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Bang Your Head : The Rise and Fall of Heavy Metal - DAVID Konow

Bang Your Head

The Rise and Fall of Heavy Metal

By: DAVID Konow

Paperback | 12 November 2002 | Edition Number 1

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“Bang your head! Metal Health’ll drive you mad!”
— Quiet Riot

Like an episode of VH1’s Behind the Music on steroids, Bang Your Head is an epic history of every band and every performer that has proudly worn the Heavy Metal badge. Whether headbanging is your guilty pleasure or you firmly believe that this much-maligned genre has never received the respect it deserves, Bang Your Head is a must-read that pays homage to a music that’s impossible to ignore, especially when being blasted through a sixteen-inch woofer.

Charting the genesis of early metal with bands like Black Sabbath and Iron Maiden; the rise of metal to the top of the Billboard charts and heavy MTV rotation featuring the likes of Def Leppard and Metallica; hitting its critical peak with bands like Guns N’ Roses; disgrace during the “hair metal” ’80s; and a demise fueled by the explosion of the Seattle grunge scene and the “alternative” revolution, Bang Your Head is as funny as it is informative and proves once and for all that there is more to metal than sin, sex, and spandex.

To write this exhaustive history, David Konow spent three years interviewing the bands, wives, girlfriends, ex-wives, groupies, managers, record company execs, and anyone who was or is a part of the metal scene, including many of the band guys often better known for their escapades and bad behavior than for their musicianship. Nothing is left unsaid in this jaw-dropping, funny, and entertaining chronicle of power ballads, outrageous outfits, big hair, bigger egos, and testosterone-drenched debauchery.
Industry Reviews
Appealing history of the genre that offended critics, moved millions of units, and thrilled adolescents of all ages. Konow's debut follows a straightforward thesis: heavy metal maintained enormous and under-acknowledged worldwide popularity from the 1970s through approximately 1992, when many factors, particularly the Seattle "alternative" explosion, consigned most bands to the cut-out bin. He identifies metal's crucial elements-multi-guitar power chords, energized vocals, rebellious occult trappings, elaborate stage productions-and traces their almost accidental coalescence during the '70s as pioneers like Led Zeppelin, Alice Cooper, KISS, and Queen toured constantly. By the decade's end, economic malaise compelled a young generation to hurry into bands, resulting in the New Wave of British Heavy Metal: Iron Maiden, Def Leppard, and Judas Priest. In turn, these groups inspired an explosion in American "underground metal," most prominently Metallica, while pop-metal acts like Bon Jovi and the infinitely sleazier (hence authentic-seeming) Guns N' Roses dominated record sales in the late '80s. A fan first and critic second, Konow discusses the laughable (W.A.S.P., Motley Crue, Poison) and the venerable (Black Sabbath, Motorhead, Slayer, AC/DC) with the same lucid enthusiasm. He attributes metal's commercial dominance to grassroots fan loyalty, MTV's marketing savvy, and major labels' deep pockets, which enabled the profligate "hair bands" to consume huge sums while recording and touring. The ludicrous side of metal, immortalized in the seminal "mockumentary" This Is Spinal Tap, emerges in numerous hilarious anecdotes concerning the awesome egotism of figures like Axl Rose or David Lee Roth and the myopia of bands like Dokken or Quiet Riot, which expected to remain popular forever. Konow's discussion of metal's commercial decline offers shrewd analysis of cultural shifts: MTV and major labels happily dropped the metal bands once profitability waned, while embittered musicians blamed fair-weather fans and alternative-rock "nerds" rather than examining their own sordid histories (herein documented) of misogyny, thuggishness, substance abuse, and uninspired recordings. Even non-headbangers may enjoy this engaging account of an improbable musical watershed. (Kirkus Reviews)

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