| Waking The Cadaver – Raped, Pillaged And Gutted Lyrics | 17 years ago |
| Nothin' like blazin' a dutch after you kill somebody, right? Hahah. This band gets better everytime I see them live, one of my favorite songs by them right here. | |
| Waking The Cadaver – Chased Through The Woods By A Rapist Lyrics | 17 years ago |
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It's obvious 90% of the people commenting here have no clue as to what they speak. It's as if you've trained your anus to talk for you. One thing I don't get; why anyone who dislikes the song SO much, would go through the trouble typing out anything more than *this song sucks*... seems a bit like overkill (great band) to me. You don't like it, don't listen. And don't comment their lyrics so people end up listening to the band EVEN MORE to figure out what all the fuss was about. Good job, geniuses! Whatever genre one might call this band, I think the label *slammin' gore groove* that the band uses fits fine. Grindcore was not the 1st *core*. The only reason you can even use core to describe any genre of music is because of the term *hardcore punk*, derived in the late 70s and early 80s. I'm assuming before most of you were born. Punk (and to a lesser extent, hardcore) being as popular as it was would only be around for a few years before fans would eventually take to incorporating the style/sounds of hardcore/punk into their own metal bands. Or metal heads adding fast beat punk/hardcore to their metal songs. Thus, the term crossover is born. Some popular bands of the time (mid/late 80s) who released albums to be labeled as crossover were Agnostic Front & Corrosion of Conformity. (Both bands still exist today) Crossover continued to be the oft used term to describe a wide array of bands or styles thank couldn't otherwise simply be described as rock, punk, hardcore, metal etc. In the early to mid 90s however, you saw the rise of many a heavy music band tired (or inspired) by the mega~popular grunge music of the era thusly creating 2 new popular titles to which one would describe bands/albums of the time: metalcore & numetal. Bands continuously fusing and incorporating all these styles and genres, so often to the point that people (artists themselves, fans, critics) create their own names on the spot to articulate a point. when it comes down to it, I love this band. they are great live. Talent doesn't equate to greatness. (And believe me, it takes talent to play as fast as this band does, talent to sing like that, talent to play blast beats like that, talent to pick notes that fast and have those type of progressions in the songs) The most popular song in the ENTIRE world (happy birthday. No matter what language it's sung in; it's always in the same key and the same time) is simple as fuck. If it sounds good to you, listen to it. |
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| Waking The Cadaver – Chased Through The Woods By A Rapist Lyrics | 17 years ago |
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It's obvious 90% of the people commenting here have no clue as to what they speak. It's as if you've trained your anus to talk for you. One thing I don't get; why anyone who dislikes the song SO much, would go through the trouble typing out anything more than *this song sucks*... seems a bit like overkill (great band) to me. You don't like it, don't listen. And don't comment their lyrics so people end up listening to the band EVEN MORE to figure out what all the fuss was about. Good job, geniuses! Whatever genre one might call this band, I think the label *slammin' gore groove* that the band uses fits fine. Grindcore was not the 1st *core*. The only reason you can even use core to describe any genre of music is because of the term *hardcore punk*, derived in the late 70s and early 80s. I'm assuming before most of you were born. Punk (and to a lesser extent, hardcore) being as popular as it was would only be around for a few years before fans would eventually take to incorporating the style/sounds of hardcore/punk into their own metal bands. Or metal heads adding fast beat punk/hardcore to their metal songs. Thus, the term crossover is born. Some popular bands of the time (mid/late 80s) who released albums to be labeled as crossover were Agnostic Front & Corrosion of Conformity. (Both bands still exist today) Crossover continued to be the oft used term to describe a wide array of bands or styles thank couldn't otherwise simply be described as rock, punk, hardcore, metal etc. In the early to mid 90s however, you saw the rise of many a heavy music band tired (or inspired) by the mega~popular grunge music of the era thusly creating 2 new popular titles to which one would describe bands/albums of the time: metalcore & numetal. Bands continuously fusing and incorporating all these styles and genres, so often to the point that people (artists themselves, fans, critics) create their own names on the spot to articulate a point. when it comes down to it, I love this band. they are great live. Talent doesn't equate to greatness. (And believe me, it takes talent to play as fast as this band does, talent to sing like that, talent to play blast beats like that, talent to pick notes that fast and have those type of progressions in the songs) The most popular song in the ENTIRE world (happy birthday. No matter what language it's sung in; it's always in the same key and the same time) is simple as fuck. If it sounds good to you, listen to it. |
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