Overview
Objectives
- Identify the similarities and differences between hard rock and heavy metal
- Identify the defining characteristics of heavy metal music
- Examine a number of early heavy metal groups and explain why they and their music were significant to the development of heavy metal
Conclusion
Heavy metal is an outgrowth of the hard rock genre. Artists such as Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple were prominent hard rock groups who are also regarded as major influences on the development of heavy metal. In the United Kingdom, Black Sabbath dominated the early heavy metal scene with its gothic themes, macabre riffs, and heavy sound. In the United States, Alice Cooper—both as a band and as a soloist—was one of the first popular heavy metal acts, horrifying and fascinating audiences with grotesque props, outrageous costumes, and violent theatrics.
Other successful heavy metal groups, such as the Scorpions, demonstrated that heavy metal (and rock more generally) knew no national boundaries. As we will see, the artists in this chapter laid the groundwork for many metal groups that would emerge in the late 1970s and 1980s, including Judas Priest, Metallica, and Van Halen.
"Black Sabbath nearly broke up before recording a single song, when guitarist Tony Iommi left to join the more established Jethro Tull in 1969, but he luckily changed his mind."