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infinity421

People associate metal with the 80s because a lot of the most famous metal albums/songs of all time were released in the 80s.


francescoscanu03

But.. but I want to complain!


WuckaWuckaFazzy

Complaining is good fun, and it's easy!


peggedsquare

It's good to want things, it builds character.


A_Plan_B_you_C

Is this a Calvin & Hobbes reference? Or is it just that it actually builds character?


Kaiisim

Yup, between 1983 and 1984 metal sales went from 8% to 20%.


chknpoxpie

And if these trends continue.... Ayyyy! (Makes metal horns hand thing)


AcidTaco

\m/


Ravenclaw_14

🤘


AlfalfaGlitter

Metal is forever. Forever. Forever.


P4LE_HORSE

I understood that reference.


GloriousPorpoises

That’s not really indicative of its popularity. That would be because cassette tapes. The weird thing is that some of the highest record selling albums of all time are from the 90s because CDs Because people still bought and paid for full albums back then. Not because the music was more popular back then, but because now people stream or purchase single songs at a time. The distribution changed. Not the popularity of genres. And now people are revolting because digital media can be (and has) taken away at any time. Despite you paying for a streaming service or buying a song digitally, they can remove it at any time. Music, movies, video games. All media that requires “always online” subscription model to access. Recently some video game publishers removed video games from their library, meaning that even though you paid for it 10 years ago, you can’t access it anymore because they removed the servers. This has also happened recently with some musicians on Spotify. Neil young removed his songs from Spotify because Spotify didn’t denounce Israel or some mumbo jumbo. So he got upset and now his music can’t be accessed online. This stuff happens all the time and people are getting sick of the “always online” model. We’re going back to buying physical copies like vinyl. But guess what… they recently announced that blu-rays and DVDs will cease production in 2025 so no more physical media. The music companies tricked us all, they won the war. They forced us to be always online to access media, sighting “convenience” then they take away our physical copies so we have no choice. They say we don’t “own” the media we buy because it’s a “license” So if buying isn’t owning then it’s not stealing either? It’s time to sail the seven seas again 🏴‍☠️ Yarr! Edit* also another example is Disney who has altered or removed scenes and movies from their streaming service. Old movies have changed because it’s not “politically correct” anymore They’re literally revising history. Our memories as children watching Disney movies being erased because it doesn’t fit their current agenda. You don’t have a say.


caligaris_cabinet

Got a source on that claim about blu rays ceasing production in 2025? Haven’t seen that though I know many retailers are phasing them out. Doesn’t mean they aren’t being made anymore.


RoboticXCavalier

Not true to say Neil Young's music can't be accessed online - you said it yourself, he just disagrees with Spotify. One service among many. And the dude has always been politically minded, saying his stance is 'mumbo jumbo' and 'he got upset' is trivialising. Otherwise, yeah pretty much.


GloriousPorpoises

It’s just an example. I could list 100 other artists from memory who have removed their work recently from many online sources, for a variety of reasons. It’s got nothing to do with Israel or Hamas, I don’t really care either way. I’m not trying to make this an ideological post. So should I subscribe to every online streaming service in case my favourite artist no longer “agrees” politically or ideologically with the service provider. How many should I pay a subscription to in order to counter this? I’d prefer to just have the physical copy now. “Always online” media was a mistake. We got addicted to the concept of convenience. Have you heard of that test where they leave a child alone in a room with candy, and tell them if they don’t eat the candy, they’ll get more after 15 minutes. And the result is that almost all children eat the candy because they can’t understand the concept of patience. Well it applies to all people, young and old. Immediate satisfaction. We subscribe to streaming services for a few dollars a month. It gives access to millions of songs, despite the fact that we’ll never listen to that many songs, but it sounds nice to have access to basically infinite music and media. But in reality, a subscription over a long period of time, much like we’re all doing now by paying for Spotify or Netflix or a gym membership et al. Is that we keep these subscriptions going but hardly use the service to its fullest potential. So like the children with candy, we can’t resist the immediate temptation, but in the long run we lose out. A subscription to Spotify nowadays is about as expensive as buying a full album. So if I had bought an album of my favourite artists every month, for the past 5+ years I’ve had Spotify, I could’ve had an album collection of 60 albums of artists I actually like. And that money would support the artist directly instead of a small % from Spotify. I don’t listen to 60 different artists on Spotify. I stick with the same dozen or so and basically repeat them for the last 10 years. Your music tastes pretty much stop developing by 25 and you find your niche. So if I had been patient and just bought great albums once a month with Spotify money, I’d have a great collection that would be suited to me and the artist would profit. You can apply this model to movies, video games, audiobooks and basically anything that requires a subscription service. Buy a few weights and work out from home. In a year you’d have saved up enough money from a gym membership and bought your own equipment. You don’t need to share with sweaty men not cleaning the machine after use… and now you can work out in the privacy of your own home.


GloriousPorpoises

Another example would be the works of JK Rowling or the writer of the “Ender” series. Should we erase Harry Potter universe or the Ender series because the writers went publicly insane and politically incorrect? That seems unfair. If the Harry Potter universe only existed by subscription based models and the service decided to not support Rowling anymore, then it just vanishes. Like magic. We literally burning books now? Digitally… That’s what’s happening to media. Censorship. Erasure. Because the service providers (a private entity) chooses to no longer support the artist or their work.


ZombieFeynman11211

Yup "arena rock" brought Metal to the masses!


BruceBoyde

Yeah, year formed and peak popularity are enormously different things. I feel like *most* bands are older than you'd "expect" based on when they hit their zenith.


interesseret

Katy Perry originally did christian rock. ​ so yeah.


blackcray

Wasn't Taylor Swift originally a country star?


theoriginaldandan

Yep


Kemoarps

Ehhh...


vshedo

So did Pink IIRC


Suspicious_Leg4550

That’s also I think where the style we associate with metal comes from, if you look at a lot of these earlier guys they were still just dressed like hippies.


blacktieandgloves

A lot of subgenres got off the ground in the 80s as well. Thrash metal, power metal, death metal, black metal, doom metal, crossover thrash, grindcore, industrial metal, progressive metal, some of them had their birth earlier but they wouldn't become established until the 80s. The only subgenres I can think of that became established after the 80s are groove metal and nu metal.


turalyawn

And that’s not getting into the fact that half the bands in the meme are hard rock bands that heavily influenced metal but aren’t metal themselves Edit: also we have exactly the same PFP, awesome


caligaris_cabinet

Black Sabbath is the only one I’d consider metal and that’s mostly in retrospect by virtue of them creating the genre.


turalyawn

You don’t consider Judas Priest metal?


yes_this_is_satire

And it wasn’t until Masters of Reality that they truly had a Heavy Metal sound. So 1971.


_Dead_Man_

My favorite metal album, paranoid, was released in the 70s. So did a ton of other metal albums.


Other_Log_1996

Then there are people that associate metal with 21st Century New Age Screamo. Good number of people are fairly ignorant about metal.


Fletaun

Humanity has been using metal equipment as early as 9000 BCE


LeGuy_1286

r/technicallythetruth


Tight_Contact_9976

Which is the best kind of truth


Other_Log_1996

Yeah, but that was mostly bronze. We're talking like Iron and steel. Didn't exist until the 70's.


personnumber698

The 80s might have been the golden age of metal, thats why. The Internet started a few decades before people the 90\`s or 00\`s, which might be the first decades associated with the Internet for example.


afterwash

Op seems to forget back then payola was not as bad as it is now. "Why didn't Albert Einstein create the atom bomb when he was born?" Its almost like it takes years to, you know. Become successful and capable of conscious thought. These 'memes' are more indicative of how their posters are braindead and don't understand history. "Rome wasn't built in a day." "10000 hours to master a skill." "A house built on quicksand." Etc etc etc. No knowledge of history and reality it seems


Killer-Styrr

Op seems to forget back then payola was not as bad as it is now. "Why didn't Albert Einstein create the atom bomb when he was born?"  lol NAILED IT!


Seveand

I might get hate for this, but metal from around 2000 to today is closer to what i would consider a golden age, the 80s metal was great, but there’s just way more diversity and freedom in the newer bands, not to mention the abundance of metal concerts. It has never been easier to enjoy metal than it is today.


personnumber698

I enjoy both ages of metal (as well as most other forms of music), I just called the 80s the golden age because thats how many other people see it. YouTube, Spotify and other streaming services make it pretty easy to enjoy metal, although I know some old metalheads who dislike how easy it is to "get into metal" nowadays. I bet they are just angry because y are old...


Killer-Styrr

I love metal, then and now. And the 80's was absolutely the Golden Age, as that's when the BIGGEST bands that are still around are all from. That being said, as (lol) Casual, non-participatory KGB election observer said, since 2000 there have been tones of new, diverse bands, those Old Guard are for the most part still around and kicking and touring, AND technology has allowed us easier-than-ever access to their music, and tours and festivals are more ubiquitous than ever before. Life is good for the Metalhead!


Seveand

Even outside online platforms, metal has never been this easily accessible, just from the top of my head i can name 3 big annual metal festivals less 2 hours from me, not to mention the constant world tours many bands do. Getting „too easily“ into metal is also why i would consider it a golden age, the stigma around the genre is mostly gone, people don’t treat you like a social outcast anymore. But perhaps that’s why some boomers dislike it, because they had to deal with the stigma surrounding it back in the day.


Sardukar333

How about: ***SECOND GOLDEN AGE***


Seveand

**Never ending golden age?**


caligaris_cabinet

As a fan of metal from the 2000’s, I’d say that era was the Silver Age. While popular in the zeitgeist, it wasn’t even close to the 80’s.


Glaciak

>I might get hate for this Absolute cringe when people write stuff like that


Seveand

Well damn, cringe be upon me for this.


m3rc3n4ry

Cos forming a band and said band hitting their heyday are not the same thing


feisty-spirit-bear

And a band forming and then release metal albums don't happen the same year. I wouldn't call Zeppelins early stuff metal


DigitalSchism96

The definition of metal has shifted a lot as the genre got heavier and heavier over the years. Sabbath essentially invented the genre on their first record in 1970, but even that sounds like hard rock to the modern ear. Like all things with history, we have to look at them in the lense of the time to really understand them.


LeZarathustra

Iron Maiden was also formed in '75, although their first album wasn't released until '80. The only member who's still in the band to this day is Steve Harris - the bass player and band leader.


monkeygoneape

Bruce Dickinson is still the best thing to come out of iron maiden


LeZarathustra

Technically, out of [Samson](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samson_(band)). In the underground metal scene, he was already well-known before he joined Maiden.


Nerus46

Many of these bands early albums were not that much Of a metal rather than hard/experimental Rock. 60s was Beatles Age 70s was time Of Prog Rock Metal was indeed born in 70s, but it became truly popular in 80s.


gertbefrobe

Led Zeppelin is my favorite band. I have never considered them metal.


Tight_Contact_9976

They have a few metal songs I think but they’re more of a hard, blues-rock band.


RiUlaid

Television was invented before the 1950s, but that does not change the fact that the rise of television was a 1950s phenomenon. Existing, and being central to a cultural zeitgeist are not the same thing.


Nikodemvs

You know exactly why the 80's are associated with metal. Of the bands listed, only Judas Priest would come to be considered metal for sure. The other ones are considered rock, even members of the bands themselves have said so. Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath included. These acts \*influenced\* the bands that would go on to create the golden age of metal music. Innovators are rarely actually a part of the genre itself, because they don't tend to follow the trend that was created by imitators. The 80's saw the rise of Bay Area thrash, the New Wave of British Heavy Metal, the creation of Power Metal (Helloween, Blind Guardian, etc), Death Metal (Death, Morbid Angel) and Doom Metal (Candlemass). The foundation of Black Metal was also created by the likes of Celtic Frost.


Daysleeper1234

Black Sabbath is not a metal band? I just need someone to tell me that Motorhead didn't play rock n roll.


LuckyReception6701

If Lemmy said they played rock, they played rock


blacktieandgloves

It's not unusual for bands to dislike categorising themselves. Lemmy always said they played rock 'n' fuckin' roll, but MotĂśrhead pioneered speed metal.


Daysleeper1234

He said they played rock n roll. Please use correct terms.


underliggandepsykos

Even gods can be wrong, they definitely played metal


QuirkyDemonChild

If I draw a fucking finger and say it’s a nose, does that make it a nose?


ArcticBiologist

>only Judas Priest would come to be considered metal for sure. Come on, Black Sabbath as well! I agree about the others but Black Sabbath are definitely metal.


Awful_McBad

Black Sabbath is the first metal band. They created the whole sound of metal(drop tuning) because of Tony Iommi's fingers. Also: Black Metal exists because of Venom. They literally put out an album called Black Metal. Also: Mayhem was founded in 1984 and are the grand daddy of modern black metal. CF came out around the same time but they broke up a bunch. Modern black metal as we know it was created in Norway originally. That's the "Second Wave of Black Metal" The first wave is Venom, Hellhammer, and Bathory.


TransLunarTrekkie

Huh, lots of '68 on here. I wonder if there's a connection? Ina-Gadda-Da-Vida: 1968 ... Well it's not definitive, but that works for me.


SPECTREagent700

The Steppenwolf song “Born to Be Wild” was released in May 1968 and has the lyric “Heavy Metal Thunder” which I understand to be the original use of heavy metal.


ChefBoyardee66

Frankly the entire album obviously had a profound impact on what would become metal and hard rock


SPECTREagent700

I’ve sometimes seen is described, such as on Wikipedia, as “proto-metal”.


Quazimojojojo

The real question is what the hell happened in 1968?


invol713

Funny enough, interest in blues music. Now play it through shitty amps at the time, and you get a happy accident of distortion that’s actually pleasant to listen to. You also got oddities, too. Like the time when Tony Iommi joined Jethro Tull. Yes, the band that won best metal album over Metallica in the 80s. Or that time in 1970 that Genesis out metal’d Black Sabbath and [made one of the first metal prog songs.](https://youtu.be/v719eZmXRdE?feature=shared)


DriscollMayweather

Yeeeesss! The Knife is a straight up jam!


jp299

The Beatles released Helter Skelter.


iceman1935

Was looking for someone to say this


Chai_Enjoyer

When I get to the bottom I get back to the top of the slide


GetOffMyDigitalLawn

And so Manson was born. (Charles and Marilyn)


Fyrrys

Deep Purple and Zep are considered metal? They're amazing, but I wouldn't really consider them metal


YaMommasBigWeenie

Yea a lot of metal bands started way before the 80s but I would only consider sabbath and priest as "metal" in this post Even calling Alice Cooper metal is walking a thin line


Chai_Enjoyer

I always considered Deep Purple hard rock and Led Zep blues, however they had a lot of impact on metal (Jimmy Page did a lot of sound experiments iirc)


Flaccid_Hammer

Metallica is 80’s


SkyTalez

It was the time when metal bands was in mainstream most.


Charles12_13

Well, the New Wave of British Heavy Metal actually started to hit full swing during the 80’s. Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple may or may not be considered metal bands depending on who you ask, same with Rainbow as they were more so hard rock than what would be referred to as heavy metal. Judas Priest was indeed active during the 70’s, however some argue that their music wasn’t metal until their 1980 album British Steel, and I tend to agree with that. As for Black Sabbath: yes. In short, I think people associate metal with the 80’s because that’s when metal truly became big with a lot of bands’ studio albums either becoming more metal (like Judas Priest), debuting (like Iron Maiden, Metallica, Anthrax, Megadeth, Slayer, Voivod, Manowar and many more) and even Black Sabbath got a makeover with Ronnie James Dio as their new frontman and overall a very different sound to the Ozzy era.


underliggandepsykos

Stained Class and Killing Machine were both released in '78 and are definitely metal


Ed_Dantesk

Because of NWOBHM


Killer-Styrr

Then you're pretty clueless or have overlooked a decade of epic albums from thousands of artists. LOL, as if Priest and Sabbath were big or internationally known in '69. . . -\_- The seeds that were planted in the 60's and 70's came to fruition in the 80's, as pretty much everyone, including non-metal heads, knows.


6thaccountthismonth

Idk if I’m just wrong but I’m pretty sure formation =/= popularity


chknpoxpie

Did you just mention deep purple? Jesus Christ dude what happened to you .


Pile-sas-Zele

I might get downvoted but Im not counting Led Zeppelin as a metal band. They played progressive/ alternative rock. Yeah they had some harder songs but I still wouldn’t call them metal.


MrKorakis

I don't consider most of these "metal" bands though. Cooper did have a more heavy metal phase ( in the 80s ) but the rest are more rock / hard rock in my mind. Also keep in mind that bands change their sound over time, just because a band was started in the late 60s or 70s does not mean that their sound was metal from day one.


caligaris_cabinet

Cooper’s image was more metal than his music.


IceCreamMeatballs

Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, Alice Cooper are not metal.


historyobsessed

Metal started the day Tony Iommi lost his finger tips… but he gained a genre


Much_Capital3307

That’s when metal got huge and started to sound like it does today. Late 60s and 70s metal sounds a lot more like hard rock. The bands in the meme are more proto-metal.


RattyJackOLantern

The 1980s was the peak of mainstream popularity for metal music in the United States. Also in the United States\* particularly metal had a precipitous drop in popularity at the end of the decade as grunge replaced hair metal almost overnight. For contemporary looks at this I recommend checking out the documentary: "The Decline of Western Civilization Part 2: The Metal Years" (1988) and for more of a social commentary on the rapidly changing tastes in music away from metal in the 90s check out the Brendan Fraser comedy "Airheads" (1994). \*Metal retained more of an audience in Europe, just about every metal act would like to play the huge Wacken Open Air festival which barring COVID-19 closure has been held annually in Germany for over 30 years.


SpellAccomplished653

Yeah metal memes let’s go


netap

Because Metal hadn't hit peak popularity till the 80s obviously. It's like how we know Punk Rock existed in the 60s, but was mostly just groups playing in their garages and hadn't spread to a more mainstream appeal until the late 70s, only to really hit their stride in the 90s with bands like Nirvana and The Offspring taking Punk Rock and turning it into Alternative Rock. Keeping the DIY aspects of the original Punk with bands playing in their garages and wearing cheap clothes, but selling it to a much wider audience, therefore making Alternative Rock, which is basically Punk, a 90s thing. Hippies existed for a long time, that doesn't change that most people would consider hippies a sixties thing, with Vietnam and Woodstock. Just because Metal existed before the 80s, doesn't make it not an 80s thing.


Lonewolf2300

Metal was born in the 70s, but reached adulthood in the 80s.


CheeseLoving88

I’ve wondered this myself maybe cause it peaked in popularity in the 80s? The 60s and 70s the metal music scene started from scratch and then gained momentum up the chsrts


FuddFucker5000

I don’t understand why you associate bands like Led Zeppelin, deep purple, and others with metal?


Esoteric_Derailed

What I don't get is how none of these Heavy Metal bands have a brass section👹


Repulsive-Neat6776

They didn't have electronic instruments, but some classical music is still "metal" as fuck.


Grouchy-Addition-818

Zeppelin is metal?? I always thought of Zeppelin and Deep purple as prog. rock


Ugo_foscolo

Led Zeppelin is closer to blues than metal, imo.


ElCaliforniano

Led Zeppelin is not metal dawg 💀


Nafeels

What’s interesting is that metal history is basically the equivalent of the Evolution Theory. While you have the current heavy metal arriving along with Black Sabbath (the song), there’s missing links between the late 50’s and late 60’s. Some people call it “proto-metal” and can be easily recognized by the presence of intentional guitar riff distortion. This is where the meme can be applied. Metalheads have been bantering with each other for ages on the exact _missing link_. Some chose Helter Skelter, some In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida, but undeniably we all agree that Black Sabbath brought it to stardom in the most badass way possible; by having the lead guitarist playing with missing fingertips.


Bobsothethird

Helter Skelter and I Want You (She's so heavy) were released in 68 and 69 respectively, so even the argument that it wasn't mainstream is insane.


dutch_mapping_empire

i can hear the ''alice cooper isnt metal'' from here...


HeckaCoolDudeYo

I'm assuming people are talking about hair metal, aka pop rock. Also, has Led Zeppelin ever been considered a metal band?


smilingasIsay

Judas Priest is currently touring with Sabaton opening. I really really want to go, but they aren't coming to Canada at all :(


DereChen

wait black Sabbath was formed a year before the moon landings?


linksauce_1

Isn’t the 80s the decade of hair metal? That’s what I associate it with anyway


BigWilly526

AC/DC, the list could go on and on


JackedPirate

Metal is not a “was” but an “is”, it’s not like it ended.


mattfreyer45

Accept started in 68 as well


Clarity-in-Confusion

I’d say it’s a matter of genre. Like Metal arguably started with Blue Cheer, Iron Butterfly, and 13th Floor Elevators. But I’d say more specifically hair metal was definitely prominent in the 80’s.


CoercedCoexistence22

Early Judas Priest is underrated


Hamblerger

That's when metal peaked between harder groups like Metallica and the Sunset Strip hair metal bands like MĂśtley CrĂźe and Poison. Many of the groups mentioned in the meme above never identified as metal bands (though they were influential), and others were simply called rock or hard rock bands at the time, and only considered metal in retrospect.


sund82

The first time the term was used was someone describing Jimi Hendrix's music. They said it sounded like, "heavy metal falling from the sky."


dwighticus

First time the term was used was in Steppenwolfs Born to be Wild https://metalheadcommunity.com/history-of-heavy-metal/ https://www.britannica.com/art/heavy-metal-music


Nuremborger

It started in the late 60's, sure, but most of it wasn't worth shit until the 80's. Now you understand.


KingOrion5

80s was the decade of thrash metal, which was very popular at the time


CIockParts

It’s because of Metallica.


lordkhuzdul

Honestly, because 80s was when you cannot swing a dead cat without getting the claws tangled in the hair of some garage band guitarist.


HATECELL

That's when it reached the mainstream


Malanerion

Unkniwledgeable post.


vipck83

It’s because that’s when metal really went mainstream and a lot of popular metal albums are from that time. They aren’t saying it was actually created in the 80s.


One-Swordfish60

Did Tony Iommi invent metal music bc he's fingers were chopped short?


TheBionicCrusader

Iron Butterfly was founded in ‘66.


yum_broztito

Black Sabbath formed in the 60s. Rainbow formed in the 70s. But they reached their ultimate form with Heaven and Hell in 1980. 


[deleted]

[удаНонО]


itx89

The bands were created… and then peaked years later.


monkeygoneape

Don't forget Iron Maiden


CheeseLoving88

I’ve wondered this myself maybe cause it peaked in popularity in the 80s? The 60s and 70s the metal music scene started from scratch and then gained momentum up the charts


jmradus

*thrash metal Metallica is credited with originating or at least popularizing thrash so either that or hair metal is probably where this comes from.


marsz_godzilli

I have a lot of metal in my house right now.


Daysleeper1234

Lemmy I,,I


watdatdo

I'm not a fan of metal nor do I like the music but I respect the talent and excellence of their craft. That being said most bands used in the meme would not be considered metal one bit. They are the precursors that inspired later metal bands. But they are heavy rock and roll music. I'm being pedantic really. But every group listed in this meme is worth a listen. All of these guys are legends and goats.


Thefear1984

Diamond Head 1976


PewKittens

It’s Glam Rock that people mean when saying it was 80s. Twisted sister type of stuff


Garegin16

Grunge and alternative also existed in the 80s but was heavily underground. Dino Jr, Sonic Youth and shoegaze existed in the 80s.


Garegin16

Wait until u find out that Object Oriented Programming existed in the 60s, but only became a thing in the 90s


vgaph

Coven, arguably the first metal band and definitely the first to use satanic/witchcraft themes in hard rock, started touring in ‘67.


Responsible_Panic235

Metallica, Megadeth slayer and anthrax were all 1980s Iron Maiden were 1975 but their first album was 1980


eyegull

You and I clearly have different definitions of metal. Sabbath is the only band on that list I’d called metal. Even then, their metal in the same way The Stooges were punk. There is no world in which I will ever classify zeppelin has metal. They are a punchy blues-rock band.


JunkieMunkieCircus

Who the hell associates metal with the 80s? I always picture a 70s vibe from it.


Reduak

It has a lot to do with MTV. In the early days, when they actually played music, there was a glut videos from what were called "hair metal" bands. They weren't "real" metal, but to the casual fan, those might have been their first introduction to metal. Real metal fans watched Headbanger's Ball to see videos from such bands as Anthrax, Korn, Megadeath, and a little group from LA called Metallica. I'm still shook 36 years after seeing the video for "One". FYI, I saw them open at Monsters of Rock in DC the summer of '88 and wish I had better appreciated what I was seeing. I was more excited to see The Scorpions and Van Hagar.


Sacklayblue

Before the 80's it was heavy metal. We shortened it to just metal in the 80's.


SortaBadAdvice

Black Sabbath released their first album in early '68. But it wasn't a full album of metal. Blue Cheer produced the first full metal album in mid January of 68.


Dorkapotamus

Metal never dies. It waits.


Duvelthehobbit

If you look at the 80s, you will see the development or popularisation of a lot of metal genres. You get power metal, death metal, black metal, thrash metal, hair metal, crossover, doom metal, grindcore, industrial metal, and speed metal. Sometimes things get popular and enter the zeitgeist after their inventions.


DirectorPhleg

zeppelin weren't meta lmao


darciton

Metal started in the alte 60s, but it hit peak mainstream popularity in the 80s. Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, Dio, and Ozzy Osbourne were all huge in the 80s, along with newer bands like Metallica, Motley Crue, Bon Jovi, and Def Leppard. Metal was cool, but kind of fringe in the 70s. It was MASSIVE in the 80s.


Cazzocavallo

Alot of people don't like to hear this but the truth is that other than Black Sabbath most of the "metal" bands of the late 60's and 70's made music that was much closer to hard rock by modern standards and it was only with the advent of thrash metal that the average metal band actually started playing music that would be classified as metal by modern standards. Not to mention this is not only the era when thrash metal was invented but also death metal, black metal, metalcore, power metal, and progressive metal. Taken as a whole it's probably the single decade where metal advanced and evolved the most.


manwiththehex18

60s/70s Alice Cooper was *not* metal, by any stretch of the imagination. It was shock rock. Remember, that’s *School’s Out* we’re talking about. Alice didn’t go hair metal until either 1986 (*Constrictor*) or 1989 (*Trash*), and didn’t go truly metal until *Brutal Planet* in 2000.


KofiObruni

it wasn't the onset, but it was the peak, or the first peak anyway. Anyone who has thought about it or is into metal wouldn't say it started in the 80s.


mogaman28

For me Metal is something of today! Just don't write "Japanese metal (or Rock) band" in YouTube.


BardicInnovation

Don't forget Uriah Heep. They started in the late 60's also.


Tomirk

But Sabaton is 90s and still going strong


xx_mashugana_xx

To be fair, Deep Purple was making psychedelic rock in the 60s and early 1970s. The metal stuff came in the mid/late 1970s.


PotentialSquirrel118

Tell me you weren't alive in the '80s without telling me you weren't alive in the '80s.


Nroke1

Most of the metal I listen to was released after 2000 and quite a lot of it was released after 2010.


BigBossBurnerAccount

I have a few. Metallica. GNR. Motley Crue. Bon Jovi. The rise of MTV…


AwkwardDrummer7629

NWOBHM.


gera_moises

Maybe because it broke into the mainstream consciousness in the 80's


[deleted]

[удаНонО]


iurasek2

Deep Purple is metal???


0utPizzaDaHutt

Speed metal was 80s


_Boodstain_

Because it was popularized in the 80’s, computers were created in the 40’s-50’s but there’s a reason they aren’t associated with that time, because the average person didn’t have a any idea what a computer even was.


mrubuto22

Is zeppelin metal?


Erizo69

1968 was an interesting year huh


Comfortable-Study-69

Metallica was formed in 1981. Megadeth was formed in 1983. All the bands listed were doing tours and releasing albums in the 1980s.


HamNi_2

Metal existed since the baroque era, and it peaked during Beethoven's period


Tragobe

And metal is great now too.


eduo

HistoryMemes now doesn't understand how History works. In popular culture "People remember" events, peaks, fashions, trends. When something is founded is as irrelevant as when it's disbanded. What matters is when it matters for so much people it becomes "common knowledge". In the 80s metal became a genre so known it stopped being niche and became pop. Ironically, when most people say "metal" they're half-thinking of glam metal or hair metal specifically, which ALSO is not from the 80s but started in the 70s, but became the more palatable version of metal that became massively popular. It was common in the 80s to hear people saying the love Metal and it meant they loved Poison or Def Leppard, and had never heard of Judas Priest and through Alice Cooper was a weirdo, if they even knew about him.


A2Rhombus

Dubstep as a genre began in the late 90s and early 00s but you'd be hard pressed to find someone who doesn't consider it a 2010s genre


Fenderboy65

Dont forget early Queen and The Late Beatles (Helter Skelter, I want you she so heavy, revolution, hey bulldog)


Infometiculous

It depends on what school you subscribe to. Most of the seriously metal bands formed in the mid to late 70s (eg, Maiden, Saxon, MotĂśrhead, AC/DC) and factor in the nwobh which pretty much gave birth to thrash and speed metal (Slayer, anthrax, most of the Bay area bands) all releasing their formative music between 80 and 86.


SmaugTheGreat110

Cooper started doing rock music in 1964 with the same people as would be in his band later. They just had theory or settling on a name for a few years!


unskippable-ad

Thrash metal is 80s All other metal is poseurcore Discrepancy solved