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22 November 2010

Bleh

Hi. I'm seriously bored.
So I'm creating my own little survey thing.
And btw? I'm gonna keep talking about this subject until someone strangles me. :)
And remember - all of this is a matter of opinion. :)

Demon Hunter - eponymous album

Favorite Track: Through the Black
Favorite "Ballad:" The Gauntlet
Most Thought-Provoking Lyric: "Anything you hate/Will be the root of everything you breathe." - Turn Your Back and Run.
Best Track Music: Screams of the Undead
Best Track Lyrics: Infected

Summer of Darkness

Favorite Track: The Latest and Last
Favorite "Ballad:" The only one - Heartstrings
Most Thought-Provoking Lyric: "We'll take our voices/With our hands/We'll make like knives/We'll make demands." - Not Ready to Die
Best Track Music: Annihilate the Corrupt
Best Track Lyrics: Heartstrings

The Triptych

Favorite Track: Undying
Favorite "Ballad:" One Thousand Apologies
Most Thought-Provoking Lyric: "So lost in your addiction/The solemn comfort of your grave/(If you) close your eyes,/The light can't take it away." - Not I
Best Track Music: Fire to My Soul
Best Track Lyrics: The Soldier's Song

Storm the Gates of Hell

Favorite Track: No Reason to Exist
Favorite "Ballad:" Thorns
Most Thought-Provoking Lyric: "This war is a page unwritten/But we know how it ends." - Fiction Kingdom
Best Track Music: Sixteen
Best Track Lyrics: A Thread of Light, tied with Grand Finale

The World is a Thorn

Favorite Track: Lifewar
Favorite "Ballad:" Blood in the Tears
Most Thought-Provoking Lyric: "Sons and Daughters/Pray for the rain,/May it redeem their eyes." - Shallow Water
Best Track Music: Just Breathe
Best Track Lyrics: Desire the Pain

--

See? :)
Boredom at its finest.
Speaking of DH, though...


Enjoy. :)

CZYA, yo.

15 November 2010

Utopia Training

Okay. I'm really bored so I'm gonna blog about more DH stuffs. Feel free to strangle me - it's all I can think of to talk about. No, I ain't kiddin'.

I had a four day weekend last weekend. Thursday was, of course, Veteran's Day (AKA, the anniversary of the signing of the World War I armistice). Friday... eh, long story. And of course, the normal weekend.
During these four days of utter bliss and boredom, I have learned more things about DH than I think I ever need to know... Yes. I'm well on my way, if I wasn't already, to becoming a hardcore Hunter. :)

Because of my nosiness, I have now learned about, among a whole buttload of other things, Invisible Creature - that it's what the Clark brothers do for a living and they're really, really good at art. I shall now show examples - some that are slightly relevant to you. :)


Yes, behold - Falling Up's Fangs! and Captiva. Yes, they did both covers. :)



Same with Hawk Nelson. Though Hawk Nelson Is My Friend looks like something they create normally... if you could ever call the Clark brothers normal.

Okay, I really don't know if they created this cover (they may have...), but look hard at the guy being "brought up" - it's supposedly the Don side of the Brothers Clark. But I'll leave it up to you to decide. ;)

OKAY - nextly, I learned more about Training for Utopia... Ryan and Don's first-ish band.

Is that Ryan in a cowboy hat? Yes it is.
The man had hair on his head in the nineties... it's a little terrifying, actually. But he's still Ryan. Screaming the way he did on the first DH album (less gritty), but still Ryan underneath. :)

I shall now leave you with an attempt to scar you using a Training for Utopia video. :)



CZYA, yo. :)

12 November 2010

PIZZA: IT'S EXTREME.

06 November 2010

Deep Thoughts...

Okay. Lettuce slow down for a moment, and ponder...

... what else? Demon Hunter.

Now, some people - my own mother is guilty of this and it was enough to place small doubt in me briefly - seem to jump to the conclusion that DH is the exact opposite of what they are - a light brightly shining in the darkness.
There are three immediate reasons I see for this:

1 - their genre. Come on, don't tell me you don't know anyone whom has a leery attitude when it comes to the metal genre of music. Same story with screaming in music.
2 - their logo/appearance. I personally love their logo - a demon head with a clear bullet wound in its forehead - because it's so original and different; plus, it is both subtle and extremely profound in the Christian sense. Some would assert, however that both that, and the fact that at least three out of five of the guys have their bodies quite tatted up (if you will) would obviously equal evil. Hmph.
And lastly,
3 - some of the lyrics. Listening to a certain line of quite a few of their songs out of context can often lead to misunderstandings. I see/hear that quite often in the songs themselves, too.

Heck, even they themselves have released a song dealing with authority figures that would go beyond openly condoning the music by outright trying to block kids (and by kids, I mostly mean teens) from exposure to such music. I show to you the second verse to said song, "A Thread of Light:"


See how bluntly they put the truth? Does that not strike you as refreshing? ;)
The whole song is extremely blunt and to the point. They even outright state the purpose of the band in the first verse.

Now granted, quite a few of they lyrics chosen are quite morbid in nature. Examples include:
- The chorus of "Thorns."
- "Everything Was White." All of it. (... no pun intended)
- The chorus and post-chorus (the only sung part) of "Our Faces Fall Apart."
- Break through the ribcage/And tear the heart out/Of everyone you love!
- Everything but the chorus and outro of "Infected."
- The whole meaning of "Carry Me Down."
And that's just to name a few.

At the same time, there are positive and strong lyrics as well. More examples:
- As demonstrated above, "A Thread of Light."
- The chorus of "Less Than Nothing."
- "Undying" is a good one, extremely positive and passionate.
- The bridge of "Grand Finale." So very, very beautiful and true.
- The rapid-fire prechorus of "A Broken Upper Hand." Yeah, boy!
Again, just to name a few.

Now, most of this can be seen as a matter of opinion. It is all about perspective, and God, of course.
I leave you with this - a headscratcher as Ryan explains to us "A Thread of Light:"

"[Kids] can either be defined by worldly music, or by positive, Christ-centered music. Although some parents may hear our music and jump to the conclusion that we must condone evil because we have a heavy sound and the vocals can seem very abrasive, what they don’t know is that their kids dig deeper than that. Kids don’t stop at the appearance. They get into the music in a way that their parents could never imagine them doing. They learn about the band, meticulously read the lyrics, and they look to get something out of it. At an impressionable age, they may very well take to heart whatever it is they’re being told in a song. What we offer them is a Christian perspective. It’s just wrapped in a package that looks a little more aggressive than what you might be used to seeing in Christian music. And if you ask why we would appear that way, I would ask why your child is interested in listening to us. This kind of music can truly be a weapon against the spiritual warfare that kids face these days. I don’t want to knock other Christian artists, because they all have their place, but if we were speaking metaphorically, what kind of weapon would you call contemporary Christian pop, and what kind of weapon would you call Christian heavy metal?"

What do y'all think?

CZYA, yo.