Top 10 Beverages That Describe Metal Subgenres
Strong yet aromatic (melodic). Nice color. A popular and classic pleasure.
Cheers!
Activated mode: Metallica - Whiskey In The Jar.
No color, not much flavour. It's very strong - right to the point.
Not strong but white wine lowers your blood pressure and this can help you fall asleep...
A much nicer, subtler approach. Usually the weakest of them all
Not strong but always welcome.
This isn't for beginners.
A glass of red wine is like "Vain Glory Opera" by Edguy - red is a powerful color, so are the rhythm, melody and chorus to this song.
Not very strong but can get your blood pumping.
Moderately strong but aromatic and classy. Not very popular.
Activated mode: Blind Guardian - Wheel Of Time.
Prompting that it's barely metal if metal at all...
Folk metal actually sounds like metal covers of folk songs, sometimes with black metal elements.
It is good for you, but obviously doesn't give you many after affects like alcohol, it also keeps you hydrated... somehow... although it does have flavor and a kick, but it still won't make me throw up if I have too much. You cannot have too much Thrash!
Speed Metal can be as fast and technical as thrash but speed metal is more melodic and less abrasive than thrash.
Activated mode: Helloween - Ride The Sky
Vodka with orange juice is an existing combination where orange juice softens the drink.
Pirate Metal isn't a music genre, the music genre is folk metal
Not a music genre, it's folk metal with pirate lyrics
Similarities:
Bourbon whiskey is a type of American whiskey made primarily from corn. The name is ultimately derived from the French Bourbon dynasty, although it is disputed whether Bourbon Street in New Orleans or Bourbon County in Kentucky inspired the whiskey's name.
Groove metal originated in America and is a very American subgenre with lots of core, crossover thrash and Southern music influences (blues), and some rap. Groove Metal actually laid the foundations for some non-metal genres, such as nu metal and metalcore.