Star of Helfest, metal music has real things to say, here’s what his songs say – Ouest-France evening edition

Star of Helfest, metal music has real things to say, here’s what his songs say – Ouest-France evening edition
Star of Helfest, metal music has real things to say, here’s what his songs say – Ouest-France evening edition

At the Hellfest in Clisson (Loire-Atlantique), 180 groups and artists are expected on stage until Sunday, June 30. This music and the sensations it provides sometimes relegate the artists’ lyrics to the background. However, the genre has some great writers, and the tumultuous history of hard rock and metal reminds us to what extent some of its representatives have had to defend their freedom of expression.

In the kingdom of hard rock and metal, the instrument is king. At the Hellfest in Clisson (Loire-Atlantique), the new edition of which began yesterday and until Sunday June 30, 2024, 180 groups and artists are expected on stage. But their words, the meaning of their texts, are not a subject, or very rarely. Metal is first and foremost a matter of physical sensations. “It is made for engaged, open and unreserved listening, precisely for existential listening” , summarizes the German philosopher Hartmut Rosa, author of a recent sociology of heavy metal (1). “This music makes the non-reconciliation and contradictions of the world heard in all clarity. ».

Also read: Hellfest 2024. Metallica: “no metal band has lyrics as touching, as personal”

This is indeed one of its characteristics:Metal music, with its rhythm and telluric power, has the main role. It is effectively supported by the often dark and violent aesthetic of images and words, which summon the imaginary or the real, the intimate or even the political.

Megadeth ou Springsteen

This observation of writing that is sometimes relegated to second place does not prevent the genre from having some very inspired authors in its ranks. Metallica, the most popular group of this edition, programmed on Saturday, has written real gems on themes as varied as youth used as cannon fodder (Disposable Heroes), the regrets of an existence (The Unforgiven) and even… love experienced at a distance (Nothing Else Matters).

Its eternal competitor, Megadeth (present Thursday), led by the very prolific Dave Mustaine, also experienced peaks of inspiration. The words of Foreclosure of a Dream (the failure of a dream), on the social damage of the American recession of the early 90s, have nothing to envy from a Bruce Springsteen at the top of his game.

As for Ice-T, rapper and leader of Bodycount (Friday), he has continued to talk about American society from the point of view of the black community, with words that are sometimes raw and very harsh, but unambiguous, on police violence.

Ice-T, singer of Bodycount, here at Hellfest in 2018. (Photo: Eddy Lemaistre/Ouest-France)

More mysterious, the American group Tool describes with precise and implacable words the fascination that we all have for news items, in Vicarious (2006). The French ? Mass Hysteria, expected on Saturday, is one of the few to sing in French, in a register that is now darker and less festive than at the beginning. Gojira, the best known, is very committed to the environment, in his actions as well as in his lyrics. : Silvera on intensive breeding, Amazonia on deforestation in Brazil.

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Censorship and trial

Finally, to understand this variable relationship to the lyrics, we must measure this paradox: those who do not listen to metal are much more interested in the content of the lyrics than those who do. The history of the genre is thus crossed by attempts at censorship, even trials, in response to lyrics deemed too provocative.

In 1984, in the United States, the creation of the PMRC (Parents Music Resource Center) by Tipper Gore, wife of Al Gore, resulted in many hard rock and metal artists being pilloried. Dee Snider, singer of Twisted Sister, summoned to explain before the Senate the allegedly hidden meaning of one of his songs, Under The Blade, had this pithy reply: “Song lyrics are meant for a person to project their own imagination, experiences and dreams onto them, Snider recalled. Miss Gore wanted to find sadomasochism and bondage there, she found it. Someone looking for references to a surgical operation would have found some too. »

More tragic, more surreal too, was the trial brought against Judas Priest in 1990: the English group had been accused of having provoked – via a subliminal message inserted into a song, which would turn out to be fake – the suicide of two young Americans, idle and under the influence of drugs. Relaxed, the group led by Rob Halford had been praised for its attitude and reinforced in its artistic approach. He never deviated from it. What do these fights have in common? Freedom, a major value shared by metal and all extreme music. Including that of being able to put words to one’s music.

(1) No Fear of The Dark, sociology you heavy metalpublished by La Découverte

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