Djent
Djent | |
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Stylistic origins | |
Cultural origins | 2000s, Sweden, United Kingdom and United States |
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Other topics | |
Djent /ˈdʒɛnt/ is a style of heavy metal music that was developed as a spinoff of traditional progressive metal.[1][2] The word "djent" is an onomatopoeia for the distinctive high-gain, distorted palm-muted, low pitch guitar sound most notably employed by bands like Meshuggah and Sikth. Typically, the word is used to refer to music that makes use of this sound, to the sound itself, or to the scene that revolves around it.[3]
Development
Fredrik Thordendal, guitarist of Swedish band Meshuggah, is considered the originator of the djent technique.[3] However, the scene itself developed from an online community of bedroom musicians including Misha Mansoor whose success with Periphery brought djent "from the virtual world into the real one."[3] Other important pre-djent era bands in the development of the style are Sikth, Mnemic, Animals as Leaders,[2] TesseracT,[4][5][6] and Textures.[7]
The scene has grown rapidly[8] and members of the original online community, including the bands Chimp Spanner, Gizmachi, and Monuments, have gone on to tour and release albums commercially.[3][9] Other bands that are often considered djent include A Life Once Lost,[10] Veil of Maya,[11] Vildhjarta,[12] and Xerath.[13] Born of Osiris have also been described as being inspired by the djent movement.[8] Furthermore, Hacktivist are a djent band that uses rapping as primary vocal style.[14][15]
Misha Mansoor from Periphery uses many guitar effects to influence the music. They use a lot of high gain by using an overdrive pedal. "To get a djent tone on any guitar you have to buy a compressor, overdrive or Tube Screamer, distortion, and shimmer reverb pedals to allow you to get a djenty tone depending on your amp and guitar in general."[16]
Characteristics
Djent as a style is characterized by progressive, rhythmic, and technical complexity.[6] It typically features heavily distorted, palm-muted guitar chords, syncopated riffs[3] and polyrhythms alongside virtuoso soloing.[1] Another common feature is the use of extended range seven, eight, nine,and ten-string guitars.[17]
Reception
Some members of the metal community have criticized the term 'djent', either treating it as a short-lived fad, openly condemning it, or questioning its validity as a genre. But other bands such as TesseracT and Animals as Leaders have gained positive reviews, such as awards and highly acclaimed albums. Post-metal band Rosetta said: "Maybe we should start calling doom metal 'DUNNN'."[18] In response to a question about 'djent', Lamb of God vocalist Randy Blythe stated: "There is no such thing as 'djent,' it's not a genre."[19] In an interview with Guitar Messenger, Periphery guitarist Misha Mansoor said:
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I was looking for gear that was djenty. I was like: ‘Are these pickups djenty?’ For some reason it caught on, but completely in the wrong way, because people think it's a style of music and they think it's a style of music I play.[20]
In a later interview with Freethinkers Blog, Misha Mansoor stated that he felt djent had become "this big umbrella term for any sort of progressive band and also any band that will [use] off-time chugs [...] You also get bands like Scale the Summit [who are referred to as] a djent band [when] eighty percent of their stuff sounds like clean channel and it's all beautiful and pretty, you know [...] In that way I think it's cool because it groups really cool bands together [...] We are surrounded by a lot of bands that I respect, but at the same time I don't think people know what djent is either [...] It's very unclear." Later in the interview he stated, "If you call us djent that's fine, I mean I would never self apply the term. But at the same time it's just so vague that I don't know what to make of it."[21]
Tosin Abasi of Animals as Leaders also takes a more lenient view of the term, stating that there are specific characteristics that are common to "djent" bands, therefore implying legitimate use of the term as a genre. While stating that he personally strives not to subscribe exclusively to any one genre, he makes the point that a genre is defined by the ability to associate common features between different artists. In this way, it is possible to view djent as a genre describing a particular niche of modern, progressive metal.[22]
List of artists
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This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
Band | Country of origin | Active |
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After the Burial | U.S. | 2004–present |
A Life Once Lost | U.S. | 1999–2013 |
Animals as Leaders | U.S. | 2007–present |
Born of Osiris | U.S. | 2003–present |
The Contortionist | U.S. | 2007–present |
Destrage | Italy | 2005–present |
Hacktivist | UK | 2011–present |
In Hearts Wake | Australia | 2006–present |
Intervals | Canada | 2011–present |
Meshuggah | Sweden | 1987–present |
Mnemic | Denmark | 1998–2013 (hiatus) |
Monuments | UK | 2007–present |
Northlane | Australia | 2009–present |
Paul Ortiz | UK | 2004–present |
Periphery | U.S. | 2005–present |
Polyphia | U.S. | 2010–present |
Returning We Hear the Larks | UK | 2008–present |
SikTh | UK | 1999–2008, 2013–present |
Skyharbor | India | 2010–present |
Sirens | U.S. | 2011–present |
TesseracT | UK | 2007–present |
Textures | Netherlands | 2001–present |
Uneven Structure | France | 2008–present |
Veil of Maya | U.S. | 2004–present |
Vildhjarta | Sweden | 2005–present |
Volumes | U.S. | 2009–present |
Xerath | UK | 2007–present |
DVSR | Australia | 2013–present |
References
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- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 "Djent, the metal geek's microgenre". The Guardian. 3 March 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2011
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- ↑ "Periphery interview part 3 of 3." FreethinkersBlog. 19 Feb. 2012. Web. 28 Aug. 2013. <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8bE0Q_9nQ9U>.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.