Death (Leprosy) Kel's First Reaction
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- Опубликовано: 16 ноя 2024
- Watch and listen to Kel's first reaction to Death's song Leprosy.
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there's no hidden meaning, the song just describes leprosy
Amazing album 🤘🏻 One of my favorite bands and guitarists of all time. R I P Chuck Schuldiner
I remember getting into Death around 1990 and really digging their music, but struggling with the vocal style. I got used to it and learned love it.. exactly the same thing happened with King Diamond.
Death, Athiest, Obituary vocals are follow able, it takes time adjusting to it.
Her face at 4:44 says it all.... Imagine hearing that song back in 1988 at the age of 14 years old! Death was no joke and they were sometimes very frightening to listen to... Fantastic band
One thing I like about chucks music, is no religious influence, meaning no satanic crap.... he said that in his interviews.
R.I.P Chuck
For Kel's judgement - you can play Death - without judgment !
Leprosy is my favorite all time song and was never expected you to play it. You've earned a new sub
ha - without judgment .. ;)
The only musician I have ever shed a tear for. I have also found cheer, happiness, love, and focus. Chuck means a lot to a lot of people, and in so many ways. I am sorry for your loss and though my words mean nothing to your experience, I hope you can feel the magic of many as one. We celebrate your son as we celebrate life. Thank you for sharing.
I remember listening to this on tape back in the 90's, and this was my favourite death metal band.
Death - Spiritual Healing pleaseee!!
yesssss
RIP Chuck Schuldiner, Scott Clendenin, and your son Jared. May they jam together forever and make great music. Chuck and the fellas of Death are legends. Such a great band
Chuck Schuldiner was one of the most inovative musicians to pick up an instrument in the world of metal. An like your loving son Jared was taken from us at an young age. R.I.P. to both Chuck and Jared. This a brilliant track from a brilliant album. And like all good wines Death just went on to become more brilliant with each album. A very emotional reaction from yourself. You guys are also very deep with your reactions, when needed. Keep it metal 🤘🤘
Loving people that dont overreact when doing this kind of reaction
Keep up the good work🤟🏻
Sorry for the loss of your son. Pull the Plug was the best song from this album. BTW, Kel is a gorgeous woman. Stunning.
Chuck Schuldiner,one of the greatest Death Metal Musicians ever lived from Florida.Saw him once live,unforgettable.We miss him so much !
Chuck Shuldiner was a great artist, lyricist, vocalist and musician. Too bad he never got to hear the newer sounds of death metal.
HAVOK - "From the Cradle to the Grave" Official Video
HAVOK - Intention To Deceive (OFFICIAL VIDEO)
underrated band.. conformicide is a diamond
@@smn1085 Overrated!!!
You need to do Story to tell .. or song called Crystal Mountain by them .. or their other project called Control Denied - Consumed .. they used clean vocals there .. very interesting
Thank you for bringing me back to my teen years with this album!
I'm pretty sure if your son was verswith DEATH he also listened to the surviving guitarists band CYNIC and fusion of jazz, metal(DEATH) and other sources that helped us become a founding sound for PROG and others.
Lots of love guys
SHIT I"VE BEEN ON A DEATH KICK THIS WEEK...
Just when I take a week off from your reaction videos.
The Philospher.
-Tim
Amazing musicians! Dimebag learned chucks scales... you cant compare death to any other band. This is iconic!!
Though their early stuff is still very raw but you can hear how prog they will become already... RIP Chuck your scales will keep influencing generations of musicians to Come
Leprosy also happened in Kalaupapa, it was truly a dark thing from our history
You tube hug🤗. Keep moving forward Rich, but always look back with fond memories.
This is one of my best death metal albums of all time . Rip Chuck
Death rules. Real fucking DEATH! Leprosy is probably one of the best Death Metal albums ever. I don't count Deicide or Morbid Angel, that are more spiritually inclined.
Bring on the death metal!!!!
4:41...UUUUUAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!
you might like bolt thrower
Death was my shit back in middle school
Fantastic. Death - The flesh and the power it holds. More progressive.
Music always helps heal
7:47 now THIS, this is brutal
plese react to death : scavenger of human sorrow , 1000 eyes , lack of coprehension...you have to listen to the discography of death, to see the evolution of the band
Saludos desde México 🇲🇽
I’m gonna just guess and say Chuck probably didn’t know about D’arcy Island. But he probably did research this in some way and learned about Kalaupapa, Hawaii. Infamous for a leper colony. Either that or he just heard about it through medieval texts and whatnot. The message tho is basically just. Leprosy is bad to have and it’s brutal. Let’s make a death metal song about it. He gets more profound later on lol.
Early Death is a bit more brutal with the vocal style and the production doesn't bring the instruments out like the later albums. Anything from Human on is more progressive and would probably get Kel to appreciate them more.
R.I.P. CHUCK!!!!
I may be a year late, but yall got a like and a subscribe from me. Keep his memory alive.
Beautifull
one if not the darkest shit there can be in this world. i play this with rhythm guitar but it is fast as fuck
What a big contradiction this song is. The music really gets you pumped, but then the topic is so serious you would actually feel guilty heandbanging along. Still it's one of my favourite death metal tracks, thank you for reacting to this one.
Reminds me old Sepultura
Open your eyes Kel. It's way better seeing the lyrics before you. Keep uo the good work
Love your channel and already put in my request I hope u get to it because I think the song you will like great song and reaction as always keep it up
Man you gotta hear sentenced: rotting ways to misery demo 1990 or under the suffer:) they are sick
You joke about Celine Dion covering this, but it wouldn't be the weirdest thing. Tori Amos covered Slayer's "Raining Blood", and it's VERY different, but also VERY cool and atmospheric, and worth checking out.
Yeah. A friend showed me that once, without giving any information. He only asked: "Do you find out what song that is?" I absolutely failed.
I'm still trying to figure this style out. Someone help me out here. When you first started listening to this style vocals, was it an instant attraction or acquired taste? I keep trying with an open mind but every single time it's always the same. It doesn't sound pleasing to the ear, it doesn't sound like singing at all, it simply sounds like screaming. Is there anyway one finds this enjoyable with time or am I just wasting my time, in that this is simply a love it or hate it vocal style and I'm just never going to get it?
(No, please believe me I am not being condescending or sarcastic. I fear I'm missing out and this bothers me.)
It was an acquired taste for me. At first I didn't like any extreme vocals, but I liked the extremely heavy musicianship so much that I kept trying. Finally I got into deathcore, and once I was enjoying that I was like "what was it I didn't like about death metal?" so I went back and finally liked the whole package.
Once I was into modern DM it still took me awhile to get into OSDM (though I liked Death from the first time I listened, but Morbid Angel, Autopsy, and others took awhile). Now I love it all.
Honestly being angry helps, because this is the kind of music that's an excellent release for that. That was what drew me to very heavy music in the first place. Now that I'm past that part of my life, I still kept my love for heavy music.
For some like me it clicked immediately, but there are definitely a lot of people that do have to "learn to like it". But I have to ask, is there anything about death metal that you like at all? Take out the harsh vocals, do you like the riffs and instrumentation? If so, I would definitely say it's worth it to keep trying and looking for that band that finally clicks with you as death metal has become one of the more prevalent subgenres of metal and has a lot to offer. If you need any recommendations I would definitely be happy to help, there are a lot of ways to approach the genre.
@@ArdensSedVirens1 Oh yes, EVERYTHING sounds totally bad ass to me aside from the vocals.
@@Warrior_Resisting_Colonialism Good to hear. In that case, just try to listen to stuff until it clicks. Focus on the riffs/instruments (metal is about riffs after all!) and try to grit your teeth through the vocals if you can. Death ain't a bad band to start with too. That said, if you need help in getting eased into harsh vocals, here's some stuff I would recommend:
A lot of early death metal bands (such a Death) were just following in the footsteps of bands like Venom, Slayer, Kreator, and Celtic Frost that began pushing the envelop in terms of extremity. As such, these bands utilize harsher vocals but sound more like an angry man shouting at you about evil shit than the screams and growls in later extreme metal bands. So those bands might be worth exploring if you haven't yet. I'd also say check out Ripping Corpse as well, they were a death/thrash band that instead used similar "shouty" vocals.
Perhaps a band that utilizes both harsh and clean vocals might work for you as well. For a lot of people Opeth is their gateway band, so try out some of their late 90s-mid 00s stuff.
Instrumental stuff might be something you'd like as well. The Chasm's last album, " A Conscious Creation from the Isolated Domain (Phase I)", is an entirely instrumental death metal album so try that and then work backwards into their discography.
As I had some huge anger inside me during my youth (which means somewhere around `83 til `91), it was definitely instant attraction. If I really can call it that way, cause I grew into it together with the evolution of the metal-scene (Steps from Motörhead to Metallica to Slayer to Celtic Frost to Possessed to Death...)
But as I always had some affinity to very various styles of music, this was just one side of me. I had no problems changing from Hell awaits to The final countdown, as an example. Today I still have my "moments", when I use to listen to Death (but rather the later stuff, although I liked Leprosy back then), Morbid Angel, Entombed, Obituary, Morgoth or Sepultura. But for me now that means only one or two hours at a time.
But if you simply don't like growling - so what? Sure, you may focus on the instrumental side of the music (and for sure there is some insane stuff around that is worth listen to it), but why should you do that and abstract, till your ears bleed? ;-)
Maybe something, that also includes other vocal styles (for relaxing moments in between), is more your cup of tea, and could also work as a form of "access in two steps".
The already mentioned Opeth do really very creative stuff, which has a tasteful balance between different vocal styles (also growling). I recommend My arms, your hearse, Blackwater park, Ghost reveries.
Samael from Switzerland (yeah, that cannot be called Death Metal) have some extreme vocals, deep and aggressive, but not real growling. Listen to Passage.
The finnish band Waltari recorded a so-called Death Metal Symphony In Deep C with the title Yeah! Yeah! Die! Die!, which includes extreme Death Metal growling, conventional vocals and a beautiful female operatic voice. A very creative, very experimental and very complexe concept album. I recommend this, because my girlfriend - who is ABSOLUTELY NOT into Death metal at all - really loves this piece.
Leper messiah metallica
Death was not the first DEATH METAL BAND. it was POSSESSED they was the first true death metal band............
I don't know about that... Possessed released their first album by 1984,
Hellhammer (who would later be known as Celtic Frost) had already been
releasing music that would provide the blueprints for death metal for a
couple years by then; Mantas (later known as Death) had formed and
started releasing their famous demos at about the same time - they all
three more or less appeared in 1983, which seems to have been the year
that death metal as we know and love it was born.
I know for sure that Celtic Frost points back to Venom as their
inspiration, Possessed sound distinctly like they were quite familiar
with Venom as well, and I've no doubt that Chuck Schuldiner and
Mantas/Death were quite familiar with Venom too, suggesting that Venom
(formed in 1979) might not have been the first death metal band, but at
the very least helped to directly inspire that genre!
On the other hand, Napalm Death had been around since 1982, introducing
the distinctly hardcore punk-inspired grindcore elements that would
become a familiar part of death metal over the course of their careers,
while extreme thrash acts like Slayer (1981), Bathory (1983), Sodom
(1981), Kreator (1982 as Tormentor), Parabellum (1983), Vulcano (1981),
and Destruction (1982) also provided some of the Venom-inspired DNA that
would go into the gene pool of death and black metal through the '80s.
Speaking of hardcore punk, Discharge could perhaps claim the title of
"first death metal band" by producing some suspiciously grindcore-like
recordings as early as the late 1970s! (See especially the albums
"Realities of War" (1980), "Why" (1981), and "Hear Nothing, See Nothing,
Say Nothing" (1982).) It was probably Discharge that really introduced
crossover and thrash metal to the death-obsessed lyrics and album
covers that would help to set the stage for what death metal would
become later: a sort of protest music for the '80s, using the bizarre
imagery of heaps of mutilated bodies piled into the sky as a metaphor
for the senselessness of totalitarian violence and modern technological
(especially nuclear) warfare....
Whatever the case, it's not too unfair to say there wasn't really a
first, and that Possessed, Death/Mantas, and Celtic Frost/Hellhammer all
started putting modern death metal as we know it together at the same
time around 1983, using bits and pieces of what the likes of Motorhead,
Venom, Mercyful Fate, Napalm Death, Discharge, Slayer, and others had
started with between the late '70s and early '80s, while injecting their
own unique contributions into the mix along the way (it would be
difficult to imagine modern death metal without Chuck's vocals and
Death's technical leanings and morbid lyrics inspired by Mercyful Fate,
or the occult themes of Possessed and Celtic Frost, with Celtic Frost's
weird riffs and aggressive speed borrowed from Venom mixed with
philosophical lyrics and avant-garde noise-art soundscape intros and
outros borrowed from gothic rock, or Possessed's loose, chaotic
amplification of Venom's speed, distortion, and growling, or Napalm
Death's blast beats, deep bellowing roars, and nihilistic, misanthropic
lyrics....)
I don't know about that... Possessed released their first album by 1984,
Hellhammer (who would later be known as Celtic Frost) had already been
releasing music that would provide the blueprints for death metal for a
couple years by then; Mantas (later known as Death) had formed and
started releasing their famous demos at about the same time - they all
three more or less appeared in 1983, which seems to have been the year
that death metal as we know and love it was born.
I know for sure that Celtic Frost points back to Venom as their
inspiration, Possessed sound distinctly like they were quite familiar
with Venom as well, and I've no doubt that Chuck Schuldiner and
Mantas/Death were quite familiar with Venom too, suggesting that Venom
(formed in 1979) might not have been the first death metal band, but at
the very least helped to directly inspire that genre!
On the other hand, Napalm Death had been around since 1982, introducing
the distinctly hardcore punk-inspired grindcore elements that would
become a familiar part of death metal over the course of their careers,
while extreme thrash acts like Slayer (1981), Bathory (1983), Sodom
(1981), Kreator (1982 as Tormentor), Parabellum (1983), Vulcano (1981),
and Destruction (1982) also provided some of the Venom-inspired DNA that
would go into the gene pool of death and black metal through the '80s.
Speaking of hardcore punk, Discharge could perhaps claim the title of
"first death metal band" by producing some suspiciously grindcore-like
recordings as early as the late 1970s! (See especially the albums
"Realities of War" (1980), "Why" (1981), and "Hear Nothing, See Nothing,
Say Nothing" (1982).) It was probably Discharge that really introduced
crossover and thrash metal to the death-obsessed lyrics and album
covers that would help to set the stage for what death metal would
become later: a sort of protest music for the '80s, using the bizarre
imagery of heaps of mutilated bodies piled into the sky as a metaphor
for the senselessness of totalitarian violence and modern technological
(especially nuclear) warfare....
Whatever the case, it's not too unfair to say there wasn't really a
first, and that Possessed, Death/Mantas, and Celtic Frost/Hellhammer all
started putting modern death metal as we know it together at the same
time around 1983, using bits and pieces of what the likes of Motorhead,
Venom, Mercyful Fate, Napalm Death, Discharge, Slayer, and others had
started with between the late '70s and early '80s, while injecting their
own unique contributions into the mix along the way (it would be
difficult to imagine modern death metal without Chuck's vocals and
Death's technical leanings and morbid lyrics inspired by Mercyful Fate,
or the occult themes of Possessed and Celtic Frost, with Celtic Frost's
weird riffs and aggressive speed borrowed from Venom mixed with
philosophical lyrics and avant-garde noise-art soundscape intros and
outros borrowed from gothic rock, or Possessed's loose, chaotic
amplification of Venom's speed, distortion, and growling, or Napalm
Death's blast beats, deep bellowing roars, and nihilistic, misanthropic
lyrics....)
I don't know about that... Possessed released their first album by 1984,
Hellhammer (who would later be known as Celtic Frost) had already been
releasing music that would provide the blueprints for death metal for a
couple years by then; Mantas (later known as Death) had formed and
started releasing their famous demos at about the same time - they all
three more or less appeared in 1983, which seems to have been the year
that death metal as we know and love it was born.
I know for sure that Celtic Frost points back to Venom as their
inspiration, Possessed sound distinctly like they were quite familiar
with Venom as well, and I've no doubt that Chuck Schuldiner and
Mantas/Death were quite familiar with Venom too, suggesting that Venom
(formed in 1979) might not have been the first death metal band, but at
the very least helped to directly inspire that genre!
On the other hand, Napalm Death had been around since 1982, introducing
the distinctly hardcore punk-inspired grindcore elements that would
become a familiar part of death metal over the course of their careers,
while extreme thrash acts like Slayer (1981), Bathory (1983), Sodom
(1981), Kreator (1982 as Tormentor), Parabellum (1983), Vulcano (1981),
and Destruction (1982) also provided some of the Venom-inspired DNA that
would go into the gene pool of death and black metal through the '80s.
Speaking of hardcore punk, Discharge could perhaps claim the title of
"first death metal band" by producing some suspiciously grindcore-like
recordings as early as the late 1970s! (See especially the albums
"Realities of War" (1980), "Why" (1981), and "Hear Nothing, See Nothing,
Say Nothing" (1982).) It was probably Discharge that really introduced
crossover and thrash metal to the death-obsessed lyrics and album
covers that would help to set the stage for what death metal would
become later: a sort of protest music for the '80s, using the bizarre
imagery of heaps of mutilated bodies piled into the sky as a metaphor
for the senselessness of totalitarian violence and modern technological
(especially nuclear) warfare....
Whatever the case, it's not too unfair to say there wasn't really a
first, and that Possessed, Death/Mantas, and Celtic Frost/Hellhammer all
started putting modern death metal as we know it together at the same
time around 1983, using bits and pieces of what the likes of Motorhead,
Venom, Mercyful Fate, Napalm Death, Discharge, Slayer, and others had
started with between the late '70s and early '80s, while injecting their
own unique contributions into the mix along the way (it would be
difficult to imagine modern death metal without Chuck's vocals and
Death's technical leanings and morbid lyrics inspired by Mercyful Fate,
or the occult themes of Possessed and Celtic Frost, with Celtic Frost's
weird riffs and aggressive speed borrowed from Venom mixed with
philosophical lyrics and avant-garde noise-art soundscape intros and
outros borrowed from gothic rock, or Possessed's loose, chaotic
amplification of Venom's speed, distortion, and growling, or Napalm
Death's blast beats, deep bellowing roars, and nihilistic, misanthropic
lyrics....)
I don't know about that... Possessed released their first album by 1984,
Hellhammer (who would later be known as Celtic Frost) had already been
releasing music that would provide the blueprints for death metal for a
couple years by then; Mantas (later known as Death) had formed and
started releasing their famous demos at about the same time - they all
three more or less appeared in 1983, which seems to have been the year
that death metal as we know and love it was born.
I know for sure that Celtic Frost points back to Venom as their
inspiration, Possessed sound distinctly like they were quite familiar
with Venom as well, and I've no doubt that Chuck Schuldiner and
Mantas/Death were quite familiar with Venom too, suggesting that Venom
(formed in 1979) might not have been the first death metal band, but at
the very least helped to directly inspire that genre!
On the other hand, Napalm Death had been around since 1982, introducing
the distinctly hardcore punk-inspired grindcore elements that would
become a familiar part of death metal over the course of their careers,
while extreme thrash acts like Slayer (1981), Bathory (1983), Sodom
(1981), Kreator (1982 as Tormentor), Parabellum (1983), Vulcano (1981),
and Destruction (1982) also provided some of the Venom-inspired DNA that
would go into the gene pool of death and black metal through the '80s.
Speaking of hardcore punk, Discharge could perhaps claim the title of
"first death metal band" by producing some suspiciously grindcore-like
recordings as early as the late 1970s! (See especially the albums
"Realities of War" (1980), "Why" (1981), and "Hear Nothing, See Nothing,
Say Nothing" (1982).) It was probably Discharge that really introduced
crossover and thrash metal to the death-obsessed lyrics and album
covers that would help to set the stage for what death metal would
become later: a sort of protest music for the '80s, using the bizarre
imagery of heaps of mutilated bodies piled into the sky as a metaphor
for the senselessness of totalitarian violence and modern technological
(especially nuclear) warfare....
Whatever the case, it's not too unfair to say there wasn't really a
first, and that Possessed, Death/Mantas, and Celtic Frost/Hellhammer all
started putting modern death metal as we know it together at the same
time around 1983, using bits and pieces of what the likes of Motorhead,
Venom, Mercyful Fate, Napalm Death, Discharge, Slayer, and others had
started with between the late '70s and early '80s, while injecting their
own unique contributions into the mix along the way (it would be
difficult to imagine modern death metal without Chuck's vocals and
Death's technical leanings and morbid lyrics inspired by Mercyful Fate,
or the occult themes of Possessed and Celtic Frost, with Celtic Frost's
weird riffs and aggressive speed borrowed from Venom mixed with
philosophical lyrics and avant-garde noise-art soundscape intros and
outros borrowed from gothic rock, or Possessed's loose, chaotic
amplification of Venom's speed, distortion, and growling, or Napalm
Death's blast beats, deep bellowing roars, and nihilistic, misanthropic
lyrics....)
there is no definite answer
🤘🏻🤘🏻fuck yeah
Fucking album
Atheist - Mineral
Shit old school.
Rattus - Stolen Life
Pull the Plug please!
Cómo va el mundo, está clase de gente no debería conocer a DEATH, porque esto es lo q pasa
Please next react to Within The Mind from Spiritual Healing album 🤘🤘🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟 R.I.P Chuck....
your son had a nice taste. life is just an ilusion.. at the end, what matters to live or to die? no one knows what we are doing here and for what. just passing by
DONT QUERY ME???!!
You’re pretty funny man.
please react the band that made Semen Wizards
Just give it a listen and dont ignore me because I'm not a subscriber
Jesus Kel it's not a pro leprosy song lol
Kel should check out old CARCASS Songs/Lyrics 3:) !
It's called gutural.
You know, there is some stuff I am ok with growing out of since the 80's haha. It's fun in a nostalgic sort of way, and there is nothing wrong with it, but the heaviest I can do anymore is stuff like Maiden.
Interesting story to the song though huh?
I'm the opposite, Maiden will never be heavy enough
Heavy?...hmmmm...NAPALM DEATH,BOLTTHROWER,MORBID ANGEL.......and so on.....
@@ingovonderluhe2174 yes
Sounds like your losing your passion for metal.
@@Volunteerfan8082 OLD SCHOOL is timeless...once Metal,4ever Metal....
Can't really say that I'm a fan of his vocals. Musically it's great even if the production sucks.
There's a much much better song than this one Slave live from Rockefeller center
i have this album love it
Rule number one = NEVER pause death