Destroyer by Kiss - when still in primary school. It wasn't like my father's Beatles albums, or my mother's operas. Nor were Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, Black Sabbath or any of the other bands my exotic long-haired cousin introduced me to, or the other things they led to - the blues, punk, industrial, techno, hip hop, grime. And that was the whole point.
The Cadwallader study concluded that metal helps smart kids relieve the pressure of being gifted. Again, this seems to blow fundamental socio-demographic certainties out of the water. You would have thought that sensitive, gifted young people would gravitate to less hairy forms of music for succour. Mopey indie rock is tailor-made for the middle-class and misunderstood. Then there's emo, with its triumphalist alienation and clever song titles. 'This Ain't a Scene, It's an Arms Race' quips a song by Fall Out Boy. But no - it's Slayer all the way for these junior masterminds.
One of the respondents summed up metal's appeal as only a member of the under-19s intellectual elite could: 'The cathartic release offered by heavy metal played loud, either by my hi-fi or myself on guitar, is a wonderful thing when it's needed.' This teen metallurgist proves two things. That he or she got to the heart of the matter a lot faster than Cadwallader, with his fancy funding. (Give the kid the PhD instead!) And second, that for young clever clogs, as for the rest of us, metal's primary appeal is the way it refracts ugly feelings of frustration into something meaty and satisfying.
In the savage 'uurrgghh!' of metal you can hear the collective human howl of disgust at a world gone mad. It's the sound of the rejected getting even, the trampled-on standing up, the unbeautiful settling scores with the buffed. Metal is the arena where the most unpleasant human emotions are let out to play - safely, for the most part. (Metal still sparks sporadic moral panics but, largely, metallers are a self-regulating and moral bunch.)
In a society embarrassed by intelligence, members of Nagty must nurture juicy revenge fantasies against the clots who rule the playground. Surely it's better for them to stick on 'Iowa' by Slipknot - a classic of nihilist bleakness - than to go on a murderous spree with a compass. Metal offers a world where injustice is punished, wrongs are Avenged Sevenfold (a band), where Vulgar Displays of Power (a Pantera album) are acceptable - if only for the duration of a CD. What's not to like?
And then there's the business of scaring your parents. These talented teens have probably spent a disproportionate amount of their lives pleasing their mums and dads with their sparkling SATs and prowess on the violin. As puberty and the natural urge to cleave away from the nest take hold, metal is a logical first port of call. You want to express an identity distinct from your parents? Heavy metal - exciting, ghoulish, loud - is perfect. That or gangsta rap.
Of course, metal is currently undergoing one of its occasional irruptions into fashion. It wasn't so long ago that Lordi won Eurovision. Fashionistas are still sporting ironic Judas Priest T-shirts - the kind of sacrilegious behaviour that brings proper metal lifers out in hives. A recent spate of so-called 'hipster metal' bands - esoteric outfits like Mastodon, Lightning Bolt and Sunn O))) - has brought this most outcast of genres blinking into semi-respectability. If these gifted youth aren't careful, they might end up cool as well as clever.
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Posted: Tue Jul 10, 2007 6:05 pm
The only thing I don't like about this article is the fact that it makes all "gifted" kids seem like socially-clueless nerds. I graduated in the top 5 of my class, yet I was on the dance team, played soccer, had a very active social life, and learned the art of procrastination very well. Oh, and of course, I'm a rocker/metalhead. And personally, even though I'm gifted or whatever you want to call it, I don't care for the stereotypical "smart kid" things, i.e. classical music, playing the violin/other instruments, etc. But anyways...I do like this article very much for showing it's not only the "lower" part of society (as some people think) that listen to rock (to be very general).
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Posted: Thu Jul 12, 2007 7:53 pm
I too agree with what your saying about the stereotype things. People are just so narrow minded
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Posted: Thu Jul 12, 2007 8:23 pm
Funny enough i'm completely the opposite. while i have an IQ higher than that of the average doctor i'm a failiure when it comes to school. of course that is mostly due to the fact that i pretty much don't do homework at all and keep gettign kicked out for not knuckleing to the petty authority of teachers and adminisrtation. funny enough though most people i meet tell me that they think of goths as the smarter, more artistic better smoke younger brothers or sisters of punks and metalheads. (while punk is out getting in fights and metal is breakig things and causing havok, goth is up in his/her room writing poetry) or somethign along those lines.
i frustrate my teachers to no end because they all know that if i were to do the work i'd be an honor student but i don't bopther applying myself.
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Posted: Thu Jul 12, 2007 9:36 pm
I'm actually on the same boat as Laz. I never do a thing in school, yet I'm one of the smartest people I know(not to be boastful). It's for the mere reason that I'm always either getting kicked out of class, sleeping in class, ditching class, or using my homework to light my cigarettes(among other things). It's just boring. Everything people have tried to teach me at school since around the 6th grade I taught myself before even getting to 5th. It's pretty boring to have something you know repeated to you over and over every year, so naturally I said "******** it". Amusingly enough, I rarely cause any real trouble conduct-wise. Sure, I hand out a few beatings here and there every once in awhile, but these folks ask for it. Some of my teachers love me anyway because they know I'm smart, and can hold intelligent conversation(something VERY rare in Miami's Overtown area, where I go to school at), and if I get kicked out it's usually because I piss the teachers off when I prove them wrong about stuff they're teaching., or because I refuse to wear the school uniform.
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Posted: Sun Jul 29, 2007 1:48 am
I sort of agree with the articale, but not with the whole social rejects area. Take a look at Coventry's scene:
Nerina speaks Japanese, French, Italian and Swedish to a degree and is looking at learning Finnish and/or Russian at some point. She's aiming at 10 A*'s in her exam results, took French on an accelerated course, completeing it in 1 year rather than 2 and came out with a high B. She plays grade 7 violin. She was speaking at the level of a 7 years old when she was 1 and 1/2. She's a natural in archery, horse-riding and fencing.
Jukka speaks Russian, German and English fluently. I think he speaks Finnish fluently as well, but he definately knows it. Loves his music and I can't think of a single song by any Finnish band he doesn't know both on Bass and drums.
Chris, now he's actually gone back to college, is looking at passing the course with very high marks.
Jason recently left university with 1st honors in his art degree after convincing himself he was going to fail. 1st honors being the highest grade possible to attain. He was one of the few, if not the only one, to reach that grade.
Thats just touching the top of the list. A lot of the scene are more musically talented than anything else. Slev's only 15, but his band have already played where most unsigned bands struggle to be allowed to play, and they did it all in one audition.
Personally, I'm not that bright in comparison: I partly speak German, I'm looking at 2 A's, mostly B's and C's for my exam results. I'm the equivilant of grade 2 clarinet, but I don't bother with it anymore, I never took any of the grading exams. My strongest point is probably reading body language, which came from 3 years of me being a reject and outcast. Though, apparently, I have a way with coping with Emo's that have over-cut, people having panic attacks, accidents, diffusing an aggresive situation etc, that's rarely found in the rest of the local scene.
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Posted: Wed Sep 12, 2007 5:33 pm
A simple fact, metal is the most complex form of music, and smart people have finally come to realize that, and the symphonic/gothic/melodic/progressive stuff is what keeps them coming, they use more music theory than many royal conservatory students, what's not to like?
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Posted: Mon Apr 07, 2008 9:48 am
i love heavy metal and i am smart.
thats why i love goth metal it combines my 2 favorite genres goth rock and metal.
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