1)中世纪作为重金属的身份标记:以西班牙为例

Amaranta Saguar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

中世纪对重金属音乐并不陌生。它实际上是其最成功的两个子类型,力量金属和异教金属的一个突出特征,它在黑色金属和古典重金属乐队的美学和歌词中反复出现。战士、骑士、巫师、吟游诗人,以及整个当代流行的中世纪小说、电视剧和电影,与挪威、盎格鲁-撒克逊,有时还有普通的日耳曼大陆神话、民谣、史诗、十字军、维京人,以及许多其他被认为更有历史意义的话题交替出现。我不会在这里评论中世纪对重金属的迷恋背后的原因。对史诗主义的品味与欢庆的男子气概紧密相连,对更简单、更高贵、更自由、更充实的生活方式的渴望,或者仅仅是对黑暗时代神话中最黑暗方面的病态兴趣,这些都是最可能的来源,尽管更有可能的是,重金属中世纪主义最终演变成了一种修辞手段,至少在某些子流派中是这样。然而,这些理由都不能解释当今重金属中重现中世纪风格的明显冲动。至少从20世纪最后十年开始,乐队已经开始摆脱过去那种普通的、流行文化的中世纪主义,开始维护历史的真实性。几周前,西蒙·特拉福德(Simon Trafford)在伦敦的一次会议上暗示,历史的真实性不一定与实际的历史准确性有任何关系。此外,特别是在外围地区,即非英美金属乐队中,这种历史化的趋势也表现为一种自然化的趋势,这可以从对外国中世纪主题的排斥、对国家和地区主题的支持中得到证明
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
1) The Middle Ages as identity marker in heavy metal: the Spanish case
Medievalism is not alien to heavy metal music. It is actually a prominent feature of two of its most successful subgenres, power metal and pagan metal, and it recurs in the aesthetics and the lyrics of black metal and, characteristically, classical heavy metal bands. Warriors, knights, sorcerers, minstrels, and the whole cast of contemporary popular medievalising fiction, TV-series and cinema alternate with Norse, Anglo-Saxon and, sometimes, plain continental Germanic mythology, ballads, epic poetry, Crusaders, Vikings, and many other supposedly more historical topics. I will not be commenting here on the reasons behind this fascination of heavy metal for the Middle Ages. A taste for epicism tightly bound to celebratory masculinity, a longing for a simpler, nobler or freer, and more fulfilling lifestyle, or simply a morbid interest in the darkest aspects of the Dark Ages myth are frequently cited as the most likely sources, although it is even more likely that heavy metal medievalism has ended up evolving into a mere rhetorical device, at least in some subgenres. However, none of these reasons explains the apparent urge to reappropriate the Middle Ages that can be felt in heavy metal nowadays. At least since the last decade of the twentieth century, bands have started to move away from the generic, pop-culture medievalism of the old days, and to vindicate historical authenticity, which, how Simon Trafford implied at a conference in London some weeks ago, does not necessarily have anything to do with actual historical accuracy. Moreover, particularly among peripheral, that is, non-AngloAmerican metal bands, this historicising tendency also manifests as a naturalising one, evidenced by the rejection of foreign medieval topics in favour of national, regional
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