Metalcore

Metalcore adalah bukan merupakan fusion/gabungan dari Hardcore dan Metal melainkan hanyalah turunan dari genre Hardcore yang terinfluence genre Metal sehingga genre ini sendiri tidak termasuk dalam subgenre Metal. Genre ini muncul belakangan pada era 2000'an tapi sudah menunjukkan ciri-cirinya melalui band-band seperti Deadguy, Earth Crisis dan Intergrity sejak era 90'an. Metalcore sendiri nama yang dibuat oleh media, genre ini dulunya dikenal dengan nama Metallic-Hardcore.
Musik metalcore memiliki ciri khas berupa gitar dituining drop D sampai C, menggunakan hardcore scream dan death growl (juga didampingi clean vocal pada band-band sekarang), penggunaan Breakdown dan Biasanya bassist mengikuti gitar rhythm. Dilihat dari penggunaan Breakdown (ciri khas musik Hardcore) ini maka dapat dipahami bahwa Metalcore akarnya dari Hardcore bukan Metal.
Band-band metalcore di dunia antara lain Avenged Sevenfold, Shadows Fall, Asking Alexandria, Killswitch Engage, All That Remains, Darkest Hour, God Forbid,Unearth, Burnt By The Sun, Heaven Shall Burn, Caliban, Maroon, Mendeed, Trivium dan sebagainya.
pada perkembanganya metalcore juga membuahkan sub-genre yaitu Mathcore (contoh;The DIllinger Escape Plan, Psyopus, Coalesce, Ion Dissonance dsb) dan Deathcore (contoh;Job For A Cowboy, The Red Chord, Animosity, Trigger The Bloodshed dsb).
 

Post Hardcore

Post-hardcore is a genre of music that is derived from and has origins in the hardcore punk music genre, itself an offshoot of the broader punk rock movement. Like post-punk, post-hardcore is a term for a broad constellation of groups. Many emerged from the hardcore punk scene, or took inspiration from hardcore, while concerning themselves with a wider degree of expression.

Characteristics

Hardcore punk typically features very fast tempos, loud volume, and heavy bass levels,[3] as well as a "do-it-yourself" ethic.[2] Music database Allmusic stated "these newer bands, termed post-hardcore, often found complex and dynamic ways of blowing off steam that generally went outside the strict hardcore realm of 'loud fast rules'. Additionally, many of these bands' vocalists were just as likely to deliver their lyrics with a whispered croon as they were a maniacal yelp."[2] Allmusic also claims that post-hardcore bands find creative ways to build and release tension rather than "airing their dirty laundry in short, sharp, frenetic bursts".[2] Jeff Terich of Treblezine stated, "Instead of sticking to hardcore's rigid constraints, these artists expanded beyond power chords and gang vocals, incorporating more creative outlets for punk rock energy."[4] British post-punk of the late 1970s and early 1980s has been seen as influential on the musical development of post-hardcore bands.[2] As the genre progressed some of these groups also experimented with a wide array of influences, including soul, dub, funk, jazz, and dance-punk. It has also been noted that since some post-hardcore bands included members that were rooted in the beginnings of hardcore punk, some of them were able to expand their sound as they became more skilled musicians.[


Origins

Ryan Cooper of About.com states that the genre began with "the actual hardcore bands themselves",[5] remarking how as acts like Black Flag "began to bore with the formulaic constraints of hardcore, more experimental sounds began to appear in their music".[5] Groups such as Saccharine Trust,[6] Naked Raygun,[7][8][9] and The Effigies,[9] which were active around the early 1980s, are considered as forerunners to the post-hardcore genre. Chicago's Naked Raygun, formed in 1981, has been seen as merging post-punk influences of bands such as Wire and Gang of Four with hardcore,[10] while author Steven Blush notes the band's use of "oblique lyrics and stark post-punk melodies".[11] Similarly, The Effigies, who also hailed from the Chicago scene, released music influenced by the hardcore of Minor Threat and the British post-punk of bands like The Stranglers, Killing Joke, and The Ruts.[9]
During the early to mid-1980s, the desire to experiment with hardcore's basic template expanded to many musicians that had been associated with the genre or had strong roots in it.[2] Many of these groups also took inspiration from the '80s noise rock scene pioneered by Sonic Youth.[4] Some bands signed to the independent label Homestead Records, including Squirrel Bait[12] (as well as David Grubbs-related Bastro and Bitch Magnet[13]) and Steve Albini's Big Black (just as his subsequent projects Rapeman[8] and Shellac[8][14]) are also associated with post-hardcore.[4][9] Big Black, which also featured former Naked Raygun guitarist Santiago Durango,[15] made themselves known for their strict DIY ethic,[4] related to practices such as paying for their own recordings, booking their own shows, handling their own management and publicity, and remaining "stubbornly independent at a time when many independent bands were eagerly reaching out for the major-label brass ring".[15] The band's music, punctuated by the use of a drum machine, has also been seen as influential to industrial rock,[15] while Blush has also described the Albini-fronted project as "an angst-ridden response to the rigid English post-punk of Gang of Four".[11] After the issuing of the "Il Duce" single (and between the release of their only two studio albums, Atomizer and Songs About Fucking), Big Black left Homestead for Touch and Go Records,[15] which would later reissue not only their entire discography, but would also be responsible for the release of the complete works of Scratch Acid, an act from Austin, Texas described as post-hardcore,[16] that, according to Stephen Thomas Erlewine, "laid the groundwork for much of the distorted, grinding alternative punk rockers of the '90s".[16]
Outside the United States, the genre would take shape in the works of the Canadian group Nomeansno,[17] related with Jello Biafra and his independently run label Alternative Tentacles, and that had been active since 1979. A reviewer noted that the group's 1989's release Wrong was "one of the most aggressive and powerful opuses in post-hardcore ever made

Moderate popularity

According to Ian MacKaye, the sudden interest in underground and independent music brought by the success of Nirvana's Nevermind attracted the attention of major labels towards the Dischord imprint and many of its bands.[54] While the label rejected these offers, two Dischord acts, Jawbox and Shudder to Think, would sign deals with major labels.[54] The former's signing to Atlantic Records would alienate some of the band's long-term fanbase,[42] but it would also help with the development and recording of the 1994 release For Your Own Special Sweetheart, considered by Andy Kellman as "one of the best releases to come out of the fertile D.C. scene of the '80s and '90s".[42] The subsequent tour for the album and the MTV rotation of some videos would introduce the band to a handful of new crowds, but ultimately the album would remain "unnoticed outside of the usual indie community".[42]
Likewise, out of the Dischord label, Interscope Records would sign Helmet after a reportedly "ferocious" bidding war between several major record companies,[77] and while MTV would air some videos by the group, which by the time of the release of their major-label debut Meantime, was considered then as "the only band close to the Seattle grunge sound" on the American East Coast[78] and would be hailed as "the next big thing", these expectations would "never be fully realized" in spite of the record's later influence.[77] In another notable case, Hum would sign to RCA in 1994, selling approximately 250,000 copies of their album You'd Prefer an Astronaut fueled by the success of the album's lead single "Stars",[79] and while the band had established by this point a strong underground fanbase, this would prove to be "the pinnacle of Hum's media attention", as its follow-up, 1998's Downward Is Heavenward would sell poorly, resulting in the decision of RCA to drop the band from their roster.[79]

2000s


Silverstein (Shane Told) in concert.
Record producer Ross Robinson, who was credited for popularizing nu metal with bands like Korn, Soulfly and Limp Bizkit in the 1990s, helped post-hardcore achieve popularity during the 2000s.[80][81] Mehan Jayasuriya of PopMatters suggested that Robinson's sudden focus on post-hardcore was his "pet project" designed to redeem himself of "the 'Nu-Metal' scourge of the late '90s".[82] Robinson recorded At the Drive-In's Relationship of Command (2000), Glassjaw's Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Silence (2000) and Worship and Tribute (2002), and The Blood Brothers' ...Burn, Piano Island, Burn (2003); four albums that are said to "stand as some of the best post-hardcore records produced" during the 2000s.[82] In John Franck's review of Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Silence for Allmusic, he stated: "Featuring extraordinary ambidextrous drummer Sammy Siegler (of Gorilla Biscuits/CIV fame), Glassjaw has paired up with producer/entrepreneur Ross Robinson (a key catalyst in the reinvention of the aggro rock sound) to take you on a pummeling ride that would make Bad Brains and Quicksand proud."[83]

2010s

Post-hardcore has garnered even more "mainstream" attention at the beginning of this decade with bands such as Sleeping with Sirens, whose third album Feel (2013) debuted at No. 3 on the US Billboard 200 chart, making it the highest charting post-hardcore album by any band to date.[84][85][86] Pierce the Veil's second album, Selfish Machines (2010) and their third, Collide with the Sky (2012), have also received much attention. The beginning of this decade has also seen the emergence of independent post-hardcore bands like The Men, Cloud Nothings and METZ, described as moving closer to the dynamics and aesthetics of earlier acts, whilst diverging deeper into external influences.[87][88][89][90] Reviewers have also noted the incorporation of a diversity of elements like krautrock, post-rock, sludge metal, shoegaze,[87] power pop[89] and no wave[91] in addition to previous hardcore, noise rock and post-punk sensibilities.

Thanks To : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-hardcore



 

Download Lagu Terbaru Killing Me Inside Dalam Full Album Album Rebirth 2014

Assalamualaikum...Wr...Wb

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  8. Killing Me Inside - Torn Mp3 
  9. Killing Me Inside - Biarlah ( New Version ) Mp3 
  10. Killing Me Inside - Let it Go ( New Version ) Mp3
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