Rap metal

Rap metal
Origines stylistiques Rap rock, metal alternatif[1],[2], hip-hop, heavy metal
Origines culturelles Fin des années 1980, États-Unis
Instruments typiques Basse, batterie, chant, échantillonneur, guitare, rap
Popularité Modérée au début des années 1990, élevée à la fin des années 1990.
Voir aussi Rapcore, funk metal

Genres associés

Nu metal

Le rap metal est un sous-genre musical du rap rock et du metal alternatif mêlant des éléments vocaux et instrumentaux issus du hip-hop et heavy metal.

  1. (en) « Alternative Metal », AllMusic (consulté le ), The first wave of alternative metal bands fused heavy metal with prog-rock (Jane's Addiction, Primus), garage punk (Soundgarden, Corrosion of Conformity), noise-rock (the Jesus Lizard, Helmet), funk (Faith No More, Living Colour), rap (Faith No More, Biohazard), industrial (Ministry, Nine Inch Nails), psychedelia (Soundgarden, Monster Magnet), and even world music (later Sepultura)... Some of those bands eventually broke out to wider audiences, often with help from the Lollapalooza tour, and they also set the stage for a new wave of alt-metal that emerged around 1993-94, centered around the Rap Metal fusions of Rage Against the Machine and Korn, the grindingly dissonant Tool, the heavily production-reliant White Zombie, and the popular breakthrough of Nine Inch Nails. These bands would become the most influential forces in shaping the sound and style of alternative metal for the rest of the '90s, along with Pantera, whose thick, molten riffs sounded like no other thrash-metal band.
  2. Erreur de référence : Balise <ref> incorrecte : aucun texte n’a été fourni pour les références nommées Henderson

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