Doom Metal
Doom metal is a form of heavy metal music that emerged as a recognized sub-genre during the first half of the 1980s. Generally, doom metal features very slow tempos, low-tuned guitars and a much "denser" or "heavier" sound than other metal genres. Both the music and the lyrics intend to evoke a sense of dread or impending doom, and often an atmosphere of despair.
Musically, doom metal is strongly influenced by the early work of Black Sabbath. A number of their early songs, such as "Black Sabbath" and "Into the Void" are considered embryonic or prototypical doom metal songs. Their third album, Master of Reality (released in 1971), features Tony Iommi's guitar and Geezer Butler's bass tuned down to C# for heavier riffing and reduced string tension for Iommi's previously injured fingers.
Artykuły DOOM METAL
Doomain
Memory Garden
The Inside Room
40 Watt Sun
The Hundredth Name
Demon Lung
El Mundo Frio
Corrupted (JAP)
Concrete Sustain
Batillus
The Veneration of Serpents
Gallow God
Watching from a Distance
Warning (UK)
Cauldron of the Wild
Witch Mountain
Nightfall
Candlemass
Ritual of the Banished
Dea Marica
Epicus Doomicus Metallicus
Candlemass
Septem Sermones
Inferno (XII)
Into the Light
The Prophecy (UK)
Passio et mors...
Gallileous
The Rough Path of Nihilism
Sorrows Path