Balita.org: Your Premier Source for Comprehensive Philippines News and Insights! We bring you the latest news, stories, and updates on a wide range of topics, including politics, culture, economy, and more. Stay tuned to know everything you wish about your favorite stars 24/7.

Contacts

  • Owner: SNOWLAND s.r.o.
  • Registration certificate 06691200
  • 16200, Na okraji 381/41, Veleslavín, 162 00 Praha 6
  • Czech Republic

Olympics show golden age of metal music

PARIS, France — A thundering performance by thrash metal band Gojira at the Olympics opening ceremony shows how much the demonic-sounding genre has entered the pop culture mainstream.

The head-banging foursome gave an unforgettable performance on the balconies of the historic Conciergerie palace along the banks of the Seine with a song evoking the guillotine executions of the French Revolution.

They were joined by opera singer Marina Viotti, for "Ah! Ca ira" ("Ah! It'll be fine"), based on the famous revolutionary song of the 1790s.

Viotti was still riding high from her appearance in front of more than a billion TV viewers. "It's dizzying," the 38-year-old French-Swiss mezzo-soprano said.

Viotti has dates coming up at Milan's La Scala and the Paris Opera, but she is no stranger to metal, having performed with groups Lost Legacy and Soulmaker.

She was overjoyed to bring the music to a wider audience, "I've read comments on social networks saying 'I never listen to metal but, this one, it's great, it gave such energy to the show.'"

She hopes it will help change the image of metal and finally rid the genre of its "Satanist" or "violent" cliches.

A surprise inclusion in the Olympics show, Gojira are a French band that have won over metalheads around the world with their pulverizing guitars and earth-shattering drums.

Related:  Lady Gaga, Celine Dion add sparkle to 4-hour star-studded Olympic show

"It's crazy, a very nice surprise and a world first for metal," said Corentin Charbonnier, a doctor in anthropology and a French researcher on metal music. "Right now, we're living in a golden age for metal."

Charbonnier helped curate France's largest-ever exhibition about the genre at — of all places — the Paris Philharmonic, which is running until September 29.

Metal is usually traced back to English group Black Sabbath in the early 1970s, merging with glam in the form of Kiss around a decade later and finding its textbook form with US band Metallica in the 1980s and 1990s.

It is now a fully established genre even in France, with a dedicated festival — Hellfest — that attracted around 240,000 fans to its latest edition last month. Metallica headlined the festival for

Read more on philstar.com