“Full Metal Jacket”*…
Heavy metal is a vast and complex subculture, with supremely elitist followers and heavily codified attire, impenetrable to those outside of its fanbase. As heavy metal’s influence continues to spread throughout culture, from Justin Bieber’s Purpose Tour imitation of Pentagram’s logo to Tommy Genesis wearing Toxic Holocaust merch, Melchior Tersen’s timely and impressive book, Killing Technology [here], documents the frontline of its symbolism: patches and patch jackets, DIY garments that fans build up themselves, sometimes over many years. Patches are bought at festivals, on merch tables at gigs and from record shops and online distros. Sites like T-Shirt Slayer exist both to trade in rare items and, more importantly, to show off collections of rare items. The breadth of the genre is overwhelming, but most true metal fans would be able to size you up immediately by the patches you wear on your jacket…
Metal style was a fashion in the 90s. Now we are in an era that’s more based on reblogging than pure avant-garde creation. Still, metal visuals fascinate a public that’s not necessarily into metal as music. A consideration of the form– and more photos– at Paper Journal‘s interview with Tersen: “Killing Technology.”
* (the title of a Stanley Kubrick film)
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As we get loud, we might recall that it was on this date in 1958 that Elvis Presley’s “Jailhouse Rock” become that first single to enter the U.K. pop charts at #!. The record (the B-side “treat Me Nice”) would stayed on top for three weeks.
Written by (Roughly) Daily
January 25, 2019 at 1:01 am
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged with art, Elvis Presley, Heavy Metal, history, jacket, Jailhouse Rock, Melchior Tersen, music, patches, photography, rock music
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