Most of you won't be surprised to hear of this, as you'll know it's nothing new. Anyone who has explored hip hop or extreme metal with any kind of depth will have encountered similar content. Nevertheless I'd like to have a discussion about it. Some questions I'd like to mull over with you:
When does entertainment begin to have a bearing on reality? Extreme artists often like to defend their works as self-contained and not to be taken too seriously. But Tyler's fans have recently sent threats of rape and murder to an activist who campaigned for age restrictions at his shows. And going further back in music history, the roots of Black Metal (a nihilistic, anti-religious and often Satanic) were tied up in burning churches, suicide, and murder.
Why do we seem to be less inclined to accept disturbing content in music as opposed to other entertainment mediums? No-one bats an eye at a gory horror movie. It might not be your thing, but no-one panics. But Death Metal lyrics involving blood and guts are met with a revulsion that seems disproportionate. Says George Fisher of Cannibal Corpse:
Where does the conversation about music as art fit in here? Pure entertainment is easily dismissed, while material presented as art generally demands further thought and dissection. To pick up the film comparison again, acts of extreme violence in Peter Jackson's "Braindead" evoke a much different response than the violence in Lars von Trier's "Antichrist." We don't seem to be as good at that separation of intent when public discussion turns to music lyrics. To me there's a clear difference in tone between these two lyrics samples:We don't sing about politics. We don't sing about religion...All our songs are short stories that, if anyone would so choose they could convert it into a horror movie. Really, that's all it is. We like gruesome, scary movies, and we want the lyrics to be like that. Yeah, it's about killing people, but it's not promoting it at all. Basically these are fictional stories, and that's it. And anyone who gets upset about it is ridiculous.
Faith No More wrote:Now you are mine
I'll keep killing you till the end of time
Surprise! You're dead!
Guess what? It never ends!
The pain, the torment and torture, profanity
Nausea, suffering, perversion, calamity
You can't get away
Both deal with the same broad topic: black magic, the occult, evil acts. Both contain imagery that could be called dark and disturbing. But the FNM song is cartoonish and gleeful. It's a shallow, over the top portrayal of a mad evil necromancer, and it's a hell of a fun song. The Opeth song, however, is a much deeper and complex beast. Themes such as self-delusion, pride, misplaced faith, self destruction and nihilism are brought to the occult topic. But often when you hear "offensive" lyrics discussed, it's in broad strokes of "bands who sing about evil things."Opeth wrote:Willingly guided into heresy
Beneath the surface, stark emptiness
And you'd pity my conviction
Whereas I though of myself as a leader
...
Wept for solace and submit to faith
In his shadow I'm choking, yet flourishing
Master
A delusion made me stronger
Yet I'm draped in pale withering flesh
I sacrificed more than I had
And left my woes beneath the mire
Sorry for the wall of text. Please post your ramblings and opinions.
