R
Raskolnikov
Guest
This reminds me of a thread on the Rolling Stones’ song “Sympathy for the Devil,” in which a whole bunch of people who’d never heard it said it must be evil and to avoid it, failing to note that the lyrics of the song are ironical, the devil clearly being the antagonist of the song. It is no more “pro-Satan” than C.S. Lewis’ “Screwtape Letters” is.Very true on Iron Maiden. They tend to get dismissed as borderline Satanic because of Eddie, “The Number of the Beast” (which is a song about a nightmare, not a “Hail Satan” song), and the general stigma that attaches to heavy metal in some circles. However, a lot of their songs are extremely literate - “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” and “Brave New World” are just two minor examples.![]()
It seems some people unfamiliar with certain genres of music fail to notice that these bands tend to be marketing themselves in such a way that they seem a lot worse than they are, rather than the other way around. And I say this as a young person who listens almost exclusively to classical music, so I have no vested interest in defending modern musicians.