Metal
Metal is more than just a musical genre: it's a true culture. Born in the late 60s with Black Sabbath and Deep Purple, it quickly asserted its identity with distorted guitars, powerful rhythms, and raw energy.
Over the decades, metal has diversified: from the heavy metal of Iron Maiden or Judas Priest to the incendiary thrash of Metallica and Slayer, all the way to the more extreme sounds of death, black, or doom metal. Each subgenre has forged its own sonic and visual universe, offering fans an immersive and intense experience.
But metal isn't just about power. It's also a music of passion, technique, and community. Festivals like Wacken or Hellfest bring together tens of thousands of loyal fans every year, coming to share the same fervor.
Metal vinyls capture this unique intensity: a blend of sonic power and strong imagery. These black discs are testaments to a genre that, for over fifty years, continues to evolve without ever denying its roots.
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Metal on vinyl: Unleashing the full power of sound through the turntable
Why vinyl is metal's ultimate format
Vinyl is metal's natural medium: its analog warmth embraces the harmonic density of distorted guitars and preserves the physical impact of every drum strike, where digital often flattens the dynamics. Owning a metal album on wax also means holding a piece of art, the large-format sleeves unveil iconic illustrations by Derek Riggs (Iron Maiden), Ed Repka (Megadeth), or Kristian WÄhlin (Emperor). For the devoted collector, every spin becomes a celebration of the work in its most noble format, a ritual no streaming service can replicate.
From heavy pioneers to extreme avant-gardes: milestones, artists, and landmark albums
It all begins in 1970 with Black Sabbath, whose 'Paranoid' and 'Master of Reality' laid the genre's foundations. The British NWOBHM ignites the early 80s: Iron Maiden delivers 'The Number of the Beast' (1982), while Motörhead blasts 'Ace of Spades' and Judas Priest forges 'British Steel'. American thrash takes over mid-decade, 'Master of Puppets' (Metallica, 1986) and 'Reign in Blood' (Slayer, 1986) remain absolute landmarks, alongside Anthrax and Megadeth. The 90s see death metal redefine brutality (Death, 'Symbolic'; Morbid Angel, 'Altars of Madness'), Norwegian black metal forge its own myth (Darkthrone, Emperor, Mayhem), and doom metal plumb the depths (My Dying Bride, Paradise Lost). In more recent decades, Opeth ('Blackwater Park'), Mastodon ('Leviathan'), Gojira ('From Mars to Sirius'), and Neurosis have expanded the spectrum toward progressive, sludge, and post-metal. As for the iconic labels, Earache, Nuclear Blast, Roadrunner, Metal Blade, Peaceville, Century Media, and Relapse have shaped the worldwide metal landscape. To track down these gems, whether an original pressing, a remastered reissue, or a limited coloured edition, Vinyles.com compares prices across major retailers for you, leaving you free to choose the offer that best fits your collector's quest.
